Welcome
to Historic Williamsport
Presidential
visits to Williamsport
By Lou Hunsinger Jr.
Williamsport has always been the most important crossroads
community of Northcentral Pennsylvania. This strategic position
has yielded many visits by important and distinguished personages,
among these several U.S. presidents, vice presidents and
presidential candidates.
Before he became president, the only native Pennsylvania
president, James Buchanan is said to have visited Williamsport
on several occasions.
On May 28, 1892, the 23rd president of United States, Benjamin
Harrison, visited here on his way to Rochester, N.Y. to
dedicate a monument honoring that city’s Civil War
dead.
One dead president, William McKinley, passed through Williamsport
on a sad and mournful trip back to Washington D.C. after
being assassinated in Buffalo, N.Y. on September 6, 1901.
The funeral train contained the president’s widow,
new President Theodore Roosevelt, Secretary of State John
Hay and numerous other cabinet and sub-cabinet officials.
The train stayed only five minutes in Williamsport, long
enough to put water in the engine. All businesses in Williamsport
were closed and public buildings were draped in mournful
black. The chimes in the Trinity Episcopal Church rang out
McKinley’s favorite hymn, “Nearer My God to
Thee.”
Theodore Roosevelt later came to Williamsport on October
26, 1914, five years after he left the presidency. Roosevelt
campaigned here for Gifford Pinchot, who running for senator
on the Progressive Party ticket. A parade headed by the
Repasz Band honored Roosevelt’s presence.
Former President William Howard Taft visited the city during
World War I to assist on the Liberty Bond campaign. He was
met with great enthusiasm and his visit yielded much treasure
for the Liberty Loan campaign.
Less political purposes lured Herbert Hoover here on May
16, 1928. He was Secretary of Commerce at the time and would
be elected the nation’s 31st chief executive that
fall. But he came to the area for the rest and relaxation
of a fishing trip. He came back two years later, as president
on May 31, 1930 on his way from a speech in Gettysburg.
He stopped briefly in Williamsport and was met by enthusiastic
crowds before going to the Ogontz fishing lodge on Larry’s
Creek in Cummings Township.
“Give 'em Hell” Harry Truman twice campaigned
in Williamsport and stopped here on train whistlestop tours.
He campaigned locally in October 1948 and for Democratic
Presidential candidate Adlai E. Stevenson in 1953.
Vice President Richard Nixon campaigned in Williamsport
in 1956. He later became the 37th president of the United
States, serving from 1969 to 1974
Future President Lyndon B. Johnson appeared in Williamsport
on October 18, 1960 while campaigning as the Democratic
vice-presidential nominee. Governor David Lawrence, Mayor
Thomas Levering and various County Democratic politicos
met him.
Vice President Hubert Humphrey campaigned here for president
in 1968.
On April 17, 1976 Jimmy Carter, who was running for the
Democratic nomination for president, stopped in Williamsport
on a campaign appearance. He was elected president that
fall.
In 1980 George Herbert Walker Bush, the Republican candidate
for vice president and later as the 41st president appeared
at the Little League Baseball World Series. His son George
W. Bush appeared as president at the 2001 Little League
Baseball World Series.
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