1 00:00:04,080 --> 00:00:07,480 Speaker 1: Welcome to Aaron Menkey's Cabinet of Curiosities, a production of 2 00:00:07,480 --> 00:00:13,840 Speaker 1: I Heart Radio and Grim and Mild. Our world is 3 00:00:13,960 --> 00:00:17,960 Speaker 1: full of the unexplainable, and if history is an open book, 4 00:00:18,280 --> 00:00:21,640 Speaker 1: all of these amazing tales are right there on display, 5 00:00:22,000 --> 00:00:27,600 Speaker 1: just waiting for us to explore. Welcome to the Cabinet 6 00:00:27,840 --> 00:00:40,599 Speaker 1: of Curiosities. After his second term in office, in President 7 00:00:40,600 --> 00:00:44,159 Speaker 1: George Washington refused to run for a third term. He 8 00:00:44,200 --> 00:00:47,840 Speaker 1: believed two terms were enough for any president. Every person 9 00:00:47,880 --> 00:00:50,199 Speaker 1: who took office after him adhered to what was then 10 00:00:50,240 --> 00:00:53,960 Speaker 1: an unwritten rule about the position until Franklin Roosevelt in 11 00:00:54,760 --> 00:00:58,320 Speaker 1: three each president only served at most two terms before 12 00:00:58,440 --> 00:01:04,120 Speaker 1: vacating the office. Roosevelt famously won four elections, serving longer 13 00:01:04,160 --> 00:01:07,520 Speaker 1: than any president before or since. Sadly, he passed away 14 00:01:07,560 --> 00:01:10,800 Speaker 1: in nineteen forty five. Not long after his fourth term began. 15 00:01:11,280 --> 00:01:14,520 Speaker 1: In nineteen forty seven, the twenty second Amendment was ratified, 16 00:01:14,760 --> 00:01:17,520 Speaker 1: stating a president could not be elected to office more 17 00:01:17,560 --> 00:01:21,760 Speaker 1: than twice. Not every president made it to the end 18 00:01:21,760 --> 00:01:24,680 Speaker 1: of their second term, though Abraham Lincoln, for example, was 19 00:01:24,720 --> 00:01:28,000 Speaker 1: the first president to be assassinated while in office, and 20 00:01:28,160 --> 00:01:30,600 Speaker 1: some didn't even reach the end of their first term. 21 00:01:30,600 --> 00:01:34,000 Speaker 1: William Henry Harrison lasted only a month into his presidency 22 00:01:34,080 --> 00:01:37,520 Speaker 1: before dying of typhoid pneumonia in April of eighteen forty one. 23 00:01:38,080 --> 00:01:40,959 Speaker 1: History books claim his was the shortest term on record, 24 00:01:41,640 --> 00:01:47,440 Speaker 1: but was it David Rice Atchison might have disagreed. Atchison 25 00:01:47,560 --> 00:01:50,400 Speaker 1: was born in Lexington, Kentucky, in eighteen oh seven. He 26 00:01:50,480 --> 00:01:53,360 Speaker 1: grew up a staunch supporter of slavery and eventually the 27 00:01:53,400 --> 00:01:57,120 Speaker 1: Confederacy during the American Civil War. He wasn't always a 28 00:01:57,160 --> 00:02:00,360 Speaker 1: political animal, though. Atchison got his start as a lawyer 29 00:02:00,400 --> 00:02:03,280 Speaker 1: in Missouri. He ran his own practice and gained fame 30 00:02:03,320 --> 00:02:06,720 Speaker 1: for representing Mormon founder Joseph Smith in a number of 31 00:02:06,800 --> 00:02:11,840 Speaker 1: land dispute cases. Atjison, though had grander plans for himself. 32 00:02:12,200 --> 00:02:15,000 Speaker 1: He rose through the political ranks, first in the Missouri 33 00:02:15,080 --> 00:02:18,400 Speaker 1: House of Representatives, then as a circuit court judge. In 34 00:02:18,440 --> 00:02:21,080 Speaker 1: eighteen forty three, he became the youngest U S Senator 35 00:02:21,160 --> 00:02:24,400 Speaker 1: to ever hail from the state of Missouri. Atchison was 36 00:02:24,480 --> 00:02:26,919 Speaker 1: so well liked by his party that they elected him 37 00:02:26,919 --> 00:02:30,480 Speaker 1: in eighteen forty five as President pro temporary. It meant 38 00:02:30,520 --> 00:02:33,200 Speaker 1: that in the event, the elected president and vice president 39 00:02:33,280 --> 00:02:35,880 Speaker 1: could no longer serve the duties of their office. He 40 00:02:35,880 --> 00:02:38,119 Speaker 1: would have been the third in line to assume the role. 41 00:02:38,639 --> 00:02:42,320 Speaker 1: He was thirty eight at the time. For the next 42 00:02:42,360 --> 00:02:45,840 Speaker 1: several years, he served as President pro temporary without incidents, 43 00:02:46,120 --> 00:02:49,160 Speaker 1: from John Taylor to James K. Polk. The former lawyer 44 00:02:49,200 --> 00:02:52,079 Speaker 1: from Missouri, carried out his job in the Senate, never 45 00:02:52,120 --> 00:02:54,680 Speaker 1: believing that he would ever ascend the highest office in 46 00:02:54,720 --> 00:02:58,600 Speaker 1: the country until something strange happened in eighteen forty nine. 47 00:02:59,480 --> 00:03:02,320 Speaker 1: You see, before the twentieth Amendment of the Constitution was 48 00:03:02,400 --> 00:03:06,000 Speaker 1: ratified in the nineteen thirties, presidential terms began at noon 49 00:03:06,120 --> 00:03:09,840 Speaker 1: sharp on March fourth, rather than on January as they 50 00:03:09,840 --> 00:03:13,240 Speaker 1: are today. On that day, at that time, the previous 51 00:03:13,240 --> 00:03:16,360 Speaker 1: administration was automatically stripped of all its power, and the 52 00:03:16,400 --> 00:03:21,200 Speaker 1: new administration assumed those responsibilities. In eighteen forty nine, though 53 00:03:21,520 --> 00:03:25,480 Speaker 1: inauguration day happened to fall on a Sunday, Zachary Taylor 54 00:03:25,520 --> 00:03:27,440 Speaker 1: had just been elected as the twelfth President of the 55 00:03:27,480 --> 00:03:30,240 Speaker 1: United States, but refused to be sworn into office on 56 00:03:30,280 --> 00:03:33,800 Speaker 1: the Sabbath. Instead, he waited until the following day, March five, 57 00:03:34,240 --> 00:03:36,440 Speaker 1: which meant that the position of President of the United 58 00:03:36,480 --> 00:03:40,440 Speaker 1: States would be vacant for twenty four hours, not if 59 00:03:40,480 --> 00:03:43,880 Speaker 1: you were David Rice Atchison, though with the presidency and 60 00:03:44,000 --> 00:03:47,600 Speaker 1: vice presidency both empty, that left Atchison as next in 61 00:03:47,640 --> 00:03:51,040 Speaker 1: line to assume the title. He was President pro temporary 62 00:03:51,200 --> 00:03:54,520 Speaker 1: after all. Historians today claimed that there was no way 63 00:03:54,560 --> 00:03:57,960 Speaker 1: Atchison could have been considered presidents. He was never sworn in, 64 00:03:58,160 --> 00:04:01,080 Speaker 1: and his position as President pro temporary ended the same 65 00:04:01,160 --> 00:04:04,320 Speaker 1: day as Polk's administration, even though he was re elected 66 00:04:04,400 --> 00:04:08,360 Speaker 1: to the same role once Taylor took office. Anyway, Atchison 67 00:04:08,520 --> 00:04:12,320 Speaker 1: didn't sign any executive orders or influence any foreign policy. 68 00:04:12,600 --> 00:04:14,920 Speaker 1: Any decisions he might have made would have been challenged 69 00:04:15,040 --> 00:04:18,520 Speaker 1: and likely undone by other governing bodies. Anyway, the way 70 00:04:18,560 --> 00:04:21,880 Speaker 1: experts see it, Taylor was president even before he was 71 00:04:21,920 --> 00:04:25,480 Speaker 1: sworn in. At worst, the country lacked a sitting president 72 00:04:25,600 --> 00:04:29,960 Speaker 1: for twenty four hours. Still, it doesn't really matter what 73 00:04:30,120 --> 00:04:33,400 Speaker 1: historians have to say about the matter. Atchison got the 74 00:04:33,480 --> 00:04:36,480 Speaker 1: last word. It says so right on his grave marker 75 00:04:36,640 --> 00:04:41,960 Speaker 1: in Plattsburg, Missouri. David Rice Atchison President of the United 76 00:04:42,000 --> 00:04:58,479 Speaker 1: States for one day. When the people are dissatisfied with 77 00:04:58,520 --> 00:05:01,960 Speaker 1: their elected officials, they have one of two options. They 78 00:05:02,000 --> 00:05:05,000 Speaker 1: can either vote them out or revolt, but a group 79 00:05:05,040 --> 00:05:08,040 Speaker 1: of seventeenth century Dutch citizens managed to come up with 80 00:05:08,080 --> 00:05:12,599 Speaker 1: a creative third option. The Dutch Republic during this time 81 00:05:12,680 --> 00:05:16,359 Speaker 1: was an educational and artistic utopia. It also had an 82 00:05:16,480 --> 00:05:19,640 Speaker 1: army more skilled and powerful than almost any other in Europe. 83 00:05:19,839 --> 00:05:23,440 Speaker 1: The republic was presided over by two government divisions, the 84 00:05:23,480 --> 00:05:26,040 Speaker 1: first of which was the House of Orange, led by 85 00:05:26,040 --> 00:05:28,880 Speaker 1: William the second. The other was the Office of the 86 00:05:28,920 --> 00:05:32,880 Speaker 1: Grand Pensionary, headed by Johan DeWitt. Johan and his brother 87 00:05:33,000 --> 00:05:37,200 Speaker 1: Cornelius were highly educated aristocrats with grand dreams for the 88 00:05:37,240 --> 00:05:40,599 Speaker 1: future of the Netherlands. Johan in particular was a master 89 00:05:40,680 --> 00:05:43,640 Speaker 1: of political manipulation. He had been elected as the Grand 90 00:05:43,680 --> 00:05:49,240 Speaker 1: Pensionary and oversaw the Dutch Republic mainly Holland. Though the 91 00:05:49,279 --> 00:05:51,599 Speaker 1: people were technically ruled by the House of Orange, it 92 00:05:51,680 --> 00:05:54,040 Speaker 1: was de Witt who pulled the strings behind the scenes. 93 00:05:54,480 --> 00:05:57,360 Speaker 1: He was a man of the republic and constantly at 94 00:05:57,400 --> 00:06:00,240 Speaker 1: odds with the monarchy, believing that the power they held 95 00:06:00,279 --> 00:06:03,840 Speaker 1: should have been transferred to the Dutch leaders instead. DeWitt's 96 00:06:03,880 --> 00:06:07,240 Speaker 1: interests were primarily centered on the shipping and trading economies 97 00:06:07,240 --> 00:06:10,560 Speaker 1: of Holland, which affected and involved the upper class from 98 00:06:10,560 --> 00:06:13,279 Speaker 1: where he had come, not like the more middle class 99 00:06:13,279 --> 00:06:17,479 Speaker 1: focused House of Orange. Meanwhile, William the Second was elected 100 00:06:17,520 --> 00:06:20,640 Speaker 1: as Governor of the Netherlands in sixteen forty seven. He 101 00:06:20,640 --> 00:06:22,960 Speaker 1: held the title for three years until his death in 102 00:06:23,040 --> 00:06:27,000 Speaker 1: sixteen fifty Just over a week after his passing, his 103 00:06:27,040 --> 00:06:30,400 Speaker 1: wife gave birth to an heir, William the third. DeWitt 104 00:06:30,560 --> 00:06:35,560 Speaker 1: immediately saw a problem that needed fixing. The people admired 105 00:06:35,600 --> 00:06:38,640 Speaker 1: the House of Orange. They encouraged the monarchy to elect 106 00:06:38,720 --> 00:06:41,240 Speaker 1: the infant William the Third as governor with the help 107 00:06:41,279 --> 00:06:44,320 Speaker 1: of a regent until he came of age. DeWitt wanted 108 00:06:44,320 --> 00:06:46,600 Speaker 1: to keep the power away from the family by any 109 00:06:46,640 --> 00:06:51,000 Speaker 1: means necessary. Now Coincidentally, at the same time, the Dutch 110 00:06:51,040 --> 00:06:54,600 Speaker 1: and the English Commonwealth were engaged in war. England had 111 00:06:54,680 --> 00:06:58,479 Speaker 1: just liberated itself from King Charles the First by liberating 112 00:06:58,480 --> 00:07:01,320 Speaker 1: the king from his head. DeWitt saw a way to 113 00:07:01,400 --> 00:07:04,280 Speaker 1: make peace with England while also keeping William the Third 114 00:07:04,320 --> 00:07:07,680 Speaker 1: from becoming governor. He penned a treaty between the two 115 00:07:07,760 --> 00:07:11,000 Speaker 1: nations called the Treaty of Westminster, which had a clause 116 00:07:11,080 --> 00:07:13,880 Speaker 1: buried inside it that prohibited William the Third from being 117 00:07:13,880 --> 00:07:17,040 Speaker 1: elected governor. The leader of the English Commonwealth, a man 118 00:07:17,120 --> 00:07:20,800 Speaker 1: named Oliver Cromwell, insisted on this clause, seeing as how 119 00:07:20,800 --> 00:07:23,920 Speaker 1: William the Third was also Charles the First grandson and 120 00:07:23,960 --> 00:07:25,960 Speaker 1: could be a problem for all of them. Later on 121 00:07:27,080 --> 00:07:30,280 Speaker 1: the documents was signed. What DeWitt didn't know was that 122 00:07:30,320 --> 00:07:33,240 Speaker 1: he had also sealed his fate. He worked hard over 123 00:07:33,240 --> 00:07:35,560 Speaker 1: the next several years to have the position of governor 124 00:07:35,560 --> 00:07:41,160 Speaker 1: wiped out. His power and influence grew, as did his party. Unfortunately, 125 00:07:41,280 --> 00:07:44,120 Speaker 1: DeWitt's previous political moves came back to haunt him in 126 00:07:44,200 --> 00:07:47,600 Speaker 1: sixteen seventy two. That year, the Dutch Republic found itself 127 00:07:47,680 --> 00:07:51,520 Speaker 1: under attack from France and England. The Republic fell and 128 00:07:51,600 --> 00:07:55,080 Speaker 1: the Orangists took control. And wouldn't you know it, but 129 00:07:55,120 --> 00:07:58,960 Speaker 1: William the Third took over as governor anyway, despite DeWitt's maneuvering. 130 00:07:59,480 --> 00:08:02,360 Speaker 1: After a failed attempt on his life, de Witt resigned 131 00:08:02,400 --> 00:08:06,440 Speaker 1: as Grand Pensionary. His brother Cornelius was arrested by Williams 132 00:08:06,440 --> 00:08:10,600 Speaker 1: forces and sentenced to exile. Before Cornelius was sent out 133 00:08:10,600 --> 00:08:13,280 Speaker 1: of the country, his brother Johan DeWitt wanted to see 134 00:08:13,360 --> 00:08:15,600 Speaker 1: him one last time. He was on his way to 135 00:08:15,640 --> 00:08:17,840 Speaker 1: the jail where they were keeping him. When an angry 136 00:08:17,840 --> 00:08:22,320 Speaker 1: mob appeared. They wanted the soldiers to arrest Johan as well. Instead, 137 00:08:22,680 --> 00:08:25,440 Speaker 1: the guards sort of left and the mob took matters 138 00:08:25,440 --> 00:08:28,920 Speaker 1: into their own hands. They dragged Johan and Cornelius out 139 00:08:28,960 --> 00:08:32,160 Speaker 1: into the open, shot them, and then strung their bodies 140 00:08:32,240 --> 00:08:36,040 Speaker 1: up in front of everyone. However, the brother's story doesn't 141 00:08:36,160 --> 00:08:40,559 Speaker 1: end there. The mob wasn't satisfied with only killing them. 142 00:08:40,600 --> 00:08:43,200 Speaker 1: They felt the two men deserved worse, so a few 143 00:08:43,240 --> 00:08:46,840 Speaker 1: members of the mob removed and eight parts of their bodies. 144 00:08:47,240 --> 00:08:50,640 Speaker 1: And amazingly, even after such a public display of violence, 145 00:08:50,960 --> 00:08:54,199 Speaker 1: none of the participants were ever prosecuted for their crimes, 146 00:08:54,559 --> 00:08:58,760 Speaker 1: including the cannibalism. In fact, William the Third made sure 147 00:08:58,840 --> 00:09:01,640 Speaker 1: that they were all let off. It wasn't the most 148 00:09:01,640 --> 00:09:05,439 Speaker 1: civilized way to punish elected officials, I know, but it 149 00:09:05,559 --> 00:09:09,520 Speaker 1: certainly left the crowd feeling happy and more than a 150 00:09:09,559 --> 00:09:15,640 Speaker 1: little full. I hope you've enjoyed today's guided tour of 151 00:09:15,640 --> 00:09:19,640 Speaker 1: the Cabinet of Curiosities. Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, 152 00:09:19,720 --> 00:09:23,199 Speaker 1: or learn more about the show by visiting Curiosities podcast 153 00:09:23,480 --> 00:09:27,439 Speaker 1: dot com. The show was created by me Aaron Manky 154 00:09:27,559 --> 00:09:31,040 Speaker 1: in partnership with how Stuff Works, I make another award 155 00:09:31,040 --> 00:09:34,600 Speaker 1: winning show called Lore, which is a podcast, book series, 156 00:09:34,679 --> 00:09:37,280 Speaker 1: and television show and you can learn all about it 157 00:09:37,360 --> 00:09:40,920 Speaker 1: over at the World of Lore dot com. And until 158 00:09:40,960 --> 00:09:43,800 Speaker 1: next time, stay curious. Ye