His son George W. I wonder if that was a "uh-oh". Perhaps this was his peak height but he was no taller than 6 foot flat while president I'm sure. It was modified several times for presidents They then said that they had to modify the desk and raise it up about 2 inches for Ronald Reagan because of his height. He must have been tall.
Peak height: cm 6' , later years 5'11 cm. He wore a size He towered over Michael Jordan on a picture. Dude, he never was That's nonsense. Look at some pictures of him besides others, and you will see that he never was. He was at most. My cousin 6'2. I saw pictures of him, standing beside Ted Kennedy, who does not seem to be very tall, at most, and Reagan is about 2 inches shorter. So far under The other models like JFK, Clinton and so-on seemed right on the money, and if the model of Reagan is anything to go by then the height this site lists would be bang on.
Just something to keep in mind. He definitely lost height. Five eleven when became President, but probably an inch or so shorter when he passed :. Reagan does not have that much height difference in order to be I would give him no more than for his presidency time. His slim body type made im appear taller. Maybe he was a maximum of 6' in his prime, but I doubt even that. I met him in in Rome at his home, Via Sistina I took a picture next to him and he was at least 1 inch taller than me at that time.
Are you crazy? He never lost 7cm! He was cm 6'1 at most and later maybe cm 5' He did have very good posture and a commanding presence which probably made some think he was bigger than he was.
I still maintain that a young Reagan was closer to 6'1". Middle aged at 6' and by the end of his life he was about 5'10". There's a long shot of Pat Neal and him walking where she is wearing 2" heels and he only looks a couple of inches taller. Later in the movie there's a close up of the two and the difference is much greater.
Perhaps she had taken off her shoes? He looks a couple inches taller than Robert Cummings who was probably around 5'10" and several inches taller than Pat O'Brien who I'd guess at 5'9" or so at age I met Crawford twice, once in the late 's and later in the late 's and he was definitely taller than me by an inch.
Crawford was spposedly such a big drunk that they finally pulled his driver's license so the driving he did in that patrol car was the only driving he did, period. I have seen a pic of him and Burt Lancaster and Reagan appeared to be taller.
I'd be what you American's coin as a "liberal". However, I've always had a soft spot for Reagan - not the policies mind you, but the person and the icon. I liked Clinton too, but he came across as arrogant too often - Reagan had a very humble approach and his speech giving abilities were spectacular.
I'm glad to read from you that he was genuinly friendly. I got the 5'11 height at the time of him taking office from Lou Cannon's "Role of a lifetime", but I hadn't read it for years and only remembered that I came across this height at some time and thought it may have related to that.
On rereading it didn't say anything of the sort - it only mentioned that Reagan at 16 was 5'11" in context of him being a footballer I think.
Since I was almost the lone conservative there they handed me the task of coordinating everything with the Secret Service and with Nancy's assistant. I did this a couple of times. Nancy was a wonderful woman. Several years later when I spotted her seated across from me at a restaurant in Beverly Hills I walked over to say hello and to inquire as to how her husband was doing battling that awful Alzheimer's disease.
She took my hand and held it the entire time I stood there. I'll never forget it as long as I live. Seeing her bent over her husband's casket during his funeral really tore me up. He was really the light in her life and now it's gone out. Anyway, right after I handled the logistics of getting her onto the lot for the first recording session I ran into Reagan at of all places the Disney Store located in a mall in Century City. I would occasionally walk to the mall for lunch since it wasn't that far from the studio.
I went up to him and we spoke. I told him I had worked with his wife and he was quite grateful saying all sorts of nice complements. We parted and then from time to time I'd see him coming and going from his office at The Plaza since I had business in that building. He was always cheerful and very friendly.
When I met Reagan he was slightly taller than me so I'd say close to 6'. I'm sure he was 6'1" when he was younger. Rutherford B. James A. Grover and Frances Cleveland: 4 inches 10 cm. Benjamin and Caroline Harrison: 5 inches 13 cm. William and Ida McKinley: Unknown. Theodore and Edith Roosevelt: 3 inches 8 cm. William Howard and Helen Taft: 7. Warren G. Calvin and Grace Coolidge: 6 inches 15 cm. Herbert and Lou Hoover: 3. Franklin D. Harry S. Dwight D. John F. Lyndon B. Richard and Pat Nixon: 5.
Gerald and Betty Ford: 9 inches 23 cm. Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter: 4. Ronald and Nancy Reagan: 9 inches 22 cm. Many in the media speculated that this was to prevent him from being classified as obese according to his body mass index.
A number of photos also circulated on social media showing Trump next to and visibly shorter than a number of athletes who are officially 6'3", while photos of him standing next to Barack Obama were used to show that he may be closer to his predecessor's height, at 6'1".
Nonetheless, Trump's medical report from June 3. Loading statistic Show source. Download for free You need to log in to download this statistic Register for free Already a member? Log in. Show detailed source information? Register for free Already a member? More information. Supplementary notes. Other statistics on the topic. Historical Data Share of electoral and popular votes by each United States president Historical Data Number of executive orders signed by U. Historical Data Number of slaves owned by U.
Aaron O'Neill. Research expert covering historical data. Profit from additional features with an Employee Account. Please create an employee account to be able to mark statistics as favorites. Then you can access your favorite statistics via the star in the header. Reagan, an accomplished swimmer since early boyhood, worked six summers as a lifeguard in Lowell Park in Dixon on the treacherous Rock River.
According to newspaper reports of the time and later research, he saved 77 people from drowning. Reagan enrolled in at Eureka College in Eureka, Illinois.
He majored in economics but was an indifferent student, graduating with a "C" average in At Eureka, he played football and was a member of the college swim team, performed with the drama club, joined the debate club, worked as a reporter on the school newspaper, edited the college yearbook, and served as president of the student council.
Admitted to college on a partial football scholarship, Reagan washed dishes at his fraternity house, Tau Kappa Epsilon, and at a girl's dormitory, and worked as a lifeguard and a swimming coach to pay the rest of his college costs and sent money home to his economically hard-hit family. He also had an early taste of politics: while still a freshman he made a dramatic oration on behalf of Eureka students who were striking to restore classes that the school administration had eliminated because of financial strains caused by the Great Depression.
After the strike, the college president resigned. His lively imagination and resonant radio voice compensated for his inexperience in radio.
He found that if he memorized the first line of a commercial, everything he read would sound "natural," a technique he used in radio for the rest of his life. By , he was earning a substantial salary with his recreations of Chicago Cubs baseball games and his sportscasts of Big Ten football. Standing six-foot, one-inch tall, with wavy brown hair, blue eyes, and an inviting broadcaster's voice, Reagan possessed many attributes that portended a successful movie career. Moreover, he had enjoyed acting since his teenage years.
In , he went to California to cover the spring training of the Chicago Cubs—and to meet a Hollywood agent. By chance, Warner Brothers was seeking a new actor to replace a promising young star who had died in a car accident, and Reagan vaguely resembled him. As a Hollywood movie actor from to , Reagan appeared in 52 films.
A 53rd film, The Killers, was never shown in theaters but was released for television in Rockne was played by the actor Pat O'Brien, who secured the small but vital role of George Gipp for his friend Reagan. Gipp is a talented but rakish football player who is terminally ill.
In the movie version, Gipp on his deathbed tells Rockne: "Someday, when things are tough, maybe you can ask the boys to go in there and win just once for the Gipper.
He told the story so often in his presidential campaigns that reporters accompanying him gave Reagan the nickname of "The Gipper. Reagan played Drake McHugh, a playboy, who awakens to find that his legs have been amputated by a sadistic surgeon.
The line clung to Reagan, who called his autobiography, Where's the Rest of Me? Reagan was a competent actor who pleased directors because he was punctual and quickly memorized his lines. He did his best work in light comedies and action movies and self-deprecatingly called himself "the Errol Flynn of the B's," referring to the low-budget films that were big money-makers for Warner Brothers and other studios. Reagan absorbed the craft of filmmaking, and especially the art of staging a scene effectively.
It was a skill that he used repeatedly during his political career. Army Cavalry Reserve since the s, was called to active duty and commissioned a second lieutenant. Reagan narrated training films for new recruits and appeared in several patriotic films designed to aid the war effort. Perhaps the most important of these was Rear Gunner made at the request of the Air Corps, which had a surfeit of pilots and a shortage of gunners.
Other movies included Mr. Reagan was relieved from duty for several weeks to participate in the highly popular Irving Berlin musical, This Is the Army , which raised millions for wartime charities. Hollywood changed Ronald Reagan's world, on- and off-screen.
He met the talented Jane Wyman during the filming of Brother Rat , Reagan's ninth film and one of the best of his B-division efforts. Their romance blossomed, encouraged by the influential Hollywood columnist Louella Parsons, who took a special interest in Reagan's career because she was also from Dixon, Illinois. Reagan and Wyman married on January 26, , and were promoted by Hollywood as the "ideal couple. While Reagan was making training films in the Army, his wife's film career skyrocketed.
She received favorable notices for this film and for The Yearling , for which she was nominated for an Academy Award. Two years later, in what critics consider her best role, she won the Oscar for best actress in a stunning portrayal of a raped teenager, deaf and mute, in Johnny Belinda. While Wyman scaled the top rungs of film stardom and Reagan battled to recapture his pre-war popularity, their marriage fell apart.
They were divorced in Four years later, after a period that Reagan described as the unhappiest of his life, he began seeing actress Nancy Davis. She had been moderately successful in ten films and had received good reviews for The Next Voice You Hear and Night into Morning But she gave up her acting career for Reagan: they were married on March 4, They had two children: Patricia, known as Patti Davis, born in and Ronald Prescott, born in Reagan's optimistic nature reasserted itself after his marriage to Nancy Davis.
But he struggled with his career. Reagan had signed a million-dollar, multi-year contract with Warner Brothers on the strength of Kings Row, which was released in when Reagan was in the Army. The movie audience that had come of age during the war years barely knew Reagan, who battled with Warner Brothers over his film roles and eventually left the studio. Reagan saw himself as a dramatic actor but was more effectively cast in lighter films, winning good notices for his performances in The Voice of the Turtle and The Girl From Jones Beach He gave a convincing performance as the epileptic baseball pitcher Grover Cleveland Alexander in The Winning Team at a time the name of the disease could not be mentioned on the screen.
In , with his film career all but ended and his finances low, Reagan was offered a unique contract by General Electric. The company hired him to narrate and occasionally act on its new program, General Electric Theater , which soon dominated the Sunday night television ratings.
General Electric Theater kept Reagan's name and face in public view, and trips to the GE plants enabled Reagan to hone his speaking message and technique.
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