Happy President’s Day!
How many U.S Presidents can you name,
aside from the ones in office since you’ve been alive? I’m kinda
lucky in that regard, in that I think I can name them all, and it’s
thanks to a box of Cheerios. Actually, it’s thanks to many boxes
of Cheerios, and the undying curiosity of an 8-year old.
I thin I may have told this story
before; if so, forgive me, but it’s kind of appropriate for today.
You see, when I was 8, I was fascinated by cereal boxes, what was
inside of them, and what was on the outside of them. I would dig
through them for the toys, I would save box-tops and send away for
items, and I would cut out the games they put on the back of the
boxes. When I was (I think) 8, the makers of Cheerios decided to try
to improve the civics knowledge of little nerds like me, and started
to put Presidential trading cards, 4 at a time, on the back of each
box. The idea was that kids would collect them all, thereby
improving their knowledge of American history while at the save time
improving General Mills’ bottom line by having the parents of said
kids rush out and buy box upon box of Cheerios so the trading card
collection could become complete.
At least, that’s how I remember it
happening in the Koski household. You could collect the cards 4 at a
time, but it always wasn’t a different 4 every time; in other
words, you might have to collect a double or two to get a card you
didn’t have. And since this was back when Tricky Dicky Nixon was
President, that means you had 37 cards you had to collect. So at the
very minimum, you would’ve had to buy 10 boxes of Cheerios to
complete the set, and that’s not even accounting for the fact that
you would eventually have to buy more to actually get all 37.
I don’t know why I was so fascinated
by the Presidential trading cards, but I was. Before obsessing over
the cards, I knew that George Washington was the first President,
that Abraham Lincoln was on the penny, and that John Kennedy had been
shot, but that was about it. I soon learned that William Henry
Harrison caught pneumonia while giving a 4-hour inaugural speech on
the cold, and died a few weeks later. I learned that James Buchanan
was the only bachelor President. And I learned that Grover Cleveland
was the only President who had been elected, lost his re-election
bid, but then came back to retake the Presidency in the election
after THAT.
Needless to say, despite what I was
learning I don’t believe I ever DID get all 37 Presidential trading
cards. I’m not sure if it’s because my parents didn’t want to
get a second mortgage to buy all those boxes, or because everyone
just got sick of eating Cheerios, but I must’ve petered out
somewhere in the mid to upper 20s. Still, the knowledge I gained
from reading the back of cereal boxes has stuck with me ever since,
as I STILL find politics fascinating, and I still know, somewhere in
the back of my head, that most of our first half dozen Presidents
were Whigs. Not wore wigs, but WERE Whigs.
As in the Whig political party.
So thank you Cheerios. And Happy
Presidents’ Day to everyone.
(jim@wmqt.com)
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