Since Washington, the nation often has elevated other veterans to its highest office. According to a list compiled by the U.S. Veterans Administration, 31 of the nation’s 45 presidents served in the military in some capacity.
Wars have sometimes produced multiple future presidents, including four who served in the Revolutionary War, seven who served in the Union Army during the Civil War, and another eight who served during World War II (counting Jimmy Carter, who was a midshipman at the U.S. Naval Academy, and Ronald Reagan, who remained stateside in the U.S. Army because of poor eyesight).
During World War II, Navy Lt. John F. Kennedy, commander of a Patrol Torpedo boat in the Pacific, survived a collision with a Japanese destroyer and swam to safety while towing a wounded member of his crew. His Navy comrade, Lt. George H.W. Bush, was a pilot who flew 58 combat missions against the Japanese and was shot down during a bombing raid.
Military credentials were once viewed as so crucial to political aspirations that during World War II, future President Lyndon B. Johnson, who went to the south Pacific as an observer, pressed hard for a chance to fly on a bombing mission, which nearly got him killed. In recent decades, though, fewer veterans have made it to the White House.
Even so, American voters appear to still value military experience in a president. A 2016 Pew Research Center survey found that 50 percent of Americans would be more likely to vote for a presidential candidate with military experience—the highest-ranked of the 13 traits that pollsters asked about.