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or had the least impact on the US and why? This isn't a homework question, more like I'm seeking we'll thought out opinions. Thanks, Holly

2007-01-17 14:06:15 · 13 answers · asked by Holly R 6 in Arts & Humanities History

13 answers

First a couple of corrections. Danny, Fillmore was not the eighth president; Van Buren was the eighth and Fillmore the 13th. And PDY, it is not Benjamin Harrison; rather it is William Henry Harrison, who died in office.

I'd answer that James Buchanan was least effective as he was powerless to do anything to prevent the Civil War.

2007-01-18 00:15:58 · answer #1 · answered by beware_the_monkey 2 · 0 0

Two parts to your question:

Least impact: William Henry Harrison (30 days doesn't leave much to posterity)

Least effective: This is harder as this could mean ''Which president- while in office, was the least effective''. It means that while he did serve, the impact was (at best) forgettable, at worse done by an incompetent. In this case, I vote for Warren G. Harding. Warren G. Harding was inaugurated as the 29th President of the United States on March 4, 1921. The details upon his presidency are indicated below.

2007-01-17 15:10:40 · answer #2 · answered by Carl 3 · 0 0

Most likely William Henry Harrison. He died after about 30 days in office.

2007-01-17 17:48:48 · answer #3 · answered by Marce 2 · 1 0

least impact would be william henry harrison 30 days in office
least effect james buchanan could have done something to limit the anger between the states which led to the civil war

2007-01-17 16:31:31 · answer #4 · answered by gbulldogs88 3 · 1 0

Note to Dan C above: It was BENJAMIN Harrison. Anyway, I would say that most of the presidents from about 1875 (after southern reconstruction, radical and otherwise) until about 1901, (when Teddy Roosevelt came on the scene), were pretty ineffective. We had serious economic problems, children starving in the streets, etc, and presidents who sympathized but felt it wasn't the government's job to interfere with such things.
Disturbing but true.

2007-01-17 14:27:13 · answer #5 · answered by PDY 5 · 1 1

George W. Bush's presidency seems headed for gigantic historic shame. Barring a cataclysmic experience on the order of the terrorist assaults of September 11th, and then the conventional public might rally around the White homestead as quickly as lower back, there seems to be little the administration can do to keep away from being ranked on the backside tier of U.S. presidents. And that would desire to be the terrific-case project. Many historians are actually questioning notwithstanding if Bush, if certainty be told, would be remembered because of the fact the very worst president in all of yankee historic previous. George W. Bush is in severe opposition for the identify of worst ever. In early 2004, an casual survey of 415 historians carried out by the nonpartisan historic previous information community chanced on that 80-one p.c. seen the Bush administration a "failure." between people who referred to as Bush a fulfillment, many gave the president severe marks purely for his skill to mobilize public help and get Congress to circulate alongside with what one historian referred to as the administration's "pursuit of disastrous policies." if certainty be told, extra or less one in ten of people who referred to as Bush a fulfillment replace into being facetious, score him purely because of the fact the terrific president because of the fact invoice Clinton -- a class wherein Bush is the only contestant.

2016-10-07 08:00:20 · answer #6 · answered by regula 4 · 0 0

I would say our eighth President, Millard Fillmore. While a good man, he was beset with difficulties, including opposition from within his own party as well as from his opponents and trouble with foreign and domestic issues which he was unable or unwilling to resolve (including the Amistad incident and the Missourian "Extermination Order". He has declined into obscurity for most Americans today.

2007-01-17 16:29:20 · answer #7 · answered by Danny Malone 2 · 1 0

First would be William Henry Harrison because of his short span in office. Second would be Andrew Johnson

2007-01-17 19:39:55 · answer #8 · answered by Bobette 2 · 1 0

Probably William Henry Harrison, considering he was only in office 30 days before he died.

2007-01-17 14:12:22 · answer #9 · answered by Dale S. 2 · 3 0

Probably Henry Harrison (shortest term) followed by James Garfield (second shortest term)... both died in office... Harrison of natural causes and Garfield assassinated !

2007-01-17 14:17:15 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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