Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
International

Most US presidents to fade from memory

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Nov, 2014 12:33 PM
  • Most US presidents to fade from memory
Most American presidents are destined to be forgotten in within 50-100 years of their serving as president, a study suggests.
 
"By the year 2060, Americans will probably remember as much about the 39th and 40th presidents - Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan - as they now remember about our 13th president Millard Fillmore," predicted Henry L. Roediger III, human memory expert at Washington University in St. Louis.
 
Hillary Clinton, if elected in 2016, has the potential to be much better remembered than her husband because her presidency would represent a unique first in American history.
 
Barack Obama may be well remembered for the same reason, the study authors said.
 
Roediger has been testing the ability of undergraduate college students to remember the names of presidents since 1973, when he first administered the test to undergraduates while a psychology graduate student at Yale University.
 
Among the six presidents who were serving or had served most recently when the test was first given in 1973, Harry S. Truman, Lyndon B. Johnson and Gerald R. Ford are now fading fast from historical memory whereas John F. Kennedy has been better retained.
 
"The findings estimate that Truman will be forgotten by three-fourths of college students by 2040, 87 years after his leaving office, just like Zachary Taylor and William McKinley," Roediger said.
 
Kennedy was president less than three years, but is remembered today much better than Lyndon Johnson.
 
"One idea is that his assassination made him memorable, but that does not apply to James Garfield or William McKinley who were also assassinated and are remembered relatively poorly," Roediger found.
 
"Kennedy may be well recalled because his brothers and other family members were (and are) active in politics and help to keep his memory alive," Roediger speculated.
 
The current study compares results from the presidential-recall tests Roediger has given to three generations of undergraduate college students (1974, 1991 and 2009) and a similar test offered online to 577 adults ages 18-69 in 2014.

MORE International ARTICLES

US military women less likely to drink than civilians: Study

US military women less likely to drink than civilians: Study
A survey of US military veterans has revealed that female veterans are actually less likely to drink than their civilian counterparts...

US military women less likely to drink than civilians: Study

McDonald's Japan to import chicken from Brazil

McDonald's Japan to import chicken from Brazil
McDonald's Japan will import chicken from Brazil after withdrawing all poultry products of Chinese origin following the Husi company rotten meat scandal...

McDonald's Japan to import chicken from Brazil

Kerry visit a start, Modi visit to US pivotal

Kerry visit a start, Modi visit to US pivotal
John Kerry visits India Wednesday as a raft of crises consume American diplomacy. By contrast, US-India relations are at a moment of opportunity, but the US Secretary...

Kerry visit a start, Modi visit to US pivotal

EU to impose more restrictive measures against Russia

EU to impose more restrictive measures against Russia
The European Union (EU) has agreed a package of "significant" additional restrictive measures targeting sectoral cooperation and exchanges with Russia...

EU to impose more restrictive measures against Russia

Obama writes to Putin over missile treaty violation

Obama writes to Putin over missile treaty violation
US President Barack Obama has written to his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin over Moscow's breach of a 1987 missile treaty, the White House said Tuesday....

Obama writes to Putin over missile treaty violation

Drinking water shortage to hit world by 2040

Drinking water shortage to hit world by 2040
If we continue doing what we are doing today to meet our energy demands, there will not be enough water in the world to quench the thirst of the world population by 2040...

Drinking water shortage to hit world by 2040