William Henry Harrison, the ninth president of the United
States, was in office for 31 days. Harrison was the first Whig to serve as
president of the United States. The Whigs were a motley crew consisting of
anti-Masons, national Republicans, and anti-Jackson Democrats. While there
wasn’t a common platform to hold the Whigs together, they employed rhetoric and
the press deftly. The election of 1840, in which Harrison defeated the
incumbent Van Buren, was one of little substance. Oliver Perry Chitwood, John
Tyler’s biographer, pointed out that the Whig press successfully framed
Harrison as a rugged frontiersman while painting Van Buren as an aristocrat. In
reality Van Buren was largely a self-made man, as you may recall from the prior
post, and Harrison was a scion of Virginia gentry. Harrison’s campaign slogan,
“Tippecanoe and Tyler, Too” was one of the most successful and enduring in
American history.
There are contradictory accounts about Harrison’s death. The
author, Robert Owens, tells the story you often hear; Harrison delivered a long
inaugural speech in bad weather, contracted pneumonia, and died shortly
thereafter. Chitwood tells a different story, which I’m more inclined to
believe given the timeline. Chitwood says that Harrison’s inauguration took
place on “beautiful day.” It wasn’t until March 24th, 20 days after
the inauguration, that Harrison contracted pneumonia. This makes the story that
Harrison contracted his illness during the inauguration difficult to reconcile.
Owens’ book, Mr. Jefferson’s Hammer, was the first I
read during this project that wasn’t a biography. I didn’t realize it when I
picked the book up, but it’s really an account of Harrison’s time as governor
of the Indiana Territory and his role in 19th Century American
Indian policy. The book spends very little time discussing his childhood and
even less discussing his post-Indiana work.
While this was a bit of a divergence from the “presidential biography”
tact, the book was still interesting and I certainly learned about a little
known president.
Harrison’s father, Benjamin, was governor of Virginia, he
was a leader in the House of Burgesses, and a signer of the Declaration of
Independence. When Harrison applied to join the Army, Washington himself approved
the application likely due to his friendship with Benjamin.
Harrison’s most famous military conquest was his role in the
Battle of Tippecanoe. Owens tells a story not as glorious as one might expect.
Harrison’s Indian adversaries attacked at night in an attempt to kill Harrison.
Harrison likely escaped because his customary gray horse ran off earlier that
day and he was riding another. Harrison’s men held off the Indians, but
suffered dozens of deaths and injuries. Initial criticisms of Harrison’s ill preparation
were quickly suppressed as Andrew Jackson defended his actions.
Like Jackson, Harrison became involved in Aaron Burr’s
failed attempt to split the union. Burr conspired with General James Wilkinson
whom Harrison had served under at the beginning of his Army career. Wilkinson
requested that Harrison send Burr to Congress as Indiana’s representative, a
request that he didn’t oblige.
President Thomas Jefferson wrote to Harrison in 1803, which
was early in Harrison’s tenure as governor, instructing him to acquire as much
Indian land in the Mississippi Valley and to keep this plan secret. Jefferson
wanted to secure the Ohio and Mississippi rivers in the event that France (i.e.
Napoléon) were to militarize their newly acquired Louisiana Territory. A common
refrain in American history education is the story of unfair treaties that the
American settlers coerced Indians in to in order to give legal cover to the
subjugation of Indian land. Harrison’s time as Governor of Indiana is a case
study in this practice. The common tactics seemed to be: (i) When possible
negotiate with a tribe on friendly terms with the Americans, these tribes often
had tenuous claims on the land that Americans were negotiating over. (ii)
Institute an annuity system whereby the tribes were paid over time. This
secured the dependence of that tribe on the American government and served as
leverage over the tribe’s leadership. (iii) Try to structure payment for land
to include farm equipment and/or livestock to help in the “civilizing” of the
tribes. The idea of protecting the
Western border from France was to become a moot point soon as the Louisiana
Purchase was completed by Jefferson’s administration later in 1803.
While Harrison's time in the highest office was brief, the role he played in the West is an important chapter in American history. Harrison was a slaveholder and a proponent of slavery and worked to institutionalize it in the Indiana Territory, a battle he lost as the country slowly marched toward a Civil War whose first shots would ring out 20 years, almost to the day, after Harrison's death.
While Harrison's time in the highest office was brief, the role he played in the West is an important chapter in American history. Harrison was a slaveholder and a proponent of slavery and worked to institutionalize it in the Indiana Territory, a battle he lost as the country slowly marched toward a Civil War whose first shots would ring out 20 years, almost to the day, after Harrison's death.
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