Benjamin the Signer HARRISON, V

Birth:
5 Apr 1726
Charles City County, Berkley, Virgina
Death:
24 Apr 1791
Berkley, Charles City Co, Virginia
Burial:
Abt Apr 1791
Marriage:
1748
Notes:
                   Benjamin signed the Declaration of Indepndence representing the Colonythat
became the State of Virginia.(JFN,1996)
Also married about 1745.
                  
Elizabeth BASSETT
Birth:
13 Dec 1730
Elnathan, Charles City, Virginia
Death:
1792
Berkley, Charles City, Virginia
Burial:
Abt 1792
Father:
Blocked
Mother:
Blocked
Notes:
                   Birthplace also recorded as Eltham. Also recorded as married abt1745.
                  
Children
Marriage
1
Birth:
9 Feb 1773
Berkeley, Charles City, Virginia
Death:
4 Apr 1841
Washington, District of, Columbia
Marr:
22 Nov 1795
North Bend, Ohio 
Notes:
                   Benjamin was a Member of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of theUnited
States (1865).
He was also a Member of The Society of the Cincinnati (1783).
Sources include, but are not limited to;
The Hereditary Register of the United States (1981).
Ninth president of the United States, 4 Mar 1841 to 4 Apr 1841. He was the
first president to die in office. It is generally agreed that Harrison died of
pneumonia, but his illness was complicated by the excitement and fatigue
brought on by the innumerable demands of office seekers who plagued him
incessantly.
[Ben Harrison I File.FTW]
[BrÃ[cedilla]derbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1093, Date of Import: Jan 14, 2001]
Harrison, William Henry (1773-1841), ninth president of the United States (1841). His claim to fame rests not on his administration_for he died of pneumonia one month after his inauguration_but on the strange campaign by which in 1840 he attained the high office. A minor military hero, he rode to glory by saying nothing (General Mum, his critics called him), while his party, the Whigs, capitalized on a propaganda blunder by their Democratic opponents to proclaim Harrison a simple man used to living in a log cabin.
Harrison was born on February 9, 1773, to one of the wealthiest, most prestigious, and most influential families in Virginia, on a great plantation in Berkeley County. From the early 17th century on, the Harrisons had accumulated vast landholdings, occupied the highest political and judicial positions, and intermarried with the leading families of Virginia. William Henry's youthful military career and his appointment, when he was not yet 30 years old, to the prominent post of governor of Indiana Territory were due more to the influence of his father, Benjamin Harrison, who was several times governor of Virginia, than to any military or administrative talent that he himself had demonstrated.
Military Hero
Harrison had a modest career that was lighted up on two occasions by significant military successes. After devoting his tenure as territorial governor to negotiating the western Indian tribes out of millions of acres, he commanded a force of militia and regulars that put down a Shawnee uprising at Tippacanoe, Indiana, in 1811. Although Harrison's own policies as governor had helped provoke the rebellion, his victory won him a reputation that helped vault him to the presidency a generation later. In the year following the outbreak of the War of 1812, Harrison won another important battle, fought near the Thames River in the province of Ontario, Canada, that ensured continued American control of the western territory.
Although Harrison's career was moderately successful_he was several times elected to the Ohio Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives_his life at this time was beset by financial difficulties. For a short period in 1828 he served as minister to Colombia, but President John Quincy Adams, who appointed him to the diplomatic post because of his connections, had low regard for Harrison's ability, and this poor opinion was shared by political figures in Washington, D.C. The nation, however, remembered his military exploits, and in the mid-1830s and again in 1840 Whig party managers decided to exploit them. As one of a number of Whig candidates in 1836, Harrison was an also-ran. In 1840, however, benefiting from the artful campaign tactics of his party, Harrison succeeded.
The 1840 Campaign
Seeking victory at almost any price, the Whig party in 1840 passed over Henry Clay, its true leader, choosing the aging general instead. To appeal to the South, they chose a states' rights southern Democrat, John Tyler, as his running mate. Convinced that they could win by blaming the severe economic depression on the policies of President Martin Van Buren, they also derided Van for his alleged aristocratic manners, commanded Harrison to be silent on the issues, refused to present a party platform, and waged a rousing campaign, using the slogan Tippacanoe and Tyler too. Taking advantage of a sneering Democratic reference to Harrison as a man content to sit in his log cabin sipping hard cider, the Whigs' propaganda transformed the Virginia aristocrat into a poor farmer. Seldom has demagoguery paid off so well.
Perhaps Harrison's most significant act in his abbreviated term_he died on April 4, 1841_was his appointment of Daniel Webster as secretary of state.
Contributed by: Edward Pessen
Biographic entry: B1256, B1417
Harrison, William Henry, Microsoft (R) Encarta. Copyright (c) 1993 Microsoft Corporation. Copyright (c) 1993 Funk & Wagnall's Corporation
[Peyton II.FTW]
[BrÃ[cedilla]derbund WFT Vol. 1, Ed. 1, Tree #5156, Date of Import: Mar 16, 2002]
9th President of US. Whig Party. Served only 31 days. 3d son of Benjamin Harrison, signer of Declaration of Independence. He attended Hampton Sydney College. He was secretary of the Northwest Territory, its delegate in congress, 1799 first governor of Indian territory, 1800 and superintendent of Indian affairs. With 900 men he routed Tecumseh's Indians at Tippecanoe Nov 7 1811. A Major General, he defeated British and Indians at the Battle of Thames, Oct 5 1813. He served in congress, 1816-19; Senate 1825-28. In 1840, he was elected President. He caught pneumonia during the inauguration and died 4 Apr. 1841.
                  
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Benjamin the Signer Harrison, V - Elizabeth Bassett

Benjamin the Signer Harrison, V was born at Charles City County, Berkley, Virgina 5 Apr 1726. His parents were Benjamin IV Harrison and Anne Carter.

He married Elizabeth Bassett 1748 . Elizabeth Bassett was born at Elnathan, Charles City, Virginia 13 Dec 1730 .

They were the parents of 1 child:
William Henry Harrison, 9th President of the United States born 9 Feb 1773.

Benjamin the Signer Harrison, V died 24 Apr 1791 at Berkley, Charles City Co, Virginia .

Elizabeth Bassett died 1792 at Berkley, Charles City, Virginia .