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The 17 weirdest jobs of US presidents

From goat herder to comic book salesman, here are the strangest roles that US presidents have ever tackled.

• Many US presidents ascended to the White House with a background in law or politics, or a record of military service.

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• But, over the course of history, some presidents have held down rather unusual jobs.

• From bartenders to Hollywood actors, here's a look at some of the weirdest roles presidents had on their résumés.

Picture the résumé of an average US president.

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It likely starts off with a degree from a top school, and includes a stint working in law or Congress. It might even feature some military service.

But the presidents on this list have a few unconventional gigs to add to their experience. At some point in their lives, these 17 presidents tended bars, crafted toys, and even personally hung criminals. Whether or not these odd jobs helped prepare them to take on the White House remains to be seen.

Here are the 17 weirdest jobs of US presidents:

Andrew Jackson was a 13-year-old militia courier during the Revolutionary War

Abraham Lincoln owned a bar

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Did you know that Lincoln was the only licensed bartender to rise to the position of chief executive?

According to Amy Cavanaugh's article in the Chicagoist, the future president launched a business in New Salem, Illinois. The joint, known as Berry and Lincoln and co-owned by an old militia friend named William F. Berry, functioned as both a store and a drinking establishment. In 1833, Berry and Lincoln received a liquor license and beganselling brandy, wine, and whiskey. Later on, the future president would leave the business to become the postmaster of New Salem.

Unfortunately, Berry's alcoholism caused the duo to fall into debt — which Lincoln wouldn't fully pay off until he became a congressman.

Andrew Johnson worked for his mom as an apprentice tailor

James Garfield tended to mules

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James Garfield's tenure as the 20th president of the US was cut short by an assassin's bullet in 1881. His presidency was so brief that most historians exclude him from presidential rankings.

However, there was a time when Garfield's career was on the rise. According to the "Erie Canal" by Ralph Andrist, the "Ohio farm boy" got his start working for his cousin who owned a canal boat. Garfield made $8 a month driving the boat's mules.

Benjamin Harrison yelled for a living

In 1888, Benjamin Harrison was elected as the 23rd president of the US — following in the footsteps of his grandfather, William Harrison.

Years earlier, when he had yet to establish a law career, Harrison began a rather archaic side hustle — working as a court crier for $2.50 a day,according to his official presidential website.

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Grover Cleveland executed people

Today, Cleveland is perhaps best known for serving as both the 22th and 24th president of the US.

Few people know about the somewhat morbid turn his career path took early on in his professional experience.

While serving as sheriff of New York's Erie County from 1871 to 1874, Cleveland personally hanged two criminals instead of delegating the gruesome task.

According toa 1912 article in the New York Times, Cleveland argued that he had "insisted that he had no moral right to impose upon a subordinate the obnoxious and degrading tasks that attached to his office."

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However, this incident came back to haunt him.According to the White House Historical Association, Cleveland was lambasted as "the hangman of Buffalo" during the 1884 presidential election.

Warren G. Harding was a teenagednewspaperman

Before ascending to a scandal-marred stint in the White House, Harding enjoyed a sterling reputation as the editor ofThe Marion Star.

Harding bought the struggling paper when he was only 18-years-old and immediately began poaching journalists at the 1884 Republican National Convention.

He always had a soft spot for the paper. After he became president, he even planned to stay on as an associate editor,according to the Marion Star. Harding died before that could happen.

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Calvin Coolidge was a toy maker

Herbert Hoover worked in the geology and mining field

Hoover — the 31st president of the US — worked as a geologist and mining engineer to pay for his living while he explored the Western Australian gold fields in the late 1890s, according toCNN.

At the tender age of 23, he was promoted to mine manager and worked in various gold fields until taking a well-earned less physical job as an independent mining consultant.

Harry Truman opened a haberdashery

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Lyndon B. Johnson worked as a shoe shiner and a goat herder

Richard Nixon worked as a chicken plucker and ran a game booth

Gerald Ford was a park ranger

Jimmy Carter grew peanuts

Ronald Reagan was a circus worker, a superstar lifeguard, and an actor

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At age 14, Reagan briefly worked for the Ringling Brothers circus as an unskilled laborer for $0.25 an hour, according toThe Week.

A year later, he took a summer job as a lifeguard at Rock River outside of Dixon, Illinois, according toPBS. There he worked 12 hour-days, seven days a week, for seven summers.

The "lean, tall, and tan" teenager became somewhat of a hero here after pulling 77 people from the danger of the swift river over the course of those seven summers, according toHeritage.

Later, Reagan went into show business. He starred in a few productions and even earned the lifelong nickname "Gipper" from his memorable turn in "Knute Rockne, All-American,"according to Careercast.

In 1981, he became the 40th president of the US at age 69.

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Bill Clinton was a grocer and a comic book salesman

George W. Bush was a landman in the oil industry and the part-owner of the Texas Rangers

After graduating with his MBA from Harvard, George W. Bush, the 43rd president of the US, took a job as a landman for an oil company, in which he scouted potential sites to drill for oil, according tothe Miller Center

It wasn't glamourous, according toThe Week: "It was hard, hot work," he said. "I unloaded enough of those heavy mud sacks to know that was not what I wanted to do with my life."

Later on, Bush became part-owner of the MLB's Texas Rangers,according to Careercast.

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The nation's 43rd President was born into a political family, with father George H.W. Bush serving as the 41st President, Vice-President to Ronald Reagan, and Director of the CIA under Gerald Ford.

Jacquelyn Smith and Natalie Walters contributed to a previous version of this article.

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