← Back to Podcast/William Henry Harrison Delivers a Warning
Episode Transcript

William Henry Harrison Delivers a Warning

Why did William Henry Harrison fear for the nation's future? Colleen Shogan talks with Sharon McMahon about Old Tippecanoe's life as a soldier and politician, the ominous message of the longest inaugural address in American history, and the choices that cut short Harrison's time as president.

Featuring Sharon McMahon, Civic Educator and author

Read McMahon's essay on William Henry Harrison at Inpursuit.org 

INFO:
Tell us who inspires you: https://www.inpursuit.org/join.

Please leave a rating and review on Apple, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. It helps other listeners find the show.

Watch all episodes on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@InPursuitUSA.

Hosted by Colleen Shogan, Ph.D. Written and Produced by Jim Ambuske, Ph.D. Audio mixing by Curt Dahl of CD Squared. Music from Music Bed. Production Services by Stand Together. In Pursuit is a podcast by More Perfect.

SOCIAL:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/p/In-Pursuit-USA-61580409336588/ 
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/inpursuitusa/
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@inpursuitusa 
BlueSkye: https://bsky.app/profile/inpursuitusa.bsky.social 
X: https://x.com/InPursuitUSA

Sharon McMahon: He really wanted to restore America to what he

viewed as its proper constitutional balance, as an

antidote to everything that had happened in the era of

Jacksonian democracy, as a counterpoint to everything that

had been happening with old Van Ruin over here. He viewed

himself as the person who could right the ship.

On a cold and blustery day in March 1841, William Henry

Harrison stood before a crowd of 1000s and delivered the longest

inaugural address in American history. Few men were better

prepared for the presidency. The 68-year-old Harrison had been a

soldier, a senator, an ambassador, and a governor

before his election to the nation's highest office. He was

also the last man who had been born a British subject to win

the presidency. While refusing to wear a coat and gloves in the

frigid weather, Harrison reminded his fellow Americans

what the revolutionary generation had won, and what

could be easily lost. And then, only a month later, he was dead.

Yet, as today's guest Sharon McMahon argues, the shortest

presidency left a lasting legacy. So, what might we learn

from Harrison's last will and testament? I'm Colleen Shogan,

and this is In Pursuit, a podcast that explores lessons

from America's past to rate the history of America's future.

Episode eight: William Henry Harrison delivers a warning.

Sharon McMahon, welcome to In Pursuit.

I'm so happy to be here. Thanks for inviting me.

Colleen Shogan: We're talking about William Henry Harrison

today, perhaps best known for dying one month into his

presidency, but there's more to him than just that. Tell us

about his early life before he became president of the United

States.

Sharon McMahon: Despite Harrison's image as sort of a

log cabin dwelling man from the Northwest Territories, Harrison

was actually born into the Virginia planter class. His

father was a founding father of the United States and signed the

Declaration of Independence. They were a slaveholding family,

so he really grew up seeing his father as the governor of

Virginia. So he didn't have humble origins, despite trying

to portray himself in that way later on in his career. When he

is 18, his father dies and leaves his older siblings with

all of the inheritance, leaving very little for him. And he had

wanted to become a physician, and in fact went to the

University of Pennsylvania to study medicine. But when his

father dies and leaves him little money, this of course was

before things like student loans existed, and so he did not have

the means to continue his medical studies, so he

ultimately drops out, joins the army, and that ended up being

very fateful decision because being in the army catapults him

into national fame. So, how does he acquire the nickname "Old

Tippy Canoe" or "Old Tip" That's related to his military service.

He was involved in a very contentious battle with a Native

American tribe, the Shawnee. They were led by Tecumseh, and

the Harrison men were camped on the shores of the Tippecanoe

River. And this battle was so legendary that people around the

country got word of it when they heard what had happened. When

they heard of the victory that Harrison had clinched, they

started, as people are wont to do, they started calling him by

this nickname, Old Tippecanoe, and then of course Tippecanoe is

a long word. It got shortened to Old Tip, and he made use of that

later in his political career.

Colleen Shogan: Harrison is an anti-Jacksonian, and he becomes

a member of the newly formed Whig Party, which doesn't last

that long in American history. But who were the Whigs, and what

did they believe?

Sharon McMahon: You're right that the Whigs were formed in

response to who they viewed as King Andrew, and that, of

course, is King Andrew Jackson. They viewed Andrew Jackson's

expansion of executive power as being too monarchical, as being

overreach from the design of the founders. So this was a

coalition. The Whig Party was a coalition of people who would

later become Republicans, of people who were disgruntled with

the aspects of the Democratic Party, people who opposed

Jackson's tactics and they opposed many of his domestic

policies and formed their own party. And of course, we had

several Whig presidents. That coalition eventually fell upon.

And gave rise to the Republicans.

Colleen Shogan: Now, when Harrison ran for the presidency

in 1840, he's running against the sitting president Martin Van

Buren. But what was on Americans' minds at that time?

Sharon McMahon: People gave Martin Van Buren the nickname

Martin Van Ruin because things were so fraught, especially in

the economic sense, that people looked around and saw nothing

but ruins when it came to the American economy. Despite

Jackson being famous for having no national debt during his

presidency, he actually created a number of the economic crises

that were then handed to his vice president when Van Buren

became president. So the Panic of 1837 is really at the top of

people's minds. This is the worst economic conditions the

country has ever faced, and would remain some of the worst

economic conditions the country would face for nearly 100 years

until the Great Depression. So not only do we have these very

serious issues with bank failures, with collapsing

credit, with business closures, with lack of security

surrounding the government's ability to handle these issues.

We also have westward expansion being highly in top of mind for

many people. Tensions involving Native American groups, treaties

with them, battles with them, the acquisition of territory,

and then Americans too. This is important to remember that

Americans have been grappling with what democracy actually

means and looks like since before this country's inception,

and they were still grappling with it during Harrison's rise

to power.

Colleen Shogan: Well, that's interesting. So, tell us more

about how democracy had changed. We're in 1840 now, so that's 50

years after the Constitution is into operation. So, how are

things changed from 1789?

Sharon McMahon: The first thing that comes to mind is that most

states had expanded voting rights to allow all white men to

vote? You no longer needed to be a property owner as you did at

the founding of the country. Now they did not expand voting

rights to include women or any minority groups, but that also

leads to another very interesting development, which

is the founders never conceived of an electoral college system

in which there was a winner take all, where all of one state's

electors went to one candidate. They always viewed it in the

founding era as every elector will be allowed to vote for whom

they feel is the best candidate, and you can see that in early

election results. Sometimes the electoral votes are very split

amongst candidates, so we have the consolidation of power in

relationship to political parties. Political parties have

become more influential in politics; they had become their

own sort of machine. Before the founding era, they had existed

as sort of loose identifiers of you know I'm a Federalist, I'm

an Anti-Federalist. There wasn't a party apparatus, but beginning

in this era, we start to see the invention of these apparatuses

surrounding political parties like the Whig Party, and this

actually becomes something that concerns Harrison and that he

later speaks out against. But one other thing that I'll note

about how democracy changed: it expanded voting rights to almost

all white men, and voter turnout amongst white men is very

different than it is today. Voter turnout in the election in

which Harrison was elected president, voter turnout was

over 80% So we have a actually a very high buy-in amongst white

men that they are meant to participate in democracy.

Colleen Shogan: It's an extraordinary number. I read

that as well. The 80% turnout compared to what our turnout

overall is in today's even national elections are

presidential elections.

Sharon McMahon: Yeah, I totally agree. I know political

scientists have been studying this topic for decades about

what increases voter turnout, what decreases voter turnout,

and it is interesting that there was such high voter turnout

despite the economic unrest. Often, when things are not going

well politically, or there's a perceived lack of economic

opportunity, you get less buy-in into the democratic process, and

that was not the case in 1840.

Colleen Shogan: Well, one of the reasons might have been that it

was such an interesting campaign in 1840. It was a different type

of campaign. Tell us a little bit about how the campaign

managers, particularly for William Henry Harrison, how did

they approach 1840, and what were some of the things that

they did to entice voters to support Harrison and Tyler and

become engaged in the process?

Sharon McMahon: This is such an interesting campaign. Of course,

a lot of people point to the Jackson v. John Quincy Adams as

the advent of sort of the modern campaign structure in which

candidates hated each other and actively insulted each other.

But in this scenario, the political parties, specifically

the Whig Party, developed a campaign strategy that involved

merch. It involved posters. It involved campaign rallies. It

involved songs. It involved visual imagery, like a log cabin

that was meant to be attached to people's perception of Harrison.

I mentioned earlier that despite his log cabin roots, alleged log

cabin roots, he actually didn't grow up in a log cabin, and all

of these things created a certain amount of hype

surrounding Harrison and his VP candidate John Tyler that had

never been seen before. We're talking maple syrup, branded

maple syrup in bottles, parades in which people built faux log

cabin floats, rallies in which people stood and did their

cheers. You know, campaign rallies are still popular today,

and now they tend to use signature songs. You know, like

Kamala Harris's signature song was Beyonce's Freedom. That, of

course, was not possible in 1840. But the people did have

chants, and so the participants in these rallies would have

their chants and the songs that they would learn, that they

would then repeat as parades went down the street. So all of

these things created a different amount of hype, and it was

positive hype for the candidate as opposed to the fighting

amongst the candidates that you saw between Jackson and John

Quincy Adams.

Colleen Shogan: I mean, the management of his image is

really extraordinary because, like you said, he was born of

the Virginia elite, not in a log cabin. They portray him as sort

of this hard scrabble, whiskey drinking guy, and he was really

a scholar. And he also apparently really liked wine. So

I don't know. That's a complete image makeover.

Sharon McMahon: You know, like you can picture. I don't know.

This wasn't true, but if he were born today, the maple syrup

would come in a maple leaf-shaped bottle, like that's

the kind of vibes that were given out. But this was a jug

that had their campaign slogans on it, and so you would take

this home. And of course, we all know that a bottle of maple

syrup-it's precious, takes a lot of work to make, and you have it

for a long time. It's not just eaten and thrown away. It's not

quickly consumed. So you have this bottle with his campaign

slogan and his face on it at your house for months. That's

actually really smart.

Colleen Shogan: That is smart

Sharon McMahon: branding. Yeah,

Colleen Shogan: very smart. You

Sharon McMahon: see his face every morning at breakfast.

Colleen Shogan: So Harrison, why is he running for president?

What does he want to do for the nation.

Sharon McMahon: He really wanted to restore America to what he

viewed as its proper constitutional balance, as an

antidote to everything that had happened in the era of

Jacksonian democracy, as a counterpoint to everything that

had been happening with old Van Ruyn over here, he viewed

himself as the person who could right the ship, as the person

who could realign the direction America was meant to point in.

There are, I think, many things that we can look at his writings

and his feelings that are instructive and valuable to

today. It's also worth pointing out. I think that throughout his

political life, he advocated for, or at minimum tolerated,

the idea of enslaving other individuals, and felt like every

state should be allowed to choose for themselves how they

want to handle that issue. So, despite his advocacy for

democracy, that did not extend to a fully inclusive democracy.

It still, in his mind, meant democracy for white Americans.

Colleen Shogan: Harrison is victorious. He defeats Martin

Van Buren pretty handily in 1840. Let's fast forward to

inauguration day on March 4, 1841 in Washington D.C. Take us

there. What was that day like in our nation's capital?

Sharon McMahon: What a day! It was a day that we're down in

infamy, as they say. It's a very cold day. It's a very rainy day.

The wind is blowing very hard. If you've been to D.C. in early

March, the weather can be very fickle, can be beautiful, it can

be absolutely terrible. And there were quotes from people

who were there that talk about the cold being carried up the

street, and that you know, no amount of wrapping yourself in

your winter coat seemed to keep the chill at bay. So it is

remarkable that despite the real. Bad weather that is

happening that day. That crowds pack the streets. They are there

to see old tip. They want to see this new era of American

democracy be ushered in, and fatefully, Harrison decides that

he is not going to wear appropriate attire, and this

became national news. His lack of appropriate attire for the

weather is something that, for many many decades, if not more

than a century, was cited as the reason for his death a month

after he assumes the presidency. His lack of gloves, his lack of

a warm coat. He does not dress himself appropriately, and at

the time, people believed that caused illness.

Colleen Shogan: Well, why wouldn't he wear an overcoat and

gloves? It was a cold day in Washington D.C.

Sharon McMahon: It's one of those things that we can

speculate about, but our best guesses about why he is not

attired appropriately is he is old. This is the first thing.

He's the oldest president ever elected at that point. He was

60-eight years old, and I also think it's very interesting that

his wife Anna is a couple of years younger than him, but she

is so infirm that she actually does not make the journey to

Washington D.C. for his inauguration, and in fact never

got there before he died. So they sent along their

daughter-in-law to help settle him into the White House and act

as a White House hostess. The role of the First Lady was still

evolving at the time, but that just speaks to the first thing

is that they wanted him to appear vital and not elderly,

like

Colleen Shogan: all bundled up or something. Right,

Sharon McMahon: exactly. Like he's an old man who can't keep

out the cold. He wants to appear like strapping and Kevin

Costner-esque, you know, like set on the set of Yellowstone.

So he wants to appear young and vital, given his age, I think it

also has to do with the fact that he wants to be seen as a

man of the frontier, and men of the frontier they don't need

gloves. You know what I mean? A fancy overcoat, something that's

Colleen Shogan: what a gentleman might wear.

Sharon McMahon: Exactly. You know what I'm out here doing

with these cows every morning? I don't need no gloves. You know,

I'm of course making that up, but I think a lot of it had to

do with the image that he wanted to project-that he was tough and

young, strong.

Colleen Shogan: So we don't have that much of the Harrison

presidency to study because he only lasts 32 days in office,

but we do have the inaugural address, which is the longest in

American history. He goes for this probably also exacerbates

the problem. He goes for about two hours for the inaugural

address, but there's a lot of important messages contained in

that address that you talk about in your essay for in pursuit.

Tell us a little bit about those.

Sharon McMahon: Yeah, his inaugural address was over 8400

words, and Daniel Webster actually had the opportunity to

edit it before he delivered it, and Daniel Webster bragged about

having cut 17 different things from his address. So even though

Daniel Webster does all of his editing, he still has 8400 words

to deliver, and as you can imagine, that's a very long time

for the audience to stand there in the cold, listening to him

speak. He hit on a few important themes that I think are worth

remembering from somebody who was born. He was the last

president born as a British subject. Again, his father is a

founding father. All of the people he studied under in

college, founding father, so he had a very unique perspective on

these issues. But some of the themes that he talked about in

his inaugural address were warnings about the separation of

powers-that we cannot have too much power concentrated in the

hands of any individual. This, of course, is a direct answer to

Jacksonian democracy. We cannot have an executive that has

unchecked power around the country. The next thing that he

talked about was that majority rule has limits. Sometimes we

hear people talk about democracy as being mob rule, and that's

not true in representative democracy. But it's still an

idea that persists. In that, if you have two wolves and a sheep

going for dinner. Guess what's going to get eaten? So this idea

that the majority does rule in a democracy, but the majority's

power has limits. It cannot just run amuck and completely

disregard the rights of the minority. He also talks to

people about being aware of political frauds, and these are

people that he viewed sort of as-he didn't use this phrase,

but another way to phrase it might be a silver-tongued

serpent. People who were co-opting or usurping the

language of democracy in an effort to make themselves. Sound

trustworthy, but in reality, they had ulterior motives.

Colleen Shogan: A soft demagogue in the Federalist, a soft

demagogue.

Sharon McMahon: Yes. He talked about true liberty being mild

and tolerant, and this spirit of the political fraud is harsh and

vindictive, and intolerant and reckless. Those are the words he

used. So he's comparing and contrasting what American

government should look like with what some people were attempting

or did do in the past. And then the fourth thing that he warns

about, which I think is an interesting warning, is about

the danger of political parties, and it's an interesting warning

because he became president because of a political party

apparatus, as we were just talking about the merch and the

rallies, and you know this entire organization that props

him up. He warns that people should use vigilance to avoid

the spirit of party, as people have talked about in American

history. He is worried about the allegiance to, say, the

Democratic Party, which at the time Andrew Jackson had been at

the helm of, and people's allegiance to this party and the

person at the top of the party led them astray from the

foundational civic virtues, as what he viewed American

democracy should be. That's a lot to pack in, you know. One

inaugural address. I think one of the things I take away is

something that he said: that party loyalty must never replace

loyalty to democratic principles, and this is a

concept that I am still talking about today. That the principles

of democracy should have higher allegiance in our consciousness

than the allegiance to any political organization.

Colleen Shogan: Well, a lot of his observations are very

relevant to what we're facing today, and some of the

challenges.

Sharon McMahon: Absolutely. Again, it speaks to the idea

that Americans have been wrestling with democracy since

the beginning.

Colleen Shogan: So, what happened to Harrison a month

after his inauguration?

Sharon McMahon: Several weeks after he is inaugurated, he gets

sick, and as I mentioned, people attributed this to having gone

outside without a coat. They attributed to having gone

outside without his appropriate outerwear, and had he not been

standing out in the rain and the wind for two hours without a

coat, this would have never happened. That was the sort of

prevailing sentiment. He catches what you might describe today as

a cold, and then that worsens into pneumonia. It worsens into

pleurisy, where he has inflammation around his lungs.

He was treated with the best that modern medicine had to

offer at the time, which involved things like ipecac,

mercury-based remedies, crude oil, heated suction cups. You

know, like they really are throwing everything they can at

the problem. This man is the president. No president had ever

died in office before, and they didn't really want to find out

what was going to happen if somebody did. So they tried

their best, but eventually he becomes delirious. His fever

eventually starts to overcome him. He declines relatively

quickly. He doesn't linger. You know, he gets sick three weeks

after taking office, and he's dead within the week or

thereabouts. His last words were they're presumed by historians

to be directed at the vice president John Tyler, but his

last words were, "Sir, I wish you to understand the true

principles of the government. I wish them carried out. I ask

nothing more.

Colleen Shogan: Amazing, and of course that precipitates, and

this is of course the subject of another discussion. But

precipitates what will actually happen when the vice president

ascends to the presidency? Will the vice president act with the

powers of the presidency, or will the vice president become

the president of the United States?

Sharon McMahon: Exactly right. Yes, that was a legitimate

debate that people were having at the time, and we have gone

through and updated the Constitution now to better

clarify exactly when the vice president can take over and how

long they can be in office, and we've clarified the manner in

which presidential succession is meant to work. But having never

done it before, it was a very novel legal concept. Will

somebody act as the president, as you mentioned, which is a

different legal status than being the president, it's almost

like being an interim administrator versus I am the

administrator of this thing. Like I'm his president

Colleen Shogan: or acting as the president of the United States,

and Tyler makes the decision pretty quickly that he's going

to take the oath and he's going to be the president of the

United States.

Sharon McMahon: That's right. Of course, that's. Story for

another day, but it's an important ending to Harrison's

story. It is that there is a peaceful transition of power,

and that there is not a fight over this line of succession of

like, well, if you're just the acting president, I'm going to

be the real president. Like it could have gone in a different

direction.

Colleen Shogan: Absolutely,

Sharon McMahon: but that peaceful transfer of power that

we now view as a very important aspect of American democracy,

Harrison's death laid the foundation for what that would

look like for 150 years to come.

Colleen Shogan: Sharon, in pursuit, of course, aims to find

relevant lessons in our nation's past, so what can we learn from

William Henry Harrison?

Sharon McMahon: I think the many of the cautions, warnings, and

also invitations that he has in his inaugural address are

important to remember that power must not fall into one set of

hands alone. That power is shared, and it was designed to

be shared amongst three branches of government and multiple

levels of government at the national, state, and local

levels, and that makes government more responsive to

the needs of citizens, and it also prevents tyranny. So the

idea that nearly 50 years after the Constitution is written,

that we have a president who feels it incumbent to reaffirm

these democratic principles because he saw the nation from

his viewpoint begin moving away from them. So we have to be

vigilant that power cannot be concentrated in the hands of a

single individual. As I mentioned before, I think the

concept of allegiance to the principles of democracy and not

allegiance to a single individual or allegiance to a

political party should be held in the highest regard in our

minds. Much like members of the military, people who serve in

high appointed office, they swear an oath to the

Constitution. They don't swear an oath to serve an individual,

and this isn't the the layperson's version of that.

That we our allegiance is to the principles of democracy and not

to a political party. And then I think it's also worth

remembering that we have to protect the rights of the

minority in a representative democracy. That this is

something that America still struggles with. To what extent

must we protect people with whom we disagree? To what extent must

we protect people who we don't think are deserving of rights?

And these are tensions that continue to exist, existed in

1840, and I do think some of Harrison's advice would be well

heeded today.

Colleen Shogan: Sharon McMahon, one of our nation's most

effective communicators for both history and civics education.

Thank you so much for joining in pursuit today.

Sharon McMahon: My pleasure. Thank you, Colleen.

Colleen Shogan: To read Sharon McMahon's essay on William Henry

Harrison, and to enjoy other great in pursuit essays and

podcasts. Visit in pursuit.org In pursuit with Colleen Shogan

is a podcast by More Perfect. The series is written and

produced by Jim Ambuske. Production services provided by

Stand Together. Our theme music is Kleos by Charlie Ryan, audio

mixing by Curt Dahl of CD Squared. Please rate and review

the show on your favorite podcast app, and tell us which

Americans inspire you.

This transcript was automatically generated by the podcast creator and may contain errors. Aggregated via the PodcastIndex API.