They literally had to drag giant tubs of whiskey punch onto the White House lawn just to get people to leave. Not even joking. Andrew Jackson's 1829 inauguration party got so out of control that the president himself was pinned against a wall by the mob and had to be snuck out of his own house. 😱
This wasn't some rowdy after-party. This was the official post-inauguration reception. At the actual White House. And it became the most chaotic event in presidential history. 🏛️
Jackson was the first president who felt like he was truly "of the people" — a war hero, a frontiersman, not some Harvard-educated aristocrat. His supporters were absolutely unhinged about it. 🤯
On March 4, 1829, tens of thousands of people flooded Washington D.C. to celebrate. Some had traveled 500 miles just to see Old Hickory take the oath. The energy was electric — and about to get very, very messy. ⚡
Picture this: the White House reception room packed wall-to-wall with people in muddy work boots. Men standing on gilded, upholstered furniture just to catch a glimpse of Jackson. 👀
A waiter carrying a massive bowl of spiked orange punch crashed into the crowd and spilled the whole thing across the carpet. China was smashed. Furniture was ruined. One Georgia congressman and his wife literally climbed out a window to escape the chaos. 😭
The crowd surged so hard toward Jackson that his aides feared for his life. He was crushed against a wall, pale and exhausted, before friends formed a human chain to drag him out of the building. He fled to a hotel. 💔 The new president could not even stay in his own house on day one.
So how do you clear thousands of rowdy people out of the White House? You don't ask nicely. 💅
The White House steward ordered giant washtubs of whiskey punch to be carried outside onto the lawn. The crowd — predictably — followed the free booze. Staff locked the doors behind them. Crisis (mostly) averted. This is basically the 1800s version of turning the lights on at the club. ⚔️
Here's the part that gets overlooked: the "chaos" was wildly exaggerated by Jackson's political enemies, who used it to paint his supporters as dangerous animals. 🗡️
Contemporary newspapers actually reported minimal real damage. One paper blandly noted that Jackson "received the salutations of a vast number of persons." Senator James Hamilton called it a "regular Saturnalia" — but admitted most of the damage was trivial. The elites were horrified not by the destruction, but by the idea that ordinary people had shown up and acted like they belonged there. 👑
They called it the "reign of King Mob." Jackson's opponents thought it was the end of civilization. His supporters called it the People's Day. 🔥
Democracy looked different depending on which side of the spilled punch bowl you were standing on.
Not a Ragged Mob; The Inauguration of 1829 - White House Historical Association
When Presidential Inaugurations Go Very, Very Wrong - Constitution Center