Taught at home!
Woodrow Wilson, U.S. President during World War I, “studied under his dad, one of the founders of the Presbyterian Church in the United States,” writes Olsen. “He didn’t learn to read until he was about 12. He took a few classes at a school in Augusta, Georgia, to supplement his father’s teachings, and ended up spending a year at Davidson College before transferring to Princeton University, where he served as president.” Other homeschooled U.S. Presidents include: not only the four on Mount Rushmore, but also John Quincy Adams, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Andrew Jackson, Grover Cleveland, James Garfield, John Tyler, William Henry Harrison, James Madison, and John Adams, who was the first Vice President of the United States, as well as America’s second President.