Advertise On EU-Digest

Annual Advertising Rates

8/8/16

US Presidential Elections: Will the Curse Of Tecumseh Strike Again In 2020

Tecumseh Kispoko of the division of the Shawnee tribe
Strange but true: From 1840 through 1960, every US president elected in a year ending in zero died while in office. Also those which stayed alive after that had all near misses to die or to be killed.

Some called it “The Curse of Tecumseh,” after the Shawnee chieftain who was killed by the forces of General William Henry Harrison in 1813.

Tecumseh’s brother, Tenskwatawa, supposedly prophesied bitterly that Harrison would die if he were elected president. (In truth, there’s no proof that Tenskwatawa ever said any such thing.)

Harrison was elected in 1840, died after barely a month in office, and the “curse” was off and running.140 long years later, Ronald Reagan finally broke the string by serving two full terms as president before stepping down in 1989 — though he had to survive a 1981 assassination attempt to do so. George W. Bush was elected in 2000 and also served two full terms.

The killer Curse of Tecumseh turned out to be the Coincidence of Tecumseh after all.Still, it was quite a deadly run. Here’s the full roll call of 0-year presidents in American history. of the Kispoko division of the Shawnee tribe, and was a member of the clan belonging to the celestial panther, Meshepeshe

WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON was elected president in 1840, and he was 68 years old when he delivered his inaugural address on March 3, 1841. Harrison spoke for an hour and 40 minutes in frigid weather, all the while refusing to wear a coat or hat.

Bad idea. The new president soon came down with a cold, which rapidly developed into pneumonia. Harrison was bedridden for a month and finally died on April 4, having been president for just a month and a day.

President ABRAHAM LINCOLN  who was first elected in 1860 was just beginning his second term in 1865 when he was shot in the head by John Wilkes Booth at Ford’s Theater in Washington, D.C. It was the evening of April 14th, only six days after the surrender of Robert E. Lee at Appomattox and the end of the Civil War. Lincoln survived the night but died the next morning at a house across the street from the theater, becoming the war’s last martyr.

JAMES GARFIELD elected in 1880  was shot by assassin Charles Guiteau on July 2, 1881 in a Washington railway station. The shots were not immediately fatal, but a bullet ended up lodged in Garfield’s chest, and he lived for two months while surgeons tried to decide if it would be most dangerous to operate or not operate. Garfield finally died from complications on September 19th.

WILLIAM McKINLEY was elected in 1896 and re-elected in 1900 for a second term. He was attending the Pan American Exposition in Buffalo, New York when he was shot by unemployed millworker Leon Czolgosz on September 6, 1901. The President died a week later, from gangrene caused by the bullet wounds. (William McKinley was replaced as president by Theodore Roosevelt, who a decade later was shot but not killed while trying to regain the presidency.)

President WARREN HARDING began a cross-country rail tour of America in June of 1923. It was a major undertaking for that time. Harding became the first president to visit Alaska on that trip — but while returning south to California, he came complained of exhaustion, then came down with intestinal cramps and then pneumonia. Harding was convalescing from those injuries in San Francisco when he suffered an apparent heart attack and died in his hotel room and died.

It takes some stretching to make the “Curse of Tecumseh” apply to FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT. He was first elected president in 1932, and was reelected in 1936, 1940 and 1944. He was beginning an unprecedented fourth term when he died in April of 1945. Worn down by years of exertion leading the country during the Great Depression and World War II, FDR suffered a cerbral hemorrhage while on a working vacation in Warm Springs, Georgia. His last words were simple enough: “I have a terrific headache.

RONALD REAGAN who was elected in 1980 served two full terms, 1981-1989, ending the string of deaths among ‘0’ year presidents. But good heavens, he was very close to joining the group. As he left a Hilton Hotel after making a speech on March 30th, 1981, Reagan was shot by a deranged would-be assassin, John Hinckley, Jr. Reagan was rushed to the hospital for emergency surgery and barely survived. He was reelected in 1984 and live through the end of both terms.

President GEORGE W. BUSH  elected in 2000 also served two full terms, from 2001-2009, thereby putting the final kibosh on Tecumseh’s Curse. It’s true that President Bush narrowly escaped an assassination attempt by a pretzel on January 14, 2002, but his administration was otherwise healthfully uneventful.

The final 0-year tally: four presidents killed, three who died of natural causes, and four who lived out their full terms.

Only one president has died in office who was not part of this group: Zachary Taylor, who died of natural causes in 1850.

But there have been near-misses! Teddy Roosevelt is among many world leaders who "almost bought the farm".

EU-Digest

No comments: