he like to be stuipd and do nothing but be fat
nothing
not any of his own his wife had some tho
was a 22 and 24 pres. of the us.
Not at all, In fact, Cleveland paid a man to take his place when he was drafted during the Civil war, which was perfectly legal , but got his some negative press during his campaigns.
He married a woman nearly 30 years younger than himself and had 5 children, one of which died.
The first time Cleveland ran for re-election ( 1888) the race was very close- Cleveland actually won the popular vote. Harrison was in favor of larger protective tariffs than Cleveland would support. Cleveland vetoed some bills that would have paid out bonuses to veterans for no good reason. Four years later, the people decided that Cleveland was better for them than Harrison and returned him to office.
No. Grover Cleveland's picture was on the $1,000 bill. These bills were last printed in 1945 and distribution was discontinued in 1969. There is not and never has been an official US $1M bill. Some novelty companies make and sell joke bills that claim to be worth $1M but they're just that - jokes.
Grover Cleveland was the President in 1894 when the Secret Service began to provide some protection.
The U.S. has never minted a coin in that denomination. Grover Cleveland appears on the modern small dollar coin, which is worth one dollar. If it's something that actually says $100 million, then it's a novelty of some kind, probably worth about 4 cents.
Grover Cleveland and Warren Harding both were accused of fathering children outside of marriage. Cleveland was not married at the time, and there was a serious question about whether the child was his, but he agreed to pay child support. Harding was married at the time and there was not much question that he was having an affair. His supporters found the money to buy off the mother.
Old US $1000 bills carried a portrait of President Grover Cleveland. Some privately-issued bills may have had a woman's portrait, though.
No, he is not. The illegitimate son fathered by Grover Cleveland was born circa 1874, and kept out of public view, although Cleveland's political enemies tried to make a campaign issue out of it, as the above cartoon shows. The child's birth name was Oscar Folsom Cleveland. His birth mother (Maria Halpin) gave him up for adoption, and he never called much attention to himself over the years. Some historians believe he changed his name to James E. King Jr. and became a doctor. If that is accurate, he died in Buffalo NY in 1947.