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Benjamin Harrison

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Benjamin Harrison Famous memorial Veteran

Birth
North Bend, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
Death
13 Mar 1901 (aged 67)
Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana, USA
Burial
Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana, USA GPS-Latitude: 39.8188896, Longitude: -86.1756134
Plot
Section 13, Lot 57
Memorial ID
View Source
23rd United States President, U.S. Senator, Civil War Union Brevet Brigadier General. Born in North Bend, Ohio, he was the grandson of President William Henry Harrison, and great-grandson of Benjamin Harrison, a signer of the Declaration of Independence. He attended Cary's Academy (Farmer's College) near Cincinnati, Ohio and in 1850, he enrolled in Miami of Ohio University as a junior and was graduated in 1852 with honors. He moved to Indianapolis, Indiana, in order to begin a legal practice, and was elected Indianapolis City Attorney in 1857. He became the Supreme Court Reporter in 1860. During the Civil War, at the request of the Governor, he raised the 70th Indiana Volunteer Infantry, and was commissioned its colonel and commander on August 7, 1862. He led the unit through the end of the war, and was honorably mustered out on June 8, 1865. He was brevetted Brigadier General, US Volunteers on January 23, 1865 for "ability and manifest energy and gallantry in command of a brigade". He then resumed his law practice in Ohio, and in 1881, was elected as a Republican to represent Indiana in the United States Senate, serving until 1887. At the 1888 Republican Convention, he was nominated as a candidate for President on the eighth ballot. While he lost the popular vote by a narrow margin, he won the electoral vote, defeating incumbent president Grover Cleveland, taking the presidency. As President, he sponsored the first Pan-American Congress, supported the McKinley Tariff Act, and the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. He appointed four justices to the United States Supreme Court, established Coast Guard Academy, expanded the United States Navy from three steel war ships to twenty-two ships, had electricity installed in the White House, and admitted six states to the Union. His wife Caroline died in 1892, making her the second First Lady to die while in office.. He was re-nominated in 1892, but he was defeated by Grover Cleveland. Upon leaving the office, he returned to his law practice in Indianapolis. In the winter of 1901, he developed influenza which progressed to pneumonia, to which he succumbed within a month. He is to date, the only United States President who was the grandson of a former United States President.
23rd United States President, U.S. Senator, Civil War Union Brevet Brigadier General. Born in North Bend, Ohio, he was the grandson of President William Henry Harrison, and great-grandson of Benjamin Harrison, a signer of the Declaration of Independence. He attended Cary's Academy (Farmer's College) near Cincinnati, Ohio and in 1850, he enrolled in Miami of Ohio University as a junior and was graduated in 1852 with honors. He moved to Indianapolis, Indiana, in order to begin a legal practice, and was elected Indianapolis City Attorney in 1857. He became the Supreme Court Reporter in 1860. During the Civil War, at the request of the Governor, he raised the 70th Indiana Volunteer Infantry, and was commissioned its colonel and commander on August 7, 1862. He led the unit through the end of the war, and was honorably mustered out on June 8, 1865. He was brevetted Brigadier General, US Volunteers on January 23, 1865 for "ability and manifest energy and gallantry in command of a brigade". He then resumed his law practice in Ohio, and in 1881, was elected as a Republican to represent Indiana in the United States Senate, serving until 1887. At the 1888 Republican Convention, he was nominated as a candidate for President on the eighth ballot. While he lost the popular vote by a narrow margin, he won the electoral vote, defeating incumbent president Grover Cleveland, taking the presidency. As President, he sponsored the first Pan-American Congress, supported the McKinley Tariff Act, and the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. He appointed four justices to the United States Supreme Court, established Coast Guard Academy, expanded the United States Navy from three steel war ships to twenty-two ships, had electricity installed in the White House, and admitted six states to the Union. His wife Caroline died in 1892, making her the second First Lady to die while in office.. He was re-nominated in 1892, but he was defeated by Grover Cleveland. Upon leaving the office, he returned to his law practice in Indianapolis. In the winter of 1901, he developed influenza which progressed to pneumonia, to which he succumbed within a month. He is to date, the only United States President who was the grandson of a former United States President.

Bio by: Iola


Inscription

BENJAMIN HARRISON,
August 20, 1833,
March 13, 1901.

Lawyer and Publicist.

Col. 70th Reg. Ind. Vol. War 1861-1865.
Brevetted Brigadier General, 1865.
U. S. Senator, 1881-1887.
President, 1889-1893.

Statesman, yet friend to truth,
of soul sincere:
In action faithful and in
honour clear.



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Added: Apr 25, 1998
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/451/benjamin-harrison: accessed ), memorial page for Benjamin Harrison (20 Aug 1833–13 Mar 1901), Find a Grave Memorial ID 451, citing Crown Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.