Harry Truman and the Haunted White House
Just three days after the 1948 election,
President-Elect Harry S. Truman stepped off a train in St. Louis and, with a
large grin on his face, held up a copy of the November 3 edition of the Chicago Tribune for reporters and
photographers to see. The bold headline on the front page read DEWEY DEFEATS
TRUMAN – the newspaper had most definitely gotten the story wrong. The headline
became known as the most infamous blunder in American newspaper history.
The Tribune,
which had once referred to Truman as a “nincompoop,” was a notoriously
Republican-leaning paper but, to be fair, the erroneous headline had nothing to
do with national politics. For almost a year before the 1948 election, the
printers who operated the linotype machines at newspapers all over Chicago had
been on strike. Around the same time, the Tribune
had switched to a method in which copy for the paper was composed on
typewriters, photographed, and then engraved onto printing plates. This process
required the paper to go to press several hours earlier than usual.
On election night, the earlier press deadline
required the first post-election issue of the Tribune to go to press before even the states on the East Coast had
reported all the results from polling places. The paper relied on its veteran
Washington correspondent and political analyst Arthur Sears Henning for a
prediction of the winner. Henning had correctly picked the winner in four out of
fine presidential contests over the past 20 years. The scuttlebutt in
Washington, based on the polls, was that a win by Thomas Dewey was “inevitable.”
The New York Governor, almost everyone believed, would easily win the election.
The first edition of the Tribune for
November 3 therefore went to press with the banner headline DEWEY DEFEATS
TRUMAN.
The story
that accompanied it, written by Henning, reported that Dewey “won a sweeping
victory in the presidential election yesterday.” He also noted that Republicans
would now control both the Senate and the House of Representatives and that
Dewey “won the presidency by an overwhelming majority of the electoral vote.”
As returns began to indicate a close race later
in the evening, Henning continued to stick to his prediction. It was simply too
late to turn back now – thousands of papers were rolling off the presses with the
headline that predicted Dewey’s victory. Even after the paper’s lead story was
rewritten to emphasize local races and to indicate the narrowness of Dewey’s
lead in the national race, the same banner headline was left on the front page.
Only late in the evening, after press dispatches began to cast doubt on Dewey’s
victory, did the Tribune change the
headline to DEMOCRATS MAKE SWEEP OF STATE OFFICES for the later edition. Some
150,000 copies of the paper had already been printed before the mistake was
corrected.
As it turned out, Truman won the electoral vote
by a 303 – 189 – 39 majority over Dewey and third candidate Strom Thurmond. Instead
of a Republican sweep of the White House and retention of both houses of
Congress, the Democrats not only won the Presidency, but also took control of
the Senate and the House of Representatives.
Harry Truman was on his way back to the White
House – a place that he already knew was infested with ghosts.
According to a number of former presidents,
their families, and their staffs, there are many ghosts to be found in the
White House. Most notable among the resident spirits are former chief
executives Andrew Jackson and Abraham Lincoln. Of course, these phantoms do not
walk the halls alone, but Lincoln is especially active in a place where he
suffered not only the psychological trauma of the country tearing itself apart
during the Civil War, but where he lost his beloved son, Willie, to an unknown
ailment. Perhaps for this reason, he has become the most frequently encountered
spirit at the White House. Theodore Roosevelt admitted to friends that he had
encountered Lincoln’s ghost. Grace Coolidge once insisted that she had seen
Lincoln’s ghost walking through a doorway on the second floor. President
Herbert Hoover described to friends “fantastic” strange noises that he heard
coming from the other side of the door to the Lincoln bedroom. Lady Bird
Johnson and Jackie Kennedy both encountered the mournful spirit, as did Eleanor
Roosevelt and several members of her staff. Queen Wilhelmina of the
Netherlands, who stayed at the White House during World War II, surprised
President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and several cocktail party guests, one evening
when she told them of seeing Lincoln in her bedroom. Prime Minister Winston Churchill
never discussed Lincoln’s ghost, but always stayed in the Lincoln Bedroom when
visiting the White House. One morning, though, he was discovered sleeping in a
room across the hall. He had moved in the middle of the night. He refused to
tell anyone what had frightened him out of his usual quarters.
Of all the presidents who encountered the
spirits of the White House, however, the best-known was Harry Truman. His
daughter, Margaret, also saw Lincoln’s ghost walking down a second-floor
corridor, just as many others had in years past. Truman made no bones about the
fact that he believed the White House to be haunted. He once recalled an
incident that took place in the early morning hours, about one year after he
took office. He was awakened that night by knocking on his bedroom door. He got
out of bed, went to the door and opened it, but found that no one was in the
hallway. Suddenly, the air around him felt icy cold but the chill quickly faded
as President Truman heard footsteps moving away from him down the corridor.
He later wrote to his wife, Bess, who often
stayed at their family home in Missouri because she didn’t like Washington, and
stated that, “I sit in this old house, all the while listening to the ghosts
walk up and down the hallway. At four o’clock, I was awakened by three distinct
knocks on my bedroom door. No one was there. Damned place is haunted, sure as
shootin’!”
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