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Grover Cleveland

 
Who2 Biography: Grover Cleveland, U.S. President

  • Born: 18 March 1837
  • Birthplace: Caldwell, New Jersey
  • Died: 24 June 1908 (heart failure)
  • Best Known As: The 22nd and 24th president of the United States

Grover Cleveland is the only U.S. president ever to serve two non-consecutive terms. Cleveland was a Democrat who had gained a reputation for efficiency and clean government during terms as mayor of Buffalo and then governor of New York. He was elected president in 1884, succeeding Chester A. Arthur. Cleveland served one term but then was unseated by Republican Benjamin Harrison in the elections of 1888. Cleveland returned the favor in 1892 by unseating Harrison and returning to office for another four-year term. Cleveland did not pursue a third term and was replaced in 1897 by William McKinley. Cleveland became the first and only president to wed in the White House by marrying Frances Folsom in 1886. (He was 49, she 21.) And he successfully hid a serious medical condition: his cancerous upper jawbone was removed and replaced with a vulcanized rubber implant in a secret 1893 operation.

Cleveland is pictured on the U.S. $1000 bill... Cleveland lost the election of 1888 despite getting more votes; Cleveland gathered 5,540,329 votes to Harrison's 5,439,853, but Harrison won the electoral vote 233 to 168. A similar scenario happened in 2000, when electoral winner George W. Bush defeated popular vote winner Al Gore... Cleveland's daughter Ruth (b. 1891) was the official inspiration for the Baby Ruth candy bar, though some feel the candy was really named to capitalize on the fame of baseball slugger Babe Ruth.

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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Stephen Grover Cleveland
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Grover Cleveland
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Grover Cleveland (credit: Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.)
(born March 18, 1837, Caldwell, N.J., U.S. — died June 24, 1908, Princeton) 22nd and 24th president of the U.S. (1885 – 89, 1893 – 97). From 1859 he practiced law in Buffalo, N.Y., where he entered Democratic Party politics. As mayor of Buffalo (1881 – 82), he was known as a foe of corruption. As governor of New York (1883 – 85), his independence earned him the hostility of Tammany Hall. Elected president in 1884, he supported civil-service reform and opposed high tariffs. Although he was narrowly defeated by Benjamin Harrison in 1888, he was reelected by a huge popular plurality in 1892. In 1893 he strongly urged Congress to repeal the Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890, which he blamed for the country's severe economic depression. Despite the repeal of the act, the depression continued, resulting in the Pullman Strike in 1894. An isolationist, Cleveland opposed territorial expansion. In 1895 he invoked the Monroe Doctrine in the border dispute between Britain and Venezuela. By 1896 supporters of the Free Silver Movement controlled the Democratic Party, which nominated William Jennings Bryan instead of Cleveland for president. He retired to New Jersey, where he lectured at Princeton University.

For more information on Stephen Grover Cleveland, visit Britannica.com.

US Military Dictionary: Grover Cleveland
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Cleveland, Grover (1837-1908) 22nd and 24th president of the United States (1885-89, 1893-97), born Stephen Grover Cleveland in Caldwell, New Jersey. As governor of New York (1883-85), Cleveland reorganized the militia, promoted efficient government, and opposed corrupt Tammany Hall. In the tight, mud-spattered presidential election of 1880, he was elected as a reform Democrat. Cleveland supported lower tariffs and civil service reform, reduced Civil War pensions, and signed the Interstate Commerce Act (1887).

Cleveland lost to Benjamin Harrison in 1888 (though he won the popular vote), but retook the White House from Harrison in 1892, thereby becoming the only U.S. president to serve two nonconsecutive terms.

See the Introduction, Abbreviations and Pronunciation for further details.

Biography: Stephen Grover Cleveland
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Twice elected president of the United States, Stephen Grover Cleveland (1837-1908) owed his early political successes to reformism. His efforts to stem economic depression were unsuccessful, and the conservative means he used to settle internal industrial conflicts were unpopular.

Grover Cleveland's political career developed while the wounds of the Civil War and Reconstruction were healing and just as the serious social and economic problems attendant upon industrialization and urbanization were unclearly emerging. Although a lifelong Democrat, Cleveland was not skilled in party politics; he had emerged from a reform wing of his party and had only a few years of public experience before becoming president. Interested in public issues, he used the presidency to try to shape legislation and public opinion in domestic areas. Yet, by his second term of office, the old, familiar debates over tariffs and currency had been called into question and traditional political alignments began to tear apart. Cleveland, however, was not sensitive to the problems of party harmony; instead, he stood on principle at the price of party unity and personal repudiation. In the depression of the 1890s, his concern for the flow of gold from the Treasury led him to force Congress to repeal the Sherman Silver Purchase Act, and this action caused division of the Democratic party. The depression worsened, and by his intervention in the Pullman strike of 1894 he alienated the laboring class, thus losing all effectiveness as president. In 1896 Cleveland was rejected by his party.

Cleveland was born in New Jersey but spent most of his life in New York. Despite the early death of his father, a Presbyterian minister, and his consequent family responsibilities, he studied law in a respected Buffalo firm and gained admission to the New York bar in 1859. He joined the Democratic party, acting as ward delegate and ward supervisor before being appointed assistant district attorney for Erie County in 1863. Diligent and devoted, Cleveland set a good, though not brilliant, record. Enactment of the Conscription Act of 1863 caught him in the dilemma of whether to serve in the Army or find a substitute. To continue supporting his mother and sisters, he took the latter option, remaining in Buffalo to practice law. This was a costly decision, for a military record was expected of almost any aspirant to public trust. Though without public office from 1865 to 1870, he steadily enlarged his law practice and gained stature in the community.

Cleveland became sheriff in 1870, a post which promised large fees as well as frustrating experiences with graft and corruption. Although he was respected for his handling of official responsibilities, he made many enemies and won few admirers, for most citizens looked with disfavor on the office of sheriff. After 3 years he returned to legal practice, concentrating now on corporate law. His legal aspirations (and fees) were modest. His qualities as a lawyer were a good index to the whole of his public service: he was thorough, careful, slow, diligent, serious, severe, and un-yielding. His sober approach to his career contrasted sharply with the boisterous humor of his private life, for he was a popular, if corpulent, bachelor.

Quickly Up the Political Ladder

In 1881 Buffalo Democrats, certain that a reform candidate could sweep the mayoralty election, turned to Cleveland. In his one-year term as mayor he stood for honesty and efficiency - exactly the qualities the New York Democrats sought in a candidate for governor in 1882. New York State was alive with calls for reform in politics; a trustworthy candidate was much in demand. Elected governor by a handsome margin, Cleveland favored reform legislation and countered the interests of the New York-based political machine called Tammany Hall and its "boss," John Kelly, to such an extent that it caused a rift between them. After one term as governor, Cleveland was seen as a leading contender for the presidential nomination of 1884. His advantages lay in his having become identified with honesty and uprightness; also, he came from a state with many votes to cast, wealthy contributors, and a strong political organization. Pitted against Republican nominee James G. Blaine, Cleveland even won the support of reform-minded Republican dissidents known as Mugwumps. Several forces favored him: Tammany's eventual decision to support him in New York State, blame for the depression of the 1880s falling on the Republicans, and temperance workers' ire with the Republican party.

Thus, in 4 years, riding a crest of reform movements on municipal, state, and national levels, Cleveland moved from a modest law practice in upstate New York to president-elect. The rapidity of this political success had several implications for the balance of his career - he had not had to make compromises in order to survive, he had not become identified with new programs or different systems, he owed fewer debts to special-interest groups than most new presidents, and he had come to the presidency on the strength of his belief in simple solutions of honesty and reform.

First Term as President

Cleveland's victory margin in 1884 was slim. His Cabinet appointees were men of substance, though not of prominence: Thomas Bayard as secretary of state, Daniel Manning as secretary of the Treasury, and William Endicott as head of the War Department. All shared the conviction that government should be neither paternalistic nor favorable to any special group and that contesting economic groups should settle their differences without government intervention. With little administrative experience and few reasons to think highly of party organization, Cleveland in his first term advocated improved civil service procedures, reform of executive departments, curtailment of largesse in pensions to Civil War veterans, tariff reform, and ending coinage based on silver. He failed to stop silver coinage but achieved at least modest success in the other areas. In one regard Cleveland was an innovative president: he used his office to focus attention on substantive issues, to pressure for legislation, and to define and determine the lines of congressional debate. Previously (and again after Cleveland), U.S. presidents left issues of legislation to Congress, spending most of their efforts on party leadership. Thus, in 1887 Cleveland took a strong position on tariff reform and later supported passage of the Mills Bill of 1888. Although the Mills Bill provided for only moderate tariff reductions, it was viewed as a step in the right direction, a way of reducing the embarrassingly large annual government surpluses.

Private Citizen

The Republicans mobilized to meet tariff reduction head on, stopping the Mills Bill and substituting a protective tariff measure, going into the election of 1888 with the tariff as the key issue. Renominated for the presidency in 1888 without challenge, Democrat Cleveland was opposed by Republican Benjamin Harrison of Indiana, who had the support of businessmen and industrialists favoring protective tariffs. Superior Republican organization, Democratic party feuding, and election fraud lost the 1888 election for Cleveland, although he won a plurality of the popular vote. He moved back to New York to practice law and enjoy his family.

Out of office, Cleveland withdrew from politics for a year but then began again to behave like an interested candidate. Stirred into attacking the McKinley tariff of 1890 and taking a strong position against currency expansion through silver-based coinage, he gained the Democratic presidential nomination in 1892.

Cleveland's campaign against incumbent President Harrison was a quiet one, with the Democrats aided by the 1892 Homestead strike, in which prominent Republicans were involved in the effort to break labor power and to maintain special benefits for the powerful steel magnates. The Democrats scored smashing victories in 1892, not only electing Cleveland but winning control of both House and Senate.

Second Term As President

To his second Cabinet, Cleveland named Walter Gresham as secretary of state, John G. Carlisle as secretary of the Treasury, Daniel S. Lamont as head of the War Department, and Richard Olney as attorney general. Like Cleveland's earlier Cabinet, these men agreed on extreme conservatism in handling economic issues. It was to Carlisle, Lamont, and Olney that Cleveland listened most closely, although in the final analysis he made his own decisions.

Policies in Time of Depression

Cleveland had scarcely taken his oath of office when the worst financial panic in years broke across the country. A complex phenomenon, the Panic of 1892-1893 had its roots in over expansion of United States industry, particularly railroad interests; in the long-term agricultural depression that reached back to the 1880s; and in the withdrawal of European capital from America as a result of hard times overseas. As the panic broadened into depression, the American public tended to focus debate about its cause and cure on one item: the money question. On one side the argument was that businessmen (alarmed by the Sherman Silver Purchase Act requiring a purchase of silver each month) had lost confidence in the monetary system and feared depletion of the gold reserves; to regain their confidence and a return to prosperity, the buying of silver by the Federal government had to be halted. On the opposite side of the argument, silver exponents maintained that what was needed was more money in circulation, which could be achieved only if more, not less, silver was purchased by the government and used as a basis for coinage.

Cleveland, long afraid of silver as a threat to economic stability, determined that repeal of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act would stem the drain of gold reserves and end the depression by restoring confidence to businessmen; he called a special session of Congress for its repeal. Protracted and bitter debate ensued. The Democratic party divided along sectional lines, with western and southern Democrats standing against repeal. The repeal, however, was voted, but it was ineffective, and gold reserves continued to dwindle. Meanwhile the depression became worse during 1893 and 1894.

Wounds that had opened during the silver-repeal debate were not healed when Cleveland's administration turned to the long-promised issue of tariff reform. Cleveland had been identified for many years with downward revision of tariffs and more equitable distributions. Pressured by sectional interests, the Democrats in Congress were more divided than united over tariff legislation. In addition, the silver battle had virtually torn the party in half, leaving many Democrats with nothing but hatred for the President. The Wilson bill, from the viewpoint of the President, a fairly satisfactory measure for tariff reduction, was amended almost beyond recognition as it passed through the Senate, emerging with tariff rates only slightly lower than previous ones and carrying a host of provisions for special-interest groups. Highly dissatisfied but unsuccessful in his attempts to improve it, Cleveland allowed the Wilson-Gorman Act to become law without his signature.

To avert what he viewed as financial disaster, Cleveland became involved with four bond issues to draw gold into the Treasury. Not only was this effort to maintain gold reserves unsuccessful, but Cleveland was charged with having catered to Wall Street millionaires when other governmental policies had failed.

Beset by currency and tariff failures and hated by a large segment of the general population and by many in his own party, Cleveland further suffered loss of prestige by his actions in the Pullman strike of 1894. Convinced that the strike of the American Railway Union under Eugene V: Debs against the Pullman Company constituted an intolerable threat to law and order and that local authorities were unwilling to take action, Cleveland and Olney sent Federal troops to Chicago and sought to have Debs and his associates imprisoned. Although Cleveland prevailed and order was enforced, laborers throughout the country were angered by this use of Federal force.

Foreign Policies

The congressional elections of 1894 marked a sharp decline in Democratic power. Bitter at Cleveland and disheartened by worsening depression, American voters turned against the Democrats. Although Cleveland felt betrayed by his party and misunderstood by his constituents, he remained confident that his money policy had been correctly conceived and reasonably executed. Perhaps his party had split, but for him the defense of principle was more important than political harmony. Confronted with possibilities for compromise, Cleveland spurned such options and withdrew into isolation.

More successful in foreign policy, Cleveland exhibited the same determination and toughness. He would not be drawn into the Cuban rebellion against Spain; he would not sanction the Hawaiian revolution engineered by American commercial interests. Yet he took an equally stern posture vis-á-vis the boundary dispute between Venezuela and Great Britain in 1895-1896. Concerned about European influence in the Western Hemisphere, Cleveland and Olney carried the United States to the brink of war by insisting that the dispute be arbitrated. Business interests, clamoring for guarantees of open markets for their products, had considerable influence in shaping Cleveland's policy, which succeeded when Great Britain accepted arbitration.

Again a Private Citizen

Distrusted now and detested, Cleveland was convincingly repudiated by the Democratic Convention of 1896, which nominated William Jennings Bryan on a platform demanding free and unlimited coinage of both silver and gold at the rate of 16 to 1. Cleveland took no role in the campaign. He retired to Princeton, N.J., as soon as his term ended. He occupied himself with writing, occasional legal consultation, the affairs of Princeton University, and very occasional public speaking, but after 1900 he became less reluctant to appear in public. Sympathetic crowds greeted his appearances as the conservative Democratic forces with which he had been identified took party leadership from William Jennings Bryan. Briefly stirred into activity in 1904 to support Alton B. Parker's candidacy for the presidency, Cleveland spent most of his retirement years outside political battles, increasingly honored as a statesman. After offering to assist President Theodore Roosevelt in an investigation of the anthracite coal strike of 1902, he was active in the reorganization of the affairs of the Equitable Life Assurance Society in 1905. His death in 1908 was the occasion for general national mourning.

Further Reading

There is an abundant literature on Cleveland. Allan Nevins, Grover Cleveland: A Study in Courage (1944), is the best overall treatment. A less sympathetic portrayal of Cleveland is Horace S. Merrill, Bourbon Leader: Grover Cleveland and the Democratic Party (1957). Robert Wiebe, The Search for Order, 1877-1930 (1967), credits Cleveland's efforts to shape legislation, whereas J. Rogers Hollingsworth, The Whirligig of Politics: The Democracy of Cleveland and Bryan (1963), criticizes him as a party leader. Cleveland's diplomacy is discussed in Walter LaFeber, The New Empire: An Interpretation of American Expansion, 1860-1898 (1963). A detailed account of the 1892 campaign is George H. Knoles, The Presidential Campaign and Election of 1892 (1942), and of the 1896 campaign, Stanley L. Jones, The Presidential Election of 1896 (1964). Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., ed., History of Presidential Elections (4 vols., 1971), is valuable as a source on the four campaigns of 1884-1896.

US Government Guide: Grover Cleveland, 22nd and 24th President
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Born: Mar. 18, 1837, Caldwell, N.J.
Political party: Democrat
Education: common school; read law, 1855–59
Military service: none
Previous government service: ward supervisor, Erie County, N.Y., 1863; assistant district attorney, Erie County, 1863–65; Erie County sheriff, 1871–73; mayor of Buffalo, 1882; governor of New York, 1883–84
Elected President, 1884; served, 1885–89; elected, 1892; served, 1893–97
Died: June 24, 1908, Princeton, N.J.

Grover Cleveland began his political career as Erie County sheriff in New York, and after a meteoric rise became the first Democratic President elected after the Civil War and the only President to be married in the White House. In dealing with Congress and state governors, he was the strongest President since Abraham Lincoln.

The son of a Presbyterian minister, Cleveland helped support his family by working in a local grocery store beginning at age 14. He worked on his uncle's farm in Buffalo, then studied law. He became assistant district attorney of Erie County during the Civil War, hiring a substitute to fight for him for $300 when he was drafted, a frequent and legal procedure at the time. In 1865 he was defeated in his first election bid when he ran for district attorney of Erie County.

Nine years later he was elected mayor of Buffalo. As mayor, and then as governor of New York, he ran honest administrations and vetoed patronage (political appointments) and pork barrel measures (special projects for the benefit of particular constituents) of the city council and state legislature. He also vetoed progressive legislation that would have held down transit fares and regulated transit workers’ hours.

Cleveland won the Democratic nomination in 1884 because of his record as a reformer.

As President, Cleveland was a conservative in budget matters and a reformer when it came to patronage and the civil service. He expanded the classified “merit appointment” list of the civil service by 85,000 positions. His cabinet and other high-level appointments owed less to patronage and politics and more to merit; his new secretary of the navy, William Whitney, built a modern steel navy that proved its worth to future Presidents. He vetoed 200 of the 1,700 private pension bills Congress passed for veterans of the Civil War, arguing that many of these claims were fraudulent. He also vetoed measures to relieve farmers in the West from drought because he did not believe that the national government had the responsibility under the Constitution to solve the problems of people in need.

Although Cleveland's administration was free of scandal and corruption, he was not all that popular. In 1888, running against a high-tariff candidate, Republican Benjamin Harrison, he won a majority of the popular vote but lost in the electoral college, in part because he failed to carry New York.

After leaving the White House, Cleveland practiced law in New York City for four years, a period he termed the happiest in his life. In 1892, Cleveland was nominated by the Democrats a third time, and he won the rematch with Harrison. Cleveland ran on a platform of good government, lower tariffs, and a return to using only gold (rather than silver) to back the paper currency issued by the U.S. Treasury. His victory made him the only American President to serve two nonconsecutive terms.

Cleveland's eventful second term was a contrast to his first. The Panic of 1893 led to calls from populists and progressives for national government programs to regulate the banks, but Cleveland turned a deaf ear. He refused to inflate the currency and forced repeal of the Silver Purchase Act, which had guaranteed that the government would purchase a set amount of silver from mine owners each year. This led to a contraction in the supply of money that worsened already hard times in the West.

Labor unrest added to Cleveland's troubles. When Jacob S. Coxey led “Coxey's army,” a group of unemployed men, to the capital to demand public service jobs, Cleveland had them dispersed by the police. When Pullman railway car workers went on strike in 1894, Cleveland won a court injunction and then sent 2,000 federal troops into Illinois to break the strike. At the behest of Attorney General Richard Olney, a former railroad lawyer himself, the socialist leader Eugene V. Debs, head of the American Railway Union, was jailed for his role in organizing a boycott of Pullman cars in support of the strikers.

In foreign affairs Cleveland refused to accept a petition from a white settlers’ government that Hawaii be annexed by the United States, accurately describing the local “Committee of Safety” as unrepresentative of the native population and not elected by it. In 1895 he insisted that the British government accept an American determination of the boundary between Venezuela and British Guyana. Ultimately, the British and Venezuelans negotiated an end to their boundary dispute, and arbitration upheld most of the British claim. Cleveland refused to intervene in the Cuban revolt against Spanish rule, leaving the problem for his successor. When there was talk in Congress of declaring war against Spain, Cleveland let it be known that as commander in chief he would refuse to use the military to fight such a war. He also rejected the idea that the United States buy Cuba from Spain. Instead, he proposed that the Spanish offer “genuine autonomy” to the Cubans.

By 1896 Cleveland's leadership was repudiated by his own party. A coalition of populists and silver Democrats, who were interested in aid to farmers, regulation of business, and increased use of silver coins as currency, dominated the party convention. It turned away from conservative policies and nominated the fiery populist William Jennings Bryan.

Cleveland moved to Princeton, New Jersey, and became a trustee of Princeton University. When he died in 1908 he was buried in Princeton Cemetery, close to the grave of former Vice President Aaron Burr.

See also Harrison, Benjamin

Sources

  • Allan Nevins, Grover Cleveland: A Study in Courage (New York: Dodd, Mead, 1932).
  • Richard E. Welch, The Presidencies of Grover Cleveland (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1988)
US History Companion: Cleveland, Grover
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(1837-1908), twenty-second and twenty-fourth president of the United States. Cleveland studied law in Buffalo, New York, and became a leading lawyer there, but for over twenty years he was unknown outside that city. His rise to the presidency was phenomenal because of its rapidity and because he was so lacking in qualities deemed essential for Gilded Age politicians. Brutally honest, frugal with public money, undramatic, ungracious, and obstinate, Cleveland was admired for his enemies rather than his friends. He was the only victorious Gilded Age presidential candidate lacking a military career, and he was a bachelor. He possessed a contrariness that appealed to reformers.

Receiving the Democratic nomination for mayor of Buffalo in 1881, Cleveland defeated the corrupt Republican organization. By thwarting attempts to raid the city's treasury, he earned the title "Veto Mayor" as well as the gubernatorial nomination in 1882. In the contest that followed, he attracted independent reformers and triumphed over a divided Republican party. As governor, Cleveland distanced himself from Tammany Hall. A factionalized Democratic party, united by his reform image, gave him its presidential nomination in 1884. After a vituperative campaign, which pitted Cleveland's personal morals (he was possibly the father of an illegitimate son) against the questionable public morals of the Republican nominee, James G. Blaine, Cleveland carried New York by eleven hundred votes and won the election.

Unable to delegate responsibility, Cleveland immersed himself in the minutiae of the presidency. He studied applications for pensions and jobs, weeding out the undeserving and incurring the wrath of veterans and politicians. He conscientiously administered the Civil Service Reform Act and late in his term made permanent his appointees by extending the merit system to cover them. Cleveland signed the Indian Emancipation (Dawes) Act (1887) and the Interstate Commerce Act (1887) but shaped no major legislation. Although he called for tariff revision, he failed to fight effectively for it. Marrying his twenty-two-year-old ward, Frances Folsom, in the White House was his most popular act. Running for reelection in 1888 on the tariff issue, he lost to Benjamin Harrison.

He did defeat Harrison four years later, however. But he had scarcely taken office when the panic of 1893 signaled the onset of a severe economic depression that made his second term a disaster. Believing that agitation for "free silver" had caused the depression in 1894, Cleveland convinced a reluctant Congress to repeal the Sherman Silver Purchase Act and negotiated unpopular bank loans in order to keep the United States on the gold standard. Having thus alienated western and southern farmers, he outraged labor by intervening on the side of the railroads during the Pullman strike of 1894. In foreign affairs he was an anti-imperialist; he refused to annex Hawaii and forced Great Britain to arbitrate a boundary dispute with Venezuela. Cleveland so angered Democrats that they repudiated him and adopted "free silver" in 1896, only to suffer a resounding defeat at the polls. Ironically the virtues that had elected Cleveland failed to help him lead his party or the country.

Bibliography:

Allan Nevins, Grover Cleveland: A Study in Courage (1933); Richard E. Welch, Jr., The Presidencies of Grover Cleveland (1988).

Author:

Ari Hoogenboom

See also Elections: 1884 , 1888 , 1892; Mugwumps. For events during Cleveland's administrations, see Civil Service Reform; Coin's Financial School ; Coxey's Army; Dawes Severalty Act; Depressions; Hatch Act; Interstate Commerce Commission; Pullman Strike; Tariff; Tenure of Office Act; United States v. E. C. Knight Co.


 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Grover Cleveland
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Cleveland, Grover (Stephen Grover Cleveland), 1837-1908, 22d (1885-89) and 24th (1893-97) President of the United States, b. Caldwell, N.J.; son of a Presbyterian clergyman. Cleveland's independence and conscientiousness in office marked him as a man of courage and personal integrity.

Early Career

A lawyer in Buffalo, N.Y., he became (1882) the "veto mayor" who drove corruption from the city administration. He won the attention of Daniel Manning and the reform Democrats and was elected governor of New York. Cleveland further built his reputation as an enemy of machine politics by breaking violently with the Tammany leader, John Kelly, and supporting the bills prepared by Theodore Roosevelt to improve the government of New York City.

Presidency

First Term

By 1884 he was a national figure, and he was nominated as Democratic "clean-government" candidate for President to oppose James G. Blaine. Cleveland, hated by Tammany and favored by political reformers, got the votes of many reform Republicans-the "mugwumps," who voted against their party. The campaign was notably bitter and was marked by the "Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion" speech of a Blaine supporter, which deeply offended Roman Catholics and may have swung the vote to Cleveland in the key state of New York.

Cleveland as President continued his independent and conscientious but conservative course. He did not go far enough in civil service reform to satisfy the zealots, but at the same time by keeping Republican government employees who were not "offensive partisans" he offended the Democratic spoilsmen. Cleveland was continually at odds with the Republican-controlled Senate.

The surplus revenue accumulating in the treasury largely because high Civil War tariffs were still in force fostered much "pork barrel" legislation. Cleveland vetoed such laws and argued for a lower tariff, devoting the whole of his annual message to Congress in 1887 to the question. The tariff was a major issue in the 1888 election. Cleveland received a popular majority but lost the electoral majority to his Republican opponent, Benjamin Harrison. A romantic note in his first administration was his marriage (1886) in the White House to his former ward, Frances Folsom.

Second Term

In 1889 he retired to private life as a New York City lawyer, but opposition to measures of the Republican administration, notably the McKinley Tariff Act of 1890, brought him a new following. In 1892 he was again elected President. The Panic of 1893 struck a hard blow at his administration. Though the more radical Democrats saw salvation in free coinage of silver, the independent President sought to improve the economic situation by securing repeal of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act with the help of conservative Republicans.

Cleveland still urged lower tariffs, although the best opportunity had passed, since the treasury now had a deficit rather than a surplus. The Wilson Bill, embodying Cleveland's tariff ideas, passed the House of Representatives but was so altered by Senator A. P. Gorman and other protectionist Democrats that Cleveland, in disgust, refused to sign it. The rift between the President and the radical Democrats widened, especially over the gold standard, which Cleveland upheld. In the Pullman strike in 1894, Cleveland, on the grounds that the movement of U.S. mail was being halted by the strikers under Eugene V. Debs, sent troops into the area over the protest of Gov. J. P. Altgeld of Illinois. The strike was broken by the use of federal injunctions and the arrest of the strike leaders.

In foreign affairs both of Cleveland's administrations were marked by a strong stand on the Venezuela Boundary Dispute, which called forth a statement greatly enlarging the scope of the Monroe Doctrine. He refused to recognize the government set up in Hawaii by a revolution that was engineered by Americans who expected speedy annexation to the United States (although he recognized the republic in 1894), and he tried to discourage support of the revolutionists in Cuba. The more radical wing of the Democrats-the Silver Democrats-got control of the party in 1896 and nominated William Jennings Bryan, repudiating Cleveland. His strong second term had put him at odds with many (he was nicknamed the Great Obstructionist), and his Presidential Problems (1904) was mainly a defense of his own attitude on some of the major issues.

Bibliography

See R. E. Welch, Jr., The Presidencies of Grover Cleveland (1988); biographies by R. McElroy (1923), A. Nevins (1932), H. S. Merrill (1957), R. G. Tugwell (1968), and A. Brodsky (2000).

History Dictionary: Cleveland, Grover
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A Democratic party political leader of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries who was president from 1885 to 1889 and again from 1893 to 1897 — the only president ever to serve nonconsecutive terms. Cleveland's presidencies were marked by his fight against corruption in the federal government and by his efforts to solve national financial problems.

Quotes By: Grover Cleveland
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Quotes:

"The ship of Democracy, which has weathered all storms, may sink through the mutiny of those aboard."

"There is no calamity which a great nation can invite which equals that which follows a supine submission to wrong and injustice and the consequent loss of national self-respect and honor, beneath which are shielded and defended a people's safety and greatness."

"Though the people support the government; the government should not support the people."

"Honor lies in honest toil."

"The United States is not a nation to which peace is a necessity."

"Your every voter, as surely as your chief magistrate, exercises a public trust."

See more famous quotes by Grover Cleveland

Wikipedia: Grover Cleveland
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Grover Cleveland

Cleveland in 1903 at age 66 by Frederick Gutekunst

In office
March 4, 1893 – March 4, 1897
Vice President Adlai E. Stevenson
Preceded by Benjamin Harrison
Succeeded by William McKinley

In office
March 4, 1885 – March 4, 1889
Vice President Thomas A. Hendricks (1885)
None (1885–1889)
Preceded by Chester A. Arthur
Succeeded by Benjamin Harrison

In office
January 1, 1883 – January 6, 1885
Lieutenant David B. Hill
Preceded by Alonzo B. Cornell
Succeeded by David B. Hill

In office
January 2 – November 20, 1882
Preceded by Alexander Brush
Succeeded by Marcus M. Drake

Sheriff of Erie County, New York
In office
1871 – 1873

Born March 18, 1837(1837-03-18)
Caldwell, New Jersey
Died June 24, 1908 (aged 71)
Princeton, New Jersey
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Frances Folsom Cleveland
Children Ruth Cleveland
Esther Cleveland
Marion Cleveland
Richard Folsom Cleveland
Francis Grover Cleveland
Occupation Lawyer
Religion Presbyterian
Signature

Stephen Grover Cleveland (March 18, 1837 – June 24, 1908) was the 22nd and 24th President of the United States. Cleveland is the only president to serve two non-consecutive terms (1885–1889 and 1893–1897) and therefore is the only individual to be counted twice in the numbering of the presidents. He was the winner of the popular vote for president three times—in 1884, 1888, and 1892—and was the only Democrat elected to the presidency in the era of Republican political domination that lasted from 1860 to 1912. Cleveland's admirers praise him for his honesty, independence, integrity, and commitment to the principles of classical liberalism.[1] As a leader of the Bourbon Democrats, he opposed imperialism, taxes, subsidies and inflationary policies. As a reformer he also worked against corruption, patronage, and bossism.

Some of Cleveland's actions caused controversy within his own party. His intervention in the Pullman Strike of 1894 in order to keep the railroads moving angered labor unions, and his support of the gold standard and opposition to free silver alienated the agrarian wing of the Democrats.[2] Furthermore, critics complained that he had little imagination and seemed overwhelmed by the nation's economic disasters—depressions and strikes—in his second term.[2] Even so, his reputation for honesty and good character survived the troubles of his second term. Biographer Allan Nevins wrote, "in Grover Cleveland the greatness lies in typical rather than unusual qualities. He had no endowments that thousands of men do not have. He possessed honesty, courage, firmness, independence, and common sense. But he possessed them to a degree other men do not."[3]

Contents

Family and early life

Childhood and family history

Stephen Grover Cleveland was born on March 18, 1837, in Caldwell, New Jersey to Richard Falley Cleveland and Ann Neal Cleveland.[4] Cleveland's father was a Presbyterian minister, originally from Connecticut.[5] His mother was from Baltimore, the daughter of a bookseller.[6] On his father's side, Cleveland was descended from English ancestors, the first Cleveland having emigrated to Massachusetts from northeastern England in 1635.[7] On his mother's side, Cleveland was descended from Anglo-Irish Protestants and German Quakers from Philadelphia.[8] He was distantly related to General Moses Cleaveland after whom the city of Cleveland, Ohio, was named.[9]

Cleveland's birthplace, in Caldwell, New Jersey

Cleveland was the fifth of nine children, five sons and four daughters.[6] He was named Stephen Grover in honor of the first pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Caldwell, where his father was pastor at the time, but he did not use the name Stephen in his adult life.[10] In 1841, the Cleveland family moved to Fayetteville, New York, where Grover Cleveland spent much of his childhood.[11] Neighbors would later describe him as "full of fun and inclined to play pranks",[12] and fond of outdoor sports.[13] In 1850, Cleveland's father took a job in Clinton, Oneida County, New York, and the family relocated there.[14] They moved again in 1853 to Holland Patent, New York, near Utica.[15] Not long after the family arrived in Holland Patent, Cleveland's father died.[15]

Education and moving west

Cleveland's education began in grammar school at the Fayetteville Academy.[16] When the family moved to Clinton, Cleveland was enrolled at the Clinton Liberal Academy.[17] After his father died in 1853, Cleveland left school and helped to support his family.[18] Later that year, Cleveland's brother William was hired as a teacher at the New York Institute for the Blind in New York City, and William obtained a place for Cleveland as an assistant teacher.[18] While there, he also acted as an occasional scribe for the poet and hymn-writer Fanny Crosby, who had been a student, and later a teacher at the school.[19] After teaching for a year, Cleveland returned home to Holland Patent at the end of 1854.[20]

Back in Holland Patent, the seventeen-year-old Cleveland looked for work unsuccessfully.[20] An elder in his church offered to pay for his college education if he would promise to become a minister, but Cleveland declined.[20] Instead, the following spring Cleveland decided to make his way west to the city of Cleveland, Ohio.[20] He stopped first in Buffalo, New York, where his uncle, Lewis W. Allen, lived. Allen dissuaded Cleveland from continuing west, and offered him a job arranging his livestock herdbooks.[21] Allen was an important man in Buffalo, and he introduced his nephew to influential men there, including the partners in the law firm of Rogers, Bowen, and Rogers.[22] Cleveland later took a clerkship with the firm, and was admitted to the bar in 1859.[23]

Early career and the Civil War

An early, undated photograph of Grover Cleveland[24]

After becoming a lawyer, Cleveland worked for the Rogers firm for three years, leaving in 1862 to start his own practice.[25] In January 1863, he was appointed assistant district attorney of Erie County.[26] With the American Civil War raging, Congress passed the Conscription Act of 1863, requiring able-bodied men to serve in the army if called upon, or else to hire a substitute.[23] Cleveland chose the latter course, paying George Benninsky, a thirty-two year-old Polish immigrant, $150 to serve in his place.[27] As a lawyer, Cleveland became known for his single-minded concentration and dedication to hard work.[28] In 1866, he defended some participants in the Fenian raid of that year, doing so successfully and free of charge.[29] In 1868, Cleveland attracted some attention within his profession for his successful defense of a libel suit against the editor of the Commercial Advertiser, a Buffalo newspaper.[30] During this time, Cleveland lived simply in a boarding house; although his income grew sufficient to support a more lavish lifestyle, Cleveland continued to support his mother and younger sisters.[31] While his personal quarters were austere, Cleveland did enjoy an active social life and enjoyed "the easy-going sociability of hotel-lobbies and saloons."[32]

Political career in New York

Sheriff of Erie County

From his earliest involvement in politics, Cleveland had aligned himself with the Democratic Party.[33] In 1865, he ran for District Attorney, losing narrowly to his friend and roommate, Lyman K. Bass, the Republican nominee.[28] Cleveland then stayed out of politics until 1870 when, with the help of his friend, Oscar Folsom, he secured the Democratic nomination for sheriff of Erie County.[34] At the age of thirty-three, Cleveland found himself elected sheriff by a 303-vote margin, taking office on January 1, 1871.[35] While this new career took him away from the practice of law, it was rewarding in other ways: the fees were said to yield up to $40,000 over the two-year term.[34] The most well-known incident of his term involved the execution of a murderer, Patrick Morrisey, on September 6, 1872.[36] Cleveland, as sheriff, was responsible for either personally carrying out the execution, or paying a deputy $10 to perform the task.[36] Cleveland had qualms about the hanging, but opted to carry out the duty himself.[36] He hanged another murderer, John Gaffney, on February 14, 1873.[37]

After his term as sheriff ended, Cleveland returned to private practice, opening a law firm with his friends Lyman K. Bass and Wilson S. Bissell.[38] Bass did not spend much time at the firm, being elected to Congress in 1873, but Cleveland and Bissell soon found themselves at the top of Buffalo's legal community.[39] Up to that point, Cleveland's political career had been honorable but unremarkable. As biographer Allan Nevins wrote, "probably no man in the country, on March 4, 1881, had less thought than this limited, simple, sturdy attorney of Buffalo that four years later he would be standing in Washington and taking the oath as president of the United States."[40]

Mayor of Buffalo

In the 1870s, the government of Buffalo had grown increasingly corrupt, with Democratic and Republican political machines cooperating to share the spoils.[41] When, in 1881, the Republicans nominated a slate of particularly disreputable machine politicians, the Democrats saw the opportunity to gain the votes of disaffected Republicans by nominating a more honest candidate.[42] The party leaders approached Cleveland and he agreed to run for mayor, provided that the rest of the ticket was to his liking.[43] When the more notorious politicians were left off the Democratic ticket, Cleveland accepted the nomination.[43] Cleveland was elected mayor with 15,120 votes, as against 11,528 for Milton C. Beebe, his opponent.[44] He took office January 2, 1882.

Cleveland's term as mayor was spent fighting the entrenched interests of the party machines.[45] Among the acts that established his reputation was a veto of the street-cleaning bill passed by the Common Council.[46] The street-cleaning contract was open for bids, and the Council selected the highest bidder, rather than the lowest, because of the political connections of the bidder.[46] While this sort of bipartisan graft had previously been tolerated in Buffalo, Mayor Cleveland would have none of it, and replied with a stinging veto message: "I regard it as the culmination of a most bare-faced, impudent, and shameless scheme to betray the interests of the people, and to worse than squander the public money".[47] The Council reversed themselves and awarded the contract to the lowest bidder.[48] For this, and several other acts to safeguard the public funds, Cleveland's reputation as an honest politician began to spread beyond Erie County.[49]

Governor of New York

Statue of Grover Cleveland outside City Hall in Buffalo, New York

As his reputation grew, state Democratic party officials began to consider Cleveland a possible nominee for governor.[50] Daniel Manning, a party insider who admired Cleveland's record, promoted his candidacy.[51] With a split in the state Republican party, 1882 looked to be a Democratic year and there were several contenders for that party's nomination.[50] The two leading Democratic candidates were Roswell P. Flower and Henry W. Slocum, but their factions deadlocked and the convention could not agree on a nominee.[52] Cleveland, in third place on the first ballot, picked up support in subsequent votes and emerged as the compromise choice.[53] The Republican party remained divided against itself, and in the general election Cleveland emerged the victor, with 535,318 votes to Republican nominee Charles J. Folger's 342,464.[54] Cleveland's margin of victory was, at the time, the largest in a contested New York election, and the Democrats also picked up seats in both houses of the legislature.[55]

Continuing his opposition to unnecessary spending, Cleveland sent the legislature eight vetos in his first two months in office.[56] The first to attract attention was his veto of a bill to reduce the fares on New York City elevated trains to five cents.[57] The bill had broad support because the el trains' owner, Jay Gould, was unpopular and his fare increases were widely denounced.[58] Cleveland saw the bill as unjust—Gould had taken over the railroads when they were failing and had made the system solvent again.[59] Moreover, Cleveland believed that altering Gould's franchise would violate the Contract Clause of the federal Constitution.[59] Despite the initial popularity of the measure, the newspapers praised Cleveland's veto.[59] Theodore Roosevelt, then a member of the Assembly, said that he had initially voted for the bill believing it was wrong, but wishing to punish the unscrupulous railroad barons.[60] After the veto, Roosevelt reversed himself, as did many legislators, and the veto was sustained.[60]

Cleveland's blunt, honest ways won him popular acclaim, but they also gained him the enmity of certain factions of his own party, especially the Tammany Hall organization in New York City.[61] Tammany, under its boss, John Kelly, had not supported Cleveland's nomination as governor, and disliked him all the more when Cleveland openly opposed the re-election of one of their State Senators.[62] Losing Tammany's support was balanced, however, by gaining the support of Theodore Roosevelt and other reform-minded Republicans who helped Cleveland to pass several laws reforming municipal governments.[63]

Election of 1884

Nomination for president

James G. Blaine, Cleveland's opponent in 1884

The Republicans convened in Chicago and nominated former Speaker of the House James G. Blaine of Maine for president on the fourth ballot. Blaine's nomination alienated many Republicans who viewed Blaine as ambitious and immoral.[64] Democratic party leaders saw the Republicans' choice as an opportunity to take back the White House for the first time since 1856 if the right candidate could be found.[64]

Among the Democrats, Samuel J. Tilden was the initial front-runner, having been the party's nominee in the contested election of 1876.[65] Tilden, however, was in poor health, and after he declined to be nominated, his supporters shifted to several other contenders.[65] Cleveland was among the leaders in early support, but Thomas F. Bayard of Delaware, Allen G. Thurman of Ohio, and Benjamin Butler of Massachusetts also had considerable followings, along with various favorite sons.[65] Each of the other candidates had hindrances to his nomination: Bayard had spoken in favor of secession in 1861, making him unacceptable to Northerners; Butler, conversely, was reviled throughout the South for his actions during the Civil War; Thurman was generally well-liked, but was growing old and infirm and his views on the silver question were uncertain.[66] Cleveland, too, had detractors—Tammany remained opposed to him—but the nature of his enemies made him still more friends.[67] Cleveland led on the first ballot, with 392 votes out of 820.[68] On the second ballot, Tammany threw its support behind Butler, but the rest of the delegates shifted to Cleveland, and he was nominated.[69] Thomas A. Hendricks of Indiana was selected as his running mate.[69]

Campaign against Blaine

An anti-Blaine cartoon presents him as the "tattooed man," with many indelible scandals.
An anti-Cleveland cartoon highlights the Halpin scandal.

After Cleveland's nomination, reform-minded Republicans called "Mugwumps" denounced Blaine as corrupt and flocked to Cleveland.[70] The Mugwumps, including such men as Carl Schurz and Henry Ward Beecher, were more concerned with ideals than with party, and hoped that Cleveland would endorse their crusade for civil service reform and efficiency in government.[70] At the same time that the Democrats gained support from the Mugwumps, they lost some to the Greenback-Labor party, led by ex-Democrat Benjamin Butler.[71]

Each candidate's supporters cast aspersions on their opponents. Cleveland's supporters rehashed the old allegations that Blaine had corruptly influenced legislation in favor of the Little Rock & Fort Smith Railroad and the Northern Pacific Railway, later profiting on the sale of bonds he owned in both companies.[72] Although the stories of Blaine's favors to the railroads had made the rounds eight years earlier, this time Blaine's correspondence was discovered, making his earlier denials less plausible.[72] On some of the most damaging correspondence, Blaine had written "Burn this letter," giving Democrats the last line to their rallying cry: "Blaine, Blaine, James G. Blaine, the continental liar from the state of Maine, 'Burn this letter!"[73]

To counter Cleveland's image of purity, his opponents reported that Cleveland had fathered an illegitimate child while he was a lawyer in Buffalo.[74] The derisive phrase "Ma, Ma, where's my Pa?" rose as an unofficial campaign slogan for those who opposed him.[74] When confronted with the emerging scandal, Cleveland's instructions to his campaign staff were: "Tell the truth."[75] Cleveland admitted to paying child support in 1874 to Maria Crofts Halpin, the woman who claimed he fathered her child named Oscar Folsom Cleveland.[74] Halpin was involved with several men at the time, including Cleveland's friend and law partner, Oscar Folsom, for whom the child was also named.[74] Cleveland did not know which man was the father, and is believed to have assumed responsibility because he was the only bachelor among them.[74]

Results of the 1884 election

Both candidates believed that the states of New York, New Jersey, Indiana, and Connecticut would determine the election.[76] In New York, the Tammany Hall, after vacillating, decided that they would gain more from supporting a Democrat they disliked than a Republican who would do nothing for them.[77] Blaine hoped that he would have more support from Irish Americans than Republicans typically did; while the Irish were mainly a Democratic constituency in the 19th century, Blaine's mother was Irish Catholic, and he had been supportive of the Irish National Land League while he was Secretary of State.[78] The Irish, a significant group in three of the swing states, did appear inclined to support Blaine until one of his supporters, Samuel D. Burchard, gave a speech denouncing the Democrats as the party of "Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion".[79] The Democrats spread the word of this insult in the days before the election, and Cleveland narrowly won all four of the swing states, including New York by just over one thousand votes.[80] While the popular vote total was close, with Cleveland winning by just one-quarter of a percent, the electoral votes gave Cleveland a majority of 219–182.[80] Following the electoral victory, the "Ma, Ma ..." attack phrase gained a classic rejoinder: "Gone to the White House. Ha! Ha! Ha!"[81]

First term as president (1885–1889)

Reform

Cleveland, portrayed as a tariff reformer

Soon after taking office, Cleveland was faced with the task of filling all the government jobs for which the president had the power of appointment. These jobs were typically filled under the spoils system, but Cleveland announced that he would not fire any Republican who was doing his job well, and would not appoint anyone solely on the basis of party service.[82] He also used his appointment powers to reduce the number of federal employees, as many departments had become bloated with political time-servers.[83] Later in his term, as his fellow Democrats chafed at being excluded from the spoils, Cleveland began to replace more of the partisan Republican officeholders with Democrats.[84] While some of his decisions were influenced by party concerns, more of Cleveland's appointments were decided by merit alone than was the case in his predecessors' administrations.[85]

Cleveland also reformed other parts of the government. In 1887 he signed an act creating the Interstate Commerce Commission.[86] He and Secretary of the Navy William C. Whitney undertook to modernize the navy and canceled construction contracts that had resulted in inferior ships.[87] Cleveland angered railroad investors by ordering an investigation of western lands they held by government grant.[88] Secretary of the Interior Lucius Q.C. Lamar charged that the rights of way for this land must be returned to the public because the railroads failed to extend their lines according to agreements.[88] The lands were forfeited, resulting in the return of approximately 81,000,000 acres (330,000 km2).[88]

Vetoes

I can find no warrant for such an appropriation in the Constitution, and I do not believe that the power and duty of the general government ought to be extended to the relief of individual suffering which is in no manner properly related to the public service or benefit. Federal aid in such cases encourages the expectation of paternal care on the part of the government and weakens the sturdiness of our national character, while it prevents the indulgence among our people of that kindly sentiment and conduct which strengthens the bonds of a common brotherhood.
Cleveland's Veto of the Texas Seed Bill
February 16, 1887
[89]

Cleveland faced a Republican Senate and often resorted to using his veto powers.[90] He vetoed hundreds of private pension bills for American Civil War veterans, believing that if their pensions requests had already been rejected by the Pensions Bureau, Congress should not attempt to override that decision.[91] When Congress, pressured by the Grand Army of the Republic, passed a bill granting pensions for disabilities not caused by military service, Cleveland also vetoed that.[92] Cleveland used the veto far more often than any president up to that time.[93] In 1887, Cleveland issued his most well-known veto, that of the Texas Seed Bill.[94] After a drought had ruined crops in several Texas counties, Congress appropriated $10,000 to purchase seed grain for farmers there.[94] Cleveland vetoed the expenditure. In his veto message, he espoused a theory of limited government (at right).

Silver

One of the most volatile issues of the 1880s was whether the currency should be backed by gold and silver, or by gold alone.[95] The issue cut across party lines, with western Republicans and southern Democrats joining together in the call for the free coinage of silver, and both parties' representatives in the northeast holding firm for the gold standard.[96] Because silver was worth less than its legal equivalent in gold, taxpayers paid their government bills in silver, while international creditors demanded payment in gold, resulting in a depletion of the nation's gold supply.[96]

Cleveland disagreed with silverite Democrats, such as Richard P. Bland.
Protectionist Democrats, led by Samuel J. Randall, joined with Republicans to keep tariffs high.

Cleveland and Treasury Secretary Daniel Manning stood firmly on the side of the gold standard, and tried to reduce the amount of silver that the government was required to coin under the Bland-Allison Act of 1878.[97] This angered Westerners and Southerners, who advocated for cheap money to help their poorer constituents.[98] In reply, one of the foremost silverites, Richard P. Bland, introduced a bill in 1886 that would require the government to coin unlimited amounts of silver, inflating the then-deflating currency.[99] While Bland's bill was defeated, so was a bill the administration favored that would repeal any silver coinage requirement.[99] The result was a retention of the status quo, and a postponement of the resolution of the free silver issue.[100]

Tariffs

"When we consider that the theory of our institutions guarantees to every citizen the full enjoyment of all the fruits of his industry and enterprise, with only such deduction as may be his share toward the careful and economical maintenance of the Government which protects him, it is plain that the exaction of more than this is indefensible extortion and a culpable betrayal of American fairness and justice ... The public Treasury, which should only exist as a conduit conveying the people's tribute to its legitimate objects of expenditure, becomes a hoarding place for money needlessly withdrawn from trade and the people's use, thus crippling our national energies, suspending our country's development, preventing investment in productive enterprise, threatening financial disturbance, and inviting schemes of public plunder."
Cleveland's third annual message to Congress,
December 6, 1887.
[101]

Another contentious financial issue at the time was the protective tariff. While it had not been a central point in his campaign, Cleveland's opinion on the tariff was that of most Democrats: that the tariff ought to be reduced.[102] Republicans generally favored a high tariff to protect American industries.[102] American tariffs had been high since the Civil War, and by the 1880s the tariff brought in so much revenue that the government was running a surplus.[103]

In 1886, a bill to reduce the tariff was narrowly defeated in the House.[104] The tariff issue was emphasized in the Congressional elections that year, and the forces of protectionism increased their numbers in the Congress.[105] Nevertheless, Cleveland continued to advocate tariff reform. As the surplus grew, Cleveland and the reformers called for a tariff for revenue only.[106] His message to Congress in 1887 (quoted at left) pointed out the injustice of taking more money from the people than the government needed to pay for its operating expenses.[107] Republicans, as well as protectionist northern Democrats like Samuel J. Randall, believed that without high tariffs American industries would fail, and continued to fight reformers' efforts.[108] Roger Q. Mills, the chairman of the House Committee on Ways and Means, proposed a bill that would reduce the tariff burden from about 47% to about 40%.[109] After significant exertions by Cleveland and his allies, the bill passed the House.[109] The Republican Senate, however, failed to come to agreement with the Democratic House, and the bill died in the conference committee. Dispute over the tariff would carry over into the 1888 presidential election.

Foreign policy, 1885–1889

Cleveland was a committed non-interventionist who had campaigned in opposition to expansion and imperialism. He refused to promote the previous administration's Nicaragua canal treaty, and generally was less of an expansionist in foreign relations.[110] Cleveland's Secretary of State, Thomas F. Bayard, negotiated with Joseph Chamberlain of the United Kingdom over fishing rights in the waters off Canada, and struck a conciliatory note, despite the opposition of New England's Republican Senators.[111] Cleveland also withdrew from Senate consideration the Berlin Conference treaty which guaranteed an open door for U.S. interests in the Congo.[112]

Civil rights

Cleveland, like a growing number of Northerners (and nearly all white Southerners) saw Reconstruction as a failed experiment, and was reluctant to use federal power to enforce the 15th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which guaranteed voting rights to African Americans.[113] Cleveland initially appointed no black Americans to patronage jobs, but did allow Frederick Douglass to continue in his post as recorder of deeds in Washington, D.C.[113] When Douglass later resigned, Cleveland appointed another black man to replace him.[113] While he claimed to deplore lynchings, he made no use of the federal power to prevent them. (Southern Democrats continued to block federal anti-lynching legislation well into the 20th century.)[114]

Henry L. Dawes wrote the Dawes Act, which Cleveland signed into law.

Although Cleveland had condemned the "outrages" against Chinese immigrants, he believed that Chinese immigrants were unwilling to assimilate into white society.[115] Secretary of State Bayard negotiated an extension to the Chinese Exclusion Act, and Cleveland lobbied the Congress to pass the Scott Act, written by Congressman William Lawrence Scott, which would prevent Chinese immigrants who left the United States from returning.[116] The Scott Act easily passed both houses of Congress, and Cleveland signed it into law on October 1, 1888.[116]

Cleveland viewed Native Americans as wards of the state, saying in his first inaugural address that "[t]his guardianship involves, on our part, efforts for the improvement of their condition and enforcement of their rights."[117] He encouraged the idea of cultural assimilation, pushing for the passage of the Dawes Act, which provided for distribution of Indian lands to individual members of tribes, rather than having them continued to be held in trust for the tribes by the federal government.[117] While a conference of Native leaders endorsed the act, in practice the majority of Native Americans disapproved of it.[118] Cleveland believed the Dawes Act would lift Native Americans out of poverty and encourage their assimilation into white society, but its ultimate effect was to weaken the tribal governments and encourage sale of Indian land to white speculators.[117]

Marriage and children

Grover Cleveland and Frances Folsom were married in the Blue Room of the White House.

Cleveland entered the White house as a bachelor, but did not remain one for long. In 1885, the daughter of Cleveland's friend Oscar Folsom visited him in Washington.[119] Frances Folsom was a student at Wells College, and when she returned to school Cleveland received her mother's permission to correspond with her.[119] They were soon engaged to be married.[119] On June 2, 1886, Cleveland married Frances in the Blue Room in the White House.[120] He was the second president to marry while in office, and the only president to have a wedding in the White House.[121] This marriage was unusual because Cleveland was the executor of Oscar Folsom's estate and had supervised Frances' upbringing, but the public did not, in general, take exception to the match.[122] At twenty-one years old, Frances was the youngest First Lady in American history, but the public soon warmed to her beauty and warm personality.[123] The Clevelands had five children: Ruth (1891–1904); Esther (1893–1980); Marion (1895–1977); Richard Folsom (1897–1974); and Francis Grover (1903–1995). The British philosopher Philippa Foot is their granddaughter.

Administration and Cabinet

Cleveland's first cabinet.
Front row, left to right: Thomas F. Bayard, Cleveland, Daniel Manning, Lucius Q. C. Lamar
Back row, left to right: William F. Vilas, William C. Whitney, William C. Endicott, Augustus H. Garland
The Cleveland Cabinet
Office Name Term
President Grover Cleveland 1885–1889
Vice President Thomas A. Hendricks 1885
None 1885–1889
Secretary of State Thomas F. Bayard 1885–1889
Secretary of Treasury Daniel Manning 1885–1887
Charles S. Fairchild 1887–1889
Secretary of War William C. Endicott 1885–1889
Attorney General Augustus H. Garland 1885–1889
Postmaster General William F. Vilas 1885–1888
Donald M. Dickinson 1888–1889
Secretary of the Navy William C. Whitney 1885–1889
Secretary of the Interior Lucius Q. C. Lamar 1885–1888
William F. Vilas 1888–1889
Secretary of Agriculture Norman Jay Coleman 1889


Judicial appointments

Supreme Court appointments

Chief Justice Melville Fuller

During his first term, Cleveland successfully appointed two justices to the Supreme Court of the United States. The first, Lucius Q.C. Lamar, was a former Mississippi Senator then serving in Cleveland's Cabinet as Interior Secretary. When William Burnham Woods died, Cleveland nominated Lamar to his seat in late 1887.[124] While Lamar had been well-liked as a Senator, his service under the Confederacy two decades earlier caused many Republicans to vote against him.[124] Lamar's nomination was confirmed by the narrow margin of 32 to 28.[124]

Chief Justice Morrison Waite died a few months later, and Cleveland nominated Melville Fuller to his seat on April 30, 1888.[125] Cleveland had previously offered to nominate Fuller to the Civil Service Commission, but Fuller had declined to leave his Chicago law practice.[126] Fuller accepted the Supreme Court nomination, and the Senate Judiciary Committee spent several months examining the little-known nominee.[125] Finding him acceptable, the Senate confirmed the nomination 41 to 20.[125]

Other judicial appointments

Cleveland appointed a total of 45 federal judges. In addition to his four Supreme Court appointments, these included two judges to the United States circuit courts, nine judges to the United States Courts of Appeals,and 30 judges to the United States district courts. Because Cleveland served terms both before and after Congress eliminated the circuit courts in favor of the Courts of Appeals, he is one of only two Presidents to have appointed judges to both bodies. The other, Benjamin Harrison, was in office at the time that the change was made. Thus, all of Cleveland's appointments to the circuit courts were made in his first term, and all of his appointments to the Courts of Appeals were made in his second.

Election of 1888 and return to private life

Defeated by Harrison

Cleveland-Thurman campaign poster
Harrison-Morton campaign poster

The debate over tariff reduction continued into the 1888 presidential campaign.[127] The Republicans nominated Benjamin Harrison of Indiana for president and Levi P. Morton of New York for vice president. Cleveland was easily renominated at the Democratic convention in St. Louis.[128] Vice President Hendricks having died in 1885, the Democrats chose Allen G. Thurman of Ohio to be Cleveland's running mate.[128] The Republicans campaigned heavily on the tariff issue, turning out protectionist voters in the important industrial states of the North.[127] Further, the Democrats in New York were divided over the gubernatorial candidacy of David B. Hill, weakening Cleveland's support in that swing state.[129]

As in 1884, the election focused on the swing states of New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Indiana. Unlike that year, when Cleveland triumphed in all four, in 1888 he won only two, losing his home state of New York by 14,373 votes.[130] More notoriously, the Republicans were victorious in Indiana, largely as the result of fraud.[131] Republican victory in that state, where Cleveland lost by just 2,348 votes, was sufficient to propel Harrison to victory, despite his loss of the nationwide popular vote.[130] Cleveland continued his duties diligently until the end of the term and began to look forward to return to private life.[132]

Private citizen for four years

As Frances Cleveland left the White House, she told a staff member, "Now, Jerry, I want you to take good care of all the furniture and ornaments in the house, for I want to find everything just as it is now, when we come back again." When asked when she would return, she responded, "We are coming back four years from today."[133] In the meantime, the Clevelands moved to New York City where Cleveland took a position with the law firm of Bangs, Stetson, Tracy, and MacVeigh, a predecessor to the current firm Davis Polk & Wardwell.[134] Cleveland's income with the firm was not high, but neither were his duties especially onerous.[135] While they lived in New York, the Clevelands' first child, Ruth, was born in 1891.[136]

The Harrison administration worked with Congress to pass the McKinley Tariff and the Sherman Silver Purchase Act, two policies Cleveland deplored as dangerous to the nation's financial health.[137] At first he refrained from criticizing his successor, but by 1891 Cleveland felt compelled to speak out, addressing his concerns in an open letter to a meeting of reformers in New York.[138] The "silver letter" thrust Cleveland's name back into the spotlight just as the 1892 election was approaching.[139]

Election of 1892

Grover Cleveland in 1892

Democratic nomination

Cleveland's stature as an ex-president and recent pronouncements on the monetary issues made him a leading contender for the Democratic nomination.[140] His leading opponent was David B. Hill, who was by that time a Senator for New York.[141] Hill united the anti-Cleveland elements of the Democratic party—silverites, protectionists, and Tammany Hall—but was unable to create a coalition large enough to deny Cleveland the nomination.[141] Despite some desperate maneuvering by Hill, Cleveland was nominated on the first ballot at the convention in Chicago.[142] For vice president, the Democrats chose to balance the ticket with Adlai E. Stevenson of Illinois, a silverite.[143]

Campaign against Harrison

Results of the 1892 election

The Republicans re-nominated President Harrison, making the 1892 election a rematch of the one four years earlier. Unlike the turbulent and controversial elections of 1876, 1884 and 1888, the 1892 election was "the cleanest, quietest, and most creditable in the memory of the post-war generation",[144] in part because Harrison's wife, Caroline, was dying of tuberculosis.[145] Harrison didn't personally campaign because of his wife's declining health, and Cleveland followed suit out of sympathy to his political rival as not to exploit Mrs. Harrison's illness. The issue of the tariff had worked to the Republicans' advantage in 1888, but the revisions of the past four years had made imported goods so expensive that now many voters shifted to the reform position.[146] Many westerners, traditionally Republican voters, defected to the new Populist Party candidate, James Weaver, who promised free silver, generous veterans' pensions, and an eight-hour work day.[147] Finally, the Tammany Hall Democrats adhered to the national ticket, allowing a united Democratic party to carry New York.[148] The result was a victory for Cleveland by wide margins in both the popular and electoral votes.[149]

Second term as president (1893–1897)

Economic panic and the silver issue

Cleveland's humiliation by Gorman and the sugar trust

Shortly after Cleveland's second term began, the Panic of 1893 struck the stock market, and he soon faced an acute economic depression.[150] The panic was worsened by the acute shortage of gold that resulted from the free coinage of silver, and Cleveland called Congress into session early to deal with the problem.[151] The debate over the coinage was as heated as ever, but the effects of the panic had driven more moderates to support repealing the free coinage provisions of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act.[151] Even so, the silverites rallied their following at a convention in Chicago, and the House of Representatives debated for fifteen weeks before passing the repeal by a considerable margin.[152] In the Senate, the repeal of free coinage was equally contentious, but Cleveland convinced enough Democrats to stand by him that they, along with eastern Republicans, formed a 48–37 majority.[153] With the passage of the repeal, the Treasury's gold reserves were restored to safe levels.[154] At the time the repeal seemed a minor setback to silverites, but it marked the beginning of the end of silver as a basis for American currency.[155]

Tariff reform

Having succeeded in reversing the Harrison administration's silver policy, Cleveland sought next to reverse the effects of the McKinley tariff. What would become the Wilson-Gorman Tariff Act was introduced by West Virginian Representative William L. Wilson in December 1893.[156] After lengthy debate, the bill passed the House by a considerable margin.[157] The bill proposed moderate downward revisions in the tariff, especially on raw materials.[158] The shortfall in revenue was to be made up by an income tax of two percent on income above $4,000.[158]

The bill was next considered in the Senate, where opposition was stronger.[159] Many Senators, led by Arthur Pue Gorman of Maryland, wanted more protection for their states' industries than the Wilson bill allowed.[159] Others, such as Morgan and Hill, opposed partly out of a personal enmity to Cleveland.[159] By the time the bill left the Senate, it had more than 600 amendments attached that nullified most of the reforms.[160] The Sugar Trust in particular lobbied for changes that favored it at the expense of the consumer.[161] Cleveland was unhappy with the result, and denounced the revised measure as a disgraceful product of the control of the Senate by trusts and business interests.[162] Even so, he believed it was an improvement over the McKinley tariff and allowed it to become law without his signature.[163]

John T. Morgan, Senator from Alabama, opposed Cleveland on free silver, the tariff, and the Hawaii treaty, saying of Cleveland that "I hate the ground that man walks on."[164]

Labor unrest

The Panic of 1893 had damaged labor conditions across the United States, and the victory of anti-silver legislation worsened the mood of western laborers.[165] A group of workingmen led by Jacob S. Coxey began to march east toward Washington, D.C. to protest Cleveland's policies.[165] This group, known as Coxey's Army, agitated in favor of a national roads program to give jobs to workingmen, and a weakened currency to help farmers pay their debts.[165] By the time they reached Washington, only a few hundred remained and when they were arrested the next day for walking on the grass of the United States Capitol, the group scattered.[165] Coxey's Army was never a threat to the government, but it showed a growing dissatisfaction in the West with Eastern monetary policies.[166]

The Pullman Strike had a significantly greater impact than Coxey's Army. A strike began against the Pullman Company over low wages and twelve-hour workdays, and sympathy strikes, encouraged by American Railway Union leader Eugene V. Debs, soon followed.[167] By June 1894, 125,000 railroad workers were on strike, paralyzing the nation's commerce.[168] Because the railroads carried the mail, and because several of the affected lines were in federal receivership, Cleveland believed a federal solution was appropriate.[169] Cleveland obtained an injunction in federal court and when the strikers refused to obey it, he sent in federal troops to Chicago and other rail centers.[170] Leading newspapers of both parties applauded Cleveland's actions, but the use of troops hardened the attitude of organized labor toward his administration.[171]

Foreign policy, 1893–1897

"I suppose that right and justice should determine the path to be followed in treating this subject. If national honesty is to be disregarded and a desire for territorial expansion or dissatisfaction with a form of government not our own ought to regulate our conduct, I have entirely misapprehended the mission and character of our government and the behavior which the conscience of the people demands of their public servants."
Cleveland's message to Congress on the Hawaiian question, December 18, 1893.[172]

In January 1893, a group of Americans living in Hawai'i overthrew Queen Liliuokalani and established a provisional government under Sanford Dole.[173] By February, the Harrison administration had agreed with representatives of the new government on a treaty of annexation and submitted it to the Senate for approval.[173] Five days after taking office, Cleveland withdrew the treaty from the Senate and sent former Congressman James Henderson Blount to Hawai'i to investigate the conditions there.[174]

In his first term, Cleveland had supported free trade with Hawai'i and accepted an amendment that gave the United States a coaling and naval station in Pearl Harbor.[112] Now, however, Cleveland agreed with Blount's report, which found the populace to be opposed to annexation.[174] Liliuokalani refused to grant amnesty as a condition of her reinstatement, saying that she would execute the current government in Honolulu, and Dole's government refused to yield their position.[175] By December 1893, the matter was still unresolved, and Cleveland referred the issue to Congress.[175] In his message to Congress, Cleveland rejected the idea of annexation and encouraged the Congress to continue the American tradition of non-intervention (see excerpt at right).[172] Many in Congress, led by Senator John Tyler Morgan favored annexation, and the report Congress eventually issued favored neither annexation of Hawaii nor the use of American force to restore the Hawaiian monarch.[176]

Oil painting of Grover Cleveland, painted in 1899 by Anders Zorn

Closer to home, Cleveland adopted a broad interpretation of the Monroe Doctrine that did not just simply forbid new European colonies but declared an American interest in any matter within the hemisphere.[177] When Britain and Venezuela disagreed over the boundary between the latter nation and British Guiana, Cleveland and Secretary of State Richard Olney pressured Britain into agreeing to arbitration.[178] A tribunal convened in Paris in 1898 to decide the matter, and issued its award in 1899.[179] The tribunal awarded the bulk of the disputed territory to British Guiana.[180] By standing with a Latin American nation against the encroachment of a colonial power, Cleveland improved relations with the United States' southern neighbors, but the cordial manner in which the negotiations were conducted also made for good relations with Britain.[181]

Cancer

In the midst of the fight for repeal of free silver coinage in 1893, Cleveland sought the advice of the White House doctor, Dr O'Reilly about soreness on the roof of his mouth and a crater-like edge ulcer with a granulated surface on the left side of Cleveland's hard palate. Samples of the tumor were sent anonymously to the army medical museum. The prognosis was not a malignant cancer but epithelioma.[182] Several doctors, including Dr William W. Keen, Professor of Surgery at Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia, stated after Cleveland's death that the tumor was a carcinoma.[183] However, as a result of Cleveland's enjoying many more years of life after the tumor removal, there was some debate. Other suggestions included ameloblastoma[184] and benign salivary mixed tumor.[185] In the 1980s, analysis of the specimen finally ruled the tumor to be Verrucous carcinoma,[186] which has low potential for malignancy.[182]

Because of the financial depression of the country, Cleveland decided to have surgery performed in secrecy to avoid further market panic.[187] The surgery occurred on July 1, to give Cleveland time to make a full recovery in time for the upcoming Congressional session.[188] Under the guise of a vacation cruise, Cleveland and his surgeon, Dr. Joseph Bryant, left for New York. The surgeons operated aboard the yacht Oneida as it sailed off Long Island.[189] The surgery was conducted through the president's mouth, to avoid any scars or other signs of surgery.[190] The team, sedating Cleveland with nitrous oxide and ether, successfully removed parts of his upper left jaw and hard palate.[190] The size of the tumor and the extent of the operation left Cleveland's mouth disfigured.[191] During another surgery, an orthodontist fitted Cleveland with a hard rubber prosthesis that corrected his speech and restored his appearance.[191]

A cover story about the removal of two bad teeth kept the suspicious press placated.[192] Even when a newspaper story appeared giving details of the actual operation, the participating surgeons discounted the severity of what transpired during Cleveland's vacation.[191] In 1917, one of the surgeons present on the Oneida, Dr. William W. Keen, wrote an article detailing the operation.[183]

Administration and Cabinet

Cleveland's last cabinet.
Front row, left to right: Daniel S. Lamont, Richard Olney, Cleveland, John G. Carlisle, Judson Harmon
Back row, left to right: David R. Francis, William L. Wilson, Hilary A. Herbert, Julius S. Morton
The Cleveland Cabinet
Office Name Term
President Grover Cleveland 1893–1897
Vice President Adlai E. Stevenson 1893–1897
Secretary of State Walter Q. Gresham 1893–1895
Richard Olney 1895–1897
Secretary of Treasury John G. Carlisle 1893–1897
Secretary of War Daniel S. Lamont 1893–1897
Attorney General Richard Olney 1893–1895
Judson Harmon 1895–1897
Postmaster General Wilson S. Bissell 1893–1895
William L. Wilson 1895–1897
Secretary of the Navy Hilary A. Herbert 1893–1897
Secretary of the Interior M. Hoke Smith 1893–1896
David R. Francis 1896–1897
Secretary of Agriculture Julius S. Morton 1893–1897

Supreme Court appointments

The objections of Senator David B. Hill defeated two of Cleveland's Supreme Court nominees.

Cleveland's trouble with the Senate hindered the success of his nominations to the Supreme Court in his second term. In 1893, after the death of Samuel Blatchford, Cleveland nominated William B. Hornblower to the Court.[193] Hornblower, the head of a New York City law firm, was thought to be a qualified appointee, but his campaign against a New York machine politician had made Senator David B. Hill his enemy.[193] Further, Cleveland had not consulted the Senators before naming his appointee, leaving many who were already opposed to Cleveland on other grounds even more aggrieved.[193] The Senate rejected Hornblower's nomination on January 15, 1894, by a vote of 30 to 24.[193]

Cleveland continued to defy the Senate by next appointing Wheeler Hazard Peckham another New York attorney who had opposed Hill's machine in that state.[194] Hill used all of his influence to block Peckham's confirmation, and on February 16, 1894, the Senate rejected the nomination by a vote of 32 to 41.[194] Reformers urged Cleveland to continue the fight against Hill and to nominate Frederic R. Coudert, but Cleveland acquiesced in an inoffensive choice, that of Senator Edward Douglass White of Louisiana, whose nomination was accepted unanimously.[194] Later, in 1896, another vacancy on the Court led Cleveland to consider Hornblower again, but he declined to be nominated.[195] Instead, Cleveland nominated Rufus Wheeler Peckham, the brother of Wheeler Hazard Peckham, and the Senate confirmed the second Peckham easily.[195]

States admitted to the Union

  • Utah – January 4, 1896

Later life and death

Official White House portrait of Grover Cleveland, painted in 1891 by Jonathan Eastman Johnson

As the 1896 election approached, eastern pro-gold-standard Democrats wished Cleveland to run for a third term, but he declined.[196] Instead, the Democratic party turned to a silverite, William Jennings Bryan, for its nominee.[197] Disappointed with the direction of their party, Gold Democrats even invited Cleveland to run as a third-party candidate, but he declined this offer as well.[196] Cleveland did, however, support John M. Palmer, nominee of the Gold Democrats, rather than Bryan.[198] William McKinley, the Republican nominee, triumphed easily over Bryan.[199]

After leaving the White House, Cleveland lived in retirement at his estate, Westland Mansion, in Princeton, New Jersey.[200] For a time he was a trustee of Princeton University, and was one of the majority of trustees who preferred Andrew Fleming West's plans for the Graduate School and undergraduate living over those of Woodrow Wilson, then president of the University.[201] Conservative Democrats hoped to nominate him for another presidential term in 1904, but his age and health forced them to turn to other candidates.[202] Cleveland still made his views known in political matters. In a 1905 article in The Ladies Home Journal, Cleveland weighed in on the women's suffrage movement, writing that "sensible and responsible women do not want to vote. The relative positions to be assumed by men and women in the working out of our civilization were assigned long ago by a higher intelligence."[203]

Cleveland's health had been declining for several years, and in the autumn of 1907 he fell seriously ill.[204] In 1908, he suffered a heart attack and died.[204] His last words were "I have tried so hard to do right."[205] He is buried in the Princeton Cemetery of the Nassau Presbyterian Church.

Honors and memorials

Cleveland on the $1000 bill

In his first term in office, Cleveland sought a summer house to escape the heat and smells of Washington, D.C., but needed to remain near the capital. Acting in secret, he located a house, Oak View (or Oak Hill), in a rural upland part of the District of Columbia, and bought it in 1886. Although he sold Oak View upon leaving the White House (the first time), the area became known as Cleveland Park, which name it still bears. The Clevelands are depicted in local murals and the like.[206]

Grover Cleveland Hall at Buffalo State College in Buffalo, New York. Cleveland Hall houses the offices of the college president, vice presidents, and other administrative functions and student services. Cleveland was a member of the first board of directors of the then Buffalo Normal School (1870)[207]

Grover Cleveland Middle School in his birthplace, Caldwell, New Jersey, was named for him, as is Grover Cleveland High School in Buffalo, New York, and the town of Cleveland, Mississippi.

Cleveland's portrait was on the U.S. $1000 bill of series 1928 and series 1934. He also appeared on the first few issues of the $20 Federal Reserve Notes from 1914. Since he was both the 22nd and 24th president, he will be featured on two separate dollar coins to be released in 2012 as part of the Presidential $1 Coin Act of 2005.

In 2006, Free New York, a nonprofit and nonpartisan research group, began raising funds to purchase the former Fairfield Library in Buffalo, New York and transform it into the Grover Cleveland Presidential Library & Museum.[208]

Notes

  1. ^ Jeffers, 8–12; Nevins, 4–5
  2. ^ a b Tugwell, 220–249
  3. ^ Nevins, 4
  4. ^ Nevins, 8–10
  5. ^ Graff, 3–4; Nevins, 8–10
  6. ^ a b Graff, 3–4
  7. ^ Nevins, 6
  8. ^ Nevins, 9
  9. ^ Graff, 7
  10. ^ Nevins, 10; Graff, 3
  11. ^ Nevins, 11; Graff, 8–9
  12. ^ Nevins, 11
  13. ^ Jeffers, 17
  14. ^ Nevins, 17–19
  15. ^ a b Nevins, 21
  16. ^ Jeffers, 16–17
  17. ^ Nevins, 18–19; Jeffers, 19
  18. ^ a b Nevins, 23–24
  19. ^ Crosby, 111–116
  20. ^ a b c d Nevins, 27
  21. ^ Nevins, 28–33
  22. ^ Nevins, 31–36; Graff, 10–11
  23. ^ a b Graff, 14
  24. ^ From the Cleveland Family Papers at the New Jersey Archives.
  25. ^ Graff, 14–15
  26. ^ Graff, 15; Nevins, 46
  27. ^ Graff, 14; Nevins, 51–52. Benninsky survived the war.
  28. ^ a b Nevins, 52–53
  29. ^ Nevins, 54
  30. ^ Nevins, 54–55
  31. ^ Nevins, 55–56
  32. ^ Nevins, 56
  33. ^ Nevins, 44–45
  34. ^ a b Nevins, 58
  35. ^ Jeffers, 33
  36. ^ a b c Jeffers, 34; Nevins, 61–62
  37. ^ "The Execution of John Gaffney". The Buffalonian. http://www.buffalonian.com/history/articles/1851-1900/gaffneyhanging/gaffneyhanging.html. Retrieved 2008-03-27. 
  38. ^ Jeffers, 36; Nevins, 64
  39. ^ Nevins, 66–71
  40. ^ Nevins, 78
  41. ^ Nevins, 79; Graff, 18–19; Jeffers, 42–45; Welch, 24
  42. ^ Nevins, 79–80; Graff, 18–19; Welch, 24
  43. ^ a b Nevins, 80–81
  44. ^ Nevins, 83
  45. ^ Graff, 19; Jeffers, 46–50
  46. ^ a b Nevins, 84–86
  47. ^ Nevins, 85
  48. ^ Nevins, 86
  49. ^ Nevins, 94–95; Jeffers, 50–51
  50. ^ a b Nevins, 94–99; Graff, 26–27
  51. ^ Nevins, 95–101
  52. ^ Graff, 26; Nevins, 101–103
  53. ^ Nevins, 103–104
  54. ^ Nevins, 105
  55. ^ Graff, 28
  56. ^ Graff, 35
  57. ^ Graff, 35–36
  58. ^ Nevins, 114–116
  59. ^ a b c Nevins, 116–117
  60. ^ a b Nevins, 117–118
  61. ^ Nevins, 125–126; Graff, 49–51
  62. ^ Nevins, 133–138
  63. ^ Nevins, 138–140
  64. ^ a b Nevins, 185–186; Jeffers, 96–97
  65. ^ a b c Nevins, 146–147
  66. ^ Nevins, 147
  67. ^ Nevins, 152–153; Graff, 51–53
  68. ^ Nevins, 153
  69. ^ a b Nevins, 154; Graff, 53–54
  70. ^ a b Nevins, 156–159; Graff, 55
  71. ^ Nevins, 187–188
  72. ^ a b Nevins, 159–162; Graff, 59–60
  73. ^ Graff, 59; Jeffers, 111; Nevins, 177, Welch, 34
  74. ^ a b c d e Nevins, 162–169; Jeffers, 106–111; Graff, 60–65; Welch, 36–39
  75. ^ Nevins, 163, Graff, 62
  76. ^ Welch, 33
  77. ^ Nevins, 170–171
  78. ^ Nevins, 170
  79. ^ Nevins, 181–184
  80. ^ a b Leip, David. 1884 Presidential Election Results. Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections (January 27, 2008)., Electoral College Box Scores 1789–1996. Official website of the National Archives. (January 27, 2008).
  81. ^ Graff, 64
  82. ^ Nevins, 208–211
  83. ^ Nevins, 214–217
  84. ^ Graff, 83
  85. ^ Nevins, 238–241; Welch, 59–60
  86. ^ Nevins, 354–357; Graff, 85
  87. ^ Nevins, 217–223; Graff, 77
  88. ^ a b c Nevins, 223–228
  89. ^ "Cleveland's Veto of the Texas Seed Bill". The Writings and Speeches of Grover Cleveland. New York: Cassell Publishing Co. 1892. p. 450. http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Cleveland's_Veto_of_the_Texas_Seed_Bill. 
  90. ^ Graff, 85
  91. ^ Nevins, 326–328; Graff, 83–84
  92. ^ Nevins, 300–331; Graff, 83
  93. ^ See List of United States presidential vetoes
  94. ^ a b Nevins, 331–332; Graff, 85
  95. ^ Jeffers, 157–158
  96. ^ a b Nevins, 201–205; Graff, 102–103
  97. ^ Nevins, 269
  98. ^ Nevins, 268
  99. ^ a b Nevins, 273
  100. ^ Nevins, 277–279
  101. ^ The Writings and Speeches of Grover Cleveland. New York: Cassell Publishing Co. 1892. pp. 72–73. http://books.google.com/books?id=NdpBAAAAIAAJ. 
  102. ^ a b Nevins, 280–282, Reitano, 46–62
  103. ^ Nevins, 286–287
  104. ^ Nevins, 287–288
  105. ^ Nevins, 290–296; Graff, 87–88
  106. ^ Nevins, 370–371
  107. ^ Nevins, 379–381
  108. ^ Nevins, 383–385
  109. ^ a b Graff, 88–89
  110. ^ Nevins, 205; 404–405
  111. ^ Nevins, 404–413
  112. ^ a b Zakaria, 80
  113. ^ a b c Welch, 65–66
  114. ^ Welch, 68
  115. ^ Welch, 72
  116. ^ a b Welch, 73
  117. ^ a b c Welch, 70–
  118. ^ Graff, 206–207
  119. ^ a b c Graff, 78
  120. ^ Graff, 79
  121. ^ The previous president to marry during his term was John Tyler. Graff, 80
  122. ^ Jeffers, 170–176; Graff, 78–81; Nevins, 302–308; Welch, 51
  123. ^ Graff, 80–81
  124. ^ a b c Nevins, 339
  125. ^ a b c Nevins, 445–447
  126. ^ Nevins, 250
  127. ^ a b Nevins, 418–420
  128. ^ a b Graff, 90–91
  129. ^ Nevins, 423–427
  130. ^ a b Leip, David. 1888 Presidential Election Results. Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections (February 18, 2008)., Electoral College Box Scores 1789–1996. Official website of the National Archives. (February 18, 2008).
  131. ^ Nevins, 435–439; Jeffers, 220–222; Goldman, 143–144; see also Blocks of Five.
  132. ^ Nevins, 443–449
  133. ^ Nevins, 448
  134. ^ Nevins, 450.
  135. ^ Nevins, 450–452
  136. ^ Nevins, 450; Graff, 99–100
  137. ^ Graff, 102–105; Nevins, 465–467
  138. ^ Graff, 104–105; Nevins, 467–468
  139. ^ Nevins, 470–471
  140. ^ Nevins, 468–469
  141. ^ a b Nevins, 470–473
  142. ^ Nevins, 480–491
  143. ^ Graff, 105; Nevins, 492–493
  144. ^ Nevins, 498
  145. ^ Calhoun, 149
  146. ^ Nevins, 499
  147. ^ Graff, 106–107; Nevins, 505–506
  148. ^ Graff, 108
  149. ^ Leip, David. 1892 Presidential Election Results. Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections (February 22, 2008)., Electoral College Box Scores 1789–1996. Official website of the National Archives. (February 22, 2008).
  150. ^ Graff, 114
  151. ^ a b Nevins, 526–528
  152. ^ Nevins, 524–528, 537–540. The vote was 239 to 108.
  153. ^ Nevins, 541–548
  154. ^ Graff, 115
  155. ^ Timberlake, Richard H. (1993). Monetary Policy in the United States: An Intellectual and Institutional History. University of Chicago Press. p. 179. ISBN 0226803848. 
  156. ^ Nevins, 565
  157. ^ Nevins, 567. The vote was 204 to 140
  158. ^ a b Nevins, 564–566; Jeffers, 285–287
  159. ^ a b c Nevins, 567–569
  160. ^ Nevins, 572–576. The income tax component of the Wilson-Gorman Act was partially ruled unconstitutional in 1895. See Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co.
  161. ^ Nevins, 577–578
  162. ^ Nevins, 585–587; Jeffers, 288–289
  163. ^ Nevins, 587–588; Graff, 117
  164. ^ Nevins, 568
  165. ^ a b c d Graff, 117–118; Nevins, 603–605
  166. ^ Graff, 118; Jeffers, 280–281
  167. ^ Nevins, 611–613
  168. ^ Nevins, 614
  169. ^ Nevins, 614–618; Graff, 118–119; Jeffers, 296–297
  170. ^ Nevins, 619–623; Jeffers, 298–302. See also In re Debs.
  171. ^ Nevins, 624–628; Jeffers, 304–305; Graff, 120
  172. ^ a b Nevins, 560
  173. ^ a b Nevins, 549–552; Graff 121–122
  174. ^ a b Nevins, 552–554; Graff, 122
  175. ^ a b Nevins, 558–559
  176. ^ Graff, 123
  177. ^ Zakaria, 145–146
  178. ^ Graff, 123–125; Nevins, 633–642
  179. ^ Graff, 125
  180. ^ Nevins, 647
  181. ^ Nevins, 550, 647–648
  182. ^ a b A Renehan and J C Lowry (July 1995). "The oral tumours of two American presidents: what if they were alive today?". J R Soc Med. 88 (7): 377–383. 
  183. ^ a b Keen, William W. (1917). The Surgical Operations on President Cleveland in 1893. G. W. Jacobs & Co.. http://books.google.com/books?id=mnUIAAAAIAAJ.  The lump was preserved and is on display at the Mütter Museum in Philadelphia
  184. ^ Hardig WG. (1974). "Oral surgery and the presidents --- a century of contrast.". J Oral Surg 32: 490–493. 
  185. ^ Miller JM. (1961). "Stephen Grover Cleveland". Surg Gynecol Obstet 113: 524. 
  186. ^ Brooks JJ, Enterline HT, Aponte GE. (1908). "The final diagnosis of President Cleveland's lesion.". Trans Stud Coll Physic Philadelphia 2 (1). 
  187. ^ Nevins, 528–529; Graff, 115–116
  188. ^ Nevins, 531–533
  189. ^ Nevins, 529
  190. ^ a b Nevins, 530–531
  191. ^ a b c Nevins, 532–533
  192. ^ Nevins, 533; Graff, 116
  193. ^ a b c d Nevins, 569–570
  194. ^ a b c Nevins, 570–571
  195. ^ a b Nevins, 572
  196. ^ a b Graff, 128–129
  197. ^ Nevins, 684–693
  198. ^ William DeGregorio, The Complete Book of U.S. Presidents, Gramercy 1997
  199. ^ Leip, David. 1896 Presidential Election Results. Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections (February 23, 2008).
  200. ^ Graff, 131–133; Nevins, 730–735
  201. ^ Graff, p. 131; Alexander Leitch, A Princeton Companion, Princeton Univ Press, 1978, " Grover Cleveland"
  202. ^ Graff, 134
  203. ^ Ladies Home Journal 22, (October 1905), 7–8
  204. ^ a b Graff, 135–136; Nevins, 762–764
  205. ^ Jeffers, 340; Graff, 135. Nevins makes no mention of these last words.
  206. ^ See, e.g., Cleveland Park Historical Society, "A Brief History of Cleveland Park"; accessed 2009.04.08.
  207. ^ "Buffalo State College Cleveland Hall"; accessed 2009.11.11.
  208. ^ "Grover Cleveland Library". http://groverclevelandlibrary.org. Retrieved 2008-03-05. 

References

Sources

Further reading

  • Bard, Mitchell. "Ideology and Depression Politics I: Grover Cleveland (1893–1897)" Presidential Studies Quarterly 1985 15(1): 77–88. ISSN 0360-4918
  • Beito, David T. and Beito, Linda Royster,"Gold Democrats and the Decline of Classical Liberalism, 1896–1900,"Independent Review 4 (Spring 2000), 555–75.
  • Blodgett, Geoffrey. "Ethno-cultural Realities in Presidential Patronage: Grover Cleveland's Choices" New York History 2000 81(2): 189–210. ISSN 0146–437X
  • Blodgett, Geoffrey. "The Emergence of Grover Cleveland: a Fresh Appraisal" New York History 1992 73(2): 132–168. ISSN 0146–437X
  • Cleveland, Grover. The Writings and Speeches of Grover Cleveland (1892) online edition
  • Cleveland, Grover. Presidential Problems. (1904) online edition
  • Dewey, Davis R. National Problems: 1880–1897 (1907), online edition
  • Doenecke, Justus. "Grover Cleveland and the Enforcement of the Civil Service Act" Hayes Historical Journal 1984 4(3): 44–58. ISSN 0364–5924
  • Faulkner, Harold U. Politics, Reform, and Expansion, 1890–1900 (1959), online edition
  • Ford, Henry Jones. The Cleveland Era: A Chronicle of the New Order in Politics (1921), short overview online
  • Goldman, Ralph Morris The National Party Chairmen and Committees: Factionalism at the Top (1990). ISBN 0873326369.
  • Hoffman, Karen S. "'Going Public' in the Nineteenth Century: Grover Cleveland's Repeal of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act" Rhetoric & Public Affairs 2002 5(1): 57–77. ISSN 1094–8392
  • McElroy, Robert. Grover Cleveland, the Man and the Statesman: An Authorized Biography (1923) Vol. I, Vol. II
  • Morgan, H. Wayne. From Hayes to McKinley: National Party Politics, 1877–1896 (1969).
  • Nevins, Allan ed. Letters of Grover Cleveland, 1850–1908 (1934)
  • Osborne, Ray. "President Cleveland's Florida visit of 1888. Google Books Preview.
  • Sturgis, Amy H. ed. Presidents from Hayes through McKinley, 1877–1901: Debating the Issues in Pro and Con Primary Documents (2003) online edition
  • Summers, Mark Wahlgren. Rum, Romanism & Rebellion: The Making of a President, 1884 (2000) campaign techniques and issues online edition
  • William L. Wilson; The Cabinet Diary of William L. Wilson, 1896–1897 1957
  • National Democratic Committee (1896). Campaign Text-book of the National Democratic Party. http://books.google.com/books?id=VIwkzQzzbl4C. 
  • Wilson, Woodrow, Mr. Cleveland as President Atlantic Monthly (March 1897): pp. 289–301 online.

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
Benjamin Harrison
President of the United States
March 4, 1893 – March 4, 1897
Succeeded by
William McKinley
Preceded by
Chester A. Arthur
President of the United States
March 4, 1885 – March 4, 1889
Succeeded by
Benjamin Harrison
Preceded by
Alonzo B. Cornell
Governor of New York
1883–1885
Succeeded by
David B. Hill
Preceded by
Alexander Brush
Mayor of Buffalo, New York
1882
Succeeded by
Marcus M. Drake
Party political offices
Preceded by
Winfield Scott Hancock
Democratic Party presidential candidate
1884, 1888, 1892
Succeeded by
William Jennings Bryan
Honorary titles
Preceded by
Benjamin Harrison
Oldest U.S. President still living
March 13, 1901 – June 24, 1908
Succeeded by
Theodore Roosevelt

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History Dictionary. The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition Edited by E.D. Hirsch, Jr., Joseph F. Kett, and James Trefil. Copyright © 2002 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Grover Cleveland" Read more