You can be on Entrepreneur’s cover!

8 U.S. Presidents Who Started as Entrepreneurs Is a background in business essential to running the country? Here are several former presidents who transitioned from the boardroom to the Oval Office.

By Kara Ohngren Prior

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

U.S. presidents sure like talking about the importance of small business to the country's overall health. For instance, Barack Obama said, "I think Ronald Reagan tapped into [the fact that people wanted] a return to that sense of dynamism and entrepreneurship that had been missing."

But, how many U.S. presidents have actually been in the trenches, running their own enterprises? Former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney made business experience the principal reason for his election in 2012, recently saying, "I'd like to have a provision in the Constitution, to say that the president has to spend at least three years working in business before he could become president of the United States."

While the jury's still out on whether business know-how makes for a better president, here's a look at eight U.S. leaders who were hard-working entrepreneurs.

George W. Bush, Invested in Texas Rangers

Term: 2001 to 2009

The first U.S. president with an MBA, Bush invested $600,000 in Major League Baseball's Texas Rangers. In 1998 he sold his stake in the team for $15 million -- a 2,400 percent return on his initial investment.

Quote: "Prosperity results from entrepreneurship and ingenuity."

Credit: George W. Bush Library

Related: Should the U.S. President Have Business Experience? (Opinion)

George H.W. Bush, Formed Oil Development Co.

Term: 1989 to 1993

After graduating from Yale, Bush, along with neighbor John Overby, formed the Bush-Overby Oil Development Co. in 1951. Family connections helped him finance its operations, with Bush's uncle Herbert Walker investing nearly a half million dollars. By 1953, Bush-Overby had merged with another independent oil company to form Zapata Petroleum, and in 1959 Bush moved to Houston as president of Zapata Offshore.

Credit: MSNBC

Quote: "Equality begins with economic empowerment."

Jimmy Carter, Managed Peanut Farm

Term: 1977 to 1981

When Carter's father died in 1953, the family farm was in danger of being lost. So, Carter made the tough decision to resign from the Navy and return to Plains, Ga., to run the struggling peanut farm. Carter reportedly threw himself into farming the way he had with his naval duties, and hard work and effective management made the Carter farm prosperous by 1959.

Quote: "It's not necessary to fear the prospect of failure but to be determined not to fail."

Credit: Mind the Image

Harry Truman, Opened Men's Clothing Store

Term: 1945 to 1953

After serving in France during World War I, Truman returned to the U.S. and opened a men's clothing store in Kansas City, Mo., with his wartime friend, Eddie Jacobson. The shop flourished for three years, but unfortunately failed in the postwar recession.

Quote: "I studied the lives of great men and famous women, and I found that the men and women who got to the top were those who did the jobs they had in hand, with everything they had of energy and enthusiasm and hard work."

Related: 10 Lessons from America's Greatest Military Leaders

Credit: American Gallery

Franklin D. Roosevelt, Opened Rehabilitation Center

Term: 1933 to 1945

A victim of polio, Roosevelt founded the Roosevelt Warm Springs Institute for Rehabilitation in 1927. Still operating today, the Warm Springs, Ga.-based institute serves about 4,000 people with all types of disabilities each year.

Quote: "The country needs and, unless I mistake its temper, the country demands bold, persistent experimentation. It is common sense to take a method and try it: If it fails, admit it frankly and try another. But above all, try something."

Credit: Franklin Roosevelt

Herbert Hoover, Opened Mine Engineering Business

Term: 1929 to 1933

With a geology degree from Stanford University under his belt, Hoover launched his own mine engineering business in 1908. His company employed 175,000 workers and specialized in reorganizing failing companies, seeking new mining prospects and finding investors to pay for developing the best mines.

Quote: "Competition is not only the basis of protection to the consumer, but is the incentive to progress."

Credit: Old-Picture

Warren G. Harding, Purchased a Struggling Newspaper

Term: 1921 to 1923

In 1884, when Harding was 19, he and several partners purchased a small, struggling newspaper in Ohio called The Marion Star. His wife Florence helped manage the business operations for the newspaper, which became a financial success.

Quote: "America's present need is not heroics but healing; not nostrums but normalcy; not revolution but restoration."

Related: Small-Business Friendly Presidents

Credit: Gerrysburg Daily

Abraham Lincoln, Owned a General Store and Ran a Law Practice

Term: 1861 to 1865

The only U.S. president to receive a patent, Lincoln invented a device to lift riverboats over sandbars. He also owned a general store and ran a law practice. He has become a symbol of perseverance, always rising up in the face of failure.

Quote: "Always bear in mind that your own resolution to succeed is more important than any other one thing."

Credit: About

Kara Ohngren is a freelance writer and part-time editor at YoungEntrepreneur. Her work has appeared in publications including Entrepreneur Magazine, The New York Times, MSNBC, The Huffington Post and Business Insider.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Business News

Sam Bankman-Fried Sentenced to 25 Years in Prison for Multibillion-Dollar Crypto Fraud

Southern District of New York Judge Lewis Kaplan said that the loss amount to the victims of Bankman-Fried's crimes surpassed $550 million.

Side Hustle

This Mom Started a Side Hustle After a 'Shocking' Realization in the Toy Aisle. Her Product Was in Macy's Within the Year — Seeing Nearly $350,000 in Sales.

Elenor Mak, now founder of Jilly Bing, didn't plan to start a business — but the search for a doll that looked like her daughter inspired her to do just that.

Growing a Business

To Achieve Sustainable Success, You Need to Stop Focusing on Disruption. Here's Why — and What You Must Focus on Instead.

Instead of zeroing in solely on disruptive innovation, embrace a pragmatic approach to innovation, recognizing and leveraging the potential within ongoing industry shifts.

Marketing

5 Ways to Get on the Media's Good Side (and Stay There)

When you're trying to make a name and a mark for yourself and your business, it's really important to get on the media's good side — and stay there.

Business News

Mark Zuckerberg Told Meta Engineers to 'Figure Out' Snapchat's Privacy Protections: 'We Have No Analytics on Them'

Recently unsealed court documents detail "Project Ghostbusters," Meta's project to work around Snapchat's end-to-end encryption to intercept data.