Top 8 Interesting Facts about George H.W. Bush

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Although George H.W. Bush only held the position of president for a single term, he was active in other capacities as well, including those of senator, ... read more...

  1. One of the most interesting facts about George H.W. Bush relates to his father. George H. W. Bush was born into a wealthy and politically active family. Prescott Bush, his father, was a businessman and a senator from Connecticut. Born in Columbus, Ohio, Bush attended Yale College and fought as an artillery commander in World War I.


    He worked for a number of businesses after the war until joining A. Harriman & Co. as a minor partner in 1931. He held a number of important positions with the United States Golf Association, including that of its president. Regarding social issues, Prescott Bush was politically involved. He was active with the American Birth Control League in 1942 and was the treasurer of the organization's first national campaign in 1947. In 1951, he served as chairman of the Connecticut branch of the United Negro College Fund, which he also supported early on.


    His children followed his footstep as well. George W. Bush, one of his sons, will eventually succeed him as the 43rd president of the United States. Jeb Bush, another of his children, was the governor of Florida and competed against Donald Trump for the presidency in 2016.

    Photo: People
    Photo: People
    Photo: NPR
    Photo: NPR

  2. One of the most interesting facts about George Bush Senior is the time he joined the military. He made the decision to enlist in the US Navy immediately after finishing high school. Following a period of training, he was commissioned as an ensign in the Naval Reserve at Naval Air Station Corpus Christi on June 9, 1943. One of the youngest pilots at the time, he was only 18 years old at that time. He was shot down in 1944 and barely made it for four hours on a raft in the Pacific until an American submarine came to his aid.


    He picked up flying again and completed 58 combat missions. Bush received numerous honors for his service, including the Distinguished Flying Cross for the flight in which he was shot down, three Air Medals, and a Presidential Unit Citation. He claimed, "I finished the bombing run, which was no heroic thing. Years afterward, they wrote it up as heroism, but it wasn’t – it was just doing your job.”


    Japan formally submitted its surrender on September 2, 1945, in response to the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Bush left the Navy that same month after serving on active duty, but he wasn't officially let out from the service until October 1955, by which time he had attained the rank of lieutenant.

    Photo: Navy.mil
    Photo: Navy.mil
    Photo: MassLive
  3. One of the most interesting facts about George H.W. Bush is about his impressive resume before becoming the vice-president. George H. W. Bush had a pretty remarkable resume when he was 56 years old. He was a war hero with numerous awards. In less than 2.5 years, he graduated from Yale with a degree in economics. Following that, Bush worked on the Western Texas oilfields and founded two profitable businesses.

    Both times he attempted to run for the US Senate in Texas, he was unsuccessful. He did, however, win two elections to the US House. Bush held positions as director of the CIA, Republican National Committee chairman, head of the US Liaison Office in China, and ambassador to the UN.


    After leaving the CIA, president George H.W. Bush went on to work as the director of the Council on Foreign Relations, the chairman of the executive committee of the First International Bank in Houston, and a part-time professor of administrative science at Rice University's Jones School of Business. He resumed his membership in the Council on Foreign Relations, and joined the Trilateral Commission. Bush was inaugurated as the 41st President of the United States on January 20, 1989, succeeding Ronald Reagan. Bush was undoubtedly dedicated to advancing his professional and political careers.

    Photo: Britannica
    Photo: Britannica
    Source: Biography
  4. George H.W. Bush and Barbara first met when they were just 16 years old, at a dance held at Greenwich, Connecticut's Round Hill Country Club. George fell in love with the young woman who was dressed in green and red attire, who was Barbara Pierce. After dancing and talking, George and Barbara watched the waltz.

    Many weeks after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Barbara and George first crossed paths. George felt compelled to take up arms. In June 1942, the month of his 18th birthday and Andover graduation, he enrolled in the Navy. Before he left for basic training in the summer, he and Barbara experienced their first true kiss, but there was a long period of time apart after that.


    Barbara traveled to New Haven with her husband so he could enroll at Yale University. After that, George H.W. Bush and Barbara relocated to Texas where George made the decision to work in the oil business. Barbara stayed by his side during George's victorious campaign for president in 1988, providing humor on the campaign trail and speaking on his behalf at the 1988 Republican National Party Convention. Becoming the longest-married presidential couple in US history, they were wed for 73 years until Barbara passed away in 2018.

    Photo: Biography
    Photo: Biography
    Photo: Town & Country Magazine
    Photo: Town & Country Magazine
  5. Back when he was a soldier serving in wars, George H.W. Bush made a pledge to himself that he would one day go skydiving. When Bush was approaching his 75th birthday, he realized that a standard birthday celebration would not be satisfying.


    At the Bush Presidential Library, which is close to Houston, on June 13, 2004, he parachuted in with the United States Army Golden Knights Parachute Team. The actor and martial arts expert Chuck Norris and Fox News Washington correspondent Brit Hume were two of the more than 4,000 people who saw him jump. The famous couple participated in the event by jumping as well. Mikhail Gorbachov, a former president of the Soviet Union, was also there at the event, and Bush invited him to jump with him. Gorbachov, however, asserted that he had never jumped and was now too elderly to do so.


    George H.W. Bush
    continued to pursue skydiving despite his family's worries on his 80th, 85th, and 90th birthdays as well - one of the interesting facts about George H.W. Bush. Following Bush's passing, retired Golden Knight sergeant Mike Elliott, who had previously jumped with Bush, claimed that the late president was still considering a jump in 2019.

    Photo: Business Insider
    Photo: Business Insider
    Photo: Business Insider
    Photo: Business Insider
  6. During her 68-year reign, the Queen had meetings with most of the presidents (everyone except Lyndon Johnson). Her visits to George H.W. Bush were among the most famous, though. She attended a state dinner and planted a tree at the White House during her 1991 visit to the United States. She attended an Orioles game at Camden Yards in Baltimore during this trip as well.


    Additionally, the Queen bestowed a very special honor upon George H. W. Bush. He received a knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II in 1993. He didn't have to bow like an English knight because he is an American. Likewise, he lacks the right to address himself as "Sir." Bush received the highest honorific title awarded by Britain to a foreigner, the Knight Grand Cross of the Most Honorable Order of the Bath, or GCB, together with Ronald Reagan.


    Queen published a heartfelt message upon his passing, in which she states: "It was with sadness that I learned of the death of President George H W Bush last night. President Bush was a great friend and ally of the United Kingdom. He was also a patriot, serving his country with honor and distinction in Office and during the Second World War. Prince Philip and I remember our days in Texas in 1991 with great fondness. My thoughts and prayers are with President Bush’s family and the American people.”

    Photo: Yahoo
    Photo: Yahoo
    Photo: Yahoo
    Photo: Yahoo
  7. It's one thing to dislike a specific meal; George H.W. Bush's dislike of broccoli was perfectly ordinary. However, when he forbade it aboard Air Force One, the president's aircraft, George H.W. Bush made this a well-known fun fact about him. When he was asked about that, he simply said: "I do not like broccoli, and I haven’t liked it since I was a little kid and my mother made me eat it. And I’m President of the United States, and I’m not going to eat any more broccoli!”.


    President George H.W. Bush has always had a huge appetite, and he brought up vegetables during a news conference on events in Europe. In order to prevent smearing his shirt and tie, he sometimes shovels his food into his mouth while hunched over his plate.


    The President's favorite foods are beef jerky, nachos, tacos, guacamole, chile, refried beans, hamburgers, hot dogs, barbecued ribs, candies, popcorn, ice cream, and cake, all of which can be found at baseball games, fast-food restaurants, or 7-Elevens. Even when he eats healthy foods like yogurt or oat bran, he makes an effort to add Butterfingers or another flavoring to give it a little zip.

    Photo: CNBC
    Photo: CNBC
    Source: The George and Barbara Bush Foundation
  8. Some popular figures have the chance to become well-known for a hobby or accessory, which can sometimes come to define them. This was for George H.W. Bush's iconic socks, which he wore during his presidency. The fact that George H.W. Bush liked to dress in eye-catching designs is interesting; he once declared in an interview that the "louder, brighter, wilder the pattern, the better." Even further, this prompted the Republican National Committee to design a collection of socks based on styles worn by Bush Sr.


    In honor of the more than 50 combat missions he flew as a young World War II pilot, George H.W. Bush lies in state in the Capitol Rotunda from Monday through Wednesday while wearing socks with an image of a formation of jets flying.


    His love for socks also helped him build some new relationships, one of which was with a businessman with Down syndrome who founded his own line of socks. Bush received a shipment of socks from John Cronin, the co-founder of John's Crazy Socks, and tweeted in March that he was wearing a pair to honor World Down Syndrome Day.

    Photo: USA Today
    Photo: USA Today
    Photo: NBC News
    Photo: NBC News




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