Presented is a copy of a simulated White House Oath of Office Letter with the actual, original signatures of five United States Presidents. The signing Presidents cover consecutive Presidential terms from 1969 through 1993. What is of particular interest to collectors is that not only do the signatures of five U.S. Presidents have great value in itself, but for collectors interested in sports, each of the five signing Presidents also creates cross-over sports interest. 1) Richard Nixon (1969-74) was on the football team at Whittier College as an undersized lineman. His main help to the team was to be knocked down by bigger players in practice, almost a human tackling dummy. "I was scrap iron," Nixon noted. The President was a great sports fan, and he once gave his friend, Washington Redskins coach George Allen, a play to use in the Super Bowl. 2) Gerald Ford (1974-77) was a center and linebacker on two National Championship teams at the University of Michigan. After college, he had offers from the Detroit Lions and the Green Bay Packers to turn professional. As a President, Ford was golfing when his errant shot hit a spectator. Despite all of the ensuing jokes about his golfing accuracy, Ford was actually a good golfer. 3) Jimmy Carter (1977-81) played high school tennis and basketball, and American Legion baseball. At the United States Naval Academy, he was on the cross-country team. In later years, he enjoyed playing slow-pitch softball as a pitcher. 4) Ronald Reagan (1981-89) played football in high school and at Eureka College. As "Dutch" Reagan, he announced "re-created" Chicago Cubs games on radio station WHO in Des Moines, Iowa. Reagan would get a play-by-play of the game over a telegraph wire and use those limited details and his imagination to re-create the game. As an actor, he played HOF pitcher Grover Cleveland Alexander in the film The Winning Team (1952), and he starred as Notre Dame's legendary George Gipp in the movie Knute Rockne: All-American (1940). 5) George G. W. Bush (1989-93) played baseball at Yale University and was the first baseman on two squads that made the College World Series. He was an outstanding fielder, leading the 1948 team in fielding percentage at .992, but he was only a mediocre hitter. President Bush later joked that he batted "second lead-off", meaning he hit eighth. Each of the Presidential signatures is big, bold, and neatly written. President Nixon's signature is in blue ink from a fountain pen and the other Presidents signed in black marker. This signed "Oath of Office Letter" comes with a PSA Letter of Authenticity. The offering makes a wonderful collectible with tremendous cross-over value of politics and sports.