[In honor of Warren Harding’s
150th birthday on November 2nd, a series
AmericanStudying the lives and deaths of presidents who passed away while in
office. Leading up to a special weekend post on a very different anniversary—my
blog’s fifth birthday!]
On one thing we
know about the 29th president, and the mysteries we’ll never know for
sure.
Warren G. Harding
represents one of the longest shots ever to win the presidency, particularly
since he was far down the roster of possible nominees at the outset of the 1920 Republic
National Convention in Chicago. But through nine ballots, none of the party’s
favorites (including General
Leonard Wood, Illinois Governor Frank
Lowden, California Senator Hiram
Johnson, and Massachusetts Governor Calvin Coolidge) had been able to win
the necessarity majority of delegates to secure the nomination, and Ohio
Senator Harding’s name was thrown into the ring by his friend and the state’s
former Governor Frank Willis. The infamous
“smoke-filled room” that eventually settled on Harding as the party’s nominee
might well be apocryphal (and is almost certainly exaggerated), as might be the
narrative
that Harding was chosen because his good looks would appeal to female
voters; but there’s no doubt that his nomination was a rare and genuine
surprise in the usually predictable field of presidential campaigns, and thus
his win and presidency even more so.
Surprising and
potentially mythic as Harding’s nomination and victory were, however, they pale
in comparison to a couple other prominent mysteries attached to our 29th
president. For one thing, Harding was the subject of persistent gossip and
rumors, not only about such
familiar themes as adultery (which, as those recently released love letters
reveal, was much more than just a rumor) but also and much more strikingly
about the possibility that he had African
Americans among his ancestors. To American historians and anyone familiar
with our cross-cultural community, mixed-race backgrounds are a common trope—but
nevertheless, Harding is the only white president to my knowledge for whom
historians have found any evidence of possible African American heritage, making
this a striking element of a presidency otherwise tainted by scandal and
failure. Indeed, as W.E.B.
Du Bois wrote in a well-known piece, Harding’s potential African American
connections made his failure to address the nation’s racial injustices,
oppressions, and violence all the more frustrating to Du Bois and other African
American political and social leaders.
And then there’s
Harding’s death, by far the greatest mystery attached to the man and his
presidency. On the one hand, his death seems logical enough: he had long
suffered from health problems, and they had increased markedly by the summer of
1923, when he decided to set out on a cross-country and multi-national train
and boat trip and speaking tour; in the course of that tour, while in San
Francisco, he suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and died. Yet as traced at length
in Robert Ferrell’s book The
Strange Deaths of President Harding (1996), there are various abnormalities
and gaps that have led to multiple, unprovable
and unlikely but not impossible allegations: that Harding’s
wife poisoned him; that he was incapacitated far earlier on the train
journey than reported and that his wife
was effectively running the country during that period; and so on. To be
clear, Ferrell does not support any of these allegations, arguing instead for a
more straightforward and even celebratory take on Harding and his presidency.
But while interpretations may and will vary, to at least a degree they will
always remain just that, responses to the historical mysteries about one of our
more unlikely and unique presidents.
Next dead
president tomorrow,
Ben
PS. Thoughts on
Harding? Other presidents you’d particularly want to AmericanStudy?
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