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What Every President Did After Leaving the White House

What Every President Did After Leaving the White House

Long before the presidential election, President Donald Trump said he would “do other things” if he lost. The real estate mogul and former reality TV star has plenty of options. But what does a person do after holding the most powerful government office in the world? 

To find an answer to that question, 24/7 Tempo reviewed information on all U.S. presidents from the Miller Center at the University of Virginia, the White House, and the History Channel.

Typical post-presidency occupations have changed significantly over the years. The first heads of state largely resumed their lives from before they moved to the White House. At least 12 presidents owned slaves and four returned to their plantations after leaving office. Others went back to practicing law. Several could not stay out of politics with two former presidents successfully running for Congress.

Former presidents in recent history have spent the immediate years after leaving the nation’s highest office writing memoirs, keeping lucrative speaking schedules, serving on boards of corporations, and overseeing the establishment of their presidential library.

There are also those presidents who stay out of the public view entirely. Many contemporary commanders in chief also earned extravagant wealth. Here is the net worth of every American president from Washington to Trump.

Source: Hulton Archive / Getty Images

George Washington
> Presidential term: 1789-1797
> Occupation after leaving office: Plantation owner

Though highly admired, George Washington declined to serve a third term as president and retired to his plantation in Virginia. The estate, known as Mount Vernon, had been neglected while Washington was in office. Washington spent the last two years of his life trying to make it productive.

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

John Adams
> Presidential term: 1797-1801
> Occupation after leaving office: Writer

John Adams became a prolific writer in his retirement. He spent about 25 years after leaving office writing columns, books, and letters. He mostly stayed in his home in Quincy, Massachusetts.

Source: National Archives / Getty Images

Thomas Jefferson
> Presidential term: 1801-1809
> Occupation after leaving office: Educator

Thomas Jefferson spent most of his retirement doing scientific experiments and research. He also at that time founded the University of Virginia. He not only designed the campus, but played a major role in setting up its curriculum, making sure the college had no religious affiliation.

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

James Madison
> Presidential term: 1809-1817
> Occupation after leaving office: Rector of the University of Virginia

After leaving the White House, James Madison retired to his plantation in Virginia and remained active in many civic causes. In 1826, the former president became rector of the University of Virginia.

Source: Billy Hathorn / Wikimedia Commons

James Monroe
> Presidential term: 1817-1825
> Occupation after leaving office: Served on the Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia

Immediately after leaving office, James Monroe worked towards paying off his huge financial debt accumulated while in office. Later, Monroe served on the Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia and presided over a new constitution of the state of Virginia in 1829.

Source: cassowaryprods / Flickr

John Quincy Adams
> Presidential term: 1825-1829
> Occupation after leaving office: Congressman from Massachusetts

A year after he left the White House, John Quincy Adams was elected to the House of Representatives. The former president remained a leading congressman for the rest of his life. His nickname was “Old Man Eloquent” because of his support of freedom of speech, universal education, and his anti-slavery stance.

Source: Hulton Archive / Getty Images

Andrew Jackson
> Presidential term: 1829-1837
> Occupation after leaving office: Political activist

Andrew Jackson was a symbol of democracy. He had many admirers whom he was glad to see in his plantation, The Hermitage, near Nashville, Tennessee. Jackson informally advised Martin Van Buren while he was in office and campaigned for the annexation of Texas.

Source: Hulton Archive / Getty Images

Martin Van Buren
> Presidential term: 1837-1841
> Occupation after leaving office: Anti-slavery activist

Martin Van Buren, the first president to be born a U.S. citizen and not a British subject, tried to win the Democratic presidential nomination four years after losing the White House, but he failed again. After that, he retired, worked on his memoirs and continued to argue against a pro-southern faction within the Democratic Party and slavery.

Source: Derek Jensen (Tysto) / Wikimedia Commons

William Henry Harrison
> Presidential term: 1841-1841
> Occupation after leaving office: Died in office

William Henry Harrison served as president for barely a month. His inaugural address, the longest in history, was given in very cold weather. Harrison was not wearing a coat. He fell sick and died from pneumonia four weeks later.

Source: iip-photo-archive / Flickr

John Tyler
> Presidential term: 1841-1845
> Occupation after leaving office: Plantation owner

After leaving the White House, John Tyler retired at his plantation in Virginia. He voted in favor of Virginia seceding from the United States and was elected to the Confederate House of Representatives, but he died before his term was supposed to start.

Source: National Archives / Getty Images

James K. Polk
> Presidential term: 1845-1849
> Occupation after leaving office: Died soon after leaving office

James K. Polk died about four months after leaving the White House.

Source: National Archives / Getty Images

Zachary Taylor
> Presidential term: 1849-1850
> Occupation after leaving office: Died in office

Zachary Taylor became the second president to die while in office (after William Henry Harrison). He served for 16 months.

Source: iip-photo-archive / Flickr

Millard Fillmore
> Presidential term: 1850-1853
> Occupation after leaving office: Activist

Three years after leaving the White House, in 1856, Millard Fillmore was nominated by the anti-immigrant (and strangely-named) Know-Nothing Party for president. He finished third. After that he retired in Buffalo, New York, keeping busy with several causes and charities.

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Franklin Pierce
> Presidential term: 1853-1857
> Occupation after leaving office: Quiet retirement

Franklin Pierce became a recluse after leaving the White House. He retired in New Hampshire and remained out of public view.

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

James Buchanan
> Presidential term: 1857-1861
> Occupation after leaving office: Writer

James Buchanan was largely blamed for the Civil War. After leaving office, he wrote a book explaining his side of the story. After that, he remained out of public view.

Source: Hulton Archive / Getty Images

Abraham Lincoln
> Presidential term: 1861-1865
> Occupation after leaving office: Assassinated while in office

Abraham Lincoln was assassinated by a Confederate sympathizer on April 14, 1865 while still in office.

Source: 37467370@N08 / Flickr

Andrew Johnson
> Presidential term: 1865-1869
> Occupation after leaving office: Senator

After leaving the White House, Andrew Johnson unsuccessfully ran for Congress twice before becoming a senator in 1875.

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Ulysses S. Grant
> Presidential term: 1869-1877
> Occupation after leaving office: Traveler and writer

Ulysses S. Grant traveled around the world for two years after leaving the White House. Following the collapse of his son’s financial firm, in which Grant had invested, the former president decided to write his memoirs to earn money.

Source: National Archives / Newsmakers / Getty Images

Rutherford B. Hayes
> Presidential term: 1877-1881
> Occupation after leaving office: Social activist

Rutherford B. Hayes retired in Fremont, Ohio, from where he worked to promote social causes, education, and prison reform. He was a major contributor to two education funds benefiting students in the South.

Source: johnsnape / Flickr

James Garfield
> Presidential term: 1881-1881
> Occupation after leaving office: Assassinated while in office

James Garfield was shot by a disgruntled lawyer who sought to be appointed to a job in the Department of State. The president suffered for three months from his wound. He died from an infection on Sept. 19, 1881.

Source: National Archives / Getty Images

Chester A. Arthur
> Presidential term: 1881-1885
> Occupation after leaving office: Lawyer

After leaving the White House, Chester A. Arthur moved to New York to resume his career as a lawyer. He died about a year and a half later.

Source: iip-photo-archive / Flickr

Grover Cleveland
> Presidential term: 1885-1889 and 1893-1897
> Occupation after leaving office: Trustee of Princeton University

Grover Cleveland retired from politics to his home in Princeton, New Jersey. There he served as a trustee of Princeton University from 1901 until his death in 1908.

Source: Wikimedia Commons

Benjamin Harrison
> Presidential term: 1889-1893
> Occupation after leaving office: Lawyer

Benjamin Harrison moved back to Indianapolis where he practiced law. He was a respected public speaker and the leading counsel for Venezuela in its legal dispute over boundaries with Great Britain.

Source: politicalgraveyard / Flickr

William McKinley
> Presidential term: 1897-1901
> Occupation after leaving office: Assassinated while in office

McKinley died eight days after being shot by an anarchist who claimed the president was the “enemy of the people.”

Source: Topical Press Agency / Getty Images

Theodore Roosevelt
> Presidential term: 1901-1909
> Occupation after leaving office: Writer

After leaving the White House, Theodore Roosevelt went on an expedition exploring the Amazon region. After returning to the United States, the former president spent his time writing scientific essays and history books.

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

William Howard Taft
> Presidential term: 1909-1913
> Occupation after leaving office: Chief justice of the Supreme Court

Before being appointed chief justice of the United States by President Warren Harding, a position in which he remained almost until his death, William Howard Taft was teaching constitutional law at Yale University.

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Woodrow Wilson
> Presidential term: 1913-1921
> Occupation after leaving office: Out of public view

Woodrow Wilson stayed out of public view after leaving the White House. He had suffered a stroke two years before the end of his second term. The stroke left him almost blind and partially paralyzed.

Source: Hulton Archive / Archive Photos via Getty Images

Warren G. Harding
> Presidential term: 1921-1923
> Occupation after leaving office: Died in office

Warren G. Harding died from what is believed to be a heart attack on Aug. 2, 1923, while still in office.

Source: Hulton Archive / Getty Images

Calvin Coolidge
> Presidential term: 1923-1929
> Occupation after leaving office: Writer

After leaving the White House, Calvin Coolidge retired to Northampton, Massachusetts, where he spent most of his time working on his memoirs. He also contributed to political magazines.

Source: Topical Press Agency / Getty Images

Herbert Hoover
> Presidential term: 1929-1933
> Occupation after leaving office: Political commentator, served on Hoover Commission

Herbert Hoover was an active political commentator after his presidential term. He was a vocal critic of FDR’s New Deal programs, writing many articles and books arguing against the federal government having too much power. He served on several congressional commissions, including the Hoover Commission, or Commission on the Organization of the Executive Branch of Government.

Source: Central Press / Getty Images

Franklin D. Roosevelt
> Presidential term: 1933-1945
> Occupation after leaving office: Died in office

Franklin D. Rosevelt died in office on April 12, 1945 from a massive cerebral hemorrhage.

Source: Hulton Archive / Getty Images

Harry S. Truman
> Presidential term: 1945-1953
> Occupation after leaving office: Writer, political commentator

After leaving the White House, Harry S. Truman retired to Independence, Missouri. He spent most of his time meeting with friends and important guests, commenting on political events, and working on his legacy by overseeing the construction of the Truman presidential library.

Source: Moore / Getty Images

Dwight D. Eisenhower
> Presidential term: 1953-1961
> Occupation after leaving office: Writer

Eisenhower retired to his farm in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, where he worked on his memoirs. He often consulted with President Lyndon B. Johnson. He also wrote a bestseller, “At Ease: Stories I Tell to Friends.”

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

John F. Kennedy
> Presidential term: 1961-1963
> Occupation after leaving office: Assassinated while in office

John F. Kennedy was assassinated while in office. Kennedy was shot on Nov. 22, 1963 in Dallas, Texas, as the presidential motorcade was passing through downtown.

Source: Keystone / Getty Images

Lyndon B. Johnson
> Presidential term: 1963-1969
> Occupation after leaving office: Investor, writer

Lyndon B. Johnson retired to his Texas ranch — now a National Historical Park — where he spent most of his time working on developing his presidential library at the University of Texas in Austin. Johnson also spent his time writing his memoirs.

Source: Hulton Archive / Archive Photos via Getty Images

Richard M. Nixon
> Presidential term: 1969-1974
> Occupation after leaving office: Public speaker, writer

After resigning from office, Richard M. Nixon moved to San Clemente, California. He first wrote a memoir and gave paid public speeches as a way to pay off his considerable debt, which had accumulated to pay for legal expenses in the Watergate scandal. After that, he worked on restoring his reputation by giving speeches around the world and writing books.

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Gerald R. Ford
> Presidential term: 1974-1977
> Occupation after leaving office: Public speaker

Gerald R. Ford occupied himself in retirement by giving speeches and serving on the board or several large corporations. He also spent much of his time golfing and skiing.

Source: Central Press / Getty Images

James Carter
> Presidential term: 1977-1981
> Occupation after leaving office: Writer, activist

At 96, Jimmy Carter is the oldest living president. He is also currently living the longest post-presidency life — 39 years and counting. After leaving the White House, Carter established a nonprofit organization, wrote books, and continued diplomatic activities around the world. He serves as University Distinguished Professor at Emory.

Source: pingnews / Flickr

Ronald Reagan
> Presidential term: 1981-1989
> Occupation after leaving office: Out of public view

Ronald Reagan moved to Los Angeles after leaving the White House. There he worked on the Reagan presidential library, which opened in Simi Valley in 1991. Three years later, he announced he had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and remained largely out of public view until his deaths in 2004.

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

George H. W. Bush
> Presidential term: 1989-1993
> Occupation after leaving office: Member of several boards

George H. W. Bush returned to his home in Houston, Texas, after leaving the presidency. He remained active by serving on various boards of companies and a local hospital as well as volunteering at a local church. He also worked on his presidential library, which opened at the Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas.

Source: Mark Lyons / Hulton Archive via Getty Images

William J. Clinton
> Presidential term: 1993-2001
> Occupation after leaving office: Public speaker, political analyst

Bill Clinton has stayed active in public life giving paid speeches and through his William J. Clinton Foundation, the goal of which is to fight AIDS and help poor people. After leaving the White House, he wrote a memoir and oversaw the establishment of his presidential library in Little Rock, Arkansas.

Source: Pool / Getty Images

George W. Bush
> Presidential term: 2001-2009
> Occupation after leaving office: Amateur painter

George W. Bush has not been very politically active after leaving the White House. He occasionally gave paid speeches and has become an amateur painter.

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Barack Obama
> Presidential term: 2009-2017
> Occupation after leaving office: Public speaker

With the exception of a few policy-related pronouncements and supporting Joe Biden in his bid for president, Obama has remained mostly out of America’s political life. He has spent his time after leaving office writing a memoir, traveling, and giving paid public speeches.

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