Black Cloth: Mourning William Henry Harrison
Gallery
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Pinch to zoomDeath of Harrison
Date: 1841
Creator: Henry R. Robinson
Medium: LithographThis 1841 hand-colored lithograph shows President Harrison on his deathbed, surrounded by physicians, political allies, and family members. His wife, Anna Harrison, who had not arrived in Washington, is not pictured.
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution1 of 6
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Pinch to zoomAnna Tuthill Symmes Harrison
Date: ca. 1820
Creator: Unknown
Medium: PaintingIn this portrait, Anna Harrison wears a black mourning dress and shawl. The painting was created before the death of William Henry Harrison, but Anna Harrison spent a good portion of her life wearing mourning clothing—she outlived all but one of her ten children, and also laid to rest ten grandchildren. She would have again worn black mourning dress after the passing of her husband.
White House Collection/White House Historical Association2 of 6
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Pinch to zoomMourning Dress, American
Date: ca. 1840
Creator: Unknown
Medium: Silk
Anna Harrison was a devout Presbyterian who “took no pleasure in contemplating the pomp and circumstance of a life at the Executive Mansion.” She may have selected a simple mourning gown such as this one, with little trimming or extra embellishment, to wear as a widow. One biography noted that “at no period of her life had she any taste for the gayeties [sic] of fashion…”Gift of Beatrice de Mauriac, etc., 1976/The Metropolitan Museum of Art3 of 6
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Marine Band in Procession During William Henry Harrison's Funeral
Date: 1841
Creator: Unknown
Medium: EngravingThis engraving of the United States Marine Band performing during the presidential funeral of William Henry Harrison captures the White House and funeral car in the background. The artist neglected to depict the black drapery that festooned the façade of the Executive Mansion during the funeral.
Kiplinger Washington Collection4 of 6
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Pinch to zoomFuneral Expenses of William Henry Harrison, Late President of the United States.
Date: August 16, 1841
Creator: UnknownThis bill from draper Darius Clagett referred to the United States Congressional Committee of Ways and Means itemized the fabric and sundries used to decorate the White House for the presidential funeral of William Henry Harrison. He used black and white crape (also spelled crepe or crêpe) to drape the north side of the White House. Crape is a transparent, crimped silk gauze and was an ideal mourning fabric—in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, cloth that reflected light was avoided for mourning; dull, solemn fabrics were ideal. Mirrors and chandeliers in the East Room and parlors were covered with crape to dull their shine. Gloves in appropriate mourning colors were distributed to White House staff and principal guests. The total cost to the government for funeral decorations was $928.25 - about $33,454 today.
Library of Congress5 of 6
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Pinch to zoomTo the Memory of William H. Harrison
Date: Unknown
Creator: Unknown
Medium: PrintIn this print, a mourner stands at the graveside of William Henry Harrison, his hat decorated with a band of black mourning crape. Sepulchral art—art depicting themes of death and mourning—was popularized in the mid-nineteenth century, when the sentimentality of bereavement became a major theme of the Romantic movement. Mourning was thought to demonstrate a person’s Christian piety, gentility, and sensitivity. The weeping willow was a popular motif, its branches mimicking the drooping posture of a mourner, and the vast amount of water needed to keep it alive signified the tears of the bereaved. The urn and the mourning doves nesting in the bush at the base of the tree were also common symbols of loss.
Everett Collection Historical/Alamy Stock Photo6 of 6