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    • George Washington. School: Never attended college. George Washington's education is a bit contested. Some sources say he never went to college, while others say he enrolled for a time at the College of William and Mary.
    • John Adams. School: Harvard College (undergraduate) John Adams started the legacy of Harvard alumni-turned-presidents, which still continues today. He attended from 1751 to 1755.
    • Thomas Jefferson. School: College of William and Mary (undergraduate) Thomas Jefferson enrolled at the College of William and Mary when he was 17. He graduated after two years and went on to study law with his legal mentor George Wythe.
    • James Madison. School: Princeton University (undergraduate) Due to poor health, James Madison had to wait two years before heading to college. When he did eventually attend in 1769, he enrolled at what was then the College of New Jersey—now Princeton—and studied a full range of subjects.
    • George Washington. School: Never attended college. George Washington's education is a bit contested. Some sources say he never went to college, while others say he enrolled for a time at the College of William and Mary.
    • John Adams. School: Harvard College (undergraduate) John Adams started the legacy of Harvard alumni-turned-presidents, which still continues today. He attended from 1751 to 1755.
    • Thomas Jefferson. School: College of William and Mary (undergraduate) Thomas Jefferson enrolled at the College of William and Mary when he was 17. He graduated after two years and went on to study law with his legal mentor George Wythe.
    • James Madison. School: Princeton University (undergraduate) Due to poor health, James Madison had to wait two years before heading to college. When he did eventually attend in 1769, he enrolled at what was then the College of New Jersey—now Princeton—and studied a full range of subjects.
  1. The College of William & Mary issued surveying licenses in Virginia, Washington received his license from the College in 1749 — surveyors did not attend classes at the school. Washington believed strongly in formal education, and his will left money and/or stocks to support three educational institutions, including George Washington University and Washington and Lee University ) [ 1 ]

  2. Dec 18, 2023 · He also took night classes at the Kansas City Law School, but he dropped out from there, too, after losing a county judge election. Since William McKinley, Truman is the only president who did not earn a college degree. Birthplace: Lamar, Missouri, United States of America. Presidency: 33.

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    • Harvard University. Unsurprisingly, Harvard takes first place when it comes to which university claims the most U.S. presidents as alumni. Harvard University is the oldest school in the nation, founded in 1636 in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
    • Yale University. The runner up after Harvard is Yale University, claiming 5 U.S presidents as alumni. Presidents that attended Yale University include William Howard Taft, George H.W Bush, and George W. Bush for his undergraduate studies, prior to attending Harvard University.
    • College Of William and Mary. College of William and Mary was founded in the 1600s and was attended by three U.S. presidents: Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe, and John Tyler.
    • Princeton University. U.S. former presidents James Maddison and Woodrow Wilson attended Princeton University. Woodrow was in fact the only U.S. president to obtain a PhD degree and was also the 13th president of Princeton University before being elected as president of the United States.
  3. Mar 5, 2024 · 4. James Madison — Princeton. (AP) Madison is one of two presidents to graduate from Princeton. He also has his own college named after him now — James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia. 5. James Monroe — William and Mary. (File) Monroe entered the College of William and Mary in 1774 at the age of 16.

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  5. Jefferson's seven years of study at Williamsburg culminated in the practice of law but without any type of "degree" as might be granted today. In 1762, when Jefferson was completing his two-year course of study, William and Mary did grant degrees, but the course of study leading toward a degree took four to five years and was directed toward a career in the Anglican Church or as a professor.

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