Yes, I dont totally agree with those rankings either. Historians have their own bias due to their
own political beliefs. I've read plenty about various presidents from biographies to specific historical
books.
Some of the presidents I think are ranked too high are FDR, Wilson and Jackson. I read a good
biography of Jackson earlier this year, American Lion, learned alot more about him and most of it I
didn't like. As for FDR, I can't stand the New Deal but I like, for the most part, how he handled WWII
before he died. Wilson? I'll get to him when I name my worst.
I'll go over some who I consider the best, then the worst.
Best:
George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson.
Our first 3 Presidents were among the best. I never thought much of Adams until I read his
biography by David McCullough and came away with a much greater admiration of the man,
especially his time as President. He was able to keep us out of a war with France despite
the efforts of so many who opposed it. History has become much kinder to him, and I loved
the HBO mini-series based on McCullough's book.
Abe Lincoln
I don't worship the ground he walks on like some people do, he wasn't perfect by a long shot.
Yet his love for his country, and his political skills, can't be denied.
Teddy Roosevelt
I don't agree with some of his progressive politics and policies, but he did alot of good things too.
All the jobs and adventures he had in his life have fascinated me since I was a teenager. Not many
presidents had the presence and speaking skills to rally the people behind him like he did.
Calvin Coolidge
The more I read about him, the more I like. He may be one of the best presidents no one knows about.
Like Harding he made the right decisions concerning the economy, The Roaring 20's, all the prosperity before
The Great Depression hit? That happened under his watch and he gets no credit for it. He supported civil rights for African Americans, gave US citizenship to Native Americans, he supported anti-lynching laws but Southern Democrats blocked it in Congress. I also loved how he handled the 1919 Boston Police Strike when he was Governor of Massachusetts. One of the best conservative presidents we ever had, and a favorite of Ronald Reagan. I need to get my hands on a good biography or two of him.
Harry Truman
Another President that I admire for many things, while disagreeing with others. Dropping the Atomic Bombs, his handling of the Soviet Union as the Cold War began, The Marshall Plan to name a few. He was a New Deal libreral, but he made many good decisions. Sadly his handiling of The Korean War wasn't one of them. David McCullough's biography of him is one of the best books I've ever read.
Ronald Reagan
I didn't apprecaite him the way I do now, while he was President I went from age 3 to 11. It wasn't until I became more conservative in my politics that I came to admire and apprecaite the things he did for this country. He made his share of mistakes too, like the Iran Contra Affair, but I still love the man.
Like Shemps, I've come to like McKinley alot more. I wonder if any good books have been written about him. I like Ike too. Harding wasn't that great a president, but he is not one of the worst. Shemps has already pointed out some
of the good things he did, yet he had multiple affairs on his wife (some which produced children). He may have cheated more than Bill Clinton did on Hillary. For a good read on him, Coolidge and the 20's check out the
book 1920: The Year of the Six Presidents.
The Worst:
James Buchanan
Jimmy Carter
Richard Nixon
Woodrow Wilson
Buchanan sat on his ass while the Civil War was coming to fruition. Carter and Nixon make me sick, hate the
damage they did to this country. But, I consider Wilson the worst offender of them all. Through his progressive political beliefs he enacted some of the worst policies ever, especially during WWI. He was a huge egomaniac who believed he was the smartest man in the room. Oh, and he was probably one of the most rascist men to ever sit in the Oval Office. And let's not forget the Treaty of Versailles and his prescious 14 Points either, he had a big hand in shaping that disaster that helped lay the groundwork for the rise of Hitler, the Nazi's and WWII. He would have tried to run for a 3rd term, but a huge stroke in 1919 left him crippled. Thankfully American finally rejected him and his policies by 1920.