no
Yes, William Henry Harrison insisted on giving the longest inaugural speech in history in the bitter cold with no jacket. He got a cold, which became pneumonia. "I am sick, very sick, much more than they think of me." -William Henry Harrison
George Washington's second address was the shortest (135 words), and William Henry Harrison delivered the longest (8,495 words).
No, William Henry Harrison did not have more than two wives. He was married twice: first to Anna Tuthill Symmes in 1795, who was his only wife until her death in 1841, and then he married a woman named Mary in 1842, but this marriage was not recognized as valid due to the timing of his wife's death. He is primarily known for his long marriage to Anna Harrison, with whom he had ten children.
One of the eight presidents from Virginia is George Washington. The rest of the presidents are Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, Woodrow Wilson, William Henry Harrison, and John Tyler.
William Henry Harrison, the ninth President of the United States, studied medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. However, he did not complete his medical education, as he pursued a military career instead. His brief foray into medicine was primarily influenced by his interest in the health and treatment of soldiers during his military service. Ultimately, Harrison is more known for his political and military roles than for his medical studies.
Arguably, it is either Ohio or Virginia that claims to have the most native presidents. William Henry Harrison was born in Virginia but spent most of his life in Ohio. Both states have eight, including him.
It was over the re-establishment of a national bank. More information regarding this can be found at the following website: http://www.presidentprofiles.com/Washington-Johnson/William-Henry-Harrison-and-John-Tyler-Tyler-s-conflicts-with-clay-s-whigs.html
he had more then 20 wifes
The United States Presidential election of 1840 saw current President Martin Van Buren compete against William Henry Harrison, who beat off competition from Henry Clay and Winfield Scott to run as Presidential nominee.
In 1840 when they beat him, they portrayed him as a wealthy and corrupt New York lawyer from the Eastern establishment and contrasted him with William Henry Harrison who was a frontier Indian fighter (more or less). They also blamed the Panic of 1837 on him.
After his first term, Benjamin Harrison; After his second, William McKinley
Thomas Jefferson, both during his presidency and throughout his lifetime, did not have any noted preference against or for Native Americans. His policies did not concern the expanding America as much as foreign and internal policies, and he managed no wars on American soil. William Henry Harrison was not president for more than a month before he died, so his policies as president are negligible. However, as general at the Battle of Tippecanoe and the Battle of the Thames during the War of 1812, both battles against Indians, he probably held them in low regard.