Virtual Presidential Series
with Doodler Heather Rogers
Monthly through 2026 on the 2nd Friday of each month at 10:30 am
Monthly through 2026 on the 2nd Friday of each month at 10:30 am
Welcome to our yearlong series in which “America’s Preeminent Presidential Doodler”, Heather Rogers, shares facts, factoids, and fun illustrations about the presidents of these United States. We'll start off at the beginning with George Washington! His lack of biological children made him an attractive starter president — no chance of unleashing a monarchy accidentally! Hooray! He was the grandson of an indentured servant; illegally inoculated his troops; a prominent doctor proposed a three-part plan to bring him back to life. Don't you want to know more? In 2026, journey through Heather's sketchbooks as she shares some of her favorite tidbits, doodles, observations, and resurrection stories about the first 12 presidents.
Heather Rogers isn’t a historian, an academic, or an impartial storyteller… but she has read more than one book about every U.S. president. Out of spite. She was dubbed “America’s Preeminent Presidential Doodler” by one of her favorite biographers and she’s been repeating it ever since. When she’s not reading or doodling history books, she’s a freelance graphic designer, illustrator, and content creator.
To keep her interest during her accidental spite project, Heather Rogers filled hundreds of sketchbook pages doodling her way through presidential biographies. Doing so heightened her curiosity and turned her into an insufferable presidential nerd. Along the way, she discovered unexpected threads connecting seemingly unconnected people, times, and events. She can’t get enough of the weird trivia, coincidences, and quirks. Like the fact that English wasn’t the first language of the first president born in the U.S. Or that a three-part plan was proposed to bring George Washington back to life. Don’t even get her started on William Henry Harrison – he was only president for a month, but she could talk about him for hours.
*All illustrations for this series have been created by Heather Rogers and are her property therein.
This session will be recorded.
Click here to register - required. You can register for one or all sessions at this link.
We'll start off at the beginning with George Washington! His lack of biological children made him an attractive starter president — no chance of unleashing a monarchy accidentally! Hooray! He was the grandson of an indentured servant; illegally inoculated his troops; a prominent doctor proposed a three-part plan to bring him back to life. Don't you want to know more?
This session will be recorded.
Click here to register - required. You can register for one or all sessions at this link.
This month we're all about John Adams: His vice presidency was the only time the president and VP were from different parties. He was the first POTUS to live in the White House; and he never enslaved anyone. Don't you want to know more?
This session will be recorded.
Click here to register - required. You can register for one or all sessions at this link.
This month, we focus on Thomas Jefferson: He was a redhead, invented the swivel chair, and was bizarrely obsessed with proving that America’s mammals were bigger than Europe’s mammals. Don't you want to know more?
This session will be recorded.
Click here to register - required. You can register for one or all sessions at this link.
This month we turn to James Madison: Our teensiest president who tried to conquer Canada. Instead, Canada captured Michigan. Oops. Don't you want to know more?
This session will be recorded.
Click here to register - required. You can register for one or all sessions at this link.
This month we move to another James - James Monroe: James Monroe and James Madison are not interchangeable! It’s true. He wore knee breeches and stockings long after they were cool; the only foreign capital named for a U.S. president was named for him. Like two of his predecessors, he died on July 4. Don't you want to know more?
This session will be recorded.
Click here to register - required. You can register for one or all sessions at this link.
This month we're all about John Quincy Adams: He was a skinnydipper; one of two presidents with a foreign-born wife; adored the metric system. Don't you want to know more?