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William Henry Harrison H. William Henry Harrison H. Race 8 at Horseshoe Indianapolis on June 4, 2025. STK; 6 furlongs Dirt $100,000 3 yo's & up ; 1:11.00; Results; News; Order of Finish. 1: ...
Harrison Ruffin Tyler, the last living grandson of U.S. President John Tyler, born 83 years after his grandfather left the White House in 1845, has died. He was 96. The cause of Tyler's death on ...
Harrison Ruffin Tyler, the last living grandson of U.S. President John Tyler, born 83 years after his grandfather left the White House in 1845, has died. He was 96. The cause of Tyler's death on ...
Mr. Tyler said his family tree also included Edmund Ruffin, a pro-slavery secessionist who fought in the Civil War, and William Henry Harrison - his grandfather’s predecessor as president and ...
CHARLES CITY, Va. — Harrison Ruffin Tyler, the last living grandson of U.S. President John Tyler born 83 years after his grandfather left the White House in 1845, died. He was 96. The cause of ...
William Henry Harrison High School Senior Taylor Oberjohann will be walking at Miami University's graduation in Oxford a little more than a week before receiving her high school diploma ...
The son of Benjamin Harrison, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, William Henry Harrison was raised on a Virginia plantation. Growing up, Harrison had no thought of becoming president. He ...
William Henry Harrison, the ninth president of the United States, is buried in North Bend, 15 miles west of Cincinnati. The tomb is marked by a 60-foot limestone brick obelisk on a hilltop along U ...
Some Ohioans insist William Henry Harrison should be considered an Ohio president. While he was born in Virginia, a British colony at the time, he started the military career that ultimately led ...
General William Henry Harrison led Americans to victory in the Battle of the Thames on this day in history, Oct. 5, 1813, routing the British and Native forces led by Shawnee chief Tecumseh.
William Henry Harrison served as President of the United States from March 4, 1841 to April 4, 1841. The shortest term of any Chief Executive.