Here's Where It Gets Interesting - First Lady of the Month, Anna Harrison

Episode Date: December 5, 2022

Today on Here’s Where It Gets Interesting, we’re going to talk about another First Lady who follows the pattern: married to the president, but never lived in the White House. This time, it was our... first lady’s husband - the newly elected President William Henry Harrison - who died a month into his presidency, giving her no reason to leave her Ohio home and travel to Washington D.C. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, friends. Welcome. I am so glad you're here with me for another episode of Here's Where It Gets Interesting. And today we're going to talk about a first lady who, guess what, also never made it into the White House. If you've been listening, you'll know that this has been a recurring theme of the past few presidents' wives, Rachel Jackson, Hannah Van Buren, and now Anna Harrison. Except this time it was Anna's husband, the newly elected President William Henry Harrison, who died a month into his presidency. And so while Anna officially held the title of First Lady for about 30 days, she hadn't even finished her preparations to
Starting point is 00:00:47 travel to the Capitol when she received news of her husband's death. I'm Sharon McMahon, and here's where it gets interesting. In 1779, legend has it that a man named John Sims 1779, legend has it that a man named John Sims galloped out of New York City. The Revolutionary War was raging, and John, wearing a British military uniform, flew past one redcoat encampment after another. What the British didn't know was that Sims was an officer in the Continental Army, and tucked into his traveling clothes with him was his four-year-old daughter, Anna. John made it to his destination without being discovered and was able to deliver young Anna to her final destination, the home of her maternal grandparents on Long Island. Three years earlier, John's wife, Anna's mother, had died suddenly.
Starting point is 00:01:47 John and his wife had already raised a daughter, Maria, who was 13 years older than Anna, and Maria was likely safely away at boarding school. John had done his very best to care for his baby daughter alone, but with war raging all around and his responsibilities in the army, alone. But with war raging all around and his responsibilities in the army, he needed to get her to safety and to a family who would provide for her needs. Anna's family, the Sims on her father's side and the Tuthills on her late mother's side were well known in New York and New Jersey. After the Revolutionary War ended, her father, John, rose through the ranks of the judicial system and became the Chief Justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court. Anna's grandparents were
Starting point is 00:02:37 part of an established East Hampton family with deep roots in the area and a reputation as intellectuals. As Anna grew, living on Long Island with her grandparents, they were devoted to giving her a top-notch education. They wanted nothing but the best for little Anna, who had already been through a lot. They sent her first to the newly opened Clinton Academy, a co-ed school that was named after New York's first governor, George Clinton. But by the time she was 12, her grandparents moved her to the Isabella Marshall Graham private boarding school in New York City. And I need to pause here for a moment and tell you a little bit about Isabella Marshall Graham and her school. It's very interesting. Isabella was a
Starting point is 00:03:21 pretty forward-thinking woman of her time. She grew up in Scotland, and there she attended a church led by the Reverend John Witherspoon, a man who later immigrated to the United States and was a signer of the Declaration of Independence. Isabella married in Scotland and had five children, but her husband died when they were young. Isabella had many mouths to feed and no income, and so she did something unconventional. She opened a school for girls in Scotland. This was the 1780s. There were often rudimentary schools for young children, small places where they gathered to learn to read and write, but the opportunities for girls to
Starting point is 00:04:05 continue their education beyond that were really few and far between. Girls from wealthy families might have gone to finishing schools or learned directly from tutors, but rarely received a formal education in the same way that boys did during the 18th century. When the Revolutionary War in America ended, Reverend Witherspoon made a return trip to Scotland for a visit. While he was there, he connected with his former parishioner, Isabella, and was so impressed by the success of her growing educational institutions, by this time she had opened multiple schools, he urged her to move to the newly formed
Starting point is 00:04:45 United States and set up a similar school in New York City. Isabella agreed, and in 1789, she established her boarding school for young women in New York. And while the 1790s brought more women's educational opportunities to the United States, it also brought something else, a yellow fever epidemic that devastated city populations. We've talked about this previously, Dolly Madison's first husband and baby son died of yellow fever during a previous outbreak. And this epidemic left a huge number of orphans and widows behind. Isabella knew the unique heartache of being a widow, and with the help of two of her close friends, she established the Society for the Relief of Poor Widows with Small Children. This would soon after become the New York Orphan Asylum, allowing widowed parents to
Starting point is 00:05:47 work while their children were safely cared for and properly educated. Under Isabella's leadership, the society assisted hundreds of needy widows and orphans in its first few years, changing the fortunes of those who were left destitute from the yellow fever epidemic. And the two women who helped her set up the New York Orphan Asylum, they were her dear friends, Elizabeth Ann Seton and... I established the first private orphanage in New York City. That's right, Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton, famed widow of Alexander Hamilton. The organization they began is still in operation today, and it's now known as the Graham Windham Home in Brooklyn.
Starting point is 00:06:34 Historian Dorothy G. Becker wrote that Isabella Graham was one of the first women to move beyond the ladies' sewing circle and into long-range institution building. And it was at Isabella's boarding school in New York that young Anna spent her formative years. For the rest of her life, she would talk about her time there, and it was one of the most cherished periods of her life. one of the most cherished periods of her life. Eventually, Anna left school at her grandparents' home on Long Island and moved back in with her father and his new wife. Judge John Sims had become the owner of a large area of land in what was then referred to as the Northwest Territory, then referred to as the Northwest Territory, which was the area west of Pennsylvania that hugged the Great Lakes. And this had to have been a very interesting transition for Anna,
Starting point is 00:07:33 as she had never met her stepmother and presumably hadn't been with her father for an extended amount of time in over a decade. There's only one record of him visiting her in New York after the Revolutionary War ended. Soon after joining her father, Anna left on a trip to visit her older sister Maria, who was married by this time and lived in Kentucky. It was on this visit that she met a young soldier stationed at Fort Washington. stationed at Fort Washington. By all accounts, it was a love at first sight for Anna and Officer William Henry Harrison. Using the excuse that she should stay with Maria for a while while her father was building a new house, Anna decided to extend her stay in Kentucky. It was a very convenient explanation to remain in the area and get to know her new beau. John Sims and his wife Susanna came to visit a few months later, and when they learned about the serious relationship between Anna and William, he did not approve. He forbid them to continue seeing each other. Marrying a military man who
Starting point is 00:08:46 planned to live on the frontier was not the future John Sims had in mind for his proper New York-educated daughter. Whether it was Anna's feminist educational foundation or just the mighty power of love, Anna directly disobeyed her father and eloped with William Harrison in November of 1795. Waiting until her father went away on a trip, the two lovebirds quickly married at the Sims' home in North Bend, Ohio. When he returned, in North Bend, Ohio. When he returned, John Sims was so angry that he confronted William and demanded to know how he planned to support his daughter. And William Harrison famously responded, by my sword and my own right arm, sir. It took some time, but Anna's father finally accepted them as a couple, and then eventually grew to deeply respect William. Judge John Sims would be a fierce campaigner for William and his political aspirations, and eventually made William Harrison the sole executor of his will.
Starting point is 00:10:00 Anna and William spent the first few years of their marriage at his military post in Fort Washington, and their first child was born there in 1796. Two years later, William resigned, and using money he had carefully saved during his military years, he purchased 169 acres of land in North Bend, Ohio, and built a log cabin on the property. It was there that the young Harrisons continued to expand their family and plan William's next adventure into politics. Anna got to work, too. She set up a school system for her children in that Ohio log cabin, and despite it being an area with few settlers, she invited children from all over the region to her home once a month for special educational experiences. So, yes, Anna Harrison set up her own homeschool co-op. Her instruction included things like reading and writing and biblical religious studies,
Starting point is 00:11:02 as well as Greek philosophy and Shakespeare, not exactly the subjects you would expect to be taught in a near-empty corner of rural Ohio in the 1790s. But Anna's strong educational foundations gave her a passion for making sure the next generation would receive every learning opportunity possible. And she was especially focused on this for young women. Despite numerous young ladies academies and higher education institutions that began populating the East Coast to train women as teachers in the growing public school system, female education was still not seen as a priority, especially for those outside of the wealthy class. Anna Harrison, no doubt because of her background at the Isabella Graham School, was operating well before her time, educating not just her
Starting point is 00:11:56 own daughters, but any others who were willing to show up and learn. I'm Jenna Fisher. And I'm Angela Kinsey. We are best friends. And together, we have the podcast Office Ladies, where we rewatched every single episode of The Office with insane behind-the-scenes stories, hilarious guests, and lots of laughs. Guess who's sitting next to me?
Starting point is 00:12:19 Steve! It's my girl in the studio! Every Wednesday, we'll be sharing even more exclusive stories from the office and our friendship with brand new guests and we'll be digging into our mailbag to answer your questions and comments so join us for brand new office ladies 6.0 episodes every wednesday plus on mondays we are taking a second drink. You can revisit all the Office Ladies rewatch episodes every Monday with new bonus tidbits before every episode. Well, we can't wait to see you there. Follow and listen to Office Ladies on the free Odyssey app and wherever you get your podcasts. The married years of Anna and Williams' life were filled with raising and educating a total of 10 children
Starting point is 00:13:10 and the successful building of Williams' political career. His appointments took him to Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., and eventually he was sworn in as the first governor of Indiana Territory. So let's back up for a quick second. In this episode, we've mentioned the Northwest Territory where Anna and William lived. Today, when we think of the Northwest, we think of like Washington and Oregon, right? But in the late 18th century, as the country began to spread westward from the eastern seaboard, the Northwest Territory encompassed what would become the future states of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin, and part of Minnesota. That was literally the Northwest of the United States at the time.
Starting point is 00:14:01 And this expansion began in 1787 when Congress adopted the Northwest Ordinance, a goal they had been working towards for three years after the end of the Revolutionary War. The system provided an opportunity for areas west of the Ohio River to eventually gain statehood and laid out a three-step plan as to how this would happen. First, the Northwest Territory had a goal of becoming no less than three but no more than five states in a union. And secondly, Congress would then appoint a governor, secretary, and three judges to become the leadership of each territory. Once the population of each area reached 5,000 free, full-age men, those citizens would then be given the opportunity to nominate and vote on the government for their region. And third, each state would adopt their own Bill of Rights that gave protections to its citizens, including a right to religious freedom,
Starting point is 00:15:11 educational access, and the assurance that slavery would be illegal. Anna's family would have a significant role in this westward expansion as her father was named a judge in the Ohio Territory and her husband was named the governor of the Indiana Territory. The Harrisons settled in the most western area of that land, building a brick home in Indiana that they called Grouseland. Anna continued to act as an educator and also moved into the role of the hospitable political spouse that William needed. She was well known for her dedication to entertaining influential leaders from Washington, D.C. And on several occasions, she hosted visits from Vice President Aaron Burr. As supportive as Anna was while William continued his political schmoozing.
Starting point is 00:16:12 She did have one rule, that he was not to do any politicking or campaigning on Sundays. Instead, after attending their local Presbyterian church, Sundays at the Harrisons came with an open-door policy. Anyone in the congregation was welcome at the Harrison home for Sunday dinner. There was always a seat at their table. By the 1830s, William Henry Harrison had become a very well-known key political figure and a senior leader in the new Whig Party. The Whigs, if you remember, it's spelled W-H-I-G, were a new political party. They were formed in the 1830s by those people who disagreed with Andrew Jackson and his Democratic Party politics. In fact, it was the Whig Party who was the first political party in the United States to refer to themselves as conservative. In the years since William's retirement from the military,
Starting point is 00:17:07 he had been well known for some of his military leadership in the War of 1812. He had built up a very impressive resume of positions in politics. Of course, I mentioned he was the governor of Indiana. They eventually moved back to Ohio. They moved back to North Bend, Ohio, where Anna's father had built up a large amount of land there. Harrison was eventually elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. He served in the Ohio legislature. He was eventually elected to the United States Senate, representing Ohio. And during that time, he ran for a bunch of other positions, some of which he lost and some of which he won. Towards the end of the John Quincy Adams administration, his friends successfully lobbied for his appointment as the first U.S. minister to Gran Colombia, a conglomerate of territories in South America. Andrew Jackson's spoils system unfortunately lost him this appointment early on in his tenure, but this did not cut short his career in public service. Williams spent the better part of the 1830s delivering speeches for the Whigs, advocating
Starting point is 00:18:18 for their stances on various political issues, especially agricultural issues, which were very important in the region that he represented. And even after declaring his retirement, he continued to serve his local government on the court of clerks. All of this work resulted in him being a very well-known man in the area at the time. When the Whigs were established, a prominent member of their party was our old friend, always a candidate, never a president, Henry Clay. Clay suffered a few unsuccessful bids for the presidency, and the Whig party could see the writing on the wall. They needed another popular figure to take their political agenda and run with it. And William Henry Harrison was their guy. Even though he had technically retired
Starting point is 00:19:16 back to his old log cabin in Ohio to drink hard cider and enjoy his numerous grandchildren, his Whig Party allies convinced him to run for president and seize power away from the Democratic Party. William Henry Harrison first ran for president in 1836, and he lost. Jackson's right-hand man, Martin Van Buren, took the win and Harrison had to wait until 1840 for his next shot. By the time the next election cycle began, William had a clear direction on how he could win. In fact, William Henry Harrison revolutionized political campaigning techniques during his second run. Harrison and his campaigners began to repeat a slogan, and it's one you may be familiar with, Tip a Canoe and Tyler Too. The phrase gave a nod to one of Harrison's military victories
Starting point is 00:20:13 and utilized the last name of his running mate, John Tyler. The slogan began to appear everywhere, not just in newspapers, but on pamphlets, artwork, collectibles like pins and ribbons. So, rewinding just a little bit to remind you of where this nickname Tippecanoe came from, just before the War of 1812, while he was still the governor of Indiana Territory, William led a thousand soldiers into the Shawnee village of Prophetstown in central Indiana. soldiers into the Shawnee village of Prophetstown in central Indiana. The indigenous landowners had organized an army of tribes in an attempt to keep out the flood of pioneers that were moving into their area. They created a tribal confederacy that was perceived to be a breach of a treaty by the European settlers, and this led William Harrison to lead a military presence into the area. William and his
Starting point is 00:21:07 troops were met with a white flag and a request for a temporary ceasefire so that the leaders of each party could sit down and discuss the matter. He agreed to set up camp with his men so talks could begin later in the week. In a shrewd military maneuver, William instructed his men not to get too comfortable. By dawn, the camp was under attack by tribal warriors. Ultimately, William's forces were victorious. They lit fire to the Prophetstown village and the battle ended the organizing of a Native American confederacy. William Henry Harrison's success at the Battle of Tippecanoe spread far and wide throughout the Union. And so he began his presidential campaign by using the slogan Tippecanoe and Tyler too, which reminded the people of his popular military victory and provided the masses with a way to
Starting point is 00:22:07 rally around him as he ran for office. It really was the first time a candidate had actively used a memorable slogan to gain the attention of the electorate. We now expect this in almost every run for major office in our country, a tactic that can actually make or break somebody's desire to become elected. His slogan, Tippecanoe and Tyler Too, was the equivalent of Obama's, yes, we can, or Trump's, make America great again. Every major election since 1840 has adopted the use of a slogan as part of its campaign plan. His revolutionary campaign tactics worked, and Harrison was elected in a landslide victory, becoming the first official Whig Party president.
Starting point is 00:23:01 But for Anna, this was not a win. When she heard that her husband was the victor, she wept heavily and said, I wish that my husband's friends had left him where he is, happy and content in retirement. Perhaps Anna had an unknown foresight of what was to come because a few months later, her status would go from First Lady to First Widow. William Henry Harrison, at 68, was the oldest man to be elected President of the United States, and he held that title until the 1980 election of Ronald Reagan. Similarly, Anna was the oldest woman to become first lady, a title that she kept until the 2020 election when Dr. Jill Biden moved into the White House. When it was time to leave for the inauguration and move to Washington, D.C. 65-year-old Anna felt too sick to make the trip. She sent along her daughter-in-law, Jane Harrison, to take her place until she was well enough to travel. But Jane didn't get much of a chance to serve as White House hostess either.
Starting point is 00:24:20 In an act of, what was he thinking, William Henry Harrison decided to make the longest inauguration speech on record during the coldest part of winter in Washington, D.C. And maybe he was trying to assert his vitality, but he did it all without wearing a hat or a coat. but he did it all without wearing a hat or a coat. Outgoing President Martin Van Buren muttered to his friends that Harrison does not seem to realize the vast importance of his elevation. He is tickled with the presidency as a young woman is with a new bonnet. Though maybe a bonnet would have kept him warm while he read all 8,445 words of his inauguration speech. It was two hours long. He spent two hours listening to himself talk in the snow and the rain. There are no speeches that people want to listen to the last two hours.
Starting point is 00:25:31 the last two hours. 8,445 words. If you think about that, like typed 12 point font holds roughly 500 words. So think about like how many pages that is to write as your inauguration speech is very long, is very noteworthy. In a turn of events that then surprised nobody, William Henry Harrison got sick. His cold evolved into a bad case of pneumonia, and 31 days into his presidency, he died. Anna, who had finally recovered from her own illness, was packing up for the move to the White House when she allegedly received the news by letter. She was overwhelmed with grief, and seeing no point in doing so, she declined to travel to Washington, D.C. for the state funeral, which officially made her the only living First Lady to never be at the White House. The body of William Henry Harrison was eventually brought home to North Bend, Ohio in May of 1841, and a local funeral was held for him. Congress voted to give Anna a surprise. She was the first spouse to ever be widowed while her husband was president.
Starting point is 00:26:48 And so they voted to give her a pension of $25,000, which is the equivalent of almost a million dollars in today's money. New President John Tyler decided to sweeten the pot, free postage for the rest of her life. And today, stamps and postage might not seem like that big of a thing. Like, people would generally not be jumping up and down about that. But in the mid-1800s, letter writing was the primary form of communication between people. It was more like the equivalent of getting free cell phone service for the rest of your life. That would be a huge perk, right? So this was viewed as a huge perk for Anna Harrison. And interestingly enough, that tradition still lives on today. It's called a franking privilege, which is related to a Latin word
Starting point is 00:27:37 meaning free. For a non-political male, all the surviving spouse of a former president has to do is use a stamp with their name where the postage would go. We currently don't have any surviving spouses of former presidents, but if, for example, Jimmy Carter outlives Rosalind Carter, she would be given franking privileges for non-political mail. Anna wrote a sincere letter of thanks to John Tyler, but instead of sending it directly to him, she had it printed in all of the major newspapers of the day. In it, she wrote, Dear Sir, I have received with sentiments of deep emotion the resolutions of the Senate and the House of Representatives, which you have done me the honor of forwarding relative to the decease of my lamented husband. I cannot sufficiently express
Starting point is 00:28:32 the thanks I owe to the nation and its assembled representatives for their condolence, so feelingly expressed of my individual calamity and the national bereavement, but mingling my tears with the sighs of the many patriots of the land, pray to heaven for the enduring happiness and prosperity of our beloved country. Perhaps having the letter distributed to the newspapers was Anna's way of letting John Tyler know that she may be the former first lady, but she was not going anywhere. Anna became deeply invested in politics and had open, strong objections to the Tyler administration. In her last years, she went to live on the estate of her son, John, who was the father to our 23rd president, Benjamin Harrison, which means that Anna was the spouse of a president and the grandmother of a president.
Starting point is 00:29:31 Anna used her congressional pension to pay off family debts and lived modestly. She continued to work with her local Presbyterian church to provide generously to poor individuals in the community. generously to poor individuals in the community. She died in February of 1864 and was laid to rest next to her husband in North Bend, Ohio. Anna is an often overlooked First Lady because of her husband's short term and her absence from the White House, but she does hold a number of distinctions. And she is the last First Lady to have been born a British subject before the American Revolution. Thanks to her husband's fondness for standing in the cold without a hat, she was the first First Lady to be widowed while holding the title. Thanks so much for being here today, friends. I'll see you again next time.
Starting point is 00:30:27 Thank you so much for listening to Here's Where It Gets Interesting. If you enjoyed this episode, would you consider sharing it on social media or leaving us a rating or review on your favorite podcast platform? All those things help podcasters out so much. The show is written and researched by executive producer Heather Jackson, Valerie Hoback, and Sharon McMahon. Our audio engineer is Jenny Snyder, and it's hosted by me, Sharon McMahon. We'll see you again soon.

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