The President with the nickname the butcher was Ulysses S. Grant. Another common nickname for him was Sam as his initials U.S. stood for Uncle Sam.
"Bubba" was the nickname for President Bill Clinton.
Thomas JeffersonANS2:Bah! Jefferson did not have the nickname of 'Old Ironside'. In fact, none of the US presidents had that nickname. The USS Constitution had that nickname because cannonballs bounced off her oak sides.
Thomas Jefferson. Two more nicknames for him: Sage of Monticello, Apostle of Democracy
President John F. Kennedy was referred to as a poor little rich kid by one of his rivals. He was the 35th President of the United States.
I can find no record that any US President had this nickname.
"The President's Own" is their nickname.
That was Harry Truman who was the only president from Missouri.
Thomas Jefferson.
i think it was Ronald Reagan.
The President with the nickname the butcher was Ulysses S. Grant. Another common nickname for him was Sam as his initials U.S. stood for Uncle Sam.
PCH = James Buchanan
Gen. Winfield Scott, who ran for president against Pierce in 1852, was known as a fussbudget and had the nickname of 'Old Fuss and Feathers." I have not heard the nickname ascribed to any president.
George H. W. Bush, the 41st president of the United States, was given the nickname Poppy. This nickname was given to him after his son, 43rd US president George W. Bush, took office so that the two could be distinguished from one another.
Ulysses S. Grant was U.S. Grant- not exactly a nickname.
The former President of the United States, Bill Clinton, had the nickname 'Bubba'. The name is associated with people from the southern states of the US.
"Bubba" was the nickname for President Bill Clinton.