Episode

Warren Harding: Corpse Of An Administration

Podcast
Disturbing History
Published
Jun 3, 2026
Duration seconds
4223
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https://www.spreaker.com/episode/warren-harding-corpse-of-an-administration--72282398
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Markdown
/podcast/disturbing-history-7341005/warren-harding-corpse-of-an-administration.md

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Summary

The nation wept for Warren G. Harding in August 1923. The funeral train crawled home through crowds that stretched for miles, mourners singing hymns by the tracks, certain they were burying one of the most beloved men ever to hold the office. They had no idea what they were really putting in the ground. Within a year, the floorboards of that respectable house started to creak, and the bodies that had been piling up around the president began to make sense. This episode walks you back into the White House and down into the rot. We start with Harding's sudden death in a San Francisco hotel room, the autopsy his widow refused, and the papers she burned in the fireplace afterward. From there we meet the Ohio Gang, the cronies who understood that the presidency could be sold off one favor at a time out of a little green house on K Street. We sit with the wounded men of the Great War, gassed and shaking in their hospital beds, while Charles Forbes turned their bandages and their medicine into bribe money and bled the Veterans Bureau of more than $200 million. And we follow the oil. Teapot Dome is famous in name, but the truth is dirtier than the half-memory: a broke Interior secretary named Albert Fall, the strategic oil reserves of the U.S. Navy handed in secret to two billionaires, $100,000 delivered in a black bag, a herd of cattle, and a Senate investigator from Montana who would not let it go.What ties it together is not the money. It's the man at the top. Harding wasn't evil. He was kind, generous, and weak in the one place a leader can't afford to be, and he filled the chairs that controlled oil and veterans and justice itself with the friends who flattered him instead of the men who would have made him better. He told a friend once that his enemies never gave him any…