Marquette Warrior: Presidents Who Went Bankrupt

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Presidents Who Went Bankrupt

From CNN:
1. Abraham Lincoln

His face may now appear on the penny, but at one time, Lincoln didn’t have a single cent to spare. Lincoln tried many occupations as a young man, including buying a general store in New Salem, Illinois, in 1832.

While he may have been terrific at splitting rails, winning debates, and wearing stovepipe hats, Honest Abe wasn’t much of a shopkeeper. Lincoln and his partner started buying out other stores’ inventories on credit, but their own sales were dismal.

As the store’s debts mounted, Lincoln sold his share, but when his partner died, the future President became liable for $1,000 in back payments. Lincoln didn’t have modern bankruptcy laws to protect him, so when his creditors took him to court, he lost his two remaining assets: a horse and some surveying gear. That wasn’t enough to foot his bill, though, and Lincoln continued paying off his debts until well into the

Lincoln’s not alone in the annals of bankrupt commanders-in-chief, though. Ulysses S. Grant went bankrupt after leaving office when a partner in an investment-banking venture swindled him.

Thomas Jefferson filed for bankruptcy several times, including after leaving office, possibly because he threw around a lot of cash on food and wine.

William McKinley went bankrupt while serving as Ohio’s governor in 1893; he was $130,000 in the red before eventually straightening out with the help of friends. He won the White House just three years later.
This, of couse, has nothing to do with the financial troubles of Christine O’Donnell.

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2 Comments:

Anonymous Chris said...

Chris Coons might just be the luckiest politician in U.S. history.

12:13 PM  
Anonymous Hipolito Mose said...

There's something slightly comforting about knowing that some of the leaders of the free world have had their pitfalls as well, and that they're not completely infallible. Since Lincoln and McKinley were able to rise above their bankruptcy issue, so it doesn't do much to sabotage the image we have of them. If anything, it makes them even more admirable. Bankruptcy can be difficult from the inside, shameful from the outside, but the important thing is that it doesn't keep you down.

10:18 AM  

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