As President Trump settles into his new job, analysts are reflecting on how the Dow industrials surged and slumped under his 44 predecessors.

Who oversaw the biggest gain for blue-chip stocks?

MarketWatch and others have written about stocks generally faring better when there’s a Democrat in the White House, but the crown goes to a Republican, Calvin Coolidge.

DJIA, -0.14% Bespoke Investment Group has created the chart below showing the Dow Jones Industrial Average’srise of 252% on Coolidge’s watch.

Coolidge took office in August 1923 after President Warren Harding’s sudden death and served until March 1929, when Herbert Hoover was sworn in.

The Vermont native occupied the White House during the exuberant Roaring Twenties. “Silent Cal” later acknowledged that he bore some responsibility for the Great Depression that began in late 1929, just a few months after he left the White House.

Five other presidents saw triple-digit percentage gains for the Dow during their terms: Democrats Bill Clinton (227%), Franklin Roosevelt (197%) and Barack Obama (148%), along with Republicans Ronald Reagan (135%) and Dwight Eisenhower (120%).

What about the biggest slumps?

Coolidge’s successor Hoover, a Republican, experienced the largest-ever Dow drop (-83%), according to Bespoke’s data.

The second- and third-biggest falls also occurred under Republicans, with George H.W. Bush seeing a tumble of 22% and Richard Nixon, a 16.5% decline.