[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 what may have
been lost, and what definitely was, in the most striking presidential death.
William
Henry Harrison was many things: a military leader who won two famous Early
Republic battles, Tippecanoe
in 1811 and the War of 1812’s Battle
of the Thames in 1813; one of the first political leaders from the Northwest
Territories; a diplomat who advised
Colombian revolutionary Simón Bolívar on the question of democracy for that
South American nation; and a man who had been retired from politics for some
years before being nominated for the presidency in 1836. He lost to Martin Van
Buren in that election, but ran
again in 1840 and this time defeated Van Buren. But what happened next is
likely all that Harrison will ever be collectively remembered for: he delivered
(hatless and coatless) the
longest inaugural address in American history on a cold and rainy March day;
and subsequently (and perhaps
coincidentally, but it makes a much better story this way) came down with a
bad cold that turned into the pneumonia from which he died only a month after
taking office. (Although all those details are in some dispute—see that last hyperlinked
article for more.)
It’s probably
impossible for the president who served only a month to ever be known for
anything else, but it’s well worth considering the results of that tragedy, and
specifically what may have been lost along with the possibility of a full
Harrison presidency. For one thing, Harrison seemed poised to undue many of the
excesses and problems of the Andrew Jackson administration (nearly all of which
Jackson’s chosen
successor Van Buren had continued), not only political (such as Harrison’s
plans to eliminate the
spoils system for government jobs and patronage and support the National Bank) but also
ideological (despite being a Westerner and former General like Jackson,
Harrison had far more experience in
territorial governance and, to my mind, would have enacted far different policies
than his predecessors or successor toward the frontier, expansion, and Native
Americans). Perhaps I’m romanticizing this shortest-term president based on
that absence of actual histories to analyze, but it seems quite possible to me
that this moderate Northwestern Whig could have offered a very different administration
from any of the more extreme and destructive ones (from both parties) with
which his brief term was framed.
We’ll never know
what kind of president Harrison might have been—but we know exactly what kind
of president John Tyler was, and the answer isn’t good. Upon Harrison’s death
Tyler became the first Vice President to assume the presidency mid-term, and he
came to be known as His Accidency,
both because of that starting point and because he seemed ill-prepared to lead
the nation (having been added to the ticket
largely because he was a Virginia slaveholder who brought many such votes
to the Northwesterner Harrison). After an initial two years in which he didn’t
do much of anything, Tyler then spent his final two years focused on a potentially
illegal and certainly problematic objective: annexing
Texas into the United States, as a slave state of course. While it’s
possible that Harrison would have pursued the same goal, I find it unlikely; in
any case Harrison’s Western experiences would have lent him a far different
perspective on the issue than did Tyler’s Southern ones. And lest there be any
doubt about the primacy of that Southern perspective for Tyler, there’s this
fact: shortly before his death, Tyler ran for and won
election to the Confederate House of Representatives after the outset of
the Civil War, becoming the only former president to commit treason against the
nation he had led. If only William Henry Harrison had put on a hat and coat.
Next dead
president tomorrow,
Ben
PS. Thoughts on Harrison
(or Tyler)? Other presidents you’d particularly want to AmericanStudy?
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