Special Report

A Quick Family History of Every US President

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

During presidential elections the spotlight often turns to the life and background of candidates who may be the next occupants of the White House. That very often includes an interest in their family history. In 2020, for example, the ancestry of Elizabeth Warren and whether her family had Native American heritage has sparked much debate.

24/7 Tempo reviewed several sources, including academic papers and the White House’s website to find out more about every president’s ancestral background. Our list is composed of all presidents and the heritage line or two that are most verifiable. Some American presidents’ family trees are widely documented, like John F. Kennedy’s Irish roots. Others are lesser known and, in a few cases, hard to prove.

Of the 44 men who have become president of the United States, 17 are generally accepted as being of Ulster-Scots ancestry. Ulster-Scots are people who migrated from the Lowlands of Scotland to Ulster in the northern part of Ireland starting in the early 1600s.

Many of the early U.S. presidents were of English descent, with family roots in Virginia. Martin Van Buren, the eighth president of the U.S. who served 1837-1841, was the first American head of state with no direct British heritage. Both of his parents were of Dutch descent. Later presidents’ heritage can often be traced to distant relatives from several European countries, including Germany.

Click here to see every president’s heritage.

Hulton Archive / Getty Images

George Washington
> Heritage: English
> Birthplace Westmoreland County, Virginia
> Time in office: 1789-1797

Many of the first president’s ancestors are from England. George Washington’s great-grandfather, John Washington, who was born in England, relocated to the Colony of Virginia in 1656 or 1657 after the death of his father.

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Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

John Adams
> Heritage: English
> Birthplace Quincy, Massachusetts
> Time in office: 1797-1801

John Adams’ roots can also be traced back to England. His great-great-grandfather, Henry Adams, emigrated from England and settled in Braintree, Massachusetts, in 1636.

National Archives / Getty Images

Thomas Jefferson
> Heritage: English and possibly Welsh
> Birthplace Shadwell, Virginia
> Time in office: 1801-1809

Thomas Jefferson’s Welsh connection has yet to be proved. However, in his 70s, Jefferson wrote: “The tradition in my father’s family is that their ancestors came to this country from Wales, from the region of Snowden, highest mountain in Great Britain.” Jefferson’s mother’s family had roots in England and Scotland.

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

James Madison
> Heritage: English
> Birthplace Port Conway, Virginia
> Time in office: 1809-1817

James Madison’s great-great-grandfather, Captain Isaac Madison, was born in London. He moved to Virginia where he bought some land and started a plantation. He was the first of several Madison family generations of powerful landowners.

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Wikimedia Commons

James Monroe
> Heritage: Scottish and English
> Birthplace Monroe Hall, Virginia
> Time in office: 1817-1825

James Monroe was the first American president with definite family roots tracing back to Scotland. There is a direct link between Monroe and 16th century Scottish clan chief, Robert Munro of Foulis, according to a DNA research project. His great-great-grandfather, Andrew Monroe, left Scotland and moved to Virginia in 1650.

John Quincy Adams
> Heritage: English
> Birthplace Braintree, Massachusetts
> Time in office: 1825-1829

As the son of John Adams, the second president of the United States, John Quincy Adams has the same English heritage.

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Hulton Archive / Getty Images

Andrew Jackson
> Heritage: Irish
> Birthplace Waxhaws, border of North and South Carolina
> Time in office: 1829-1837

Andrew Jackson’s parents emigrated from Ireland a few years before the future president was born.

Hulton Archive / Getty Images

Martin Van Buren
> Heritage: Dutch
> Birthplace Kinderhook, New York
> Time in office: 1837-1841

As his last name may suggest, Martin Van Buren was the first American president with no direct British or Irish heritage. Both of his parents were of Dutch descent.

Derek Jensen (Tysto) / Wikimedia Commons

William Henry Harrison
> Heritage: English
> Birthplace Charles City County, Virginia
> Time in office: 1841-1841

William Henry Harrison, the first U.S. president to die in office, just a month into his term, has English roots. His family moved from England to Virginia in the 1630s. His great-grandfather Archibald Irwin may have been born in Ireland.

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iip-photo-archive / Flickr

John Tyler
> Heritage: English
> Birthplace Charles City County, Virginia
> Time in office: 1841-1845

John Tyler was a descendant of Henry Tyler, who was born in Shropshire, England, and eventually moved to York County, Virginia.

National Archives / Getty Images

James K. Polk
> Heritage: Irish
> Birthplace Pineville, North Carolina
> Time in office: 1845-1849

James K. Polk’s great-great-grandfather, Robert Pollock or Polk, emigrated from County Donegal in the Irish province of Ulster in the 17th century.

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National Archives / Getty Images

Zachary Taylor
> Heritage: English
> Birthplace Barboursville, Virginia
> Time in office: 1849-1850

Zachary Taylor also had English ancestry. He was descended from one of the Mayflower leaders, William Brewster. The Mayflower was a merchant ship that transported English families, also known as Pilgrims, from England to the New World in 1620.

iip-photo-archive / Flickr

Millard Fillmore
> Heritage: English
> Birthplace Moravia, New York
> Time in office: 1850-1853

Millard Fillmore was the great-grandson of John Fillmore, an emigrant from Ipswich, England and a legendary mariner who spent a few months as a prisoner on a pirate ship.

Franklin Pierce
> Heritage: English
> Birthplace Hillsborough, New Hampshire
> Time in office: 1853-1857

Franklin Pierce was a descendant of Thomas Pierce, who emigrated from Norwich, England, to Charlestown, Massachusetts, in 1633 or 1634.

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Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

James Buchanan
> Heritage: Scottish and Irish
> Birthplace Cove Gap, Pennsylvania
> Time in office: 1857-1861

James Buchanan’s parents were descended from Ulster-Scots. His father, James Buchanan Sr., was a Scotch-Irish farmer from the County of Donegal, who moved to Philadelphia in 1783.

Hulton Archive / Getty Images

Abraham Lincoln
> Heritage: English
> Birthplace Sinking Spring Farm, Kentucky
> Time in office: 1861-1865

Abraham Lincoln’s family is believed to be of English descent with Puritan or Quaker roots. The president was related to Samuel Lincoln who emigrated from Norfolk, England to New England in 1637.

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37467370@N08 / Flickr

Andrew Johnson
> Heritage: Irish
> Birthplace Raleigh, North Carolina
> Time in office: 1865-1869

Andrew Johnson, the first U.S. president to be impeached, had Irish heritage. His grandfather left Mounthill, Northern Ireland, around 1750 and settled in North Carolina. His mother’s maiden name was McDonough, which suggests Celtic roots.

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Ulysses S. Grant
> Heritage: Irish
> Birthplace Point Pleasant, Ohio
> Time in office: 1869-1877

Born Hiram Ulysses Grant, the 18th president of the United States had Irish roots. Grant’s great-great-great-grandfather, Thomas Simpson, was born about 1683 somewhere in Ulster. Grant’s mother, Hannah Simpson, had roots in Dergenagh, Northern Ireland. The U.S. Grant Ancestral Homestead, where the president’s great-grandfather John Simpson was born, is still in Dungannon.

National Archives / Newsmakers / Getty Images

Rutherford B. Hayes
> Heritage: Scottish and English
> Birthplace Delaware, Ohio
> Time in office: 1877-1881

Rutherford B. Hayes spent much time researching and learning about his ancestors, leaving a large library of genealogy and local history books. In a diary entry from 1870, he wrote that he had always thought of himself as Scotch. He also added that, on his father’s side, he had 30 ancestors from England and two from Scotland. No one from his mother’s side was Scottish, according to Hayes.

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johnsnape / Flickr

James Garfield
> Heritage: English
> Birthplace Moreland Hills, Ohio
> Time in office: 1881-1881

James Garfield, the second president to be assassinated, was related to Edward Garfield, who left Warwickshire, England around 1630 and immigrated to New England. Garfield was also descended from John Billingham, a Mayflower passenger.

National Archives / Getty Images

Chester A. Arthur
> Heritage: Scottish and Irish
> Birthplace Fairfield, Vermont
> Time in office: 1881-1885

Chester Arthur’s family roots include English ancestors. His father, however, was a Scotch-Irish clergyman from Ballymena, or what is now Northern Ireland, who moved to Greenwich, New York, in 1835. There were speculations that he was Canadian.

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cornelluniversitylibrary / Flickr

Grover Cleveland
> Heritage: Irish and English
> Birthplace Caldwell, New Jersey
> Time in office: 1885-1889 and 1893-1897

Grover Cleveland, the only president in American history to serve two non-consecutive terms in office, had two Irish lines of descent. His grandfather, Abner Neal, was born in Ireland in the 18th century. His great-great-grandmother, Ann Lamb, was born in Dublin sometime around 1722. Cleveland also had English ancestors on his father’s side who had emigrated from Cleveland, England in 1635.

Wikimedia Commons

Benjamin Harrison
> Heritage: Irish
> Birthplace North Bend, Ohio
> Time in office: 1889-1893

Benjamin Harrison, the 23rd president, was William Henry Harrison’s grandson — the only grandson of another American president. They had the same English heritage.

William McKinley
> Heritage: Scottish and Irish
> Birthplace Niles, Ohio
> Time in office: 1897-1901

The McKinley family were of Scottish and Irish descent. William McKinley’s great-grandparents were born in Pertshire, Scotland. The former president was also a descendant of David McKinley, who was born in County Antrim, Northern Ireland. David McKinley moved to Otter Creek in Chanceford Township,Pennsylvania in 1742. McKinley’s mother’s family, the Allisons, were among the earliest settlers in Pennsylvania. McKinley was the last serving president who fought in the American Civil War.

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Topical Press Agency / Getty Images

Theodore Roosevelt
> Heritage: Irish and Dutch
> Birthplace New York City
> Time in office: 1901-1909

Theodore Roosevelt had Irish roots on his mother’s side. His mother, Martha Bulloch, had Ulster-Scots ancestors who emigrated from Larne, Northern Ireland, in the 1700s. The president also had Dutch ancestry. Roosevelt’s grandfather, Cornelius Van Schaick Roosevelt, was the last full-blooded Dutch Roosevelt of his line.

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

William Howard Taft
> Heritage: English
> Birthplace Cincinnati, Ohio
> Time in office: 1909-1913

William Howard Taft was a descendant of Richard Robert Taft, who was born in England and died in County Louth, Ireland in 1700. Richard’s son, Robert Taft, moved to Massachusetts in the 1680s.

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Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Woodrow Wilson
> Heritage: Scottish and Irish
> Birthplace Staunton, Virginia
> Time in office: 1913-1921

Woodrow Wilson’s grandfather, James Wilson, was born in Strabane, Northern Ireland. The president’s grandmother, Mary Anne Adams, was also born in Ulster, a region in the northern part of Ireland. Wilson had Scottish roots on his mother’s side. His maternal grandfather was from Paisley, Scotland.

Keystone / Getty Images

Warren G. Harding
> Heritage: Dutch
> Birthplace Blooming Grove, Ohio
> Time in office: 1921-1923

Warren G. Harding’s heritage included Dutch connections. His great-grandfather on his mother’s side was William Van Kirk from the wealthy Van Kirk family.

Hulton Archive / Getty Images

Calvin Coolidge
> Heritage: English
> Birthplace Plymouth Notch, Vermont
> Time in office: 1923-1929

Calvin Coolidge, the only American president to be born on Independence Day, had roots going back to the earliest settlers in New England. The family was related to John Coolidge, who emigrated from Cambridgeshire, England to Massachusetts around 1636.

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Topical Press Agency / Getty Images

Herbert Hoover
> Heritage: German, Swiss, English
> Birthplace West Branch, Iowa
> Time in office: 1929-1933

Herbert Hoover had German, Swiss, and English ancestry. His parent’s families were Quakers — a Christian group that began in mid-17th-century England. The family lived on a farm near West Branch, Iowa.

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Franklin D. Roosevelt
> Heritage: Irish and Dutch
> Birthplace Hyde Park, New York
> Time in office: 1933-1945

Franklin D. Roosevelt was distantly related to the first Roosevelt president, Theodore. The two presidents were fifth cousins and share the same heritage.

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Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Harry S. Truman
> Heritage: English
> Birthplace Lamar, Missouri
> Time in office: 1945-1953

The “S” in Harry S. Truman’s name was for both of his grandfathers, Anderson Shipp Truman and Solomon Young. Young was of Scottish and Irish descent. The Truman family history could also be traced back to England with German lineage.

Moore / Getty Images

Dwight D. Eisenhower
> Heritage: German
> Birthplace Denison, Texas
> Time in office: 1953-1961

Dwight D. Eisenhower was born to a German-American family. His roots can be traced back to ancestors who immigrated to a Pennsylvania Dutch community in 1741. The family moved to Kansas, then Texas, where Eisenhower was born in 1890, and back to Kansas two years later.

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

John F. Kennedy
> Heritage: Irish
> Birthplace Brookline, Massachusetts
> Time in office: 1961-1963

John F. Kennedy, the first Catholic president, was perhaps the most famous president of Irish descent. All of his great-grandparents were Irish immigrants who made new lives in Massachusetts.

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Keystone / Getty Images

Lyndon B. Johnson
> Heritage: Irish-English
> Birthplace Stonewall, Texas
> Time in office: 1963-1969

Lyndon B. Johnson’s Irish link was not as strong as his predecessor’s. Johnson had a great-great-great-great-great-grandfather, John Jameson, who was born in Galway, Ireland about 1680.

National Archives / Getty Images

Richard M. Nixon
> Heritage: Irish
> Birthplace Yorba Linda, California
> Time in office: 1969-1974

Richard Nixon, the only president to resign from office, had Irish roots. His great-great-great-grandfather was Isaac Brown, who was born in Ireland in 1771. Nixon was also related to James Moore, who was born in County Antrim, Ireland. Some of Nixon’s ancestors left Ulster in the mid-18th century.

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Handout / Getty Images

Gerald R. Ford
> Heritage: Irish
> Birthplace Omaha, Nebraska
> Time in office: 1974-1977

Gerald Ford was born Leslie Lynch King, Jr., but his name was changed after his mother remarried. Ford had two sets of great-great-great-great-grandparents who were from Loughgall, Northern Ireland, and Donnahlong, Ireland.

Wikimedia Commons

Jimmy Carter
> Heritage: English
> Birthplace Detroit
> Time in office: 1977-1981

Jimmy Carter, the first U.S. president born in a hospital, descends from English immigrant Thomas Carter, who was born in London, England, and settled in Virginia sometime in the mid-1600s.

pingnews / Flickr

Ronald Reagan
> Heritage: Irish
> Birthplace Tampico, Illinois
> Time in office: 1981-1989

Ronald Reagan’s paternal great-grandfather was from County Tipperary, Ireland. He later moved to London, where he married an Irish refugee. Reagan’s grandfather was the first Reagan born in the U.S.

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Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

George H. W. Bush
> Heritage: English-Irish
> Birthplace Milton, Massachusetts
> Time in office: 1989-1993

George H.W. Bush is related to Samuel Bush, was the first American-born member of the Bush family. Before then, the Bush’s family roots can be traced back to England. George Bush’s mother was a distant relative of William Gault, who was born in Ulster.

usnationalarchives / Flickr

William J. Clinton
> Heritage: English and possibly Irish
> Birthplace Hope, Arkansas
> Time in office: 1993-2001

Bill Clinton’s ancestry is English. His heritage may contain Irish elements, though the link has not been definitely proven. Clinton’s potential Irish ancestry is through his mother, Virginia Dell Cassidy, whose ancestors have been traced back to Zachariah Cassidy. Zachariah’s father is thought to have been Irish who emigrated from Ulster.

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Pool / Getty Images

George W. Bush
> Heritage: Irish
> Birthplace New Haven, Connecticut
> Time in office: 2001-2009

As the son of George H.W. Bush, the 41st president of the United States, George W. Bush has the same English and Irish heritage.

Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

Barack Obama
> Heritage: African and Irish
> Birthplace Honolulu, Hawaii
> Time in office: 2009-2017

America’s first Black president, Barack Obama was born in Hawaii. His father was born in Kenya. Obama said in 2008: “I am the son of a black man from Kenya and a white woman from Kansas.” Obama has a great-great-great-grandfather from Moneygall, Offaly County, Ireland.

Pool / Getty Images

Donald Trump
> Heritage: German and Scottish
> Birthplace New York City
> Time in office: 2017 –

Donald Trump’s grandparents on his father’s side were German immigrants. His grandfather, Friedrich Trump, came to the U.S. when he was 16. He married a woman who happened to be from his hometown of Kallstadt, Germany. Donald Trump’s mother, Mary Anne MacLeod, was born in Scotland. She immigrated to New York in 1930.

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