History of the Collection
[From Index to the William Henry Harrison Papers (Washington, D.C.: 1960), pp. v-vi]
We learn from passengers who arrived by the Ohio and Mississippi Railroad, yesterday morning, between 1 and 2 o'clock, that as the train arrived at North Bend the old Log-Cabin was enveloped in flames, and that its destruction was complete. . . .
Of course nothing was saved in the way of furniture or documents, and the probability is that many valuable papers left by President Harrison, together with articles cherished as relics of the Old Hero, and of the early history of the West, have been destroyed with the building. . . .
Almost everything was lost. A little clothing and furniture and a few paintings were saved, but everything else was consumed. . . . the public has sustained a great loss in the destruction of a mass of valuable correspondence and papers reaching from Gen. Harrison's first entry into public life till the untimely close of his career. These papers were stored in one of the garrets, and only a basketful or two were saved.
Thus reads a contemporary newspaper account of the end of the "old Log Cabin" commemorated by a spate of songs in the campaign of 1840. [1] Although the report of the fire in July 1858 plainly indicates that some items were saved, it was assumed for many years that all of the William Henry Harrison Papers were destroyed. As late as 1896 President Benjamin Harrison said in a letter to the Rev. Burke A. Hinsdale that his "grandfather's papers were all destroyed when the residence at North Bend was burned. Friends have sent me a good many letters and perhaps a pretty complete set of campaign publications and biographies which have been printed. I have not found time to arrange or classify them and am not just now in a position to consider the question of attempting to write my grandfather's biography." [2]
Gaillard Hunt, Chief of the Manuscript Division, first inquired about the William Henry Harrison Papers in 1910. [3] But it was not until September 1919 that the Library received a shipment of Benjamin Harrison Papers from Mary Lord Harrison, widow of the twenty-third President, who had begun to deposit her husband's papers three years earlier. One of the 11 boxes contained an important group of the William Henry Harrison Papers—the core of the present collection—composed of one of his letter-books, a number of drafts of his letters, and letters he had received. These papers, dated about 1805 to 1841, centered on the period of the War of 1812. There was also material relating to the 1840 Presidential campaign, some of which had been sent to Benjamin Harrison by friends and well-wishers. By direction of Mrs. Harrison, the entire shipment, including the William Henry Harrison Papers, was to be treated as part of the Benjamin Harrison collection and administered under the same conditions. The papers could be consulted only upon written permission from Mrs. Harrison or her daughter, Elizabeth, and could be withdrawn at the pleasure of either at any time. An interesting description of the William Henry Harrison segment at about this time was written by Dorothy Burne Goebel, one of the first scholars who was permitted to consult the papers. [4]
Two subsequent deposits by Mrs. Harrison also contained papers of William Henry Harrison. Several of his speeches were received in 1928, and some 70 papers of and relating to him, dated between 1735 and 1860, were received in 1932. By this time plans were being made to bind the William Henry Harrison segment as a separate collection, and restrictions on the examination of these papers by scholars were relaxed. The following year, on June 2, 1933, Mrs. Harrison presented all of the deposited material to the Library. [5] In a separate letter pertaining to the William Henry Harrison Papers, she specified only that they were to be bound within one year, a condition that was promptly fulfilled.
The Library, over the years, has acquired smaller numbers of Harrison materials from other sources, including gifts from two other members of the family, William Henry Harrison IX and John Scott Harrison, who presented certain original documents and allowed others to be photocopied. The Harrison Papers are now in nine volumes and two other containers. The number of pieces in the collection is 984.
In 1940 the Library began to formulate plans to insure the safety of its unique and particularly valuable materials. Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, on December 7, 1941, and the declaration of war on the United States by Germany four days later, Archibald MacLeish, then Librarian of Congress, directed the evacuation of the specially selected materials according to plan. The Harrison Papers, with other materials, were evacuated from the Library on December 29, 1941, under the supervision of Alvin W. Kremer, Keeper of the Collections, and were stored in the Alderman Library of the University of Virginia. On August 14, 1944, they were returned to the Library. No item was lost or damaged in the vast evacuation program. Fortunately Washington was not attacked, but the Library of Congress was, in 1941, prepared for eventualities as it had not been prepared in 1814. [6]
Since 1944 the Harrison Papers have remained in the Manuscript Division of the Library of Congress, where they may be consulted under the usual conditions which govern the use of manuscripts. Additions unrestricted as to their use which are received after the completion of this film will eventually be microfilmed and indexed as a supplement to the entire microfilm reproduction of the Library's Presidential collections.
Inasmuch as many of President Harrison's papers have been destroyed, searchers may wish to examine the personal papers of his contemporaries in the Library of Congress and elsewhere for information about him and his times. Personal papers or autograph collections in the Library of Congress which are listed below contain varying numbers of letters by, to, or relating to President Harrison:
- Clay, Henry
- Clay, Thomas J.
- Ewing, Thomas
- Green, Duff
- Gregg Collection
- Harrison, John Scott
- Heaton, James
- Innes, Harry
- Jefferson, Thomas
- McArthur, Duncan
- McHenry, James
- Madison, James
- Marcy, William
- Monroe, James
- Piatt, John H.
- Randolph, John
- Rives, William C.
- Short, William
- Short Family Papers
- Stephenson, Nathaniel W.
- Webster, Daniel
Other libraries known to possess one or more William Henry Harrison manuscripts include the William L. Clements Library, the Indiana Historical Society, the New Jersey Historical Society, the New-York Historical Society, the Southern Historical Collections of the University of North Carolina, the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, the Virginia Historical Society, and the State Historical Society of Wisconsin. The National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections may eventually reveal the whereabouts of other Harrison manuscripts.
1. New York Times, July 29, 1858.
2. July 9, 1896, copy (Tibbott transcript) in Benjamin Harrison Papers.
3. To W. Allen Scott, December 5, 1910.
4. "Manuscript Collections" in Dorothy B. Goebel, William Henry Harrison, A Political Biography (Indianapolis, 1926), pp. 383-88.
5. Letter from Mrs. Harrison to Herbert Putnam.
6. Most of the information concerning the evacuation of materials was furnished by Alvin W. Kremer, Keeper of the Collections. A statement concerning the evacuation appears in Annual Report of the Librarian of Congress, 1945, p. 59. See also article by Robert Penn Warren, "The War and the National Muniments," Library of Congress Quarterly Journal of Current Acquisitions, 2 (November 1944), 64-75.