Raised in the Dutch community of Kinderhook, New York, Van Buren spoke Dutch as his first language; to date, he’s the only president to learn English as a second language. He also was the first native New Yorker elected to the White House; As of 2017, four other presidents have been born in the Empire State: Millard Fillmore, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt and Donald Trump. (While not born there, Chester Arthur, a Vermont native, was heavily involved in New York’s Republican Party before he won the White House, and Grover Cleveland, a native of New Jersey, was governor of New York prior to his first term as president.)
After serving in the New York Senate and the U.S. Senate, Van Buren, dubbed the Little Magician for his political savvy, was U.S. secretary of state from 1829 to 1831 under President Andrew Jackson. Van Buren was Old Hickory’s vice president during his second term in office, starting in 1833. Three years later, Kinderhook’s favorite son was elected president; he was the last sitting VP to ascend to the job this way (rather than as a result of his predecessor’s death or resignation) until George H.W. Bush did so in 1988.