Pets
Nicknames
Deaths
Jobs
Miscellaneous
100

Kept two Portuguese Water Dogs, Bo and Sunny, chosen because the breed is hypoallergenic.

Barack Obama (#44)

100

Old Hickory

Andrew Jackson (#7)

100

The first president to assassinated.

 Abraham Lincoln (#16)

100

Reality TV show host

 Donald Trump (#45)

100

Shortest President at 5’4”

James Madison (#4)

200

A tuxedo cat who was a media sensation and the first presidential pet to have his own website.

Bill Clinton (#42)

200

His Rotundity

John Adams (#2)

200

The last president to be assassinated.

John F. Kennedy (#35)

200

Peanut Farmer

Jimmy Carter (#39)

200

The two former presidents who died on the same day. Bonus Points if you can name the exact date.

John Adams (#2) and Thomas Jefferson (#3) on July 4, 1826

300

DAILY DOUBLE

Owned an alligator, which he kept in the White House bathtub.

John Quincy Adams (#6)

300

His Accidency

John Tyler (#10)

300

The two presidents to die IN the White House.

William Henry Harrison (#9) and Zachary Taylor (#12)

300

Hat Maker  

Harry S. Truman (#33)

300

Worked to save football from being banned in the United States.

Theodore Roosevelt (#26)

400

An Airedale Terrier who was the first White House pet to receive regular newspaper coverage and even had his own birthday parties.

Warren G. Harding (#29)

400

The Gipper

Ronald Reagan (#40)

400

The president shot by Charles Julius Guiteau in 1901.

James A Garfield (#20)

400

Male model

Gerald Ford (#38)

400

Slept up to 11 hours a day and always took an afternoon nap lasting at least 1-2 hours.  

Calvin Coolidge (#30)

500

A flock of up to 48 sheep grazed on the White House lawn during World War 1.

Woodrow Wilson (#28)

500

Old Kinderhook (OK)

Martin VanBuren (#8)

500

Assassinated by anarchist Leon Czolgosz on September 6, 1901, at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York.

William McKinley (#25)

500

DAILY DOUBLE

Geologist

Herbert Hoover (#31)

500

Which future president, (besides George Washington) is featured in Emanuel Leutze's painting, Washington Crossing the Delaware.

James Monroe (#5)