Spirea - mid-February - PL
Valentine’s and President’s Day. Thanks to Arkansas
Living and Parade Magazine, this column was a snap to compose, er transcribe.
*Women purchase 85 % of Valentine’s Day cards, says
the Greeting Card Association.
*Valentine’s Day is the second most popular holiday
for sending cards. About one billion cards are exchanged each February 14.
*Esther A. Howland—the “Mother of the Valentine,”
popularized mass produced valentines in America in the 1840s.
Kenneth C. Davis, author of Don’t Know Much about
the American Presidents offered this trivia feature, “Take the Oath of Office
Quiz” in Parade. Answers at the end of the column.
1. In which city did the first inauguration take
place? a. Richmond, VA; b. New York City; c. Philadelphia
2. Which president gave the longest Inaugural
Address? a. B. Clinton; b. G. Washington; c. Wm. Henry Harrison
3. Who was the only president to take the oath of
office from a woman? a. L. Johnson; b. R. Reagan; c. Geo. H. W. Bush
4. African-American soldiers first marched in whose
inauguration parade? a. A. Lincoln’s; b. U. S. Grant’s; c. T. Roosevelt’s
5. Which chief justice administered the most presidential
oaths? a. John Jay; b. John Marshall; c. Earl Warren
6. Inauguration Day was officially changed from March
4 to January 20 thanks to the passage of the 20th Amendment in 1933.
Why? a. It often rained on March 4; b. Congress did not want the inauguration
to fall during Lent; c. The transition period between the election and the
inauguration of the president-elect was deemed too long.
7. Which president tossed the Super Bowl coin the
same day as his swearing-in? a. R. Nixon; b. G. Ford; c. R. Reagan
8. Which president administered the oath of office to
two of his successors? a. G. Washington; b. J. Q. Adams; c. Wm. H. Taft
9. Who was sworn in on a Bible written in a modern
foreign language? a. T. Jefferson; b. F. D. Roosevelt; c. J. F. Kennedy
10.
Which president was given the oath of office by his own father? a. J. Q. Adams;
b. C. Coolidge; c. Geo. W. Bush
Have
you picked your answers? There may not be room for all the discussion Mr. Davis
supplied. You can find the rest online.
1. b.
NYC was the temporary capital of the US when Washington took the oath on April
30, 1789.
2. c.
Harrison’s speech in 1841 was more than 8,000 words long & took nearly 2
hours to deliver.
3. a. After JFK’s assassination, Johnson was sworn in
aboard Air Force One by Sarah T. Hughes, a US district judge.
4. a. At Lincoln’s 2nd inauguration (1865),
four companies of African-American troops, plus lodges of Masons and Odd
Fellows joined the procession to the Capitol.
5. b. Marshall administered the oath 9 times, from
Jefferson’s first inauguration (1801) to Andrew Jackson’s second (1833).
6. c. The old March 4 inaugural date had been
selected when travel and communications were much slower and when the “lame
duck” period for the outgoing president rarely caused problems.
7. c. On Jan. 20, 1985, Reagan took
the oath privately in the Entrance Hall at the White House, and later went to
the Map Room to flip the coin on live television via satellite. (The 49ers won
the toss, and the game.)
8. c. Taft was appointed chief justice in 1921—eight
years after his presidency--and administered the oath of office to both
Coolidge (1925) and Hoover (1929).
9. b. Roosevelt used an old family Bible written in
Dutch at all four of his inaugurations.
10. b. Coolidge was sworn in by his father, a justice
of the peace, at the family homestead in rural Vermont on Aug. 3, 1923.
Happy February Holidays.
1 comment:
When I read this, I was reminded of what a collector of facts you are. Thanks for teaching me some new ones.
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