Warren G. Harding
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Warren Gamaliel Harding (Thursday, November 2, 1865 - Thursday, August 2, 1923) was the 29th (1921-1923) President of the United States and the sixth President to die in office.
Many historians consider Harding to have been the worst President in American history, mostly due to widespread corruption in his Administration. His death early in his term makes a definitive judgement impossible.
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Early life
Harding was born in Corsica, now Blooming Grove, Morrow County, Ohio on November 2 1865 to Dr George Harding and Phoebe Dickerson. He graduated from Ohio Central College at Iberia. Harding was the oldest of six children; his boyhood heroes were Alexander Hamilton and Napoleon. His mother was a midwife who later obtained her medical license.
In 1889 (when he was 24) Harding suffered a nervous breakdown and spent several weeks in a sanitarium. Two years later he married Florence Mabel Kling DeWolfe, a divorcee and mother of one son. Florence inherited her father's determination and business sense. Five years older than he, she had pursued him persistently, until he reluctantly gave in. Her father opposed the marriage vigorously and would not speak to his daughter or her husband for many years.
While the marriage wasn't one of full-blown passions, the couple complemented one another. Much to Florence Kling Harding's dismay, Harding conducted a number of affairs behind her back. But it has been said that it was Florence's drive that helped him achieve greater things than he could alone.
Political rise
An influential newspaper publisher, Harding was elected to the Ohio State Senate in 1899, serving four years before being elected Lieutenant Governor of Ohio, a post where he served from 1903 to 1905. In both cases his service was relatively indistinguished, and at the conclusion of his term as Lieutenant Governor Harding returned to private life.
Senator
Re-entering politics, Harding won election to the United States Senate in 1914, serving from 1915 until Friday, March 4, 1921 and earning the distinction of becoming the first sitting Senator to be elected President.
As was the case during his first tenure as a Senator, Harding was relatively indistinguished, missing over two-thirds of the roll-call votes - among them the vote to send the 19th amendment (granting Women's Suffrage) to the states for ratification.
Election of 1920
Main Article: U.S. presidential election, 1920
A relative unknown outside his own state, Harding was a true "dark horse" candidate, winning the Republican party nomination due to the political machinations of his friends. Before receiving the nomination, he was asked whether there were any embarrassing episodes in his past that might be used against him. He had a very limited formal education, suffered from depression, had spent several years in a sanitarium, had a rocky relationship with his wife (whom he referred to as "the Duchess"), had a longstanding affair with the wife of an old friend, and was a heavy drinker despite Prohibition. Although he answered "no," each of these issues was raised by his opponents during his presidency.
In the 1920 election, Harding ran against Democrat Ohio Governor James M. Cox, whose vice presidential candidate was Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The election was considered a referendum on whether to continue with the progressive work of the Woodrow Wilson administration or to go back to the laissez-faire approach of the William McKinley administration.
Harding ran on a promise to "return to normalcy," which reflected three trends of his time: a renewed isolationism, a resurgence of nativism, and a turning away from the government activism of the progressive era.
During the campaign, rumors were printed that Harding's great-great-grandfather was a West Indian black and that other blacks lurked in his family tree. In response, Harding's campaign manager said "No family in the state [of Ohio] has a clearer, a more honorable record than the Hardings, a blue-eyed stock from New England and Pennsylvania, the finest pioneer blood." To a friend, however, Harding confided that maybe one of his ancestors "jumped the fence," although Harding himself was never certain that this was true or not. These rumors, perhaps based on no more than local Ohio gossip, were circulated by William Estabrook Chancellor.
Harding received 61% of the national vote and 404 electoral votes. Cox received 36% of the national vote and 127 electoral votes. Eugene V. Debs, campaigning from Federal prison, received 3% of the national vote. The election of 1920 marked a milestone in that it was the first election in which women were allowed to vote.
Presidency
As President, Harding played both golf and poker twice a week. Although as a U.S. senator from Ohio, he had voted for Prohibition, Harding kept the White House well-stocked with bootleg liquor. He attended baseball games regularly.
Throughout his administration, Harding adopted a laissez-faire attitude, and there are few lasting achievements to his name. One important event, however, was the Washington Naval Conference of 1921-1922, which at Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes' instigation limited the size of navies and reduced tension between the US, the UK and Japan in the Pacific. Also notable was the establishment of the Bureau of the Budget (now the Office of Management and Budget), which increased the powers of the president by directing departmental spending plans to him rather than to Congress.
It should be pointed out that Harding did appoint some good, smart and honest men to places within his Cabinet, including, most significantly, Hughes, Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover, Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon, Secretary of War John W. Weeks, Postmaster General Will Hays, and Secretary of Agriculture Henry C. Wallace. Wallace was the father of Henry A. Wallace, the future Agriculture Secretary, Vice President, Commerce Secretary and 1948 presidential candidate.
Scandals
Warren G. Harding’s detractors began using the topic of Harding’s ancestry early in his political career in the 1880's. One of the most vicious rumors was that Harding was of “negro” blood. One of those who helped to spread the rumors was that of Amos Kling, Marion Ohio’s wealthiest citizens who detested Harding and his newspaper, The Marion Daily Star. Kling got his comeuppance when his daughter Florence Kling DeWolfe married Harding. Eventually the Hardings and Klings reconciled, however the rumors persisted.
Those who hold to the theory of mixed race do so without scientific proof, and often rely upon the research of William Estabrook Chancellor for details of Harding's African American lineage. However there is no scientific or legal basis for these arguments. Chancellor’s work never provided clear indications of his resources, or his proof. In fact, so few copies of the book exist (one of five known copies is owned by a private book collector in Marion, Ohio that its availibility to modern scholars is limited at best). Furthermore, there has never been a verification of Harding’s DNA. It is also impossible to verify through public records in Ohio; Harding was born in 1865, and the state of Ohio did not require registration (or recording of births) until 1867. Furthermore, Chancellor’s own theories do not play out given examination of Federal Census Records, nor through probate court records. Harding’s 1923 California issued death certificate also does not indicate anything to lead one to believe that Chancellor’s theories were recorded as fact. With the release in the 1960's of Francis Russell's The Shadow of Blooming Grove, the spector of Harding's mixed blood was again raised and, lacking factual sources, quickly put down as inuendo.
Upon winning the election, Harding placed many of his old allies and cronies in prominent political positions. Known as the "Ohio Gang," (A misleading term used by Charles Mee Jr. for his book of the same name) some of the appointees used their new powers to rob the government. Corruption was rampant throughout Harding's administration, though it is uncertain how much Harding actually knew about his friends' illicit activities. One of the most famous scandals of the time was the Teapot Dome scandal, which shook the nation for many years after Harding's death. The scandal involved Secretary of the Interior Albert B. Fall, who was eventually convicted of renting public oil fields to private concerns in exchange for personal loans. In 1931 Fall became the first member of Cabinet to be sent to prison.
Thomas Miller, head of the Office of Alien Property, was convicted of accepting bribes. Jess Smith, personal aide to the Attorney General destroyed papers and then committed suicide. Charles Forbes, Director of the Veterans Bureau, skimmed profits, earned fat kickbacks, and ran alcohol and drugs. He was convicted of fraud and bribery, and drew a two-year sentence. Charles Cramer, an aide to Charles Forbes, committed suicide.
No evidence to date suggests that Harding personally profited from these crimes, but he seemed unable to stop them. "My God, this is a hell of a job!" Harding said. "I have no trouble with my enemies, but my damn friends, they're the ones that keep me walking the floor nights."
Cabinet
Supreme Court appointments
Harding appointed the following Justices to the Supreme Court of the United States:
- William Howard Taft - Chief Justice - 1921
- Harding was the only President to have appointed someone who had been President as Chief Justice.
- George Sutherland - 1922
- Pierce Butler (justice) - 1923
- Edward Terry Sanford - 1923
Death
In June of 1923, Harding set out on a cross-country "Voyage of Understanding," planning to meet regular people and explain his policies. During this trip, he became the first President to visit Alaska. At the end of July, while traveling south from Alaska, Harding developed what was thought to be a severe case of food poisoning. Arriving at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco, he developed pneumonia. Harding died early in the morning on August 2, 1923 at age 57. Naval physicians surmised that he had suffered a heart attack; however, this diagnosis was not made by Dr. Charles Sawyer, the Surgeon General, who was traveling with the presidential party. Mrs. Harding refused permission for an autopsy upon Sawyer's recommendation, which soon led to speculation that the President had been the victim of a plot. Sawyer's medical qualifications were also called into question. Harding was succeeded by his Vice President, Calvin Coolidge, who was sworn in by his father, a notary public, in Plymouth Notch, Vermont.
Following his death, Harding's body was returned to Washington, where it was placed in the Gold Room of the White House pending a state funeral at the United States Capitol. White House employees at the time were quoted as saying that the night before the funeral, that they heard Mrs. Harding speak for more than an hour into the face of her dead husband. The most-commonly reported (but never verified) remark attributed to Mrs. Harding at this time was, "They can't hurt you now, Warren."
Harding was entombed in the receiving vault of the Marion Cemetery, Marion, Ohio, in August 1923. Following Mrs. Harding's death in November 1924, she too was temporarily buried next to her husband. Both bodies were moved in December 1927 to the newly completed Harding Memorial in Marion, which was dedicated by President Herbert Hoover in 1931. The lapse between the final internment and the dedication was due in part to the aftermath of the Teapot Dome scandal.
In 1930, a former private investigator named Gaston Means wrote the exploitive book, The Strange Death of President Harding, in which he suggested that there were many with motives to murder the President, including his wife. Means claimed that it was possible that Mrs. Harding poisoned the President, a rumor that has clouded the facts of Harding's death and heart condition. Means—who had been imprisioned for his activities while an FBI agent— has never had his arguments and theories proven; they remain as speculative as they were sensational.
Extramarital Affairs
Many self-appointed experts on Harding's infidelities base their authority on innuendo, speculation, and stories that swirled around the President following his death. What is known, and has been documented by primary documents, is that during his lifetime, Harding had an affair with Mrs. Carrie Fulton Phillips; he was also rumored to have had an affair with Miss Nan Britton, although information for this comes mostly from her book, written after his death.
Rumors of the Harding love letters circulated through Marion, Ohio for many years. However, their existence was not confirmed until author Francis Russell acquired access to them during his research for his book, The Shadow of Blooming Grove. The letters were in the possession of Harding's one true love, Carrie Fulton Phillips, who was of an advanced age. Phillips kept the letters in a box in a closet and was reluctant to share them. However she relented, and it deemed conclusive that Harding had a 15-year relationship with Mrs. Phillips, who was then the wife of his friend James Phillips, owner of the local department store the Uhler-Phillips Company. Mrs. Phillips was ten years younger than Harding. By 1915, she began trying to sway Harding to leave his wife. When he refused, she left her husband and moved to Berlin with her daughter Isabel. However, the United States was increasingly likely to be drawn into World War I, so Mrs. Phillips moved back to the U.S. and the affair reignited. Harding was now a Senator of Ohio, and a vote was coming up regarding a declaration of war against Germany.
Mrs. Phillips threatened to go public with their affair if the Senator voted for the declaration of war. Harding defied her and voted for the declaration of war, but Carrie did not reveal the scandal to the world. When Harding won the Republican presidential nomination in 1920, he did not disclose the relationship to party officials. Once they learned of the affair, it was too late to find another nominee. In order to reduce the likelihood of a scandal breaking, the Republican National Committee sent Carrie and her family on a trip to Japan and paid them over $50,000. Mrs. Phillips would also receive monthly payments thereafter, thus making her the first and only person known to have successfully extorted money from a major political party.
The letters written to Mrs. Phillips by Harding were confiscated at the request of the Harding heirs, who requested and received a court injunction prohibiting their inclusion in Francis Russell's book, The Shadow of Blooming Grove. Russell, in turn, left quoted passages from the letters as blank passages in protest of the Harding heirs' actions. The love letters between President Warren G. Harding and Carrie Fulton Phillips remain under an Ohio court protective order that expires in 2024, after which the content of the letters may be published and/or reviewed.
In addition to Mrs. Phillips, Harding also reportedly had an affair with Nan Britton, the daughter of Harding's late friend, a Dr. Britton of Marion. Nan's obsession with Harding began at an early age when she began pasting pictures of then-Senator Harding on her bedroom walls. According to Nan's kiss-and-tell book The President's Daughter, published after Harding's death, she and Sen. Harding conceived "their" daughter, Elizabeth Ann, in January 1919 in his Senate office. Harding never met Nan's daughter, but paid large amounts of child support. Harding and Britton, according to unsubstantiated reports, continued their affair while he was President, utilizing a closet adjacent to the Oval Office for privacy. Following Harding's death, Nan Britton sued the estate of Warren G. Harding unsuccessfully on behalf of Elizabeth Ann. Under cross-examination by the Harding heirs' attorney, Grant Mouser (a former member of Congress himself,) Britton's testimony was riddled with inconsistencies, and she lost her case. Britton married a Mr. Christian, who adopted Elizabeth Ann. Now Elizabeth Ann Blaesing, Nan Britton's daughter has been a resident of California for most of her life and was still living as of 2002.
External links
- Inaugural Address
- The Harding home (historic site, Ohio)
- First State of the Union Address of Warren Harding
- Second State of the Union Address of Warren Harding
| Preceded by: Woodrow Wilson | President of the United States 1921–1923 | Succeeded by: Calvin Coolidge |
| Preceded by: Theodore E. Burton | U.S. Senator from Ohio 1915–1921 | Succeeded by: Frank B. Willis |
| Preceded by: Harry L. Gordon | Lieutenant Governor of Ohio 1904–1906 | Succeeded by: Francis W. Treadway |
| Preceded by: Charles Evans Hughes | Republican Party Presidential candidate 1920 (won) | Followed by: Calvin Coolidge |
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