While the presidential inauguration dates back to 1789, official weather records for Washington, D.C. go as far back as Ulysses S. Grant’s second inauguration in 1873. That still gives us ...
President Trump’s youngest son, Barron, was tough to miss in the Capitol Rotunda for his father’s inauguration ceremony ... a marble statue of Ulysses S. Grant in the background adding ...
Continuing a long, bipartisan, even nonpartisan, tradition that dates back to the 1873 inauguration of Ulysses S. Grant, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints sent high-level ...
The Polar Express that blasted into Washington for President Ronald Reagan’s second inaugural in 1985 forced the whole inaugural ceremony indoors, and the parade was canceled.
The coldest inauguration to be held outside was President Ulysses S. Grant's in 1873, which was held on the old Inauguration Day of March 4. The temperature at noon was 16 degrees, and a day low ...
It remains the coldest inauguration on record, with a high temperature of just 7°. There are some records of President Ulysses S. Grant’s second inauguration having a numbing high of only 16 ...
Donald John Trump became the 47th president of the United States on Monday, and two Latter-day Saint apostles were on hand for the events and ceremonies surrounding the historic occasion.
It’s not the first inauguration ceremony to be held indoors ... Official weather record-keeping began in 1873, beginning with Ulysses S. Grant’s second term. It’s also at that time that ...
Taft, Grover Cleveland (second inauguration), Ulysses S. Grant (second inauguration), Martin Van Buren, Andrew Jackson (second inauguration) and James Monroe (second inauguration). Aside from ...
The second Adams, his son, did not invited his successor, Andrew Jackson, to the White House, which he left the day before the inauguration. Johnson, who disliked his successor Ulysses S.