Gather general pointers on mapping out a family tree, and continue on to complete expansions of presidents and their First Ladies to determine if relationships exist.
Locate parks open to citizen visits in spots such as Kentucky, Arkansas, and Indiana. Learn how Presidents' Day was conceived to honor all presidents, in 1968-1971.
Lists trivia facts about United States presidents including Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and George Washington.
Sift through a multimedia selection catering to high school students, with textual outlines, photos of 20th Century leaders, and recommended books and videos.
Access thematic guidance on White House history, presidential roles, and voting, to incorporate into history lesson plans. Locate a photo ID game for memorization.
Official capitol visitor's guide attempts to capture the character and legend of America's leaders. Scan chronological and alphabetical bios, and locate local memorials.
Play a game involving United States Presidents or famous scientists and mathematicians. Provides portraits and a collection of facts and trivia.
Access nationally-sponsored and history buff page contributed from by university departments, White House official representatives, and the Internet Public Library.
43 pages constitute this volume of famous quotes tied in with biographies for each president. View portraits of each man, his vice-president, and First Lady.
Mini-bios for presidents in four time periods include birthplace notes and notable accomplishments during office. Sort by party, birth state, or vice-president pairing.
Find a directory of US presidents. Click on a president's name to find copies of speeches and links to other resources.
Read an article by Borgna Brunner and find out which President was the only bachelor, which never attended college, and where the term "First Lady" originated.
Children can work through the periphery of presidential education via these features on known hobbies, pets, and nicknames for top U.S. executive officers.
Find links to document archives, or browse the directory of presidents. Supplies a short list of links for each president.
Furnishes a guide to presidential parks, historic sites and museums entrusted to the preservation of presidential documents and history.
Historical coverage of speeches, inaugural day events, and candidate photographs comprises this piece of the national multimedia memorial collection.
Study this encyclopedic profile of the executive position to learn about its election processes, authorities, history, and sub-departments.
Use this collection to visit homepages for presidential memorials and birthplace landmarks, including Mount Vernon, Sherwood Forest, and The Herbert Hoover Library.
Educational support organization reviews 20 texts on presidential history, noting elementary or secondary student age range, and coverage of events, trends, and policy.
Interactive art project provides an interesting and often wry glimpse of the individual presidents. Includes a rendering on playing cards.
Quiz and trivia enthusiasts can reference obscure facts on international relations, personal styles and tastes, and office terms, listed individually by president.
Professor Bookworm teaches kids trivia facts about Presidents of the United States. Answer the questions and find a related art project for a classroom.
Worksheets, flash cards, maps, and activities help educators instill social science knowledge. Filter specific pages listing teaching resources on Washington and Lincoln.
Web-based special exhibit details the evolution of governmental roles and limits of power, campaign process, and career paths of previous inaugurates.
One-paragraph biographies pair with National Collection portraits for each officer since Washington. Listings offer follow-up links to museums, and personal dedications.
Read lists of U.S. presidents sorted by birthplace, religion, military experience, electoral events, and party affiliation.
Resource devoted to the history of the United States features a collection of detailed biographies of each US president listed by term year.
Read a collection of little known facts about past American presidents including George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, and Bill Clinton.