
Grandson of 10th US President John Tyler, who left the White House 180 years ago, dies at 96
The grandson of the 10th President of the United States, John Tyler, has died at 96 — 180 years after his grandfather was last in the White House.
Harrison Ruffin Tyler, the son of President Tyler's 13th child, Lyon Gardiner Tyler, died on Sunday evening at a Virginia nursing home, ending the last living link to an 18th-century presidential administration.
When he was born on Nov. 9, 1928, his father was 75 years old. Having children into old age was a family trait, as President Tyler was 63 when Lyon he was born.
President Tyler would go on to have two more children before he died in 1862 age 71.
4 Harrison Ruffin Tyler, the last living grandson of President John Tyler, has died at 96.
WTVR
Born into a prominent slaveholding Virginia family in 1790, John Tyler served as President William Henry Harrison's vice president on the Whig ticket in 1840.
He became president after Harrison died just 31 days into his term.
While in office, Tyler was a believer in manifest destiny, and signed a bill offering Texas statehood shortly before leaving office.
4 Tyler, the 10th US President, was born in 1790 and served one term in the White House between 1841 and 1845.
Getty Images
But he fell out with the Whig Party, who chose not to nominate him for reelection, instead opting for Henry Clay, who lost to the Democrat James K. Polk.
He fathered more children than any other American president, including eight with his first wife, Letitia Christian, and seven with his second, Julia Gardiner, whom he married in 1844 — two years after Letitia died of a stroke.
Harrison Ruffin Tyler was a feature of curiosity from a young age due to his ties to America's past.
4 President Tyler was 63 when his wife gave birth to Harrison's father, Lyon Gardiner Tyler.
Getty Images
At age 8, he was invited to the White House to meet FDR, and Lady Nancy Astor paid his $5,000 tuition fees at William & Mary College even though the two had never met.
He also had a historic lineage on the side of his mother, Susan Ruffin Tyler, and was a direct descendant of Pocahontas.
But despite that, he grew up poor during the Great Depression and, after graduating, he continued his education at Virginia Tech due to a lack of employment opportunities.
In 1968, he founded the industrial water treatment company ChemTreat with his business partner William P Simmons, serving top clients such as Kraft and Philip Morris.
4 Harrison had been living in a Virginia nursing home when he died on Sunday.
WTVR
In 1975, he bought his grandfather's former home, Sherwood Forest Plantation, from relatives and restored it along with his wife, Francis Payne Bouknight Tylor.
The property is now open to the public and operated by a foundation.
It boasts not only 'the longest frame house in America' but is also home to a ghost known as the Gray Lady, who visitors claim to have heard for over 200 years.
In 1996, Tyler bought and financed the preservation of Fort Pocahontas, a Civil War-era earthwork close to Sherwood Forest built by black Union soldiers.
In 2001, he donated thousands of papers and books, along with $5 million of his own money, to William & Mary's history department, which was renamed in his honor in 2021, The Richmonder reported.
Tyler's wife died in 2019, and he had been living in a nursing home in Richmond at the time of his death.
He is survived by three children and numerous of grandchildren.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
24 minutes ago
- New York Post
Romanian national, 26, pleads guilty to ‘swatting' over 75 public officials, including a former US president
A Romanian national pleaded guilty on Monday to charges related to his role in a 'swatting' ring that targeted dozens of public officials, including a former US president. Going by the aliases 'Plank,' 'Jonah' and 'Cypher,' 26-year-old Thomasz Szabo took part in a years-long conspiracy to place bogus 911 calls, claiming emergencies were taking place at the homes of top government officials, and make bomb threats against government buildings and houses of worship, according to Justice Department. Szabo and a co-conspirator, 21-year-old Serbian national Nemanja Radovanovic, allegedly targeted about 100 people, including members of Congress, governors, cabinet-level executive branch officials and state officials. 3 A Romanian national pleaded guilty on Monday to charges related to his role in a 'swatting' ring that targeted dozens of public officials, including a former US president. REUTERS One of their alleged victims is identified as a 'former elected official from the executive branch' who was swatted on Jan. 9. 2024, when Radovanovic falsely reported a murder at the home of the former president or vice president – who is not named in the indictment – and threatened to blow up the person's residence. Several of the victims were selected by Szabo, who directed Radovanovic to place the emergency calls targeting both Republicans and Democrats, according to the indictment. 'We are not on any side,' Szabo allegedly told Radovanovic. The menacing calls started around December 2020, when Szabo called a crisis intervention hotline and threatened to 'commit a mass shooting at multiple unspecified synagogues in New York City,' the indictment states. Around Jan. 17, 2021, Szabo allegedly called another crisis intervention hotline and threatened to detonate explosives at the US Capitol Building and kill then-President-elect Joe Biden. 3 Interim Attorney for the District of Columbia, Jeanine Pirro (L) and US Attorney General Pam Bondi (R) look on as US President Donald Trump speaks during a swearing-in ceremony in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on May 28, 2025. AFP via Getty Images The duo's last 'swatting' call listed in the indictment was placed by Radovanovic on Jan. 9, 2024, which reported a homicide at the home of a state governor. Szabo, who was extradited from Romania last November, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy and one count of making bomb threats. He is slated to be sentenced in a Washington, DC, federal court in October. 3 Attorney General Pam Bondi speaks at a news conference at the Justice Department, Feb. 12, 2025, in Washington. AP 'This defendant led a dangerous swatting criminal conspiracy, deliberately threatening dozens of government officials with violent hoaxes and targeting our nation's security infrastructure from behind a screen overseas,' Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement. 'This case reflects our continued focus on protecting the American people and working with international partners to stop these threats at their source.' FBI Director Kash Patel declared that swatting 'will not be tolerated by the FBI.' 'Today, Szabo pleaded guilty to a years-long conspiracy that targeted victims with swatting and bomb threats, including to government buildings, houses of worship and homes of government officials,' Patel said in a statement. 'Swatting endangers lives and will not be tolerated by the FBI.' 'We are fully committed to working with our partners to bring to justice those criminals hiding behind keyboards and threatening violence.' Charges against Radovanovic are still pending.


Business Insider
an hour ago
- Business Insider
Trump wants Senate to return ‘Big Beautiful Bill' to his desk before July 4
President Donald Trump stated in a post to Truth Social: 'Passing THE ONE, BIG, BEAUTIFUL BILL is a Historic Opportunity to turn our Country around after four disastrous years under Joe Biden. We will take a massive step to balancing our Budget by enacting the largest mandatory Spending Cut, EVER, and Americans will get to keep more of their money with the largest Tax Cut, EVER, and no longer taxing Tips, Overtime, or Social Security for Seniors – Something 80 Million Voters supported in November. It will unleash American Energy by expediting permitting for Energy, and refilling the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. It will make American Air Travel GREAT AGAIN by purchasing the final Air Traffic Control System. We will secure our skies from our adversaries by building The Golden Dome, and secure our Border by building more of our Wall, and supercharging the deportation of the millions of Criminal Illegals Joe Biden allowed to walk right into our Country. It will kick millions of Illegals off Medicaid, and make sure SNAP is focused on Americans ONLY! It will also restore Choice and Affordability for Car purchases by REPEALING Biden's EV Mandate, and all of the GREEN NEW SCAM Tax Credits and Spending. THE ONE, BIG, BEAUTIFUL BILL also protects our beautiful children by stopping funding for sick sex changes for minors. With the Senate coming back to Washington today, I call on all of my Republican friends in the Senate and House to work as fast as they can to get this Bill to MY DESK before the Fourth of JULY. Thank you for your attention to this matter!'
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
FEMA head told staff he was previously unaware US has a hurricane season
Staff at the Federal Emergency Management Agency were caught off-guard and left bewildered when the disaster relief agency's new acting head David Richardson told personnel that he was previously unaware the United States has a hurricane season, which started Sunday. Richardson made the comments during a briefing Monday morning, multiple sources told CNN. While some interpreted the remark as a joke, others said it raised concerns about the recently appointed acting administrator, who has no prior experience managing natural disasters. A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson told CNN the comment was made in jest, adding, 'FEMA is laser focused on disaster response, and protecting the American people.' It remains unclear whether Richardson's comment – joking or not – reflects a lack of knowledge before assuming his current role. In recent weeks, he has repeatedly referenced FEMA's preparations for hurricane season in meetings and interviews. Reuters first reported Richardson's comments in the meeting. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem appointed Richardson – a former Marine combat veteran and martial-arts instructor – in early May, firing President Donald Trump's first acting FEMA chief just hours after he broke from other Trump officials and told lawmakers he did not support eliminating FEMA. Richardson has promised to enforce Trump's agenda. In an all-hands meeting on his first day at FEMA, Richardson told agency staff he will 'run right over' anyone who tries to prevent him from carrying out the president's mission, CNN previously reported. Since then, the Department of Homeland Security has installed more than a half-dozen of its officials into key roles at FEMA to effectively run the agency. Most of them, like Richardson, have little experience handling disasters. In Monday's meeting, Richardson announced that FEMA will not release an updated disaster plan for this hurricane season as previously promised, saying the agency does not want to get ahead of Trump's newly formed FEMA Review Council, sources said. Instead, FEMA will largely default back to its operating procedure from 2024, though the agency enters this hurricane season in turmoil, with a dramatically smaller workforce. Roughly 10% of FEMA's total staff have left since January, including a large swath of its senior leadership, and the agency is projected to lose close to 30% of its workforce by the end of the year, shrinking FEMA from about 26,000 workers to roughly 18,000, according to a FEMA official briefed on the numbers. In a memo issued last month that was obtained by CNN, Richardson officially rescinded FEMA's 2022-2026 strategic plan, saying it 'contains goals and objectives that bear no connection to FEMA accomplishing its mission.'