Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-29T02:28:33.595Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Evangelicals, Whigs and the Election of William Henry Harrison

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 January 2009

Extract

Few American presidential elections have engaged the passions of contemporaries or exercised the imaginations of later generations more than the ‘log cabin’ campaign of 1840. By their parades, slogans, symbols and songs party managers deliberately played down questions of public policy likely to divide their ranks, reasoned discussion was overwhelmed by an organized torrent of feeling, and the carefully cultivated images of candidates obscured the reality of their outlooks. Unscrupulous propagandists, especially of the Whig party, undoubtedly manipulated the emotions of the electorate. The excitement carried a massive 80·2 per cent of voters to the polls, a huge increase in turnout over previous presidential elections and a level of participation exceeded in no subsequent campaign. William Henry Harrison was indeed, as Philip Hone put it, ‘sung into the Presidency’

Yet style alone did not create the passion. The economic distress consequent upon the Panic of 1837 allowed the Whigs to act as a focus for those who blamed the Democrats for the hard times and who looked for a more vigorous stimulus to capitalist development than Martin Van Buren was likely to provide.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1983

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Richard Carwardine is Lecturer in American History at the University of Sheffield, Sheffield Sio 2TN. He wishes to thank the British Academy and the University of Sheffield Research Fund for financial assistance in the preparation of this essay.

1 Gunderson, Robert G., The Log-Cabin Campaign (Lexington, Ky, 1957), p. 123Google Scholar. For a survey of the campaign and an assessment of its significance in the coming of age of the ‘second party system’, see Chambers, William Nisbet, ‘Election of 1840’, in Schlesinger, Arthur M. Jr, and Israel, Fred L., eds., History of American Presidential Elections, 4 vols. (New York, 1971), 1, 643744Google Scholar. W. D. Burnham estimates a turnout of 26·9% in the 1824 presidential election, 57·6% in 1828, 55·4% in 1832 and 57·8% in 1836. The figure fell back a little to 78·9% in 1844. Ibid., Appendix, Table 2. An estimated 80% of the electorate voted in the Bryan–McKinley campaign of 1896.

2 The classic statement of the view that socio-economic questions lay at the heart of the Democratic–Whig divide is Schlesinger, Arthur M. Jr, The Age of Jackson (Boston, 1945)Google Scholar. The ‘ethnocultural’ approaches to the Jacksonian period, most particularly Benson, Lee, The Concept of Jacksonian Democracy: New York as a Test Case (Princeton, 1961)Google Scholar, and Formisano, Ronald P., The Birth of Mass Political Parties: Michigan 1827–1861 (Princeton, 1971)Google Scholar, argue conversely that voting behaviour was determined principally by loyalty to ethnic and religious groups and that the socio-economic rhetoric of politicians and policy-makers scarcely influenced the electorate at large. That socioeconomic interests, couched in terms of the economic experience and needs of communities rather than classes, did have a considerable influence on voting patterns is the persuasively argued thesis of Ratcliffe, Donald J., ‘Politics in Jacksonian Ohio: Reflections on the Ethnocultural Interpretation,’ Ohio History, 88 (1979), 536Google Scholar. In order to square an ethnocultural analysis of voting behaviour with party leaders' attention to banking and other economic issues in their political rhetoric, Shade, William G., Banks or No Banks: The Money Issue in Western Politics 1832–1865 (Detroit, 1972), pp. 1819, 173–4, 253Google Scholar, offers a cultural explanation of economic conflict. The present essay, though drawing on many of the insights of the ethnoculruralists, is not intended as a vindication of that school, some of whose shortcomings are identified in McCormick, Richard L., ‘Ethno-Cultural Interpretations of Nineteenth-Century American Voting Behaviour’, Political Science Quarterly, 89 (1974), 351–77CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and in Latner, Richard B. and Levine, Peter, ‘Perspectives on Antebellum Pietistic Politics’, Reviews in American History, 4 (1976), 1524CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

3 Cooper, William J., The South and the Politics of Slavery, 1828–1856 (Baton Rouge, 1978), pp. 102–3, 132–48Google Scholar.

4 McCormick, Richard P., ‘New Perspectives on Jacksonian Politics’, American Historical Review, 65, (1960), 296301CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

5 Formisano, pp. 128–36. Cf. McFaul, John M., ‘Expediency vs. Morality: Jacksonian Politics and Slavery’, Journal of American History, 62 (1975), 38CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Benson, pp. 186–7, is rather more cautious than Formisano: in New York before 1844 he considers non-Catholic sectarian identity to have been a relatively poor predictor of voting behaviour.

6 I use the term ‘evangelical’ to refer to those whose Christianity impelled them to seek the conversion or the regeneration through grace of themselves and their fellow men. In addition to those denominations whose guiding theological principles were uncompromisingly evangelical – Methodists and New School Calvinists in particular – other bodies, including the Episcopalian and Unitarian churches, contained men and women of this outlook. My definition is much broader than Formisano's, who curiously omits from the fold the largest denomination of all, the Methodists. In referring to an evangelical ‘community’ I do not mean to imply an absence of tension between and within evangelical denominations: poisonous ecclesiastical and theological conflicts were a feature of the age. Rather I am arguing that the preoccupations of these groups acted as a centripetal force in conditioning their response to secular events. A degree of concurrence in political philosophy across the denominational divide is a premise of Hood, Fred J., Reformed America: The Middle and Southern States, 1783–1837 (Alabama, 1980)Google Scholar.

7 Author's ‘Preface’ and Ashbel Green's ‘Introduction’ to Cornelius Cuyler, C., The Signs of the Times … (Philadelphia, 1839), pp. 14, 79Google Scholar.

8 Carwardine, Richard, Transatlantic Revivalism: Popular Evangelicalzsm in Britain and America, 1790–1865 (Westport, Ct, 1978), pp. 4852Google Scholar; Roche, John A., The Life of J. P. Durbin (New York, 1889), p. 76Google Scholar; Cuyler, pp. 98–105, 267–93; Bacon, Leonard, The Duties Connected with the Present Commercial Distress … (New Haven, 1837), pp. 411 and passimGoogle Scholar.

9 Cuyler, pp. 89–108, 191–240, 289; Mitchell, John, A Sermon Preached Before the First Church and the Edwards Church, Northampton … (Northampton, Mass., 1837), pp. 46Google Scholar, Duffield, George, A Thanksgiving Sermon… (Detroit, 1839), pp. 1216Google Scholar; Putnam, George, The Signs of the Times … (Boston, 1836), pp. 1315Google Scholar; McKeen, Silas, God Our Only Hope … (Belfast, Me, 1837), pp. 720Google Scholar; Gage, Nathaniel, Sins and Dangers of the Times … (Haverhill, 1838), pp. 617Google Scholar; Tucker, Mark, Public Sins, a Cause for Humiliation… (Providence, 1838), pp. 1317Google Scholar; Western Christian Advocate [Cincinnati] 15 May 1840, 22 Jan. 1841, hereafter abbreviated to WCA; Pittsburgh Conference Journal, 9 July 1840, hereafter abbreviated to PCJ; Lord, John C., Signs of the Times… (Buffalo, N.Y., 1837), pp. 67, 1215Google Scholar; Bacon, pp. 14–15 Krebs, John M., Righteousness the Foundation of National Prosperity … (New York, 1835), p. 20Google Scholar.

10 Stearns, E., ‘Christian Politics’, Quarter1y Christian Spectator, 10 (1838), 437Google Scholar; Lord, pp. 8–15 Frelinghuysen, Theodore [supposed author], An Inquiry into the Moral and Religious Character of the American Government (New York, 1838), pp. 1012, 124–8Google Scholar; Hood, p. 104.

11 Cuyler, pp. 63–86, 241–64; Codman, John, The Importance of Moderation in Civil Rulers… (Boston, 1840), p. 18Google Scholar; PCJ, 8 Mar, 1838; McKeen, pp. 5–7, 22; Sprague, William B., A Sermon Addressed to the Second Presbyterian Congregationin Albany, March 4, 1838… (Albany, 1838), passimGoogle Scholar; Duffield, pp. 12–13; Tucker, pp. 7–10.

12 PCJ, 5 Sept. 1839; Lord, pp. 5–7 10–12; Bushnell, Horace, ‘American Politics’, American National Preacher, 14 (1840), 190–1Google Scholar; Cuyler, pp. 261, 289; Nevin, John W., Party Spirit… (Chambersburg, Pa, 1840), p. 9 and passimGoogle Scholar; Ullman, Daniel, An Address … before the Tippecanoe and other Harrison associations … (New York, 1841), p. 9Google Scholar and passim. WCA, 7 Aug. 1840, 8 Jan. 1841; Skinner, Thomas H., Religion and Liberty… (New York, 1841), passimGoogle Scholar;

Frelinghuysen, pp. iii–iv, 19, 143, 184–98; Pierpont, John, National Humiliation… (Boston, 1840), p. 16Google Scholar; Lord, p. 11.

14 For the character of the Whig party and the place of evangelicalism within it, see Howe, Daniel W., The Political Culture of the American Whigs (Chicago, 1980), pp. 150–70 and passimGoogle Scholar. See also Heale, M. J., The Presidential Quest: Candidates and Images in American Political Culture, 1787–1852 (London, 1982), pp. 182–3, 222Google Scholar.

15 Cushing, Caleb, Outline of the Life and Public Services, Civil and Military, of William Henry Harrison of Ohio (Boston, 1840), p. 24Google Scholar; Albany Argus (daily), 3 June 1840, hereafter abbreviated to AA; Ohio State Journal, 3 June 1840, hereafter abbreviated to OSJ; Jackson, Isaac R., The Life of William Henry Harrison…, 2nd edn (Philadelphia, 1840), 206–8Google Scholar; Green, James A., William Henry Harrison: His Life and Times (Richmond, Va, 1941), pp. 444–5Google Scholar; Cleaves, Freeman, Old Tippecanoe: William Henry Harrison and His Time (New York, 1939), p. 325Google Scholar.

16 Gaddis, Maxwell P., Foot-prints of an Itinerant (Cincinnati, 1855), pp. 281–2Google Scholar; Tefft, Benjamin F., Methodism Successful… (New York, 1860), pp. 195–6Google Scholar, which misdates the occasion by a year.

17 Pittsburgh Christian Advocate, 19 May 1841, hereafter cited as PCA; Nichols, Thomas, Forty, Years of American Life, 2 vols. (London, 1864), 1, 175Google Scholar.

18 Harrison Melodies … (Boston, 1840), p. 9Google Scholar; Hildreth, Richard, The People's Presidential Candidate… (Boston, 1839), p. 198Google Scholar; Moore, Jacob B., The Contrast … (New York, 1840), p. 5Google Scholar.

19 Cleaves, p. 321; J. Wheelwright to W. H. Harrison, 15 Aug. 1840, H. Kingsbury to W. H. Harrison, 12 Nov. 1840, William Henry Harrison Papers, Library of Congress; AA, 26 June 1840; OSJ, 7 and 28 Oct. 1840.

20 Cushing, p. 24; Hildreth, p. 197; The Harrison Medal Minstrel … (Philadelphia, 1840), p. 2Google Scholar.

21 Iowa Territorial Gazette and Advertiser, 22 Aug. 1840; Albany Rough Hewer, 30 Apr. 1840, quoted in Gunderson, p. 235; AA, 26 May, 15 and 20 June 1840; The Letters of Stephen A. Douglas, ed. Johannsen, Robert W. (Urbana, Ill., 1961), pp. 8691Google Scholar; OSJ, 2 Sept. 1840; Harrison Medal Ministrel, pp. 2, 8.

22 AA, 20 and 28 May 1840; PCJ, 28 May 1840; E. W. Chester to L. Burnell, 27 July 1840, Finney Papers, Oberlin College Library; Wheeler, John, A Discourse Occasioned by the Death of Gen. William Henry Harrison… (Burlington, Vt, 1841), p. 22Google Scholar; White, Charles, A Sermon, Delivered … on Friday, May 14, 1841 …; (Owego, N.Y., 1841), p. 9Google Scholar; L. Beecher et al. to W. H. Harrison, n.d., Harrison Papers.

23 Sprague, Peleg, Remarks of the Hon. Peleg Sprague at Faneuil Hall… (Boston, 1839), p. 18Google Scholar; General Harrison in Congress (Washington, 1840), p. 32Google Scholar; Harrison Medal Minstrel, title page.

24 Jackson, 60–61; Moore, p. 6.

25 Harrison, William Henry, A Discourse on the Aborigines of the Valley of the Ohio… (Boston, 1840), pp. 3839Google Scholar; Harrison Medal Minstrel, pp. 115–16; Harrison Melodies, p. 13; New York Evening Express, 29 Sept. 1840; OSJ, Oct. 1840; Christian Advocate and Journal [New York], 10 Mar., 14 Apr. 1841.

26 Moore, p. 16. Heale, , Presidential Quest, especially pp. 224–28Google Scholar, discusses the perceived fragility of republican forms.

27 Van Deusen, Glyndon, William Henry Seward (New York, 1967), p. 44Google Scholar; M. Fillmore to C. A. Reppier et al., 23 June 1840 in Millard Fillmore Papers. Publications of the Buffalo Historical Society, vols. 10 and 11, ed. Severance, Frank H. (Buffalo, 1907), 11, 211Google Scholar; Wherefore Change?More than One Hundred Reasons Why William Henry Harrison should and will have the Support of the Democracy… (Boston, 1840), pp. 3, 5Google Scholar; New Orleans Bee quoted in OSJ, 16 Sept. 1840; Mayo, Robert, A Word in Season; or, Review of the Political Life and Opinions of Martin Van Buren…, 3rd edn (Washington, D.C., 1840), pp. 9, 1316, 2943Google Scholar; AA, 26 May 1840; Upton, Wheelock S., Address Delivered before the Tippecanoe Club, of New York (n.p., 1840), p. 5Google Scholar: Waddy Thompson, An Examination of the Claims of Mr. Van Buren and Gen. Harrison to the Support of the South… (n.p., 1840), p. 2.

28 Wherefore Change?, p. 14; Thompson, p. 11; Harrison Medal Minstrel, p. 3; Fillmore Papers, 11, 212. Samuel Swartwout, Van Buren's Collector of the Port of New York, absconded to Europe with a million dollars.

29 Van Nest, Abraham R., Memoir of Rev. Geo. W. Bethune, D. D. (New York, 1867), p. 125Google Scholar; Wheeler, pp. 3–4, 21–23. Amongst many other examples, see Edwards, Tryon, God's Voice to the Nation… (Rochester, 1841), p. 8Google Scholar; Dwight, William T., ‘A Great Man Fallen’ … (Portland, Me, 1841), pp. 611Google Scholar.

30 See, for example, Formisano, , Mass Political Parties, pp. 5680Google Scholar; Heale, , Presidential, Quest, pp 130–32, 139–41Google Scholar.

31 Harrison, William H., General Harrison's Speech at the Dayton Convention… (Boston, 1840), p. 7Google Scholar; Moore, pp. 3–4, 7, 10, 13 Wherefore Change? p. 11; Mayo, p. 7.

32 Duncan, John M., A Discourse, Delivered on the Fast Day Recommended by the President of the United States (Baltimore, 1841), pp. 21, 2430Google Scholar; Humphrey, Heman, Death of President Harrison… (Amherst, 1841), p. 16Google Scholar.

33 Gunderson, pp. 11, 167; OSJ, 14 and 21 Dec. 1839, 16 Sept., 7 Oct. 1840; Badger, Joseph, A Memoir … (Hudson, O., 1851), pp. 127, 135, 173–74Google Scholar; Harrison Melodies, p. 10; Harrison, , Speech at the Dayton Convention, p. 7Google Scholar; B. F. Martin to W. B. Campbell, 4 Feb. 1840; J. Campbell to W. B. Campbell, 4 Feb. 1840 quoted in Alexander, Thomas B., ‘Presidential Election of 1840 in Tennessee’, Tennessee Historical Quarterly, 1 (1942), 2627, 3435Google Scholar; Grinnell, Josiah Bushnell, Men and Events of Forty Years… (Boston, 1891), p. 21Google Scholar; Sprague, , Remarks at Faneuil Hall, p. 19Google Scholar.

34 Peck, John M., Forty Years of Pioneer Life… (Philadelphia, 1864), pp. 293–94Google Scholar; Harrison Medal Minstrel, pp. 3, 21, 65; AA, 28 May 1840; Formisano, pp. 129–31; White, , Sermon, p. 30Google Scholar; Colton, Calvin, The Crisis of the Country (Philadelphia, ca. 1840), p. 16Google Scholar.

35 For the Democrats' promotion of a ‘negative liberal state’, see Benson, , Concept, pp. 86109Google Scholar. Benson regards the Jacksonian/anti-Jacksonian alignment in New York as having been determined in the first instance by reactions to the Antimasons – the Christian party in politics and the forerunners of the Whigs. The party allegiances then established were maintained until the 1850s. In that state at least ‘the Whigs were the “religious party” and the Democrats the “free thought party”’. Ibid., pp. 193–97, 300–12.

36 OSJ, 17 June, 5 Aug. 1840; Levy, Leonard W., ‘Satan's Last Apostle in Massachusetts’, American Quarterly, 5 (1953), 1630CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

37 The Diary of George Templeton Strong, ed. Nevins, Allan and Thomas, Milton H., 4 vols. (New York, 1952), 1, 147Google Scholar; Mayo, p. 9; Correspondence of Andrew Jackson, ed. Bassett, John Spencer, 7 vols. (Washington, D.C., 19261935), 6, 61Google Scholar.

38 Gunderson, p. 132; Word in Season, p. 7; Harrison Medal Minstrel, pp. 65, 126; Moore, p. 11; Hawkeye and Iowa Patriot, 29 Oct., 12 Nov. 1840; OSJ, 27 May, 17 June, 23 Sept. 1840; Colton, Calvin, American Jacobinism. By Junius (New York, 1840), passimGoogle Scholar.

39 Billington, Ray Allen, The Protestant Crusade: A Study of the Origins of American Nativism (New York, 1938)Google Scholar still provides the best treatment of the subject.

40 Benson, pp. 187, 321–22; he estimates (p. 171) that by 1844 in New York state 95% of the Catholic Irish voted Democrat.

41 Letters of Douglas, pp. 85, 95–96; B. Maguire to J. England, 3 Sept. 1840, Martin Van Buren Papers, Library of Congress; OSJ, 28 Oct. 1840; Orestes Brownson, A., An Oration Before the Democracy of Worcester and Vicinity… (Boston, 1840), pp. 20, 35Google Scholar; AA, 16 May 1840. Cf. Heale, , Presidential Quest, pp. 195196Google Scholar.

42 OSJ, 12 Feb., 12 Aug., 14 Oct. 1840; A. Lincoln to J. T. Stuart, 20 Jan. 1840, The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln, ed. Basler, Roy P., 9 vols. (New Brunswick, N.J., 19531955), 1, 184Google Scholar; Harrison Medal Minstrel, pp. 6–7; Harrison Melodies, pp. 66–67; A. C. Flagg to M. Van Buren, 7 Mar. 1840; J. Power to N. Devereux, 31 Mar. 1840; P. Sharp to J. England, 1 July 1840; J. England to P. Sharp, 14 July 1840, Van Buren Papers; Hassard, John R. G., Life of the Most Reverend John Hughes (New York, 1866), 227–38Google Scholar.

43 Geary, M. Theophane, A History of Third Parties in Pennsylvania, 1840–1860 (Washington, D.C., 1938), p. 16Google Scholar; Brownlow, William G., A Political Register… (Jonesborough, Tenn., 1844), pp. 77, 109–16Google Scholar; The Works of the Right Rev. John England, 5 vols. (Baltimore, 1849), 4, 6973, 7783Google Scholar; Hazard, Thomas R., Facts for the Laboring Man… (Newport, R. I., 1840), pp. 4446Google Scholar.

44 WCA, 28 Aug. 1840, 8 Jan., 26 Mar. 1841; John Todd: The Story of His Life…, ed. Todd, John E. (New York, 1876), p. 493Google Scholar; Perry, Gideon B., Two Discourses on the Occasion of the Death of William Henry Harrison… (Alton, Ill., 1841), p. 5Google Scholar; Correspondence of Thomas Ebenzer Thomas…, ed. Thomas, Alfred A. (Dayton, Ohio, 1909), pp. 13, 1617Google Scholar.

45 Wright, John F., Sketches of the Life and Labors of James Quinn (Cincinnati, 1851), p. 201Google Scholar; Murray, James O., Francis Wayland (Boston, 1891), pp. 269–70Google Scholar; AA, 21 May 1840; Brownson, , Oration, pp. 3337Google Scholar; Letters of Douglas, pp. 83, 85–86; Johnson, Donald B. and Porter, Kirk H., eds., National Party Platforms 1840–1972, 5th edn (Chicago, 1975), p. 2Google Scholar.

46 Emmons, William, The Authentic Biography of Col. Richard M. Johnson… (New York, 1833), pp. iii, 8, 89Google Scholar; Wyatt-Brown, Bertram, ‘Prelude to Abolitionism: Sabbatarian Politics and the Rise of the Second Party System’, Journal of American History, 58 (1971), p. 336CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

47 Formisano, , Mass Political Parties, p. 120Google Scholar.

48 E. W. Chester to L. Burnell, 27 July 1840, Finney Papers; WCA 30 Oct. 1840; J. G. Birney to M. Holley et al., 11 May 1840, Letters of James Gillespie Birney, 1831–1877, ed. Dumond, Dwight L., 2 vols. (New York, 1938), 1, 562–74Google Scholar.

49 Oberlin Evangelist, 6 May, 29 July, 12 Aug., 23 Sept. 1840; Crane, William W., Autobiography, pp. 8589Google Scholar.

50 Hunt, Thomas P., Life and Thoughts… (Wilkes–Barre, Pa., 1901), pp. 345–46Google Scholar; Formisano, , Mass Political Parties, p. 133Google Scholar; Works of England, 4, 85, 90–91; Catholic Telegraph, 4 Dec. 1841; Gunderson, p. 61; New York Freeman's Journal, 20 Dec. 1856.

51 Dodge, D. Stuart, Memorials of W m.E. Dodge (New York, 1887), p. 34Google Scholar. The Diary of Calvin Fletcher, ed. Thornbrough, Gayle et al. (Indianapolis, Indiana, 1972– ), 2, 188, 231Google Scholar; G. Crane to W. H. Harrison, 1 Sept. 1840, Harrison Papers.

52 PCA, 11 Nov. 1840; Alexander, ‘Election of 1840’, pp. 35–36, 38; Harrison Medal Minstrel, pp. 25; Gunderson, pp. 135–39.

53 Hague, pp. 148–49; Hodge, Archibald A., The Life of Charles Hodge… (New York, 1880), pp. 230–33Google Scholar; Holder, Ray, William Winans: Methodist Leader in Antebellum Mississippi (Jackson, Mississippi, 1977), p. 36Google Scholar; Brunson, Alfred, A Western Pioneer… 2 vols. (Cincinnati, 1880), 2, 140Google Scholar; Hobart, Chauncey, Recollections of My Life… (Red Wing, Minn., 1885), pp. 200–02Google Scholar; Lewis, William G., Biography of Samuel Lewis… (Cincinnati, 1857), pp. 283–86Google Scholar; James, Edmund J., ‘Reverend Colin Dew James’, Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, 9 (1917), 464Google Scholar; Robertson, Archibald T., Life and Letters of John Albert Broadus (Philadelphia, 1901), pp. 716Google Scholar; Murray, pp. 269–73; Letters of Birney, 1, 531–32, 535–38, 545–48, 555–57; WCA, 20 Nov. 1840; Correspondence of Thomas, pp. 18–19.

54 Wherefore Change?, p. 3: Harrison, Dayton Convention, passim; O. Hutchins to E. Curtis, 12 Dec. 1838, general manuscript collection, Drew University,; WCA, 21 May 1841.

55 Works of England, 4, 86; Seward, William H., An Autobiography… (New York, 1891), pp. 462–63, 471, 501Google Scholar; A. C. Flagg to M. Van Buren, 7 Mar. 1840, Van Buren Papers; AA, 16 May 1840; Van Deusen, , Seward, pp. 7576Google Scholar; Pratt, John W., ‘Governor Seward and the New York City School Controversy, 1840–1842’, New York History, 42 (1961), 352–57Google Scholar.

56 J. Wheelwright to W. H. Harrison, 15 Aug. 1840, Harrison Papers; Dwight, ‘Great Man Fallen’, pp. 3–4; Breckinridge, William L., Submission to the Will of God… (Louisville, Ky, 1841), p. 15Google Scholar; WCA, 16 Apr. 1841. I have accumulated references to ninety-seven published sermons delivered on the occasion of Harrison's death, though I have not been able to confirm the existence of them all. A wide range of denominations are represented, but not surprisingly Presbyterian clergy predominate (27·3% of those whose denominational attachment is clear) with Unitarians (21·6%), Episcopalians (21·6%) and Trinitarian Congregationalists (13·6%) well represented. Methodists and Baptists together make up 10·2% of the total. Almost 40% derive from New England.

57 Green, , Harrison, p. 513Google Scholar; Kirk, Edward N., An Oration on the Occasion of the National Fast… (New York, 1841), p. 25Google Scholar; Hewit, Nathaniel, Discourse at the Funeral Solemnities … April 19th, 1841 … (Bridgeport, Ct, 1841), p. 8Google Scholar; Sprague, William B., Voice of the Rod … (Albany, 1841), pp. 911Google Scholar.

58 Humphrey, , Harrison, pp. 2021Google Scholar; PCA, 23 June 1841; Riddle, David H., ‘The Morning Cometh’… (Pittsburgh, 1841), pp. 6, 2427Google Scholar.