In 1836, it became the home of Francis Preston Blair, a journalist and political advisor to President Andrew Jackson ... especially with hotel space in short supply. The Blairs’ elegant home ...
President Andrew Jackson had some 20,000 of his supporters ... Jackson ultimately fled out a window to the safety of a nearby hotel, according to the National Archives. Staff at the White House ...
Henry Horton was sworn in as Tennessee’s thirty-sixth governor after a “simple” ceremony in his rooms at the Andrew Jackson Hotel in Nashville. According to the Kingsport Times, Horton’s inaugural was ...
Columbus Mayor Andrew Ginther called Jackson "the very embodiment of courage ... alone in the back of a restaurant. Instead of a hotel, he slept in a "drunk tank where they sent the town drunks ...
The East River structure is home to restaurants including Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s Fulton and Andrew Carmellini ... with stores such as McNally Jackson Books, the Lawn Club recreational ...
On March 4, 1829, Andrew Jackson officially became the seventh president of the ... President Jackson had to be whisked out of the house and away to the National Hotel for dinner. Tubs of whiskey ...
Growth in Knoxville has made headlines about new hotel projects a frequent occurrence. However, efforts to reopen one of the ...
Feb. 4 (UPI) --President Trump may think he is President Jackson reincarnated -- but there are lessons in Old Hickory's resistance to sycophants. The portrait of President Andrew Jackson has ...
Penn State has hired Andrew Jackson. No, not that Andrew Jackson. This Andrew Jackson was a graduate assistant with the defensive line for two years at Penn State. Two players he worked with ...
I've spent over 100 days at sea. Please don't make these 6 etiquette mistakes on your next cruise. Memphis airport lands seven new flights for 2025. Here's where they will take you. 8-hour ...
Yet, as scholars of American history well know, the roots of Biden’s rhetoric go back further still, to yet another president and another official Farewell Address: that of Andrew Jackson in 1837.