Grover Cleveland was only Democrat to be elected president between the Civil War and World War I. He was born in Caldwell, New Jersey in 1837. He was the fifth of nine children. He abandoned his plans to go to college when his father died, instead pursuing a legal career. His wealthy uncle in Buffalo used his connections to get Grover an apprenticeship at one of Buffalo's top law firms.
At 22, he was admitted into the New York bar. He was a successful trial lawyer. After a few years, he took a 40 percent pay cut to become assistant district attorney because it was political in character. He once argued four major cases concurrently and won all four. He often stayed up til 3 preparing for a case and woke up at 8. He once went 36 hours without sleep.
He got out of being drafted during the Civil War by hiring a substitute to take his place. He got elected sheriff of Erie County. Cleveland executed murderers himself instead of hiring a hangman because he didn't think it was right to make another man do something so abhorrent. He also hung up sheets to prevent spectators from watching the executions.
Two of his brothers were lost at sea during this time. After three years as sheriff, he didn't seek reelection but went back to law, forming his own firm. He didn't court any women, preferring the occasional dalliance. When his sister asked when he'd get married, he said, "I'm only waiting for my wife to grow up." She thought he was joking. He wasn't.
Democrats selected Cleveland to run for mayor since he had a reputation for honesty and reform-minded Republicans supported him since the Republican nominee was corrupt. Once elected, he set about cleaning the city... literally. 36 percent of deaths were due to diseases caused by poor conditions. He improved the sewer system, brought in clean water, and vetoed a bill awarding the contract for an exorbitant sum. He saved the city hundreds of thousands of dollars by insisting upon competitive contracts. He checked invoices personally to ensure there was no fraud or waste.
When Cleveland became governor, he refused to give jobs to his friends or the people who helped him get elected, instead appointing people qualified for the jobs. He examined the facts pertaining to every bill thoroughly and vetoed any bill he concluded didn't benefit the public. He vetoed bills despite the fact his friends would benefit from them. He reviewed the details of hundreds of appeals for clemency personally. He'd arrive at his office at 9 and work til 5, although he'd often return to the office and work from 8:30 to midnight.
Theodore Roosevelt, a Republican up-and-comer in the state legislature, admired and respected Cleveland. They worked together to pass a civil service reform bill. However, they also clashed. Once a reporter witnessed Roosevelt lose it and have a temper tantrum over Cleveland vetoing some of his bills. Cleveland explained the bills had a good intent but contradicted themselves and needed to be cleaned up. Roosevelt insited the bills be passed because of the principle of the thing. Cleveland roared that he would veto the bills and slammed his fist on the desk with such force Roosevelt fell backwards into a chair.
The Mugwumps, a group of Republicans who didn't support the official Republican nominee, threw their support behind Cleveland for president even though he was a Democrat. While the Tammany Democrats opposed Cleveland and joined forces with mainstream Republicans to stop him.
When he learned he got the Democratic nomination for president, he said, "By Jove, that is something, isnt it?"
The presidential campaign of 1884 was one of the dirtiest in American history with both candidates being dragged through the mud. Republicans claimed Cleveland would bring back slavery and cut veteran benefits. They claimed he was a womanizer, which actually had a kernel of truth to it.
Worse, his friend Henry Ward Beecher tried to defend him by saying if every men who committed adultery voted for Cleveland, he'd win by a landslide. "I am afraid that I shall have occasion to pray to be delivered from my friends!" Cleveland remarked.
Cleveland believed the best way to handle the scandal was to tell the truth about it. He believed that if he owned up to the facts, the unpleasantness would be quickly forgotten. And it was.
He admitted to having an affair with Maria Halpin. She did have a child, although it's unknown who the father was since she named the child after both Cleveland and his law partner. She took to drinking and a judge sent her to a mental institution for a short time while the child was placed in an orphanage which Cleveland paid for. He also gave Maria money to start a dress salon. Cleveland then arranged for the boy to be adopted. The Republicans tried to keep the story alive in cartoons with captions such as "Ma! Ma! Where's my Pa?"
Cleveland refused to go low in return. When given records that indicated Blaine's wife was pregnant before their marriage, he burned them in the fireplace.
Blaine was expected to win. However, seven days before the election, a clergyman speaking for Blaine made an anti-Catholic statement, losing half a million votes. Blaine also lost the working class vote by having a lavish "prosperity dinner" with two hundred of the richest men in the country.
Many newspapers announced Blaine had won. There were rumors of delayed and falsified returns. Cleveland supporters threatened to riot if their man wasn't declared winner. Cleveland himself suspected fraud and later said if denied the presidency, "I should have felt it my duty to take my seat anyhow." He barely won New York by a thousand votes. From the time he was elected mayor of Buffalo, to Governor of New York to President was less than four years. A truly meteoric rise.
The spoils system was responsible for massive corruption throughout the country. Over half the federal employees in some departments were redundant in order to give jobs to political supporters. Cleveland made it clear he intended to enforced the civil service reform measures passed by the previous administration. He even let some Republican supporters keep their current jobs if he found them competent, making him many enemies in his own party.
Days before Cleveland took office, President Arthur had opened up nearly half a million acres of Winnebago and Crow Creek lands to white settlers. After hearing about atrocities suffered by the natives, Cleveland rescinded this order and ordered white settlers to evacuate. However, white people kept encroaching upon native land and conflict was inevitable. In response to an Apache attack led by Geronimo, Cleveland waged a small scale war to prevent a greater war.
Railroads and other corporations drove rightful homesteaders from their land. His agents discovered thousands of cases of fraudulent homestead claims and put a stop to it, recovering millions of dollars.
Before his marriage, his sister Rose served as First Lady. She taught at a girl's school and published essays on female writers. Rose never married, but ended up settling in Italy with a wealthy widow with whom she was buried side by side.
Frances Clara Folsom Cleveland was the youngest First Lady. She became a celebrity. Women would style their hair "à la Cleveland" and pose like her in photos. During a slow news day, reporters made up a story that Frances had stopped wearing a bustle and bustles immediately went out of fashion. Companies put her picture on products such as soap, perfume, liver pills, candy, ashtrays, and underwear without permission. Cleveland was furious. He asked congress to pass a bill forbidding it, but it failed to pass. She helped the causes of female education and female employment regardless of race. She helped found the New Jersey College for Women. She knew French, German, and Latin. She was proficient at the new art of photography and was a talented pianist.
Cleveland first met his future-wife when she was born. He was 27 at the time. She was the daughter of his law partner. He bought her first baby carriage and bounced her on his knee. He called her "Frank" and she called him Uncle Cleve. When she was ten, her father died in a carriage accident. Cleveland was named her legal guardian and took responsibility for her and her mother, although they moved and he didn't see much of them.
They corresponded while she was at college. He visited her when he could. He began to secretly court her his second year as governor. He sent flowers (and once a puppy) to her dorm room. She was with him when he learned of his presidential nomination. A friend unknowingly remarked that "If one of you young fellows doesn't take an interest in that pretty Miss Folsom the governor (Cleveland) is likely to walk off with her himself!" He didn't know his joke would turn out to be true.
Cleveland proposed to her by letter in the summer of 1885 when she and her mother were about to leave for a nine-month trip to Europe. The engagement was kept secret, although an affectionate cable he sent to their departing ship leaked to the press. It was assumed he was marrying her mother. "I don't see why the papers keep marrying me to old ladies," he told a friend. "I wonder why they don't say I am engaged to marry her daughter!"
When she returned, they got married in the White House in a small ceremony. He was 49 and she was 22. John Philip Sousa led the Marine Band in playing the Mendelssohn Wedding March.
In 1886, there were twice as many strikes as any previous year. Cleveland was sympathetic to working men and urged management to compromise with them. The Missouri Pacific Railroad Strike affected six thousand miles of railroad. Perishable goods rotted along the tracks. The cost of provisions when through the roof. Many mills and factories were forced to shut down. Fights broke out between strikers and law enforcement. Several men died. The strike eventually ended with less than 20 percent of strikers keeping their jobs.
To get labor votes, Congress passed legislation calling for arbitration of railroad disputes, legalized trade unions, and prohibited the importation of contract labor. Cleveland wanted them to go further, but signed these laws as being the best he could get.
In Chicago, a fight between police and strikers turned into the Haymarket Riot of 1886 when an anarchist's bomb escalated the situation and police began firing into the unarmed crowd. Eight men were found guilty by a biased judge and jury with four being sentenced to death and one killing himself by exploding a bomb in his mouth.
There was fraud in the Veterans Bureau. Soldiers who hadn't been injured in the Civil War claimed to have injuries. People injured after the war claimed their injuries were war-related. Financially well off people claimed to be dependent relatives. Remarried widows claimed to still be single. Some collected checks for legitimate pensioners long dead. By the time Cleveland took office, there was a 500 percent increase in pension spending compared to twenty years ago when it should have decreased during this time.
To get around the Pension Bureau, fraudulent claims were taken directly to Congress which didn't dare reject any for fear of being labeled unpatriotic. Cleveland would research these claims even though there were thousands of them. He approved the ones that had merit and vetoed the rest. He was portrayed as being an unpatriotic draft-dodger, and many of the claims got passed during the next administration, but he did slow the fraud down.
Canada started arresting American fisherman and confiscated their boats after they illegally fished in Canadian waters. Cleveland wanted to negotiate a treaty, but the Senate blocked this. The Senate called for retaliation in the form of selectively blocking trade with Canada to benefit the New England fishing industry, but Cleveland called for all Canadian trade to be blocked which he knew they weren't willing to do, so they backed down.
When running for reelection, he won more popular votes than Benjamin Harrison, but lost the electoral vote.
Germany tried to annex the island nation of Samoa by secretly distributing arms and instigating a pro-German uprising led by a puppet ruler and forcing the rightful king into exile. Cleveland sent a flotilla of warships to protect Samoa's sovereignty.
War seemed inevitable when Harrison took office, but a hurricane destroyed both German and American flotillas before fighting could break out.
When the Clevelands left the White House, Frances told the butler to keep everything in good shape for they'd be back in four years.
After leaving the presidency, Cleveland joined a prestigious New York law firm and spent a lot of time fishing and hunting with his favorite rifle which he named Death and Destruction. In 1891, Cleveland's first child, Ruth, was born. A candy bar, still popular today, was named Baby Ruth in her honor.
Cleveland won reelection in a landslide, partly because Harrison made the unpopular decision to send in federal troops to break strikes. While the Clevelands had been away, the Harrisons had installed electricity in the White House and added some bathrooms. The single telephone had been replaced by a switchboard and an operator. Rats were still a problem, though. When Baby Ruth played outside, tourists would sneak up and hug her, causing her mother to order the gates locked. Since fashion of the day allowed a pregnant woman to hide her condition, it was a surprise to the nation when Esther was born, the first child born to a President while in the White House.
During the 1800s, colonists introduced diseases to Hawaii which reduced the native population by 80 percent. Second generation American missionaries took over the Hawaiian legislature and judiciary and passed laws disenfranchising most of the natives while allowing Americans living in Hawaii to vote. Shortly before Cleveland began his second term, the American military invaded Hawaii, a friendly sovereign nation, deposing the Queen and setting up a provisional government. Harrision tried to rush annexation, but Congress wanted to wait to see what Cleveland would do.
Cleveland wanted to annex Hawaii, but not by force. However, the provisional government refused to leave and he didn't want to expel them by force either. So he did nothing, leaving it to the next president to annex.
As the nation transitioned from an agricultural economy to an industrial one, many farmers across the nation were foreclosed upon resulting in economic deflation. Unregulated big companies crushed small businesses and slashed worker wages. Mortgage lenders charged high interest rates, railroads charged high shipping fees, manufacturers charged a lot for machinery. Crops sold for less money. Economic problems in England and Australia impacted America, leading to the Panic of 1893, the worst depression in 20 years. Railroads shut down and there was a 15 percent unemployment rate. Some people starved to death.
The reckless spending of the Harrison administration didn't help, nor did the fact The Sherman Silver Purchase Act required the government to exchange less valuable silver for more valuable gold, especially once the price of silver had dramatically fallen. Cleveland called Congress into a special session to repeal the Sherman Act.
During this time, Cleveland discovered he had mouth cancer on his "cigar-chewing" side. News of the president's illness could further exacerbate the financial crisis, so he kept it secret. The surgery took place at sea aboard a friend's yacht. A sizable portion of his jaw was removed.
Cleveland also wanted to lower tariffs, but he made so many enemies in the Senate by forcing the repeal of the Silver Act, that he couldn't lower them as much as he wanted to. They did get lowered a bit, though.
George Pullman, maker of sleeping and parlour cars for the nation's railroads, provided a village for his four thousand employees to live in, but he charged rent that was 25 percent higher than other Chicago neighborhoods, and charged ten percent higher for public water and gas. He lowered salaries 25 percent while the company was making millions of dollars. When employees asked for either lower rent or higher wages, he fired them. This led to The Chicago Pullman Strike of 1894.
Tens of thousands of men walked out around the country. Freight traffic into and out of the West was stopped. The strikers held peaceful protests which the newspapers mischaracterized as riots. Despite the objections of the governor of Illinois and mayor of Chicago, a false report convinced Cleveland to send in the military. He proclaimed martial law in Chicago and authorized putting the strikers in jail without trial. This caused violence to break out. Hundreds were wounded. Twelve were killed.
The nation faced a financial crisis as the Treasury was running out of gold. Cleveland struck a deal with New York bankers to replenish the gold supply and prevent financial ruin, although he faced criticism from those who pointed out how much the bankers profited from this.
There was a boundary dispute between Venezuela and British Guiana, especially after gold was discovered in the region. Cleveland offered to be a mediator in the dispute, but Britain refused. The United States considered South America to be off-limits to European powers. If war broke out between England and Venezuela, Congress would involve the US in the conflict. Cleveland gave a saber-rattling speech before Congress, calling for force to defend Venezuela's boundary against England. Many newspapers called for war. England finally agreed to arbitration and the threat of war passed.
Cuba wanted independence from Spain and Congress wanted to force Cleveland to recognize Cuba diplomatically, which would have amounted to declaring war on Spain. He declined. He wanted to achieve a peaceable solution, but didn't have time in the last days of his presidency to do anything. During his last days in office, he refused to sign a bill which would prevent illiterate immigrants from entering America.
Cleveland ended his presidency hated by many in his own party. He moved to Princeton for retirement where he befriended Woodrow Wilson. He also gave lectures at Princeton and was made a trustee. In 1903, at the age of 66, his last child, Francis Grover was born. Six months later, his firstborn child Ruth died suddenly at the age of 12 from diphtheria.
Although despised when he left the presidency, by 1907 he was so popular his seventieth birthday was an informal day of national celebration. He received hundreds of congratulatory letters and telegrams.