John Tyler | |
| Date | April 6, 1841; 184 years ago (1841-04-06) |
|---|---|
| Location | Brown's Indian Queen Hotel, Washington, D.C. |
| Participants | John Tyler 10th president of the United States — Assuming office William Cranch Chief Judge of theUnited States Circuit Court of the District of Columbia — Administering oath |

Theinauguration of John Tyler, the tenthpresident of the United States, was held on Tuesday, April 6, 1841 at the Brown's Indian Queen Hotel inWashington, D.C. following the death of PresidentWilliam Henry Harrison two days earlier.
Theinauguration marked the commencement ofJohn Tyler's only term (a partial term of 3 years, 334 days) as president; the first non-scheduled, extraordinary inauguration to ever take place in American history.William Cranch, the chief judge of theUnited States Circuit Court of the District of Columbia, administered thepresidential oath of office to Tyler during the proceedings.
The1840 United States presidential election was won by theWhig Party nominee, Harrison, with Tyler as hisvice-presidential running mate. Harrison was inaugurated as the ninth president on March 4, 1841, but on March 26, 1841, he came down with acold, withpneumonia andpleurisy then setting in. It was believed that Harrison's illness was directly caused by the bad weather athis inauguration on March 4; however, the illness did not arise until more than three weeks after the event.[1]
On April 1, Secretary of StateDaniel Webster sent word of Harrison's illness to Vice President Tyler, who was at his home inWilliamsburg, Virginia. Two days later, Richmond attorney James Lyons wrote with the news that the president had taken a turn for the worse, remarking that "I shall not be surprised to hear by tomorrow's mail that Gen'l Harrison is no more."[2] Tyler determined not to travel to Washington, not wanting to appear unseemly in anticipating the president's death. At dawn on April 5, Webster's sonFletcher, Chief Clerk of the State Department, arrived at Tyler's plantation with a letter from Webster, informing thenew president of Harrison's death the morning before.[2]
President Tyler immediately packed a bag and headed towards Washington with one of his sons via the fastest conveyances then available (steamboat and train), arriving early in the morning of April 6, having made the 230-mile (370 km) journey in 21 hours.[2] He was greeted by a bipartisan group of dignitaries, including the entire Cabinet. A heated discussion followed as to what procedural steps should be taken in the aftermath of Harrison's death. While several sitting presidents had experienced illness, none had previously died while in office. Some cabinet members held that no formal actions needed to be taken, as Tyler's right to take over as acting president was virtually undisputed. During Harrison's illness, the executive branch was ruled by majority vote of cabinet officials. Tyler discontinued this practice, contending that taking the oath of office would ensure his authority as the tenth president of the United States.[3]

On April 6, 1841,William Cranch, Chief Judge of theUnited States Circuit Court of the District of Columbia, administered the oath to President Tyler in the lobby of theBrown's Indian Queen Hotel, making this the first extraordinary presidential inauguration in history.[4][5]
On April 9, Tyler published an inaugural message to a special session of Congress that Harrison had called.[6] Later presidents would do the same under similar circumstances.
Tyler's defense of his title was unyielding.[3] Letters addressed to the “vice president” or “acting president” were returned unopened. The “Tyler precedent” subsequently endured through the next seven presidential deaths, four after assassinations, until it was codified in 1967 when theTwenty-fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution was ratified.