User:HornGong

List of Presidents of the United States from 1821-1837
Following the d|election of 1824, which saw former Secretary of State Timothy Pickering beat Senator Aaron Burr in the electoral college but lose the popular vote, garnering only 41.2% of the vote, compared to Burr's 58.6%, then-General Andrew Jackson led the d|March on Washington which successfully instated Aaron Burr as president. Following the revolution, a second Constitution was written by Andrew Jackson which made the presidency elected via d|national popular vote, democratized federal officeholding, and instituted r|universal white male suffrage.

List of Presidents of the United States from 1837-present
The popularity of President Burr compelled the legitimacy of the new constitution. Following his death, popular opinion shifted massively against the d|Constitution of 1825 and the newly inaugurated President Sam Houston. In the s|election of 1836, the Whig party, a party founded in 1828 on anti-d|Burrism, ran Rep. Thurlow Weed who beat incumbent president Sam Houston in a landslide. Using a congressional supermajority, Weed was able to reinstate the American Constitution. President Weed pursued a soft reconstruction of the revolutionaries, though the Democratic-Republican majority elected in 1838 following the Panic of 1837 halted reconstruction through his presidency, which continued through the d|Presidency of Dixon Hall Lewis. After the election of Robert E. Lee, d|hard reconstructionism was pursued.

De Facto Heads of State of the regime
Following the assassination of President Miles, General Frederick Dent Grant forcefully took power of the national government promising to return order and stability to the nation. Immediately after his death, his cabinet issued a proclamation that rulership of the country would be transferred to a Central Executive Committee composed of the most powerful men in the country.

De Jure President of the Unites States
Despite General Grant's Putsch in late March 1909, government systems in de jure control of the country refused to accept Frederick Dent Grant as the leader of the country and instead recognized former Speaker of the House Glenn E. Plumb as the legitimate leader.

President of the Provisional Government of the Republic
Following the s|Second American Revolution, John J. Pershing was named provisional president with the charge of holding free and fair elections in November of 1912.