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Health and Medical History of President Andrew JohnsonPresident #17: 1865-1869
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This style... | ... means the event occurred while President. |
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![]() big head and chest |
"massive head and deep chest"
1a
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![]() typhoid fever |
Had typhoid fever during the winter of 1864-1865, and was "slow to recover from the fever"
1a
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![]() not a drunkard |
Johnson was ill on March 4, 1865 -- the day he was to be inaugurated Vice-President and Lincoln
president. He wanted to skip the ceremony, but Lincoln persuaded him otherwise
2a.
To steady his nerves, Johnson had "three stiff drinks of whisky [sic]" and became
drunk
1b.
He walked into the inauguration ceremonies red-faced, on the arm of outgoing Vice President
Hannibal Hamlin
3a.
Then, during his speech, he talked too much and rather incoherently, leading to his reputation
as the "drunken tailor." Lincoln defended him: "I have known Andrew Johnson
for many years. He made a slip the other day, but you need not be scared; Andy ain't a drunkard"
2a.
Nevertheless, the consequences of this episode persisted.
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![]() kidney stones |
While president, Johnson chronically suffered from kidney stones. This is a painful condition.
It has been speculated that "His temperament and ability to compromise were likely impaired
by a state of chronic pain [and this] may have adversely contributed to his political failure
with far-reaching political and societal consequences"
4.
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![]() snored |
Reliability of this information is uncertain.
5
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![]() ![]() ![]() stroke |
The New York Times of Sunday, August 1, 1875
6
quotes a story in the Cincinnati Gazette,
dated the prior day:
This morning at about 2 o'clock ex-President Johnson died at the residence of his daughter... from a paralytic stroke. He had been in rather bad health since the adjournment of the last sesson of Congress, but nothing serious was anticipated. On Wednesday morning he left on the train for Carter's Station, and from thence he went on horseback to his daughter's residence, a distance of about seven miles, riding in the hot sun. Arriving there he felt very fatigued, and the same afternoon, about 4 o'clock, his right side was paralyzed, rendering him speechless. His wife was with him at the time, and his [children] were at once sent for.... On Thursday about noon he became conscious and had a partial use of his side again, but it was evident that the great commoner could not live long, and thus surrounded by his entire family and neighboring friends he passed away about 2 o'clock this morning. Much feeling is manifested here and at Knoxville. |
During Presidency |
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Ampres Series
![]() ![]() 57 reviews
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Kansas Series
![]() ![]() 5 reviews
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Signature Series
![]() ![]() 30 reviews
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a p.451 b p.453
Comment: A vivid account of Washington, DC during the Civil War. Won the Pulitzer Prize.
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a p.150
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a p.244
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![]() | Comment: Credibility is dubious. Just before a list of Presidents, the article states: "Twenty of the 32 Presidents ... are proved or believed on a thick web of circumstance to have been nocturnal nuisances in the White House." |