Why Martin Van Buren Was In aSeinfeldEpisode and 5 Other Things Nobody Knew About Our 8th President

Mar. 15, 2025

Martin Van Buren, the 8th president of the United States.Photo:Pictures from History/Universal Images Group via Getty

Martin Van Buren (1782 - 1862) was the 8th President of the United States, serving from 1837 to 1841. Oil on canvas, (1813-1894), 1858.

Pictures from History/Universal Images Group via Getty

How much do you know about President Martin Van Buren? Chances are, not much.

Martin Van Buren: America’s First Politician by James M. Bradley

Oxford University Press

“Van Buren was most responsible for making the mass party the primary form of political expression in America," says Bradley, also the deputy copy chief at PEOPLE. “He practically founded the Democratic Party, the oldest political party in the world. Everything we associate with parties and campaigns — conventions, platforms, and yes, propaganda — started under Martin Van Buren.”

Read on for a few things we may not have learned in history class about the man dubbed “the Little Magician” for his diminutive frame and wily political skills.

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Contrary to what Kramer said onSeinfeld, Van Buren was not “mean”

Seinfeld Season 8, Ep. 14 ‘Van Buren Boys’.NBC/Netflix

Seinfeld Season 8, Ep. 14 ‘Van Buren Boys’

NBC/Netflix

In the 1997 episode “The Van Buren Boys,” a fictional “street gang” that admires the eighth president uses the hand sign of eight fingers to signal its allegiance. After Kramer has a run-in with them at the pizza parlor, he tells Jerry who responds in disbelief: “There’s a street gang named after President Martin Van Buren?”

He was bald – and not happy about it

A strong follower of fads, Van Buren did what he could to restore his diminishing hairline. In researching the book, Bradley discovered receipts from a Washington druggist who sold Van BurenOldridge’s Balm of Columbia, a product promising, through “the power of chemistry, the grand desideratum of preventing hair from falling off in FORTY EIGHT HOURS.”

The wildly popular product cost $1 a pint and made the manufacturer a bundle. But it didn’t reverse Van Buren’s hair loss. He did, however, make up for his growing forehead with prodigious muttonchops, earning him a comparison onVeepto Hugh Jackman’s Wolverine character.

It’s a strange enough fact that just about all U.S. Presidents, genealogists now believe, descend from King John of England, who agreed to and sealed the Magna Carta in 1215.

But there’s one exception: Martin Van Buren — the only U.S. President of pure Dutch stock and with no ancestral connection to a British monarch.

He had a cheese problem in the White House

A tradition started under Thomas Jefferson in which cheese artisans sent their delicious handiwork to the president. With time, the cheese got bigger and bigger, with each monger trying to outdo the other. In 1837, right before Van Buren became President, a cheesemaker from western New York sent to the White House a block of cheeseso enormous(1,400 lbs.!) that it had to be kept in the foyer for everyone to feast on.

When Van Buren moved into the White House, the smell of cheese was so overpowering that it worked its malodorous ways into the curtains and furniture, requiring weeks of cleaning and airing.

He popularized the term “OK”

In the “who knew” category, Martin Van Buren played a major part in making “OK” a worldwide phenomenon. He did not invent the acronym — linguists believe that it started in a satirical Boston newspaper piece in 1839 — but in the frenzied presidential campaign of 1840, his supporters used one of his nicknames (“Old Kinderhook” – Van Buren was born In Kinderhook, NY) in party newspapers, literature, and banners (“He’s OK,” “I’m With OK”), and it’s been part of our lexicon ever since.

He liked the finer things in life — even in his bathroom!

A man of humble origins, Van Buren was unabashed about spending money on luxury items and clothes. In his grand mansion in upstate New York, he had indoor plumbing (a luxury in 1840s America), a bathtub made of malachite and a toilet bowl made of Wedgwood, a fine English porcelain. Visitors were known to poke fun at the extravagance on display in his estate. The Wedgwood toilet canstill be found todayat the Martin Van Buren National Historic Site in Kinderhook, New York.

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James M. Bradley’sMartin Van Buren: America’s First Politicianis out now from Oxford University Press and available for purchase, wherever books are sold.

source: people.com