The shortest term for a U.S. President was only one month. |
U.S. History |
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Harrison's condition worsened, and on April 3 he spoke his last words, directed at Vice President John Tyler: "Sir, I wish you to understand the true principles of the government. I wish them carried out. I ask nothing more." He succumbed to the illness at 12:30 in the morning on April 4, the first President to die in office, setting off a brief constitutional crisis, as presidential succession had yet to be clearly defined. Harrison's wife Anna, who was still in Ohio, never moved into the White House. Tyler was sworn into office two days later once the confusion was resolved, earning the unfortunate nickname of "His Accidency." | |
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John Tyler has a living grandson. | |||||||||
More than two full centuries after John Tyler's 1790 birth, one of his grandsons is still alive. Tyler had 15 children, including a son named Lyon Gardiner Tyler in 1853, when the former POTUS was 63. (His second wife, whom he married in 1844, while President, was 30 years his junior.) Lyon then had three sons of his own in his 70s (also with a younger second wife), one of whom — Harrison Ruffin Tyler, born in 1928 — is still living. More than two full centuries after John Tyler's 1790 birth, one of his grandsons is still alive. Tyler had 15 children, including a son named Lyon Gardiner Tyler in 1853, when the former POTUS was 63. (His second wife, whom he married in 1844, while President, was 30 years his junior.) Lyon then had three sons of his own in his 70s (also with a younger second wife), one of whom — Harrison Ruffin Tyler, born in 1928 — is still living. | |||||||||
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