
This portrait of Thomas F. Pendel appeared
in his 1902 memoir, Thirty-six Years in the White House.
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Three Ushers Foil
an Assassin
Thomas F. Pendel was
a White House doorman from the Abraham
Lincoln administration to the turn of the
20th century. By the time Chester A. Arthur
succeeded James A. Garfield in September
1881, Pendel had experienced the assassinations
of both Lincoln and Garfield.
Even
before Arthur moved into the White House,
a man who "seemed perfectly rational" came
to the Executive Mansion, asking to see the
new President. Pendel sent him on his way,
but two weeks later he returned.
Another
usher, Mr. Allen, approached the chap, who handed
Allen a note. Allen walked over to Pendel and
said, "Tom, that
man is crazy."1
Chief
Usher Eldon Dinsmore tried to persuade the
visitor to come along with him to see President
Arthur; but the fellow sensed he was being
deceived, and he attempted to bolt.
"Dinsmore
grabbed him by the collar," recounts
Pendel, "and
as he did so, the man's hand went down to his hip-pocket." Allen went
for the pocket "and drew out . . . a six-shooter, with every barrel
loaded." Pendel confiscated the gun. The "ugly customer" was
packed off to police headquarters, and "that was the last we ever saw
of him."2
1 Thomas F. Pendel, Thirty-Six Years in the White House (Washington:
Neale Publishing, 1902), 123–124.
2 Ibid., 124-125. |