Richard Nixon is the only U.S. president born on the West Coast.

  • Richard Nixon as a child
Richard Nixon as a child
Credit: Bettmann Archive via Getty Images

On January 9, 1913, Richard Milhous Nixon was born on his parents’ citrus farm in Yorba Linda, California, a location that became notable when, in 1968, he became the first — and to date, only — U.S. president born on the West Coast of the United States.

Considering that a total of 45 people have served in the nation’s highest office, it may seem odd that just one has come from the contiguous West Coast states of California, Oregon, and Washington. Then again, the United States is a country that began on the Eastern Seaboard and expanded westward, with California, Oregon, and Washington among the later entries to the nation, in 1850, 1859, and 1889, respectively. 

In fact, it took until 1860 for Americans to elect the first president from somewhere besides the original 13 states: Kentucky-born Abraham Lincoln. The tide has tilted toward the Pacific in more recent decades, with eight of the past 16 presidents coming from states west of the Mississippi River. Still, a disproportionate overall share hail from traditional eastern strongholds, with 28 presidents born in the original 13 states and another seven in Ohio.

Despite Nixon’s rare geographic origins for a president, he isn’t the only one with ties to the western reaches of the country. Barack Obama was born and spent much of his childhood in Hawaii, before becoming a state and U.S. senator from Illinois. Herbert Hoover was born in Iowa but was sent to live with an uncle in Oregon at age 11, before attending Stanford University in California. And Ronald Reagan grew up in Illinois prior to establishing a Hollywood career and eventually becoming governor of the Golden State.

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