4.5 • 670 Ratings
🗓️ 18 February 2019
⏱️ 4 minutes
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0:00.0 | Retropod is sponsored by Tiro Price. Are you looking to learn a thing or two about getting your finances in order, saving, and investing? Check out the Confident Wallet, a personal finance podcast series by TeroPrice and the Washington Post Brand Studio. Find it wherever you get your podcasts. |
0:14.5 | Hey, history lovers. I'm Mike Rosenwald with Retropod, a show about the past, rediscovered. |
0:29.8 | On a lonely night in 1946, President Harry Truman went up to bed at about 9 p.m. |
0:32.6 | About six hours later, he heard it. |
0:35.0 | Truman was startled. |
0:37.2 | He later wrote in a letter, quote, I jumped up and put on my bathrobe, opened the door, and no one there. |
0:42.0 | Went back to bed after locking the doors, and there were footsteps. |
0:45.4 | Jumped up and looked at no one there. The damn place is haunted. Sure is shooting. |
0:52.0 | Truman didn't shoot anyone that night, but like other White House occupants, he was convinced |
0:57.0 | that the old place was haunted by more than political ghosts. |
1:01.0 | Whether you believe this stuff or not, the many accounts that have spilled out of |
1:05.0 | 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue over two centuries give ghosts an undeniable place in the country's history. |
1:12.6 | They also make that address arguably the nation's most famous haunted house. |
1:17.6 | Abraham Lincoln said he received regular visits from his son Willie, |
1:22.6 | who died of typhoid fever in the White House when he was 11 years old. |
1:25.6 | First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln, |
1:28.2 | who was so grief-stricken by the loss that she remained in her room for weeks, spoke of seeing |
1:33.1 | her son's ghost once at the foot of her bed. There were also reports of her hearing Thomas |
1:38.7 | Jefferson playing the violin and Andrew Jackson swearing. Not only did President Lincoln see ghosts, he actually |
1:47.8 | became one. After his assassination in 1865, First Lady Grace Coolidge spoke in magazine accounts |
1:54.9 | of seeing Lincoln look out a window in what had been his office. Many more sightings would come |
2:00.6 | in the decades in presidential administrations that followed. |
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