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George Herbert Walker Bush (born June 12, 1924 ) was
the 41st President of the United States (1989 -
1993). Previously, he served as director of the CIA
in 1976 - 1977, and the 43rd Vice President of the
United States under President Ronald Reagan ( 1981 -
1989 ).
His
son, George W. Bush, is the 43rd President of the
United States. As a result George H. W. Bush is
sometimes referred to as "the Elder Bush", "Bush the
Elder", "Bush Senior," "Bush 41", or "the first
President Bush" in order to avoid possible confusion
between his presidency and that of his son. (Note
that contrary to popular conception outside the
U.S., Bush and his son are not " senior " and "
junior " but rather just father and son with very
similar names.)
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Order: |
41st
President |
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Term of
Office: |
January 20 ,
1989 - January 20 , 1993 |
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Predecessor: |
Ronald Reagan |
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Successor: |
Bill Clinton |
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Date of Birth: |
Thursday ,
June 12 , 1924 |
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Place of Birth: |
Milton,
Massachusetts |
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First Lady : |
Barbara Pierce |
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Profession: |
businessman |
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Political
Party : |
Republican |
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Vice President
: |
Dan Quayle |
Personal background
George Bush's father,
Prescott Bush, served as a Senator from Connecticut
and was a partner in the prominent investment
banking firm Brown Brothers Harriman.
George Bush attended Phillips Academy in Andover,
Massachusetts from 1936 to 1942, where he
demonstrated early leadership, captaining the
baseball team, and was a member of an exclusive
fraternity called the A.U.V, or "Auctoritas, Unitas,
Veritas," Latin for "Authority, Unity, Truth". His
roommate at the boarding school was a young man
named Edward G. Hooker. It was at Phillips Academy
that Bush learned of the surprise attack on Pearl
Harbor, and after graduating in June, 1942, he
joined the US Navy.
He
was a naval aviator during World War II, the
youngest ever at that time, and earned the
Distinguished Flying Cross for his service in the
Pacific Theater.
After the War he attended Yale University , and was
inducted into the secret society (essentially a
fraternity) Skull and Bones , helping him to build
friendships and political support. Joining the
fraternity a year after him at Bush's request was
William Sloane Coffin , a fellow classmaste from the
Phillips Academy. They would remain friends and, at
times, enemies, throughout their lives, though
Coffin became a notable anti-war activist of the
political left.
He
married Barbara Pierce on January 6, 1945. Their
marriage produced 6 children: George W., Pauline
Robinson "Robin" ( December 20, 1949 - October 11,
1953, died of leukemia ); John (Jeb); Neil; Marvin;
and Dorothy Walker ( August 18, 1959 - ). The family
has built on his and his father's political
successes, with his son George W. Bush's
Governorship of Texas and subsequent election as
President, and his son Jeb Bush's election as
Governor of Florida . The Bush political dynasty has
been compared to that of John Adams and the Kennedy
family.
Bush ventured into the Texas oil business after the
war with mixed results. He secured a position with
Dresser through his father's investment banking
relationship with the company. His son, Neil Mallon
Bush, is named after his employer at Dresser, Neil
Mallon, a close family friend. Dresser, decades
later, merged with Haliburton, whose former CEO's
include Dick Cheney, George H. W. Bush's Secretary
of Defense during the Gulf War and now (2004) Vice
President of the United States and former George W.
Bush campaign manager.
In
1964, Bush ventured into conventional politics by
running against Democratic Senator Ralph Yarborough
, making an issue of Yarborough's vote for the Civil
Rights Act of 1964 which almost all Southern
politicians (including the Republican Sen. John
Tower of Texas) opposed. He called Yarborough an
"extremist" and a "left wing demagogue" while
Yarborough said Bush was a "carpetbagger" trying to
buy a Senate seat "just as they would buy a seat on
the New York Stock Exchange." Bush lost in the 1964
Democratic landslide.
He
was later elected in 1966 and 1968 to the House of
Representatives from the 7th District of Texas. He
later lost his second attempt at a Senate seat in
1970 to Democrat Lloyd Bentsen who defeated the
incumbent Yarborough in the Democratic primary. He
served as United States Ambassador to the United
Nations, US Envoy to communist China, Director of
the Central Intelligence Agency and on the executive
board of the Committee on the Present Danger.
In
1980, Bush ran for President, losing in the
Republican Party primaries to Ronald Reagan, the
former Governor of California. After nearly choosing
former President Gerald Ford as his running mate,
Reagan selected Bush as his Vice President, placing
him on the winning Republican Presidential ticket of
1980. Bush had been many things Reagan had not been,
a military man, a life-long Republican, and an
internationalist with UN, CIA and China experience.
The
Reagan/Bush ticket won again in 1984, against the
Democrats' Walter Mondale / Geraldine Ferraro
ticket. In 1988, after 8 years as Vice President,
Bush ran for President with the little known Senator
Dan Quayle as his running mate and beat Michael
Dukakis and Lloyd Bentsen, 426 to 111 electoral
votes . (Lloyd Bentsen received one.)
During his second term as Vice President, Bush had
the distinction of becoming the first Vice President
to become Acting President when, on July 13, 1985,
President Reagan underwent surgery to remove
cancerous polyps from his colon. Bush served as
Acting President for approximately 8 hours, during
which time he is reported to have spent most of the
time playing tennis.
Presidency
As President of the
United States, George Bush is perhaps best known for
leading the United Nations coalition in the
1990-1991 Gulf War. In 1990, led by Saddam Hussein,
Iraq invaded its oil-rich neighbor to the south,
Kuwait. The broad coalition sought to remove Iraqi
forces from Kuwait and ensure that Iraq did not
invade Saudi Arabia. President Bush's popularity
rating in America soared during and immediately
after the successful military operations, but later
fell due to an economic recession.
A
mild economic recession from July 1990 to March 1991
was a contributing factor to his defeat in the 1992
Presidential election. Several other factors were
key in his defeat, including siding with
Congressional Democrats in 1990 to raise taxes
despite his famous "read my lips" pledge not to
institute any new taxes. In doing so, Bush alienated
many members of his conservative base, losing their
support for his re-election. Another major factor,
which may have helped Bill Clinton defeat Bush in
the 1992 election was the candidacy of Ross Perot.
Perot won 19% of the popular vote, and Clinton,
still a largely unknown quantity in American
politics, won the election.
After losing the election, Bush has retired from
public life. After retiring, he did, however,
notably parachute from an airplane for the first
time since World War II. The Bushes live in Houston,
Texas and their summer home in Kennebunkport, Maine.
The
George Bush Presidential Library and Museum is
located on the Southwest corner of the Texas A&M
University campus in College Station, Texas.
The
tenth Nimitz -class aircraft carrier will be named
USS George H. W. Bush when it is launched in 2009.
George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston,
Texas was renamed after the former president in
1997.
Major legislation signed
Supreme Court appointments
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