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William Henry Harrison

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The Life of William Henry Harrison

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William Henry Harrison

On March 4, 1841, William Henry Harrison was inaugurated as the President of the United States. Thirty-one days later he was dead. So sums up the common historical refrain of the 9th person elected as the nation’s President. It is true that such a short tenure denied Harrison the opportunity to make his mark on the nation he was selected to lead, but it would be a disservice to limit his story to his one month in the White House. Harrison spent nearly his entire life in service to the public. … The most fundamental element of Harrison’s philosophy was his never-wavering commitment to republicanism. Harrison wholeheartedly believed in the American notion that majority will should drive his nation’s policies (as long as they don’t impinge on the handful of privileges afforded all under the Bill of Rights) and that the maximum amount of these policies should be derived at the local level. … He was a Jeffersonian at heart and planned to lead his nation in that vein. … His rapid demise denied the country the opportunity to experience his leadership at the national level, leaving him in the estimation of far too many as a mere historical footnote.

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Volume II: Democracy Expands

Full Volume

William Henry Harrison

The second volume of Presidential Chronicles tells the life stories of the following five American Presidents who emerged to power in the first half of the 19th Century:
John Quincy Adams
Andrew Jackson
Martin Van Buren
William Henry Harrison
John Tyler
Fisher explores the nation’s initial expansion, bringing forward the democratic ideals of greater access to the ballot and a more direct say in the selection of their national leader. Those leaders represented different political parties and ideologies, as well as widely divergent backgrounds and personalities. Democracy Expands explores the early political battles over the proper role of the U.S. Federal government, the national impact of western expansion, and the tense oppositional clashes that emerged between the executive and legislative branches of government. Andrew Jackson may have dominated this era with his outsized personality, military exploits, and strong-willed vision of the nation’s presidency, but all of the stories in Volume II of Presidential Chronicles add to the rendering of this expansive period in American history, including the elevation of the nation’s first Vice President into the executive chair, and a whole new method of campaigning for national office.

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The Life of William Henry Harrison

Video

William Henry Harrison

The following Henry Harrison videos have been released (10 of 10)
Henry Harrison #1: Plantation to Medicine to Arms (1773-1795)
Henry Harrison #2: Frontier Politician (1978-1805)
Henry Harrison #3: Tecumseh and The Prophet (1806-1810)
Henry Harrison #4: Tippecanoe (1811)
Henry Harrison #5: War! (1812-1813)
Henry Harrison #6: Victory! … and Sidelined (1813-1814)
Henry Harrison #7: National Politics (1814-1824)
Henry Harrison #8: Colombia and Back (1828-1834)
Henry Harrison #9: Log Cabin and Hard Cider Campaign (1836-1840)
Henry Harrison #10: The Briefest Presidency (1841)



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