Anna Harrison
Anna Tuthill Harrison (
''née'' Symmes; July 25, 1775 – February 25, 1864) was the
first lady of the United States in 1841 as the wife of President
William Henry Harrison. She served in the role for only one month, as her husband contracted
pneumonia and died shortly after his term began. Their son
John Scott Harrison was the father of President
Benjamin Harrison. She never entered the
White House during her tenure as first lady, remaining the only presidential wife to never visit the capital during her husband's presidency. At age 65 when her husband's presidential term began, Harrison was the oldest woman ever to assume the role of first lady, a record held until
Jill Biden became first lady at age 69 in 2021. She also has the distinction of holding the title for the shortest length of time, and the first first lady to be widowed while holding the title. Harrison was the last first lady to have been born before the
inauguration of George Washington. She was the only First Lady of the United States to have been the wife of one U.S. President and the grandmother of another U.S. President.
Anna was raised by her grandparents on
Long Island and given an education better than any other first lady had yet received. She married military officer William Henry Harrison against her father's wishes in 1795, and she raised their family of ten children in the
frontier of
Ohio and
Indiana while William pursued a political career. Eight of Anna's ten children died in her lifetime, causing her to become more deeply involved in her
Presbyterian faith. She became first lady when William became president in 1841, though she did not attend his
inauguration. William died while Anna was preparing to travel to
Washington, D.C., only one month into his term. Anna lived the remainder of her life in Ohio, first in their family log cabin, and then with her only surviving son. Her short tenure as first lady, her absence from the White House, and the destruction of her personal papers in a fire have caused her to be overlooked by historians, and her life has been the subject of relatively little scholarly analysis.
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