A feature of celebrity magazines is the question “Who wore it best?” when two famous people are spotted wearing the same outfit. For this week’s presidential inauguration, the question that came to ...
Taft, Grover Cleveland (second inauguration), Ulysses S. Grant (second inauguration), Martin Van Buren, Andrew Jackson (second inauguration) and James Monroe (second inauguration). Aside from Trump ...
The coldest inauguration on record was President Ronald Reagan’s second swearing-in ceremony in January 1985, when the temperature was 7 degrees, followed by President Ulysses Grant’s ceremony ...
Unofficially, George Washington was sworn in in 1793 at an estimated 61 degrees. Coldest inauguration: Ronald Reagan's in 1985 at 7 degrees. Coldest March 4 inauguration was Ulysses S. Grant's in 1873 ...
Of these March 4 ceremonies, Woodrow Wilson’s first inauguration in 1913 was the warmest with a noon temperature of 55 degrees. Ulysses S. Grant’s second inauguration in 1873 was the coldest ...
Some other very cold Inaugurations occurred in 1961 for President Kennedy when it was only 22 degrees, for President Ulysses Grant in 1873, 16 degrees. The warmest presidential inauguration was fo ...
Expect Inauguration Day in Washington, D.C., to be abnormally cold and windy. Here’s what to know about the Inauguration Day ...
Some other very cold Inaugurations occurred in 1961 for President Kennedy when it was only 22 degrees and for President Ulysses Grant in 1873, 16 degrees. The wettest inauguration was in 1937 ...
Coldest inauguration: Ronald Reagan's in 1985 at 7 degrees. Coldest March 4 inauguration was Ulysses S. Grant's in 1873 at 4 ...
The second-coldest inauguration (other than 1985) was the second swearing-in of President Ulysses S. Grant on March 4, 1873. The low temperature that morning was a frigid 4 degrees, and the high ...