Lara Trump rejects Barron Trump time traveler theory on Thursday
lara trump rejected the viral claim that Barron Trump is a time traveler during an episode of The Right View with Lara Trump on Thursday. She said the theory had spread far enough that she felt compelled to address it directly, calling the idea false and saying Barron is not a time traveler.
“Barron Trump is not a time traveller. Sorry to say it. I’m sorry, I broke a lot of people’s hearts today,” she said on the show. Lara Trump also asked, “Name me one time traveler. Name me anybody who actually can say that that’s a real thing?”
Lara Trump on Barron Trump
Trump, Donald Trump’s daughter-in-law, said, “It doesn’t exist but people have gotten so far off the rails on this ‘Barron being a time traveler’ thing. I don’t know what to tell you. I think it’s crazy. I’ve known Barron for 18 years, OK, he’s not a time traveler.” Barron Trump is 20 years old and the youngest child of President Donald Trump.
Her comments landed on a theory that has circulated online for years and pulled in large audiences. Barron has also largely stayed out of the public eye, which has made him more enigmatic to some admirers and helped keep attention on the rumor.
Ingersoll Lockwood Books
The theory points to Ingersoll Lockwood, who lived from 1841 to 1918 and wrote two children’s books in the late 19th century. The titles are The Travels and Adventures of Little Baron Trump and his Wonderful Dog Bulger, published in 1889, and Baron Trump’s Marvellous Underground Journey, published in 1893.
The books feature a wealthy boy adventurer named Wilhelm Heinrich Sebastian Von Troomp, also known as Baron Trump. Similarities between Lockwood’s writings and the MAGA era were first highlighted during President Trump’s first term, and the idea that the novels reflect Barron Trump’s journeys back to the 1890s has gained traction as interest in Barron Trump has increased.
Joe Rogan and the rumor
The conspiracy has been examined by Joe Rogan, among others, adding to the audience around the claim. Lara Trump’s response directly challenged that narrative on her own show, where she pressed for a basic standard of proof before repeating it.
For readers following the rumor online, the practical takeaway is simple: Lara Trump has now publicly rejected it in her own words, and the claim continues to live only as an internet theory tied to Lockwood’s books, not to anything Barron Trump has said or done.