This list covers the historical firsts of vice presidents of the United States.
John Adams (1789–1797)
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John Adams, the first vice president and the first to become president.
- First vice president.[1]
- First vice president to serve two terms.
- First vice president to be elected president.
- First vice president from Massachusetts.
- First vice president to have been a Continental Congress Delegate, a state judge, and a U.S. diplomat to France, the Netherlands, and Great Britain.
- First vice president to have been a lawyer.
- First vice president from the North and New England.
- First Unitarian vice president.
- First vice president to join a political party, the Federalist Party.
- First vice president to cast a tie-breaking vote as President of the Senate.
- First former vice president to reach the age of 90.
- First former vice president to live at the White House.
Thomas Jefferson (1797-1801)
- First vice president to have sought the presidency against his president.
- First vice president from Virginia.
- First vice president from the South.
- First Deist vice president.
- First vice president to own slaves.
- First vice president to enter office as a member of a political party, the Democratic Republican Party.
- First vice president to have served as a state legislator, a state governor, and U.S. secretary of state.
- First vice president to be a widower.
Aaron Burr (1801-1805)
- First vice president from New York.
- First vice president to have served as a state attorney general and U.S. senator.
- First Presbyterian vice president.
- First vice president to be younger than 50.
- First vice president to be criminally prosecuted.
- First vice president to never become president.
- First vice president to have a 30-year long post-vice presidency.
George Clinton (1805-1812)
- First vice president to be elected under the parameters of the Twelfth Amendment.
- First vice president to have served as a university president.
- First Dutch Reformed vice president.
- First vice president to enter office over the age of 60 and to reach the age of 70 while in office.
- First vice president to serve under two presidents (Thomas Jefferson and James Madison)
- First vice president to die in office (or at all, all 3 former vice presidents were alive at the time of Clinton's death).
Elbridge Gerry (1813-1814)
- First vice president to have served as U.S. congressman.
- First Episcopalian vice president.
- First vice president to die in their first term.
Daniel D. Tompkins (1817-1825)
- First (and only) vice president to have served two terms in the 1800s.
- First former vice president to die within a year of leaving office.
John C. Calhoun (1825–1832)
- First vice president from South Carolina.
- First vice president to resign.
- First vice president to serve under two presidents after the latter defeated the former in the intervening election.
- First vice president to switch parties while in office.
- First vice president to be a member of a third party, the Nullifier Party.
- First vice president to have served as secretary of war.
- First vice president to cast over 30 tie-breaking votes in the U.S. Senate.
- First vice president to be photographed.
- First former vice president to serve in the U.S. senate after leaving office.
- First former vice president to serve in the U.S. cabinet after leaving office (secretary of state).
Martin Van Buren (1833–1837)
- First vice president to be a member of the Democratic Party.
- First vice president to speak English as a second language.
Richard M. Johnson (1837–1841)
- First vice president elected through a contingent election in the Senate.
- First vice president from Kentucky.
- First vice president to be elected to state legislature after leaving office.
John Tyler (1841)
- First vice president to ascend to the presidency on his president's (William Henry Harrison) death.
- First vice president to be a member of the Whig Party.
- First vice president to have been president pro tempore of the United States Senate.
George M. Dallas (1845–1849)
- First vice president from Pennsylvania.
- First vice president to have served as minister to Russia, mayor, and U.S. attorney.
- First Baptist vice president.
Millard Fillmore (1849–1850)
- First vice president to have chaired a committee in the U.S. House.
- First vice president to have served as state comptroller.
William R. King (1853)
John C. Breckinridge (1857–1861)
- First (and only) vice president to take office under the age of 40
- First former vice president to be expelled from the U.S. Senate as senator.
- First former vice president to defect to the Confederacy and serve in its cabinet.
Hannibal Hamlin (1861–1865)
- First vice president from Maine.
- First vice president to be a member of the Republican Party.
- First vice president to have served as minister to Spain.
Andrew Johnson (1865)
- First vice president from Tennessee.
- First vice president to be elected on the National Union ticket.
- First vice president to have served as military governor.
- First vice president to ascend to the presidency on his president's assassination.
Schuyler Colfax (1869–1873)
- First vice president from Indiana.
- First vice president to have served as Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives.
Henry Wilson (1873–1875)
- First Congregationalist vice president.
- First vice president to have served as state senate president and chairman of a U.S senate committee.
William A. Wheeler (1877–1881)
- First Half-Breed vice president.
Chester A. Arthur (1881)
- First vice president from Vermont
Thomas A. Hendricks (1885)
- First vice president born in Ohio.
Levi P. Morton (1889–1893)
- First vice president to die on his birthday.
Adlai Stevenson I (1893–1897)
- First vice president from Illinois.
Garret Hobart (1897–1899)
- First vice president from New Jersey.
- First vice president to be filmed.
- First vice president to have his voice recorded.
Theodore Roosevelt (1901)
- First vice president to ascend to the presidency on his president's assassination and be elected to a term in his own right.
- First vice president to be shot in an assassination attempt (after leaving office).
Charles W. Fairbanks (1905–1909)
- First vice president to serve a complete term without casting any tie-breaking votes as President of the Senate.
James S. Sherman (1909–1912)
- First Reformed vice president.
Thomas R. Marshall (1913–1921)
- First vice president to conduct cabinet meetings.
Calvin Coolidge (1921–1923)
- First Vice President to attend cabinet meetings.
Charles G. Dawes (1925–1929)
- First vice president to win the Nobel Peace Prize.
Charles Curtis (1929–1933)
- First vice president with Native American ancestry.
- First vice president from Kansas.
- First vice president born west of the Mississippi River.
John Nance Garner (1933–1941)
- First vice president from Texas.
- First vice president to be inaugurated on January 20 (pursuant to the Twentieth Amendment).[lower-alpha 1][2]
Henry A. Wallace (1941–1945)
Harry S. Truman (1945)
- First vice president from Missouri.
- First vice president to be a president's third vice president.
Alben W. Barkley (1949–1953)
- First Methodist vice president.
- First vice president to take office after turning 70.
Richard Nixon (1953–1961)
- First vice president from California.
- First Quaker vice president.
- First former vice president to be elected president.
Lyndon B. Johnson (1961–1963)
- First Disciples of Christ vice president.
Hubert Humphrey (1965–1969)
Spiro Agnew (1969–1973)
Gerald Ford (1973–1974)
- First vice president from Michigan.
- First vice president to be appointed to the role under the Twenty-fifth Amendment, via a process of presidential nomination and congressional confirmation.
- First vice president to ascend to the presidency as a result of resignation.
Nelson Rockefeller (1974–1977)
- First vice president to be appointed to the role under the Twenty-fifth Amendment and not be nominated by their party in the next election.
Walter Mondale (1977–1981)
- First vice president to live at Number One Observatory Circle.[4][5]
George H.W. Bush (1981–1989)
Dan Quayle (1989–1993)
- First Baby boomer to be elected Vice President or President.
Al Gore (1993–2001)
- First Southern Baptist vice president.
Dick Cheney (2001–2009)
- First vice president from Wyoming.
- First vice president to serve as acting president twice.
Joe Biden (2009–2017)
- First vice president from Delaware.
- First vice president to have been a U.S. senator for 35 years.
- First Catholic vice president.
- First vice president to be awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom with distinction.
- First vice president to cast zero tie-breaking votes whilst serving two full terms.
Mike Pence (2017–2021)
- First Evangelical vice president.
- First vice president to testify before a federal grand jury indicting his president.
Kamala Harris (2021–present)
- First female vice president.
- First African-American vice president.
- First Asian-American vice president.
- First female to assume the powers of the presidency, as acting president.
See also
References
- ↑ American Political Leaders 1789–2009. CQ Press. 2009. ISBN 978-1-4522-6726-5.
- ↑ "38TH INAUGURAL CEREMONIES". Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
- ↑ "THE 38th PRESIDENTIAL INAUGURATION". Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
- 1 2 "The Vice President's Residence". WhiteHouse.gov. Archived from the original on October 21, 2009.
- ↑ "Happy, Nelson Rockefeller open 2nd Washington Home". Sarasota Herald-Times. United Press International. September 7, 1975. p. 11A. Archived from the original on January 21, 2021. Retrieved December 31, 2015 – via Google News.
- ↑ Groppe, Maureen. "Second Lady Karen Pence lights up garden to honor George H.W. Bush". USA Today. Archived from the original on November 28, 2023. Retrieved November 28, 2023.
- ↑ Garner was inaugurated for his first term on March 4, 1933. He was sworn in for a second term as vice president on January 20, 1937, the first time a presidential or vice presidential inauguration took place on January 20th.
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