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Eleven occupants of the White House: eight Presidents
and three First Ladies have died while in office. The exhibit documents
the circumstances of those deaths. Artifacts representative of the
exhibit include: a replica of Lincoln’s coffin; a quilt
created from the black bunting that draped the Indiana State House
where Lincoln lay in state April 30, 1865; Mrs. Harding’s
and Mrs. Garfield’s mourning dresses and Mrs. McKinley’s
hat, each worn at the funerals of their respective husbands; a veiled
hat worn at the funeral of Caroline Harrison; the original cards
from the funeral flowers for Caroline; copies of newspaper articles
and church sermons; photos of processions; other memorabilia.
Presidents that died while in office
William
Henry Harrison, President March 4, 1841-April 4, 1841.
- His inaugural address lasted one-hour and forty-five
minutes in rain and snow.
- The cold caught as a result of the chill during
his inaugural evolved into pneumonia.
- He died in the White House, the shortest tenure
of any President.
- He was first buried in the Congressional Burying
Grounds, Washington D.C.; his body was moved later to North Bend,
Ohio.
- His funeral cost the United States $3,088.09,
$20 of which was paid for shaving and dressing the deceased.
Zachary Taylor, President March 4, 1849-July
9, 1850
- Following a July 4th celebration at the Washington
Monument, Taylor ate a large quantity of iced milk and cherries.
At least one of the cherries may have been contaminated.
- He died in the White House after a five-day illness.
- Rumors circulated that he was poisoned.
- His body was exhumed in 1991; the subsequent autopsy
determined he was not poisoned by arsenic.
- Analysis of his hair and fingernails was performed
at the Oak Ridge (Tennessee) National Laboratory.
- The funeral procession included “Old Whitey,”
Taylor’s horse during the Mexican campaigns, parading with
an empty saddle and inverted spurs.
- He was first buried in the Congressional Burying
Grounds, Washington D.C., but his remains were moved later to
the Zachary Taylor National Cemetery, Louisville, Kentucky.
Lincoln Eagle
22” x 29” x 26”
Giltwood and gesso
One of a pair that hung over Lincoln’s casket at the State
House in Indianapolis when Lincoln lay in state on April 30, 1865.
P resented to the Columbia Club in 1940 by Mrs. John McGraw, Originally
given to John McGraw by Indiana Civil War Governor Oliver P. Morton.
From the collection of the Columbia Club.
Abraham Lincoln, President March 4, 1861-April
15, 1865
- Lincoln was shot by John Wilkes Booth while attending
a performance of “Our American Cousin” in Ford’s
Theatre.
- The bullet from the .44 single Derringer split
into two pieces upon impact with the back of Lincoln’s head.
- He died in the Peterson Boarding House, to which
he had been taken, across the street from the theatre.
- The public viewed his body on April 18 in the
East Room of the White House.
- His body lay in state in 14 different cities during
the 12 days of the train funeral procession from Washington, D.C.
to Springfield, Illinois.
- Indianapolis, Indiana was one of the cities in
which Lincoln’s body lay in state in the State House (April
30, 1865).
- The funeral train also contained the remains of
Lincoln’s son, Willie, who had died in 1862.
- The Lincoln tomb in Illinois now holds the remains
of Abraham, his wife Mary, and his sons Willie, Eddie and Tad.
James A. Garfield, President March 4-September
19, 1881
- Garfield was shot in the back by Charles J. Guiteau
on the platform of the Baltimore and Potomac railroad station
in Washington, D.C., on July 2, 1881.
- Two bullets hit Garfield: one in the arm; the
other entered his lower back, deflected off a rib and lodged near
his pancreas.
- He was tended by physicians in the White House
until moved to the New Jersey sea shore. Special train track was
laid right up to the Francklyn cottage in Elberton, New Jersey.
- On September 6, he died in the cottage.
- Death was attributed to infection caused by physicians
probing his body with bare fingers and un-sterilized instruments
attempting to find and remove the bullet.
- A special train moved his body from New Jersey
to Washington, D.C.
- A funeral train transported his body to its final
resting place in Lake View Cemetery, Cleveland, Ohio.

Garfield Pass to Rotunda
4 1/2” x 2 3/4”
From the collection of Tom Huston.
William McKinley, President March 4, 1897-September
14, 1901
- McKinley was shot by Leon Czolgosz in the Temple
of Music on the grounds of the Pan American Exposition, Buffalo,
New York, on September 6, 1901.
- Czolgosz wrapped his right arm in white cloth
to look bandaged; the covered arm rested in a sling concealing
a gun.
- The assassin fired two bullets. One struck a jacket
button and did not enter McKinley’s body. The other passed
through his stomach, then nicked his left kidney.
- In the medical building of the Exposition, doctors
performed two operations: one looking for the bullet and the other
to remove cloth carried into the abdomen by the bullet.
- He died of gangrene developing around the path
of the bullet into the stomach and abdomen.
- A funeral train moved his body to Washington,
D.C., where it was placed in the East Room of the White House.
- Another funeral train moved McKinley’s body
to Canton Ohio. He was first buried in the Westlawn Cemetery,
then moved in 1907 to the McKinley National Memorial Cemetery.

Framed memorial to William McKinley
23 1/2” x 19 1/2”
From the collection of Julian and Sue Ridlen.
Warren G. Harding, President March 4, 1921-August
2, 1923
- He died in San Francisco, California, in the Palace
Hotel, following a lengthy cross-country goodwill tour by train.
- The tour included a trip to Alaska, the first
by a President to the area.
- On the trip south to California from Alaska he
fell ill.
- The presidential party checked into the Palace
Hotel on July 29, 1923.
- Speculation regarding the cause of death included
pneumonia, heart attack (he suffered from enlarged heart) and
stroke (he suffered from high blood pressure).
- Rumors of poison from a variety of sources, including
his wife, causing his death circulated throughout the country.
- Mrs. Harding refused an autopsy of Harding’s
body, so the exact cause of death remains in question.
Franklin D. Roosevelt, President March
4, 1933-April 12, 1945 (the only President elected for four terms)
John F. Kennedy, President January 20, 1961-November
22, 1963
- Kennedy was shot by Lee Harvey Oswald shortly
before noon on November 22 while in a motorcade in Dallas, Texas.
- Texas Governor Connally, riding in the same open
car, also was shot.
- A little more than one hour after the shooting,
doctors at the trauma center in Parkland Hospital concluded that
efforts to revive the President were useless. Last rites were
administered and he was pronounced dead.
- His body lay in state in the Rotunda of the Capitol
until November 25, 1963.
- The funeral procession carried the caisson past
the White House to St. Matthew’s Cathedral and then to Arlington
National Cemetery where he was buried.
- Black Jack, a riderless horse, followed behind
the caisson, carrying Kennedy’s riding boots reversed in
the stirrups to mark the death of the rider.
- An eternal flame burns in Arlington in his memory.
First Ladies that died in the White House
Letitia Tyler, First Lady, April 4, 1841-September
10, 1842
- Letitia suffered her first stroke, which left
her partially paralyzed, one year before her husband John Tyler
became William Henry Harrison’s Vice President.
- Following the election, Tyler remained in his
home in Williamsburg, Virginia, to be near Letitia. On the death
of the President, April 4, 1841, he left his Williamsburg home
for the White House.
- Letitia and her children joined President Tyler
in Washington D.C. in May 1841, where she directed the affairs
at the White House. She did so from her private bedroom suite.
- Her only public appearance in the state rooms
of the White House while First Lady was on the occasion of the
marriage of her daughter, Elizabeth, on February 7, 1842.
- Her second stroke occurred during late summer
of 1842, and she died in the White House on September 10, 1842.
- She lay in state in the East Room of the White
House before burial at Cedar Grove Cemetery, New Kent County,
Virginia.
Caroline Scott Harrison, First Lady April
4, 1889-October 25, 1892
-
Caroline
supervised four generations of Harrisons living together in the
White House: eleven people, five rooms, one bathroom.
- She helped found the Daughters of the American
Revolution.
- Caroline supervised the total refurbishing of
the White House.
- During the winter of 1891-1892, bronchial infections
frequently interfered with her social and political obligations.
- In March of 1892 she developed catarrhal pneumonia,
followed by hemorrhaging of the lungs and was moved to a three-bedroom
cottage on Loon Lake in the Adirondack Mountains in July.
- Following a brief rally, her doctors diagnosed
her condition as tuberculosis. On September 20, she returned to
the White House where she died on October 25.
- A private service was held in the East Room of
the White House.
- Her remains were taken to Indianapolis where a
funeral service was held at the First Presbyterian Church.
- After the service, the cortege proceeded past
the Harrison’s Delaware Street home before going on to Crown
Hill Cemetery for burial.
Ellen Axson Wilson, First Lady March 4, 1913-August
6, 1914
- On March 1, 1914, Ellen Wilson fell ill in the
White House. She was diagnosed with Bright’s Disease, a
kidney ailment for which there was no cure.
- In August, as her condition deteriorated, she
told her husband, “I would go away more peacefully if my
Alley Bill was passed by Congress.” The Senate passed the
bill that day with a promise from the House that it would pass
the bill the next day. (Note: The Alley-clearance bill sought
better housing particularly for black laborers in Washington,
D.C.)
- She died in the White House less than an hour
after being told of the Senate’s action and the House’s
promise.
- Private services were held in the East Room of
the White House.
- A funeral train moved her body to Rome, Georgia,
where she was interred with her parents in Historic Myrtle Hill
Cemetery.
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