No-one. The post became vacant when the then vice president, Lyndon B. Johnson, was sworn in as president the day after the assassination of Kennedy. The post was left vacant until the inauguration of Johnson 14 months later. Then, in January 1965, Hubert Humphrey became vice president.
Thurgood Marshall Retired from his job in 1991.
Andrew Johnson was the US President after Abraham Lincoln.Andrew Johnson was the 17th President of the United States from April 15, 1865 to March 4, 1869. The vice president for Lincoln's second term, Andrew Johnson replaced Hannibal Hamlin as Vice President and became president after Lincoln was assassinated, sworn in three hours after Lincoln died in 1865. Andrew Johnson was the governor of Tennessee and one of the few Southern Senators to stay loyal to the Union during the Civil War. Johnson was elected to be Lincoln's running-mate for the 1864 election.
If you're referring to Lincoln cents with a simple portrait of Kennedy carved into it, they're not valuable at all. They're a novelty not produced by the US Mint, and are only worth as much as someone might be willing to pay. Besides, being that Kennedy wasn't President until 1961 and died in '63, he of course wouldn't have been on any earlier coins anyway.
There have been 14 US Vice Presidents who became President, either by election or succession to the office. All but one of those elected did so as sitting Vice President (Nixon was not). All but one of those succeeding did so on the death of the President (Ford did not).By Vice Presidential sequence (chronological) order:1 - John Adams (elected) 2nd president2 - Thomas Jefferson (elected) 3rd President8 - Martin Van Buren (elected) 8th President10 - John Tyler (succeeded William Henry Harrison) 10th President12 - Millard Fillmore (succeeded Zachary Taylor) 13th President16 - Andrew Johnson (succeeded Abraham Lincoln) 17th President20 - Chester A. Arthur (succeeded James Garfield) 21st President25 - Theodore Roosevelt (succeeded William McKinley) 26th President29 - Calvin Coolidge (succeeded Warren G. Harding) 30th President34 - Harry S. Truman (succeeded Franklin D. Roosevelt) 33rd President36 - Richard M. Nixon (elected) 37th President *196837 - Lyndon B. Johnson (succeeded John F. Kennedy) 36th President40 - Gerald R. Ford (succeeded due to resignation of Richard Nixon) 38th President43 - George H.W. Bush (elected) 41st PresidentPARTY CHRONOLOGICAL ORDERFederalist- John AdamsDemocratic-Republican-Thomas JeffersonDemocratic- Martin Van Buren- Harry S. Truman- Lyndon B. JohnsonWar Union- Andrew JohnsonRepublican- Theodore Roosevelt- Calvin Coolidge- Richard M. Nixon- Gerald R. Ford- George H.W. Bush
Abraham Lincoln was assassinated James Garfield was assassinated William McKinley was assassinated Franklin D. Roosevelt died suddenly in the midst of his 4th term John F. Kennedy was assassinated Richard Nixon resigned (before he was going to be impeached)
Lyndon B Johnson was the successor of President John F Kennedy.
Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson was in the same motorcade as President Kennedy in Dallas, Texas. Johnson was two cars back in the motorcade.
Lyndon Baines Johnson was the US President after John Fitzgerald Kennedy.Lyndon B. Johnson was the 36th President of the United States from 1963 November 22 to 1969 January 20. He was originally John F. Kennedy's Vice President and assumed the presidency after Kennedy's assassination in 1963.
no
Lyndon Johnson was the vice-president when Kennedy died. Johnson was sworn in as President while sitting in Air Force One the day Kennedy died.
Vice-President Lyndon B. Johnson became president when Kennedy died.
Londyn B johnson became the 36th pesedent of the U.S upon the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
Lyndon B. Johnson, the vice-president at the time, took the presidential oath just hours after JFK was assassinated on November 22, 1963.
John Fitzgerald Kennedy was 46 when he was assassinated.
He died on April 41968 at 6:01 pm at the loraine motel Memphis Tennessee
Lyndon B. Johnson died on January 22, 1973 at the age of 64.
Lyndon Johnson