All the great and the good would be in attendance — everyone who was everyone. Former president Woodrow Wilson made his first public appearance since leaving office riding in the funeral cortege from the Capitol. The ceremony would receive front page coverage from all of Washington’s newspapers — the Herald, the Evening Star, the Washington Post, the Washington Times.
Attendance was so heavy that the august occasion was almost spoiled by the crush of traffic crossing the Aqueduct and Highway Bridges from Washington to Arlington. President Harding arrived mere minutes before he was due to speak.
The traffic tangle was inevitable. Washingtonians were early and enthusiastic adopters of the automobile.
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The vision of a memorial bridge across the Potomac uniting North and South might be said to have originated with Daniel Webster in 1851. Webster authored a convenient fiction, crediting President Andrew Jackson with the idea. Jackson did advocate building a bridge across the Potomac, but his was the reconstruction of the existing Long Bridge damaged by floods in 1831. Jackson did participate in the re-opening ceremonies in 1835, walking from Washington to Virginia (and riding back). Yet Long Bridge had always been strictly utilitarian and in no way symbolic, monumental, or memorial.
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