Antifeminist. Sunday, your questions for author Christina Hoff sommers. And looking ahead to the new in on joint mark leva january 5. Nd awe. As like shock ad i could close my eyes and see him on the stretcher. I could see him putting his hands up and his eyes. I could close my eyes and see it. I will never forget that first case, bringing me to reality of what was going on here. After he got into the tent, there was an initial triage. We got the report and saw him. The other team starts to work. We got pulled in, myself and my colleagues that wrote the forward. We both got pulled in. The other team wanted us to begin right away. They did not want us to be bystanders. Get involved right away. Once they did that, it was like a jolt. To you have to act, you have be a doctor, a surgeon, a care provider. Emotion to dismiss your and talk that away, what you are feeling tuck that away. You have one objective. You have to stop the bleeding. You have to get him back home to his family. He uses his own military experience is to write about physicians working in afghanistan. More on sunday night at 8 00 on q a. Florence harding once said she had only one real hobby. Warren harding. She was a significant force in her husbands presidency. Florence harding set many precedents that would help define the role of the modern first lady. Good evening. Tonight we are going to tell you the story of Florence Harding, who has been neglected and derided throughout history. Inrtime, the hardings her time, the hardings came in as popular people. We are going to learn about her and her husbands time in office. Let me introduce you to our guests. Katherine sibley is a history professor at st. Joseph college. Her book is called behind the tragedy and controversy. Thank you for being here. David pietrusza is a guest as well. Harding andwarren teapot dome. When he came to office, it was in a landside. Set the stage for what brought these people into office. And with the mood of the country was. The mood of the country is bad. It is the year when any republican can win. The trick was to get to the nomination. Tr was supposed to be the nominee. There was a big split. That is patched up. Tr dies in his sleep. There are people who want to fill the void. The governor of illinois. Johnson was just too irascible. Which leads you to the fourth man, the available man, andrew sinclair, Warren Harding. He is not too hot, not too cold, not too much of anything. Except he is handsome and a fairly good speaker. He has been on the National Stage at the 1916 republican convention. He nominated taft in 1912. So he is the alternative. In that year, the alternative to wins. Ism they were the publishers of a newspaper. Give us the short history of publishing a newspaper to national politics. Thank you so much. It was a small paper when harding required it. He made it successful over time thanks to the efforts of his wife, florence. For the point of getting to the discussion, she was a key element. What happens is they are working in the paper. It is going well. It is a little dull. She liked seeing him get involved in other things. He was a very good speaker. He did an Alexander Hamilton oration. He was a lieutenant governor. He ran for governor, was not successful. He was positioned. He was visible in ohio. By the time of 1913, when there was a new law that allowed senators to be elected popularly, he is positioned to run. In 1914, he is elected to the senate in ohio. He thus becomes the first popularly elected senator from that state. And the first senator to become president as a sitting senator. And of course florence is right there alongside him. Her role is quite significant. You write in your book that he was unconvinced about his of viability as a candidate, even among his congressional republicans. It was a matter of his health. He did die early. Then there was a matter of terri Carrie Phillips. There were other women as well. His personal life was a mess. Do people look the other way and in these days . In those days . There were a lot of things which were not talked about. Scandal of public figures were as not written about. Unless there was a divorce. Unless something went into the courts. The papers would not touch it. Something that has never occurred to me until now, he is a newspaper man. Maybe he is part of the club and theyre not going to write about it. That may work in his favor. But you also see in that era that there are other infidelities going on. There is certainly some issues about Woodrow Wilson in the bahamas or bermuda, before he is president. There is the famous incident of Alice Roosevelt, and her child, deborah, she wanted to name it deborah. It becomes pauline. That is the illegitimate daughter of a famous guy at that time. Then Franklin Roosevelt cheating on Eleanor Roosevelt in 1917. The rich have their prerogatives. They take them. One of our viewers asks how did mrs. Harding respond to the rumors of hardings wandering eyes . It is a great question. There is a debate about these relationships that Warren Harding had. He had this affair with Carrie Phillips. They were both a couple who were related in ohio. What happens over time is that warren falls in love with carrie. Florence discovers about this affair. They were still friends and vacationing together. How was is happening . How did she reacts . Not very happily. She asked him to consider divorce. He knew he needed her for his career. He agreed to downplay the affair, and i believe he committed to ending it. He did not, as it turns out. As he is running for president , it is an embarrassment. It hasnt been an active affair for several years. They were flaring years of it. In the end, she is essentially bought off by members of the Republican Party who come up with funds to get her outof of the way. Florence was not happy at all. There are wonderful quotes in her diary where she expresses how difficult it was dealing with an unfaithful husband like hers was. We have one of her diary quotes. How much is preserved . Her diary is not very reliable as far as dates. I believe it is an authentic version of her thoughts. It was a small book discovered 15 years ago in ohio. Is a list of recipes, remembrances, and the things going tonts you are share with the audience. There is a clear sense of her own views and beliefs. I think it is credible. It is not extensive and dated. We have to take that into account. Barely a formal diary. It is like a datebook or calendar. It seems to be real. One quote we will share with you to caption her thinking about this did she make the best foreign harding . I think she did. She went after him. I know sometimes we hear she made him at think that is too simple. That takes away from his abilities, which is not something that can be reckoned with. Absolutely. He was not just a pretty face. She had a key role of pushing him into the place where he got to be. Steve murdoch asks, was in his newspaper one newspaper person who did was his own fatherinlaw. Explained the story. He would criticize his sonin law. This is a long story. He is a banker, a businessman. Doesnt he buy a competing newspaper . Not that i know of. I believe what the caller is getting to is that he helped to fund an opponent when harding ran for senator. He funded another republican newspaper in the town and siphon business away. To call him a newspaper person would be he is a banker. He is the fatherinlaw. He likes being a banker. There was a long history. We can talk about the history of florences first marriage. It was kind of a sad chapter in her life. He did not like her first husband or her second husband. The only got reconciled when his first wife died, the mother of florence. He decided he would make some rapprochement with her. They came back together. It was a difficult relationship for the first years. The first seven years, there was nothing. Yes. It was a difficult time. Talk about hardings audio. Our audiog to begin and visual part with an audio harding in one of his speeches. Then we will learn about the front porch campaign. They conducted a campaign from marion, ohio. Lets watch. Not revolution but restoration. Not surgery, but serenity. Not that dramatic, but the dispassionate. All of the action took place on this porch. Usually during speeches, warren would stand here with florence beside him. They would wave to the crowd parading down towards his house. This was a perfect backdrop to the campaign. Not only did it show the human side, the fact they did not live in a mansion. They lived in a normal house like most of the folks coming to see him speak. They wanted to feature the town as well. Warren said the campaign was taking main street to the white house. Florence was a part of this message. She was a visible part of the campaign. She was always near him on the front porch when he was speaking. She gave interviews herself to magazines, especially womens magazines. She alternated between being the savvy politician, to being the homebody. The wife, the caretaker, the candidate. She knew how politics works. She knew the different sides of her that but have to be per portrayed as part of the campaign in order to make the campaign successful for him. She is not afraid to wait into a into a crowd. She is in the line shaking hands along with the president. Going through hundreds if not thousands of people, standing there as long as it will take to shake hands and greet people. We see Florence Harding, who knows how her husband is going to get to the white house, through the vote. It is important politically, and she believes in the people of the united states. She seems as good or better a politician as her husband. She is more out there with her strengths. He pushes on. She continues. We think of how ill she was, the kidney ailments, it is astounding. She would recover from days like that, taking 48 hours to recover from shaking hands. Thousands of hands. She had the strength. She wanted to be accessible. She wanted to be a people person. We welcome your participation. We are getting comments on facebook and twitter. Youre welcome to join that conversation. The cspan facebook pages easy to follow. There is a conversation underway. Twitter, two ways you can be involved. We will look at those. Here are the phone lines we will get to those calls in just a couple of minutes. You cant talk about the campaign without talking about harry dorning. Who was he . Dockery. K it is he is the campaign manager. He is the man behind the throne, especially the way he tells it. He elevates his influence and power great deal. A great deal in the telling of the story. He does help harding out. But you also see udc correspondence where he is saying you think if i listen to the gossip that people tell me that i swallow it all. I dont. I know exactly what is going on. Harding is incredibly savvy. He is good. He is an excellent people person. People like him. Even his enemies like him. He is exuding human kindness. This is something overlooked about him. He is a genuinely kind and if you shove out aspects of his life, hes a good person. He is very lovable. But daugherty is runofthe mill. Dockery. He has been in the general assembly. He has run for attorney and governor. He is a little too shady to make the trip himself. He gets behind harding. He runs across some a few times. He says i found him sunning himself like a turtle on along, and i push them into it. Did harding make himself . John dean in his biography makes the point that hardings protestations of inadequacy, of humbleness, is not necessarily an act, but that harding from the beginning was a very sharp guy. His academic career is good. He learns things quickly. He is giving speeches at the age of four years old. People get jealous of people who were good. He didnt necessarily want to be president did he . I do not think so. Certainly not with the Kerry Phillips thing hanging over his head. He enjoyed being in the senate. They thought he was popular. He didnt. It seemed over time increasingly there was urgings on him. My theory is that in the big letter which he sends to Kerry Phillips regarding the blackmail. How did she try to blackmail him . She had the letters. There were approximately 98 of them. Torrid love letters . Not all torrid love letters. A lot of them were. I will not endeavor to quote them. I will say this. In reading history, people skip over to the dirty parts. Read the rest of these he is a good writer. He is very good. There is a certain charm. She has the goods on him. This is the smoking gun. This is the blue dress. To the nth degree. She has it, and she and her husband in 1920, because she is finally become so incensed at him, she tells her husband, and they determine they are going to put the hammer to this one of the president. The party responded. They offered money to her. 5,000. He made the offer. 5,000 per year. 25,000 up front. All expense paid trip to the orient. Go far away during the election campaign. Her and her husband. Hes in the dry goods business. Harding tried to argue with her, i can do good if you would let me carry out this president ial election. There was this disagreement there. She is pretty much out of the picture at that point. I argue that is the end of the relationship, but it is the end of all the relationships. Many might suggest that were other relationships. Other names have been heard. You probably heard the story about the president s daughter. I did not find it credible. There was a child. Florence had been married once before and she had a child. Was that an issue . It is interesting. This is a sad story. She married to escape her overwhelmingly powerful father. We alluded to that. We dont actually have any records she literally married this man. Dewolf. E wolf but she certainly a lot with them and they had a child. He was someone who had a difficult past and future. He left her. He was a drunk. There she was trying to raise this boy on her own. Her father steps in and says you cant do this. I will take over. She was trying. She was a single mother who taught piano. She was making money doing that, but not enough. In the end, she has to live with her father. When she marries her husband, her second husband, or maybe her first, she divorces from pete. This is the first or second case of divorce in ohio. She was the first divorced first lady. Marshall grows up. He has a set of future. He doesnt live very long after his Young Children are born. It is an interesting story. It could have humanized the hardings. She doesnt want to acknowledge this. This was an issue she didnt want brought up in the election. She tries to downplay it. I have not found evidence that the children were invited to the white house. There wasnt much of a public visible presence. What was the story on why she didnt raise her son . It had to do with this issue of being a single mother, and not a wealthy one. She didnt have the money . You probably could have done it. She was trying to. There were issues at the time, the interesting thing was that when she married warren, marshall seems to have lived partly with them and probably with their grandfather. It is an interesting relationship they worked out. She doesnt seem that maternal. I think that is part of that. In terms of the story your , original question has to do with the 1920 campaign. Does that become an issue . Her being divorced was not in favor at that time. It is a case of mutually assured destruction. Mr. Cox is the first divorced person to run for president. He had been married once before. His wife had mental problems. He marries again. There is no great scandal. Marries a much younger woman. Yes. They are not about to bring that up. If they had brought up the immense hardship which florence had to go through, and she spent a great deal of time not dealing with until she gets into the white house, there could have been more sympathy generated for her. Because her life is tremendously hard. Take away the infidelities. She comes from the richest family in town. She has to go and live with this fellow when she is pregnant at the time of the marriage. Or nonmarriage, as it was. When she gets back to town, abandoned, it is on Christmas Eve. She has to hitch a ride on a train on Christmas Eve to get home. And even then she is afraid to go see her father, and must break in to an abandoned home to spend the night. She sees her father, and its no i will not help you. And then finally a deal is brokered after quite a while. That i will take your son. Not you. This is like way down east. This is like dw griffith and lillian gish. This is real 19thcentury melodrama. It happened to her. This is a very hard life. The illness. This series of things. In that way, shes a sympathetic person because she is a survivor. I think you are right. Going to phone calls, hi , bill. Thank you for taking my call. I have always thought Florence Harding was misaligned as a first lady regardless of the scandals in the administration. I think she was probably very opinionated and very bossy. But the horrible rumors that came, i am sure you will discuss them later, that she plays in the presidency. I think she was probably in the top 10 first ladys because of her accomplishments and the amount of firsts that she had. Thanks for taking my call. I appreciate you and your guests for the job youre doing. Thank you. We cant leave in 1920 campaign without making note of it along the way. This is the first election the first lady can vote for her husband. How important was the womans vote in 1920 . It is very important. The number of women voters in 1916, by 1920 the number of actual voters jumped to 25 million because women were voting. That was not the only reason. This was a significant shift. It is also important in the election. Florence becomes someone who is attuned. She has been attuned as a woman, a single mother. Someone who dealt with her share of difficulties. She is someone who is attuned to the plight of women and the opportunities that women are going to get now that they are voters. She is interested in womens involvement in politics. She listens closely to many who come to the white house. The vote itself is a moment of real triumph for her. She is there at the front porch. She travels 25,000 miles with him after they leave the front porch. She is reaching out. There are number of problems. Much excitedry about womens possibilities. There is a quote you can perhaps allude to, where she talks about how thrilled she is to see women succeeding in active in politics, wanting to cultivate that. They break the vote down by sex in 1920. I believe the hardingcoolidge team does well. You also see it is an advantage to the republicans. You see precincts in massachusetts where the immigrant areas do not do as well. It is the Republican Party which puts the amendment through. The south is not particularly into it. Neither is the traditional immigrant culture. It is the native american or older stock, republican areas to which are more interested in putting suffragette. It is something which boosts harding that year. He is a hell of a lot better looking than james cox. This is the first president ial election that had read your coverage of the results. The reported the Election Results across the nation. I want to bring in two other points. First of all, Florence Harding liked astrology. It was to her very important way of getting information, gathering strategies. She had a relationship with an astrologer. Who was she . Madame marcia. She wasnt alone in this. It was an interesting period of time. Lots of people believe this. If anything, people were more criticized who were following astrology than even now. Nevertheless, she found in t extremely important. It shows up in her diaries. It shows up in her writings. Of course, madame marcia told her that harding was going to die, but he was going to die in office. She nevertheless decides all the same that shes going to back him to the hilt and make sure this happens. It does seem to have an uncanny effect on her relationship as first lady. We see in 1909, the jewelers wife goes to madame marcia and gets the same prediction, but she ends up being the second wife to Woodrow Wilson. That is amazing. I did not know that. I am really enjoying your show. I was wondering why mrs. Harding was a wellliked but respected. That is an interesting question. You are suggesting that her likability is understood to not be very high, but her respectability is high. If i understand you correctly. It is interesting. This gets into the discussion is of where she falls as a first lady. It was mentioned she was not very maternal. I would disagree with that. I think of her relationship with the men who worked for her. On the same note, perhaps she was kind of a hard person to be around. She could be strong and perhaps more a yin than yang with her husband. I actually have found in reading her papers and looking at her to be much more likable. There was a kindness about her. There was a caringness. She had many causes she believed in. We can talk more about that. She should be both respected and liked. Was she an early day nancy reagan . There are number of aspects that connect with modern president s. I want to bring in a happy part of the 1920 campaign. Accusations about Warren Hardings heritage. That goes back to the friction between harding and his fatherinlaw. The rumors have been going around that part of the country for a while about the harding family. The theory now is that arose because the hardings were abolitionists. They worked on the underground railroad. When you did that, people started rumors about you. The rumors would be that the hardings were part black. These rumors were floating around. One of the reasons he doesnt trust her judgment in men after the first marriage. Also, he believes harding is part black. He is pretty vociferous about it. I will not print his language. He goes around town saying what he thinks harding is. Finally he gets used to harding, but the stories do not go away. There is a fellow named chancellor who is a distinguished professor, went to all sorts of colleges, historian and author, but a thorough racist. He is at the 1916 democratic convention. It becomes obvious that harding is going to be the nominee, he becomes obsessed with hardings ancestry, collecting stories. Basically my theory is they go around the country. The right quarter million copies of the handbill alleging he is black. How do they get there . One crackpot. L i believe it was the Ohio Democratic party. There is an interview with the cox family in 1920. They say warrens one of our relatives. He used to come visit. Mrs. Coxs name was harding. You do not want to get this up and running because maybe your children have harding blood, which means they have other sorts of blood. Florence hardings nickname was duchess. We are going to learn how she earned that nickname. We going to learn more about that in our next video. This key is special. It is hinged. It fits in your pocket. Mr. Harding carried it in his pocket for 40 years. It is a key to his newspaper building. While he was the official owner of the marion star, you cannot speak about it without bringing florence into the picture. She managed the books and headed Circulation Department for 20 12 years. It was very much a joint enterprise and sense of pride. It was their baby. I would like take you into the press house to show you more things connected to the marion star. Let me show you what is in here. Mrs. Harding kept the books. This is an accounting book. This is her handwriting. She is keeping track of money going in and out. Warren worked the editorial side. She is assembling newsboys. She starts delivering the newspaper for the first time. You do not have to come to the Newspaper Office to buy your newspaper. You can have it tossed on your front porch. Also in this case we have the timecard stamp. We have a stamp from the marion star. A picture of the building at that time, it doesnt stand anymore. Florence harding had a very businesslike mind. She is a little out of step with other women in her time because of that. Her father was an excellent and taught her about keeping books, keeping mortgages. Things that most women will not have an interest in norwood want want to take the time to teach them. This sets her up nicely to help at the marion star. He needs help keeping the place afloat. He finds it difficult. People to pay their bills. She doesnt. She doesnt shy away from that at all. That really frees him up to do what he does best, the editorial product. It is a winwin situation for the newspaper, and works well for the two of them. Want to take a call from david. And then we will talk more about the experience at the marion star. Hi, david. This is a great program. I just finished the book, a couple of months ago, called the teapot dome scandal. Very good book light mccartney. It begins with an individual from oklahoma, who i think donated a tremendous amount of money to hardings campaign initially, saw him being the man for the election. This individual was a profligate. He enlisted a nephew to marry a woman who became his mistress, and bandied around the country with her. However, when it became evident he wanted to be the secretary of the interior. They were all set to do that, to make him secretary of the interior, until the duchess put her foot down. Apparently this individuals wife was a relative of florence, and she made no Uncertain Terms to president harding, a Firm Statement that if he were to come to washington, this woman would not accompany him. And apparently one night, he had the individual in question. His name escapes me. He delivered the bad news to his mistress, and she shot him and they tried to cover it up. He eventually died. I think that portended what happened along the way with the administration, and the lusting and quest for oil. Thank you. I have seen a couple of versions of that story. One that it was a man who gave the money, and that it was hamans wife who gave the money. To get him back to washington without the mistress. Ok . Wheels within wheels. The teapot dome scandal is very interesting. What we have is a fellow, albert fall, and there was no great reason to be particularly suspicious of fall in the interior department. There were no issues raised. He needed the money. He had a big ranch. It made the money through his inheritance. He cuts these deals with harry sinclair, huge amounts of money. There are some cattle which are shipped in from new jersey, which the neighbors become concerned about. At first the case goes nowhere. It unravels. He is convicted and becomes the first cabinet member to go to jail. That is in 1931. This case is a slowly unraveling case. Sometimes the drip can hurt the reputation more than if it is just over and done with. These things drip with harding after his death. Whether it is the britain book or the indictment of fall or people in the Veterans Administration or the alien property offers or is attorney general. It isnt clear that harding knew. No. I do not think he did it all. The caller suggests the hardings were aware of it. I do not think there is evidence. I would say absolutely not. To make a larger point, i do not think there is any credible evidence that harding is involved in any of these scandals. Not at all. Will have more time to get to these scandals later in the program. We are in her preparation years. I want ask about how important it was she seemed to favor women reporters. She hired the first woman reporter at the newspaper. How important were the skills that she and more and harding that she and Warren Harding brought to the press in their success to the campaign . Very important. They were people used to working in the newspaper business. Florence wasnt involved in the writing. She was involved in the business. That skill was very useful. She liked reporters. She did. She was loved by them as well. When she was in the white house, especially the women reporters. Seewould have them in to what she was doing. What the gardens looked like. This was very popular. The reporters gravitated to her. It is another point connected. They were very popular in the white house because they could deal so well with the press. During the campaign, the press was used extensively. They were media savvy. And of course, some of our viewers may know that they were close to mr. Lasker, the pork and beans person. He sold pork and beans for that company. And so they were able to use that approach to sell their campaign. Pictures, recordings. All that played well with the press. Before we leave, how they brought hollywood into the campaign. Dw griffith, the gish es. The gish sisters came to the front porch. It is interesting today to think about it republican candidate with all the support from hollywood. This is not will we would have suspected at the time. They love the movies. They showed movies in the white house. Extensively. This was something they would gravitate to. The celebrity culture. Florence grooved on that. On facebook, im struck about the comments about women and men in the era. How big is the Womens Movement at the time . We talked about that. Then she asked, what issues were there beyond the vote for women . In the election . It is always the economy. The economy is bad in 1920. There is tremendous unemployment. There is inflation. There are strikes ravaging the country. The country is a mess economically. There is all this dislocation of veterans coming back causing problems. But also the league of nations is the big issue. For women . For everyone. Because you do not want another war, for america to be dragged into things. And the person of the hardings who was against the league of nations, it was a florence. Florence is the hardliner there. Who else is a good hardliner at this time against the league of nations, but her friend Alice Roosevelt longworth. They are very hard line against the league. Harding signed into law the shepherd counteract, which brought Health Clinics throughout the clinic. That was a shortlived initiative that was ended by the end of the 1920s. It would be carried on during the new deal. And probation, brought into the constitution because of the womans Temperance Movement. So what was the feeling about prohibition . Waspopular russian mark it popular . It had just passed. It was going into effect. He had voted for it without any enthusiasm. He would take a drink or so. He would take one shot of ales, and that will be it for the night. He was not a heavy drinker, despite reports. I do not think those are true. It is the women, the Temperance Movement of the women, which largely puts prohibition in more than the men. They see the men getting paychecks on a friday night, blowing it in saloons, going to women of the night, bringing things home. It was not good. The saloon was established as an evil place. Now, we see that this gender gap exists even at the end of prohibition. When you see the numbers for Franklin Roosevelt started to tip down, his numbers from the private democratic pollsters go down. It is the women who favor prohibition. What is your question . Thank you for taking my phone call. I read what her favorite causes was taking care of veterans after world war i. I was wondering about her efforts with veterans, and if there is an enduring legacy from her efforts . That is a great question. Were going to talk about the other causes. That was very much a passion for her. Before the war she had been involved with various things to help soldiers. Because of her kidney ailment, this made her sensitive to the suffering of veterans after the war. There were many people going around in wheelchairs, limbs missing. She would invite them to the white house. If you saw veteran walking along the street, she would stop her car and make sure they had a ride. She is passionate about veterans. She would go to hospitals. Later we might see a clip of a special item who came from a veteran. This was close to her heart. She was particularly disheartened when it was discovered there was a scandal in the Veterans Bureau. He created a Veterans Bureau, and the man he chose was an old friend from the senate, who turned out to be a crook. He still many of the goods that were supposed to go to the veteran supply. He made money from kickbacks. Lots of money. Forbes was a wilson appointee running pearl harbor in hawaii. He flattered her shamelessly. And so she in fact was the person who said you shouldve point this forbes fellow. Her other great friend took a great dislike to him. It was sawyer who brought rumors of the thefts, which are completely egregious. You talk about your teapot dome. You talk about whatever jeff smith did in the justice department. I think the great shame of the administration is what they did to veterans. Even in terms of money. Right. She absolutely was even more forceful than harding. He was reluctant to turn hard on his old friends. He did have to accept the resignation of forbes. Sent him out of the country. While you were talking but the veterans, we saw some clips of veterans in wheelchairs. Some credit florence for creating photo ops. What she responsible for them . She was the first first lady to use photography at these opportunities. Many of your viewers may know there was a picture with her with filipino women looking for independence for their country. It was a wonderful photo op. She liked to do this. She had this photogenic dog. He was featured. It was put forward by these photo ops. Again, it ties into our discussion of hollywood and celebrity culture that was part of her. She wore a neck clasp. It became popular. Many people wanted to copy it. There was a harding blue collar she wore. It was a color that she wore and people called it harding blue. I think the photo op was her thing. Now we think about president s and first ladies with dogs. The last several president s have done videos. It was the hardings that made a celebrity out of him. Even though the roosevelts had many animals in the white house. They had quite the zoo. I am thinking about a picture with florence. Even before that, she is the first first lady to go to a convention and campaign for her husband, and to be accessible to the press. As an not just there ornament. She is very effective. She is doing all the things a man would do. I do not think we talked about how her father had wanted a boy. We skipped over that. That is a good point. He said, i will just raise her as a boy, do all the business things men do. She learned how to run the hardware store. Make loans at the bank. Do everything a male business person could do. That is what gave her the strength to run the marion star. How small was the marion star when they got a hold of it . So small it was called the marion pebble. But she doesnt have to learn how to do it. She already knows. He can hit the ground running. When Warren Harding checks into the sanitarium. Harding has physical problems. They both have physical problems. They should never go to the white house. She has nephritis. She is laid up dying. It is horrible. The pain she is in. They say in one of these things, it is so intense she is digging her hands in and making a fist, and he goes in so deep and the nails cause her to believe. To bleed. The intensity of the pain. This is interesting. She was a believer in this french psychologist. Mind over matter. She read his book. She was determined to get she was an outdoors woman. Because of her nephritis, she was not able to read the beautiful verses. Harting is a horseman to and they hate and they love animals and hate cruelty to them. We learned in our last program on the wilsons about the president s great illness and the closing down of the white house. The wilsons put sheep on the white house lawn as a way to suggest austerity during the war but it also kept people off of the lawn at the white house. The first thing the parties did when they came to the white house was get rid of the sheep and open up the white house. What was the public reaction . It was so positive. They knew this was going to happen. People heard about this during the campaign and were excited. Even the New York Times talked about for shoulders coming in. The opening of the white house was a refreshing moment and people could come onto the lawn and the handshaking we saw in the earlier video was happening every day. Shes up to it in their out there shaking hands. Theres a story about the sheep that she is walking by the white house when warren was still a senator and wilson was in the white house and the sheep are there and she sees the sheep grazing and the police are guarding the sheep or something and shooing the people away from the white house. She kind of gets nervous and trips and falls into the mud. She is tremendously embarrassed by this for a variety of reasons and she says, if i ever run this place, the policeman will have Better Things to do than guarding sheep on the god damn long. She brought back the easter egg roll. Thousands of people came to the white house to take part in the easter egg roll which has become an annual tradition. One of the biggest days ahead they had this shriners visit. He was a mason and at one point before their trip to alaska, a hectic time in7000 people were in the white 1923,house. This is how open, how accessible. We mentioned earlier their illnesses. This was probably not that healthy for them. Not just the germs, but the exhaustion of greeting people. They had concerts on the lawn, they had visitors coming constantly. Harding fell, felt, he was a kindly and dear man, as we mentioned, felt there was no reason why he should not be accessible to people. The film we saw earlier, the overhead shot, that sort of disturbs me. It is what the politicians have to go through at that level, this maelstrom. It is quite a sacrifice they make. It probably killed him in the end. The president on their view of Florence Hardings strengths and contributions that is a great quote. Here is Florence Harding on her husband later she wrote, i know what is best for the president. I put him in the white house. You do not believe she said that. May be at any given moment she did, but the nickname she had before she was the duchess was the boss. War and warren sort of toned that down for public consumption, but i think half the time he felt she was the boss. In many ways he valued her opinion. I think there was a real partnership. Roger is watching us in baltimore. Thank you. I have a few questions for ms. Sibley. Since listening to you, i think i would like to read your biography of florence. I have already read one biography that was very detailed, and i am wondering if you have an opinion on that one. Do you think mr. Carl anthonys biography of Florence Harding is accurate and well researched . I am hoping you can answer the other question with ace temple a simple yes or no, but it might be difficult. You have done a mountain of research on Florence Harding, i am sure. Now that all is said and done, do you have a gut feeling, yes or no, simply from your heart, do you think that nan britains child belongs to Warren Harding . Why have the grandchildren refused dna tests . That is a very good question. I will answer your second question first, because it sounds a that is a yes or no. I will say, absolutely i do not believe harding is the father of nan britains child. There is really no credible evidence. I like the piece we have very good evidence that one affair happened for much of those years. But the case of nan britton, a young woman, she had a crush on warren, they certainly connected that there was nothing of the sort we heard about on boardwalk empire another Popular Culture and books you were alluding to. To me, there is no credible evidence. The dna business sort of confirms it. My sense is orangey Harding Warren g hardingprobably had, other people suggested this as well, some kind of fertility problem. Florence had no problem having children, yet they were married for 15 years and were only 30, 31 when they got married. Harding loved children. There would have been really no reason for them to have additional children before she got ill. Issues may have created a situation where she could not. To me, it seems not credible that nan britton had an affair or that a child resulted. I do not really believe in either. Perhaps you would like to weigh in. If you could quickly answer the book was a wonderful book, and i read it very closely when i was creating my own work on florence. My concern about his approach is much of it seems to be focused on the affairs. As you can tell from what i just said, i do not find them very credible except for terry rrie phillips. We would disagree on those particular issues, but he certainly unearths a lot of really interesting information about florence. I give him a lot of credit for trying to begin the wave of scholarship i like to think of myself as part of. Reconsidering florence in a more positive way. You seen suggest to suggest in your book you believe there were more affairs. I revisited the issue. I figured, i think theyre going to mention it. So i started to look one way and another. With Kerry Phillips you know Carrie Phillips you know there is something. Historians rarely have that level of proof. Which gets to the question of letters, why doesnt nann britton have those letters . Did she destroy them . That leads to another question, not about her, but this occurred to me two days ago. If they pay off Carrie Phillips, where we know an affair happened, if they pay her off, why doesnt she turned those letters back . This is a botched payoff attempt. If i am giving you 5,000 a year or sending you to japan, i want the letters. At one point she in offered to give them. But getting back to nan britton, we see that admin starling, who edmund starlingwho has no particular grudge against hardy, says he is the kindest man he ever met. He was a secret service man and said harding is not a drinker. He says he was asked to carry letters to new york secretly from harding. Some other agents did carry those letters and some other agent brought someone back from new york. We have that level of proof. We also have certain things which corroborated from the letters of phillips, to harding from mrs. Phillips. I have heard one historians say somehow she got asked after the letters, that is too far of a stretch. The question he raises a question i have now had for 10 years as writing 1920. I would love to see those dna tests. If we can do it on jefferson, there are many collateral descendents of war and harding. Of Warren Harding. He hada really big family. They are all doctors now. There was nan britton, Elizabeth Anne and, and she had two sons. I believe dna testing is possible. I do not know if it is true they have refused this or anyone has asked them. I kind of doubt that. I will ask snipe tonight would you do it . We have only 20 minutes. We have been talking about the scandals. We alluded to the fact there have been a number of firsts in the Florence Harding first ladyship. I would like to list some of those so you can see why she is, if not a transformational, definitely a transitional first lady. The first to vote in a president ial election. The first divorced first lady. The first two was public about her illness, in contrast with the administration before. The first first lady lady to get secret service protection. The first first lady to fly in an airplane. She created the photo op. The first to give impromptu public speeches. The very first to own a radio. Quite a list of firsts. She was a transitional figure because the times were changing so rapidly then. Part of it is a function of the times. She was also a forwardlooking person. We are going to run out of time. This is back from the harding home in marion, indiana. Items from the white house years. We are in the dining room at the harding home. In the sideboard here are pieces of a set of crystal that were used in the harding white house. The hardings hardings did not have white house china. That was a conscious decision on their part. They went into the white house following world war i and in a deep recession. Mr. Harding was stressing the need for a economy and government. They decided that was one expenditure that did not need to be made. There is plenty they just used what was there. This collection has never been displayed in its entirety before. Mrs. Harding collected figurines of elephants. She thought they were good luck. Especially if the trunks were going up. Conveniently, they also are the symbol of the Republican Party, so it serves two purposes. Made of all different kinds of materials. Jade, ivory. These were often displayed in a curio cabinet in the private quarters of the harding white house. We have a very unique piece here. A portable movie projector used in the private quarters of the white house. The hardings were both movie fans. They like comedies. Charlie chaplin, buster keaton. This was used in the upstairs hallway, the private quarters. They would turn that into an impromptu Movie Theater for their friends. On their dresser here, a couple very special things. A jewelry box that is french and dates from the 1700s. It was a 16th Birthday Gift to her from her father. She takes the jewelry box with her and is displayed in the private quarters of the white house. In here we are going to see some very unusual things, some things that are certainly they speak to Florence Harding. One of those things is a necklace. There is a faded four leaf clover in there. That four leaf clover was found on the lawn of the white house by a disabled that vet and was given to her. She is a kind of superstitious woman, so she immediately think this is a good omen. She has it put a necklace so she can wear it. There is a penny in here. A 1920 penny she carried during the campaign for good luck. And a mourning ring. She wore this after the president s death. She did not wear a wedding ring. To her, wedding rings were a sign of subservience. This is kind of odd, because we know she is fiercely dedicated to her husband. Yet she did not wear a wedding ring. She would wear a mourning ring. The harding white house, even though there was illness by the first lady, was a social white house. How did they use entertaining . Many people came. There were dinners, all kinds of groups, girl scouts, veterans groups, womens groups. All these, lots of social activities going on. One of the people who was a very popular visitor was evelyn walsh mclean, who was a very wealthy heiress. Had the hope diamond. One of the fascinating moments was that the white house was this social place. But she got very ill in september of 1922. From then until march the visits really stopped. It was tough. Very few people coming, a silent place, a difficult place. One of the reasons she recovered was because they all were so social. The whole country prayed for her. It was interesting. A hundred people came and did a mass praying for her to get better. Finally, at deaths door, dr. Mayo is going to come. The movie cameras are there to watch him come in. It seems to have really turned the corner. Her dear friend, this much younger woman. She was 29 to florences 55. Both of them did not have they had a real bond, a real time. Tie. Came from a mining camp at west. Her father, very poor, literally strikes gold and becomes fabulously wealthy. Then she marries into more wealth, the son of the publisher of a cincinnati paper. They knew the hardings from ohio. Was a morphine addict. That was because of an injury, an auto accident that killed her brother. She was a very heavy drinker, even before that. This hope diamond, she purchased the hope diamond in paris, supposedly worn by marie antoinette. They warned her, do not do it. Then people started to die around here. Around her. I came in to washington decades ago and went in to see the smithsonian. There in front of me was the hope diamond. I thought, the night before there had been on abc television, the curse of the hope diamond. I said, the curse of the hope diamond . And i came out and my car was missing. [laughter] the harding presidency, we begin to hear about the scandals that were building, including the socalled teapot dome scandal. The attorney general daugherty. The Veterans Bureau scandal, which was many hundreds of thousands of dollars. On the positive side, the first radio broadcast from that administration. He was also the president who appointed former president taft as chief justice of the united states. I am wondering, alternately, about mr. Hardings reputation. One viewer on facebook asks whether or not he was the most corrupt president in history. There are others who suggest he does not get his due for some of the things that happened during his administration. Where would you put him . I do not think he is corrupt at all. A definite canard. That is just not true. There are the bad appointments you alluded to. There are scandals under truman with mink coats and deep freezes. There is Sherman Adams under dwight eisenhower. There are scandals under lyndon johnson, scandals of a much more recent vintage. They are not necessarily connected to the man in charge. They do not prove their corruption and it is unfair to tar them like that in some cases. Certainly, harding, i would criticize him for being maybe not being maybe as vigilant with forbes. He should not have allowed him. To lead a country. He goes to jail after harding is dead. Why, in the summer of 1923, did the president and first lady plan a trip . There have been suggestions this was to escape they just wanted to see alaska. They gave it a brand brand name, the voyage of understanding. They were going to go to alaska, and then come down through the panama canal. Right after the election, a vacation visit. This trip was aimed to create a greater connection between the American People and alaska. Unfortunately it was the trip that would be the end of hardings life. What happened on the trip, he gives many speeches, is welcomed around the country, but it turns out in san francisco, where they plan to stay in a nice way and visit and talk and give more speeches, it turned out to be the place where he died at the palace hotel. The trip was a very Great Success up until that point. They did connect with people in alaska and around the country. But because of the way the Harding Administration was done, all the handshaking and speeches, it really wore him out. His health was already not so strong. What is really interesting is florences health was so dire. On the trip there was a cop and coffin packed secretly. The fear was she would not survive the trip. She did survive the trip. They and up at the hotel, which becomes a kind of hospital. Harding becomes sick. He thought it was some crab he ate in alaska. Everyone else ate it and recovered, and he did not. In fact, he gets stickers, recovers sicker, recovers only to get sicker again. He died of what some have called apoplexy, others alluded to poisoning. It seems he simply had a heart attack. A very sad moment for florence. A difficult history. The trip back is remarkable. He has to go all the way across the country and out again to marion, ohio. His body. His body. The scenes people write about of crowds gathering silently in the middle of the night, in remote areas. Breaking into songs and hymns. God knows how many people saw him pass through. A remarkable thing. The feelings were quite genuine. That must be chicago, i am guessing. Look at the crowds. It was about one million. There has been criticism of Florence Harding for being so uncaring publicly about this. Your take on her response to her husbands death . It was connected with the character we talked about earlier, the mind over matter, the mastery of the motion. She kept saying, i will not break down. She kept her emotions in check. All around, people in tears and falling apart. Part of this was she knew she had to organize first a little ceremony in san francisco, then this huge ceremony, including a visit to the rotunda. Thousands of people seeing the body in washington, then another ceremony in ohio. A 96our trip across the country. Very delayed. Exactly. They were down to 10 miles an hour. Some people thought she had died on the way. Her emotions were in check because she needed to have control. Not because she did not miss him dearly. Not because she encouraged his death in any way. She trusted these doctors. She called when he died, she yelled for the moon boone. He was finally getting a breath of fresh air downstairs. He had been there for days in the hotel. She called for him, and it was too late. Robert, in chicago. I have several questions. Are there any descendents of the hardings today . Number two, are there any pictures of marshall . I have been trying to look upon my internet. The other question, what was mrs. Hardings life after the president s death . Thanks. Were there any pictures of her son, marshall . There is one in my book. It came from the ohio the marion historical society. Are there any descendents left . You could debate that. We have talked about her health and will go back to the harding house for our last video. This is about florences recurring health problems. It answers the viewers question about what happened to her after the white house. This room is filled with a lot of clothing, shoes, hats, all kinds of everyday things. The bed they got in 1910, birdseye maple. In the guest room they have the double bed they originally had in here. By 1910, florence is a semi invalid with Kidney Disease. When that flares up, she is bed ridden three or four months at a time. During that time she has excruciating abdominal pain, swelling in her feet, her hands, her ankles. This is a sick room for them. My unbelief is the twin beds work well because of her situation my own belief is the twin beds work well because of her situation. Twin beds were popular around 1910. It was not unusual for married couples to do that just to get a good nights sleep. For them, i think it had a lot to do with their illness. A very personal item of mrs. Shawlgs. The purple she used this a lot during the fall of 1922. They are in the white house. Her Kidney Disease picked up in september. She is in bed until november. And nearly dies. The white house is putting out daily bulletins about her health. She often is draping a purple shawl around her shoulders. She is her health is fragile. Sometimes she cannot go on some trips or has to curtail her activities because of that. We have six minutes left. I want to take a call from ohio. My question is this. I want to know about the history agra for you historiography of the hardings. I am a staff member of the harding house, so i get a lot of questions about the poisoning, the papers. My question, why is there still the myth out there even though the evidence is right out there and there is not a movement to turn things around . Lets say with the rumors are. The rumors started how soon after hardings death that she was responsible for poisoning him . There were a number of rumors. I date it to the 1930s. I do not know if she raised the issue of the poisoning. A former secret service agent. An absolute crook and a fellow that was swindling Evalyn Walsh Mclean out of money in relation to the lindbergh kidnapping. He is the guy who put the story out. Not a credible guy. This goes on to this day. I recently met some people who are hearing the stories still from tour guides in alaska. Thankfully, the historians stopped the issue. I think it began to switch in the late 1960s. You had a very important book. But also propagating a lot of stories we have been wrestling with the night. She did not allow an autopsy. And had guards around the president s body. Was she not somewhat the architect . The autopsy i understand. She left him so dearly. I cannot imagine she would want to see him carved up. Visitors around the country wanted to see his body. They slowed down some people could see. But you are absolutely right that the history could not be told because she would not allow people to write it. Burning the papers, under the circumstances of his death, the scandals how many were burnt . There were a lot of questions about that. She burns a lot of stuff at the mclean mansion. It appears she basically burns copies of the book the chancellor had written. Also an unopened chute case we reallyof hardings. Dont know. There are 907 manuscript boxes at the library of congress of his papers. There is a lot. We were talking earlier about letters between the two of them. We do not see those letters because they wanted some privacy. T. R. s widow burnt a lot of his papers. Any conspiracy there, or the desire for privacy . Where was harding buried . Marion, ohio. Mrs. Harding came back to washington, moved out of the white house . She lived in the weathered hotel, the same place the the willard the willard hotelcoolidges lived when they ,were in the Vice President ial time. I think she if she stayed in washington she might have lived longer. She had just come back and was beginning something of an active life. Unfortunately, she got sick again and dr. Sawyer encouraged her to come back to ohio. At that point, i am afraid she just sort of gave up. When you think about the strength she had in the white house warren was her light, and that was gone. Her kidneys were gone, too. She died in marion, ohio at on november 21, 1924. They werethe only president and first lady to die before what would have been the end of their first term. Another sad first for the country. Heres a question from gary robinson, who wants to ask florence or warren as the more interesting . They are both very interesting. This is like this ranking of president s we get into, which i hate to make lists. I will pass on that one, but i will say what we were talking about earlier, about his legacy and his a congressmans, the creation a compliments accomplishments. The naval bureau, the bringing these arehe economy. All major accomplishments. Florence is even more interesting. She was badly treated by history, but there is more to her than we know. You referred to her as a neglected and derided first lady. At the bottom of all these lists. Where does she belong, do you think . I think she belongs in the top 10. She was a transitional first lady, she made the cracks in the mold that Eleanor Roosevelt broke. Many causes people embrace. She attached created the culture of celebrity still attached to first ladies today. She really wanted to make the world better for the underprivileged. Prisoners, women, minorities. We did not get to talk about all these issues. I hope you will look into her further. Where would you put her . I think in terms of setting precedents, in terms of opening up the office, if it is an office, the first lady, the visibility, she would have to rank very high on that. In terms of not opening up the white house but reopening to the public, that is very significant. We have seen it closed down since that. After coolidge it sort of close down. The depression and the war and such and all the concerns of modern life close it down. It used to be the peoples house, and she really brought the people back. Our partners for this series are the White House Historical situate association. They have a compendium of the lives of first ladies that we are making available on our website for costs. You can find it on our website as we continue to tell the stories of these women, how they shape the administrations and shaped history in our country as well. Thank you to our guests to tell us about Florence Harding, a first lady not wellknown but maybe you know more now. Karen sidley and david pietrusza. Thanks to both of you. Thank you. [captioning performed by national captioning institute] [captions Copyright National cable satellite corp. 2013] this is the pat nexen rose garden at the Nixon Library. It was important because mrs. Nixon was instrumental in designing it for the grand opening of the Nixon Library in 1997. She loved gardening and had a special affinity for roses. Mrs. Nixon was instrumental in opening up the white house for garden tours in the spring which is a tradition that has continued to this day. This is the Pat Nixon Rose which