On this day, 173 years ago, our ninth president gave up
the ghost.
William Henry
Harrison was the first president to die in office and he holds the
distinction of serving the shortest term on record.
On a miserable, late winter day, he gave the
longest inaugural speech
EVER and did
it without wearing a hat, coat or gloves.
He caught a cold and pneumonia finished him off exactly a month
later.
This is why mothers all over say,
“Put a coat on.
I’m cold.”
They all used to say, “That’s how President
Harrison died, you know.”
When kids
started saying, “President who?”, mothers left that part out and stayed with
the tried-and-true, “...because I said so.”
Born to plantation aristocracy in Virginia (his father
signed the Declaration of Independence), he joined the Army and went to the
Northwest Territories after daddy died and left him no money. There, he fought Indians, met his wife and
settled into territorial government after leaving the military.
I guess if Native Americans had their ‘Hall of Shame’,
Harrison would be a prominent member. As
governor of the Indiana Territory, one of his primary duties was to make things
easy for settlers – with no regard for the people already living there. Negotiating treaties with the tribes was a
less messy way to acquire their lands. Liberal
donations of alcohol made the process go smoothly and the final terms more
agreeable. If we didn’t want to abide by
the terms of the treaties, we didn’t and would conquer them anyway.
Entrance to
William Henry Harrison Memorial,
North Bend, OH
[21 October 2006]
Apart from his record term length, Harrison is known by
his campaign nickname.
With his running
mate, John Tyler, their slogan was ‘Tippecanoe and Tyler too’.
Tippecanoe was the
battle he won against the Shawnee Confederation.
Some refer to the 1840 election as the first ‘modern’
presidential campaign because the Whigs manipulated the issues and stressed
style over substance. The issues were
secondary as Harrison’s handlers preferred to falsely emphasize his frontier
background and tout his military victories over the Indians.
I guess his brief time in office did have something to show for
it...even if that happened because he croaked.
Harrison’s premature passing prompted us to clarify the vague
constitutional aspects of presidential succession.
We can also give him this much.
When C-Span conducted its Second Historians
Survey
of Presidential Leadership in 2009, 65 experts placed Harrison firmly in
the Bottom Ten but at Number 39.
There
were still three guys who ranked lower...despite his being in office for only a
month and in a sick bed most of that time.
It’s only fitting that my visit to the grave of the
president with the shortest term was also abbreviated. It was late in the day when I arrived at the
memorial and it was too late to enter.
All I could
see of the Harrison Tomb [21 October 2006]
Until Ronald Reagan was inaugurated in 1981 at age 69,
Harrison was the oldest man to take the oath at age 68.
Interestingly, another thing Reagan did was
defeat ‘
Tecumseh’s
Curse’.
It was said that Tecumseh’s
brother,
Tenskwatawa,
also known as The Prophet, put a curse on Harrison.
He said Harrison will die and “every Great
Chief chosen every twenty years thereafter shall also die.”
Damned if that didn’t work for a long
time.
After Harrison, Lincoln, Garfield
and McKinley were assassinated, Harding was poisoned...um, died suddenly, FDR
died on the job and JFK was shot.
For
the next 120 years, every president elected in a year ending in ‘0’ died in
office until Ronnie lived through his two terms...despite
John Hinckley’s
effort to keep the streak going in 1981.
William
Henry Harrison
9th President; Served 1841
Born: February
9, 1773, Berkeley, VA
Died: April
4, 1841, Washington, D.C.
Grave
Location: Harrison Tomb State Memorial, North Bend, OH
Date Visited:
10/21/2006
4 Comments:
I'd have aced history in high school if I'd have had access to these little tidbits of inside information! Again, just love reading these.
You are sweet, Pam. Thanks. I don't recall my HS history emphasizing factoids and trivia as I am prone to do but, as the William Hurt character says near the end of 'Big Chill', "I'm just trying to keep things LIVELY".
I agree with Pam, I might have enjoyed history more if it had been peppered with the type of details you add to your posts. I was facinated by the bit about the curse
Thank you, Bill. I will try to keep it interesting after the Dead Presidents Quest is done and we move on to other topics.
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