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November-December 2000
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The Crimson Party |
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Gilbert Stuart's and Thomas Sully's
John Quincy Adams, done between 1825 and 1830,
is part of the Harvard University Portrait Collection.
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The hyperactive Teddy on vacation,
drawn by Joseph Keppler for Puck, is in Harvard's
Theodore Roosevelt Collection.
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FDR at the Tercentenary in 1936
(Harvard University Archives)
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Adams's son John Quincy, A.B. 1787, LL.D. 1822, the sixth president and, so far, the only son of a president to serve in that way himself, made history thanks to Anne Royall, who, the story goes, meant to interview him for her newspaper. He refused repeatedly. Knowing that he often swam nude at 5 a.m. in the Potomac, she went there and sat on his clothes until he relented--she thus becoming the first woman to interview a president.
Rutherford B. Hayes, LL.B. 1845, LL.D. '87, won the election of 1876, but it was a near thing, involving disputed electoral votes, and amid the tension he took the oath of office secretly in the Red Room of the White House. Theodore Roosevelt, A.B. 1880, LL.D. 1902, wrestled, rowed, birdwatched, and shot through college and kept lobsters, snakes, and a substantial tortoise in his room. His cousin Franklin Delano Roosevelt '04, LL.D. '29, failed in his great ambition--to be admitted to the Porcellian, Harvard's most prestigious social club--and went on to become a "traitor to his class."
JFK was the sixth president to hold a Harvard degree. The
seventh will likely be Ralph Nader, LL.B. '58 (running with
Winona LaDuke '80), George W. Bush, M.B.A. '75, or Albert
Gore Jr. '69, LL.D. '94--and November 7 will be a grand day
for Harvard.