Poll

Select president

George Washington
9 (7.1%)
John Adams
2 (1.6%)
Thomas Jefferson
0 (0%)
James Madison
0 (0%)
James Monroe
0 (0%)
John Quincy Adams
0 (0%)
Andrew Jackson
0 (0%)
Martin Van Buren
2 (1.6%)
William Henry Harrison
3 (2.4%)
John Tyler
0 (0%)
James K. Polk
0 (0%)
Zachary Taylor
0 (0%)
Millard Fillmore
0 (0%)
Franklin Pierce
0 (0%)
James Buchanan
1 (0.8%)
Abraham Lincoln
9 (7.1%)
Andrew Johnson
1 (0.8%)
Ulysses S. Grant
0 (0%)
Rutherford B. Hayes
0 (0%)
James Garfield
0 (0%)
Chester A. Arthur
1 (0.8%)
Grover Cleveland
0 (0%)
Benjamin Harrison
0 (0%)
Grover Cleveland
0 (0%)
William McKinley
0 (0%)
Theodore Roosevelt
8 (6.3%)
William Howard Taft
1 (0.8%)
Woodrow Wilson
1 (0.8%)
Warren G. Harding
1 (0.8%)
Calvin Coolidge
1 (0.8%)
Herbert Hoover
0 (0%)
Franklin D. Roosevelt
7 (5.5%)
Harry S. Truman
1 (0.8%)
Dwight D. Eisenhower
1 (0.8%)
John F. Kennedy
36 (28.3%)
Lyndon B. Johnson
2 (1.6%)
Richard M. Nixon
2 (1.6%)
Gerald R. Ford
0 (0%)
James Carter
0 (0%)
Ronald Reagan
9 (7.1%)
George H. W. Bush
1 (0.8%)
William J. Clinton
8 (6.3%)
George W. Bush
9 (7.1%)
Barack Obama
11 (8.7%)

Total Members Voted: 127

Voting closed: February 17, 2015, 08:52:29 AM

Author Topic: PRESIDENTS DAY THREAD: Who is best president?  (Read 4681 times)

since when are we able to remove votes?



This is some crazy stuff right here

since when are we able to remove votes?

I think you can choose if votes can be removed or not at the poll settings

Where is Benjamin Franklin? If you believed me, you lost 15 points

Where is Benjamin Franklin? If you believed me, you lost 15 points
I lose 15 points for thinking you were serious.

Remember people poll closes at the end of president's day so vote now

calvin coolidge best president

Obviously Gerald Ford was the best

William Henry Harrison is the best president:
Quote from: wikiped simplifed
     When Harrison came to Washington, he wanted to show that he was badass. He took the oath of office on March 4, 1841, a cold and wet day. He wore neither an overcoat nor hat, rode on horseback to the ceremony rather than in the closed carriage that had been offered him.
     The dude delivered the longest inaugural address in American history. At 8,445 words, it took him nearly two hours to read.

As a result of this he died in 30 days after his inauguration.