ok, so if i do recall correstly, the first president to ride in a car at an inaugural parade was president Abraham Lincoln. Hope i helped!!!
The first, and only, President of the Confederate States of America was Jefferson Davis. Jefferson Davis was the first and only president of the confederacy.
Franklin Roosevelt was the first president to take office on the inaugural date specified by the Twentieth Amendment.
President William Henry Harrison delivered history's longest inaugural address, a nearly two-hour, 8,445-word speech in the face of an icy wind, without hat or overcoat. Harrison died of pneumonia less than two months later.
ThomasThomas
THOMAS JEFFERSON
president Tomas Jefferson
A speech by the president on his or her first day of office
Thomas Jefferson was the first and probably only president to walk to and from his inauguration.
Well, it MIGHT have been Thomas Jefferson? He was also the only president to walk to and from his inaugural, and the first president to be inaugurated at the Capitol. :)
George W. Bush (the second one)
President Franklin D. Roosevelt's first inaugural address does not have a specific name, yet a specific famous reference to the speech contained, "the only thing we have to fear... is fear itself."
Jefferson Davis delivered his first and only Inaugural Address on February 18, 1861.
He was the first president to die while in office. He caught pneumonia after giving his inaugural speech and died a month later.
Lincoln was elected two times. He gave his first inaugural speech, the first time he was inaugurated in 1861, his second the second time he was inaugurated, for his second term in 1865.
In his first inaugural address, Jefferson stressed his desire to minimize the difference between Federalists and Republicans. During his presidency, Jefferson actually escalated conflicts between his opponents and himself.
Thomas Jefferson, during his second inauguration was the first president to have a procession down Pennsylvania Avenue. Washington and John Adams did not have an inaugural procession down Pennsylvania Avenue.