A Secret Life: The Lies and Scandals of President Grover Cleveland

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A Secret Life: The Lies and Scandals of President Grover Cleveland Page 41

by Charles Lachman


  348. “The place is full of rumors about Mrs. Cleveland,” Dunlap, 52, quoting Sir Cecil Spring-Rice.

  349. “Called her wicked names and finally slapped her face,” Chicago Tribune, 7 December 1888.

  350. “I can only say in answer to your letter.” New York Times, 8 June 1888.

  350. His “tongue is considerably longer than his judgment,” ibid., 10 June 1888.

  350. “Of course, I don’t believe these rumors,” ibid., 8 June 1888.

  351. “It was mainly because the other party had the most votes,” Lamont scrapbook, Nevins Collection, Box 104.

  351. “I am sorry for the president,” Dunlop, 58.

  352. “Mrs. Cleveland looks up to her husband,” Atlanta Constitution, 25 November 1888, quoted by Dunlap, 58.

  352. “The place I hate above all others,” GC to William Vilas, 20 May 1888, Nevins, Letters, 207.

  352. “Jungle of gifts,” Nevins, 448.

  353. “We’re coming back just four years from today,” Crook, 197–198.

  353. “Things are getting into a pretty tough condition,” GC to Vilas, 20 May 1888, Nevins, Letters, 207.

  353. “Why hasn’t Lena sent my corsets,” Dunlap, 63.

  355. Moot rose and presented his opening statement: Four Great Lawyers of Our Time, amemoir privately published by the Buffalo law firm Kenefick, Cook, Mitchel, Bass and Letchworth, undated, 10.

  355–379. Author’s note: No official transcript of the Ball vs. New York Evening Post Corporation trial exists. The Q and A and opening and closing arguments in chapter 18 are taken from a variety of sources, primarily contemporary newspaper accounts published in Buffalo in February 1890 and court papers on file at the New York State Appellate Division Law Library in Rochester.

  357. “Remote deity,” Allan Nevins, The Evening Post: A Century of Journalism (New York: Boni and Liveright, 1922), 529. Nevins once worked at the Evening Post.

  357. “Smacked of sensationalism,” New York Times, 22 May 1902.

  358. Locke was also a voracious reader: Four Great Lawyers of Our Time, 3–5.

  363. “It was torture,” Buffalo Times, 5 February 1890.

  367. Once he had treated the son of a tribal chief. Buffalo News, 14 August 1910.

  371. A pallid George Ball sat at the plaintiff’s table. Buffalo Times, 6 February, 1890.

  373. “In this an attack had been made not only upon the living but upon the dead.” Author’s note: The quote is from the Buffalo Commercial Advertiser account of the trial (6 February 1890.) Although there are no quotation marks, it appears to be directly taken from John Milburn’s closing arguments.

  375. “If it pleases Your Honor we desire to reopen our side of the case,” Buffalo Times, 7 February 1890.

  378. “Without the slightest leaning one way or the other,” Buffalo Commercial Advertiser, 7 February 1890.

  378. No one expected a victory for Ball. Buffalo Courier, 8 February 1890.

  379. It had taken six more ballots before reaching a unanimous verdict: Buffalo Courier, 8 February 1890.

  19. KEEPER OF THE FLAME

  381. Two days before she passed away, Maria wrote out a will. New Rochelle Pioneer, 22 February 1902.

  381. “Do not let the funeral be too public,” Utica Journal, 10 February 1902.

  382. Then a hearse carried the coffin down a rain-slicked country road. Records from the Davis Funeral Home, New Rochelle, New York, courtesy Rick Moody of New Rochelle.

  382. “The well-known stove and furnace dealer,” New Rochelle Press, 8 February 1902. Also see New Rochelle Pioneer, same date.

  383. “But for this woman [Mrs. Baker],” Brooklyn Eagle, 9 February 1902.

  383. On October 30, 1909, Byrne was sitting. Buffalo Courier, 1 November 1909; death of Byrne from Courier, 31 October 1909.

  383. He was boarding a trolley in front of the Iroquois Hotel. Buffalo News, 14 August 1910; 16 August 1910. Bull was eighty-three when he died. Some accounts put his age at eighty-five.

  384. The 342-acre site opened on May 1, 1901. Thomas E. Leary and Elizabeth Sholes, Buffalo’s Pan-American Exposition (Charleston, South Carolina, Arcadia Publishing, 1998), 110, 117.

  385. The hotel was the social hub of the new town: Ron Jamro and Gerald L. Lanterman, The Founding of Naples (Naples, Florida, The Collier County Museum, 1985), 41.

  386. “Ah, Eve, Eve, surely you cannot realize what you are to me,” Rose Cleveland (RC) to Evangeline Marrs Simpson Whipple (EMSW), postmarked 23 April 1890, Whipple/Scandrett Family Papers, Minnesota Historical Society (MHS), P789, Box 2, File 1890. Author’s note: An account of the relationship between Rose and Evangeline can also found in Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers: A History of Lesbian Life in Twentieth-Century America by Lillian Faderman (New York: Penguin, 1992), 32–33.

  386. “Oh, darling, come to me this night, my Clevy, my Viking,” RC to EMSW, 22 April 1890, ibid.

  386. “Oh, Eve, Eve, this love is life itself—or death,” RC to EMSW, 5 May 1890, ibid.

  387. “I shall go to bed, my Eve,” RC to EMSW, 6 May 1890, ibid.

  387. “Ah, my Cleopatra,” Rose wrote that day. RC to EMSW, 9 May 1890, ibid.

  387. “Yes, darling, I will be with you, surely,” ibid.

  389. “I wish for your happiness and good,” Rose wrote. Postmarked 25 April, apparently in the year 1893. P789, Box 3, ibid.

  389. “The bishop is in vigorous health. New York Times, 24 October 1896.

  391. Seeking a consultation on a “very important matter.” William Williams Keen, The Surgical Operations on President Cleveland in 1893 (Philadelphia: George W. Jacobs and Co., 1917), 30–31.

  393. “If you hit a rock, hit it good and hard,” Nevins, 530.

  395. Lamont snapped that it was a “preposterous” question: H. W. Brands, The Reckless Decade: America in the 1890s (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995), 83. Author’s note: Brands’s book offers an excellent account of the Panic of 1893.

  395. Dr. Bryant found something disturbing. Keen, 36–44.

  396. “My God, Olney, they nearly killed me!” Nevins, 532.

  397. Erdmann later said he “did more lying,” Nevins, quoting Erdmann, 533.

  398. “Mr. Cleveland had suffered so much at the hands,” Philadelphia Times, 31 August 1893.

  399. Sensible and responsible women “do not want to vote,” Ladies Home Journal, October 1905, 7–8.

  399. Baby Ruth as she came to be called. Author’s note: The Baby Ruth candy bar made its first appearance some seventeen years after the child’s death. Although the Curtiss Candy Company maintained it was named in honor of Ruth Cleveland, some have speculated that it was a ruse to avoid paying royalties to the baseball great Babe Ruth.

  402. “Where she knew she could find him,” Dunlap, 129; Jean S. Davis, A Rambling Memoir of Mrs. Grover Cleveland and Some Related History, unpublished manuscript, Louis Jefferson Long Library, Wells College, 23.

  402. “Unpleasant shock when I read the headlines reporting the engagement,” Davis, 24.

  403. “The Cleveland pew was third in front of ours,” ibid.

  403. He was fond of crocheting. Dunlap, 133.

  404. “That of a man who needed to go to Florida for his health,” New York Times, 11 February 1913; also noted by Davis, 26.

  405. “I went over his book before it was published,” Frances Cleveland Preston to William Gorham Rice, 13 August 1918, Rice Papers, Folder 8, Manuscripts and Special Collections, New York State Library.

  405. She recruited the historian for the presidency of Wells. Jane M. Dieckmann, Wells College: A History (Aurora, New York Wells College Press, 1995), 101.

  405. “When his friend, Charles W. Goodyear, reported that a particularly violent,” McElroy, 91–92.

  406. “Who threw open his papers and gave invaluable advice,” Nevins, v.

  407. “A weaker or more callous man in his place,” Nevins’s account of the Halpin scandal can be found in his Cleveland biography, 162–169.

  407. A
“true picture—of the man and his meaning,” Frances Cleveland Preston to Rice, 23 December 1932, Rice Papers, Folder 9.

  407. “It probably wasn’t Cleveland’s child,” New York Times, September 8, 2008.

  408. Author’s Note: If Nevins’s meticulous scholarship closed the door on divergent accounts of the Cleveland-Halpin story, it also opened a window, albeit a small one. He claims that in 1895, Maria Halpin made a crude attempt at blackmail in a letter she addressed to President Cleveland at the White House. She demanded money from Cleveland, Nevins says, and threatened to “publish facts in her possession” unless she was paid off. Nevins cites a date for this letter—September 9, 1895—which he says can be found in the collection of Grover Cleveland’s presidential papers in the Library of Congress. The Library of Congress has no record of such a letter. One can only presume that Frances Cleveland, or someone acting on her behalf, removed Maria Halpin’s letter before consigning the Cleveland Papers to the Library of Congress in 1923. One can also wonder whether it was the only item to have met that fate.

  408. In October 1946, an extraordinary spectacle. New York Times, 22 October 1946.

  409. “You did?” he asked. “Where?” Davis, 30.

  EPILOGUE

  411. King even set up a Dickens Room in his house. Buffalo Evening News obituary on King, 10 March 1947.

  411. Saimi Pratt worked as his cook. E-mail from Ronald Pratt to author, 28 July 2009.

  412. “I was a new bride and very nervous,” interview with Ruth Kahn Stouroff, 21 October 2008.

  412. “If anyone calls, just say I am improving,” Buffalo Evening News, 10 March 1947.

  412. A funeral procession took his coffin. Warren (Pennsylvania) Times Mirror, 10 March 1947.

  412. Pliny the Elder’s Naturalis Historia: This edition of Naturalis Historia was published in 1634 or 1639. The nameplate indicates it was a Christmas gift to King from Beulah Hood. John Edens, University of Buffalo Libraries, SUNY. Via e-mail, 27 July 2009.

  413. To his former laundress he left $500. Buffalo Evening News, 28 May 1947. The laundress was Marie Bazinski; the six-year-old boy was James Millard Riley.

  INDEX

  Abbott, Dr. Lyman

  Albany Argus

  Allen, Cleveland

  Allen, Gertrude

  Allen, Lewis

  Allen, Margaret

  Apgar, Edgar

  Arthur, Chester A.

  Avery, Rev. Charles

  Bacon, Charles E.

  Bacon, Cleveland

  Baker, Maria (Mrs. William)

  Ball, Rev. George H. (see also Ball vs. New York Evening Post)

  Ball vs. New York Evening Post

  Banks, Charles

  Baptist Union

  Barnum, P. T.

  Bass, Cleveland & Bissell

  Bass, Lyman K.

  Beard, Frank

  Beaver Island Club (“Jolly Reefers”)

  Beebe, Milton E.

  Beecher, Eunice

  Beecher, Henry Ward

  Beniski, George

  Bigelow, Allen

  Bissell, Wilson S.

  Billy Dranger’s Saloon

  Blaine, Harriet

  Blaine, James G.

  Boston Globe

  Boston Herald

  Boston Journal

  Boscobel

  Bowen, Dennis

  Box, Henry

  Bragg, Edward S.

  Brooklyn Eagle

  Brown, Sister Rosaline

  Bryant, Dr. Joseph

  Buchanan, James

  Buffalo

  cholera epidemic

  City Council

  Fourth of July celebrations

  Mansion Row (Delaware Ave.)

  tensions in

  Buffalo Orphan Asylum

  Buffalo Commercial Advertiser

  Buffalo Courier

  Buffalo Evening News

  Buffalo Evening Telegraph

  Buffalo Express

  Buffalo Times

  Bull, Dr. Alexander

  Burchard, Rev. Samuel D.

  Burrows, Roswell L.

  Butler, Gen. Benjamin

  Butler, Ed

  Byrne, John

  Canal Street

  Chicago Advance

  Chicago Tribune

  Christian Union

  Cleaveland, Moses

  Cleveland, Ann (mother of Grover)

  Cleveland, “Baby Ruth”

  Cleveland, Cecil

  Cleveland, Frances (see Frances Folsom)

  Cleveland, Grover,

  achievements of

  bachelor

  bound for Buffalo

  cancer

  children of

  Civil War

  courting Frances

  cuts back drinking

  death of

  Decoration Day parade

  dislike of reporters

  early years in Buffalo

  elected governor

  Election Day

  election of

  Evening Telegraph

  feelings about Buffalo

  final years

  George Ball

  as governor

  honeymoon

  inaugurated mayor

  inaugurated president (1884)

  inaugurated president (1893)

  law career

  leaves Holland Patent

  life in Buffalo

  life in White House

  Maria Halpin scandal

  as mayor

  New Year’s Eve 1855, 14 nominated for president

  Oscar Folsom’s death

  as president-elect

  presidential campaign (1884)

  proposes marriage

  relationship with Maria Halpin

  resides in governor’s mansion

  runs for governor

  runs for mayor

  runs for sheriff

  runs for president 1884

  as sheriff

  sentiments about abolitionists

  wedding of

  Cleveland, (Frederick) Lewis

  Cleveland, Mary (Mary Cleveland Hoyt)

  Cleveland, Oscar Folsom (see also James E. King Jr.)

  Cleveland Penny Press

  Cleveland, Rev. Richard (father of Grover)

  Cleveland, Rose Elizabeth (Libby),

  as author

  as editor of Literary Life

  as First Lady

  attends Grover’s wedding

  death of

  first impressions of

  in Holland Patent

  house fire

  influenza epidemic

  leaves White House

  meets Evangeline Simpson

  in Naples, Fla.

  lesbianism

  “Romanist peril,”

  Cleveland, Rev. William

  Cleveland siblings

  Cohan, George M.

  Collins, Gail

  Conkling, Roscoe

  Cornell, Gov. Alonzo

  Cresswell, Harry

  Cresswell, John

  Curtis, George

  Cymbeline

  Czolgosz, Leon

  Dana, Charles

  Daniels, Charles

  Davis, Henry Gassaway

  Davis, Jean S.

  Davis, Jennie

  Delaware Avenue (“Mansion Row”)

  Depew, Chauncey

  Dickens, Charles

  Dickinson, Anna

  Dorsheimer, William

  Douglas, Stephen A.

  Dow, Julie

  Edwards, John

  Eisenhower, Gen. Dwight David

  Elder, Abram, P. T.

  Election of 1884

  Erie Canal

  Erie County Jail

  Falvey, Mike

  Fargo, William G.

  Fifth Avenue Hotel

  Fillmore, Mary Abigail

  Fillmore, Millard

  Fillmore, Powers

  Flint & Kent

  Flint, William

  Flower, Roswell P.


  Folger, Charles J.

  Folsom, Benjamin

  Folsom, Emma

  Folsom, Frances (Mrs. Grover Cleveland)

  absent from 1884 inauguration

  birth of

  children of

  Cleveland visits

  courtship by Cleveland

  death of father

  Frankie Cleveland Clubs

  leaves White House

  marries Preston

  popularity of

  protecting Cleveland’s reputation

  reacts to Maria Halpin

  relationship with “Uncle Cleve”

  returns to U.S.

  shopping spree

  tensions with Emma

  tour of Europe

  visits White House

  wedding preparations of

  Wells College

  Folsom, Col. John

  Folsom, Oscar death of

  Fort Porter

  Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper

  Fullerton, James C.

  Gaffney, John

  Ganson, Alison B.

  Gilsey House

  Goetz, Louis

  Godkin, Edwin L.

  Godey’s Ladies Book

  Goodyear, Charles

  Gould, Jay

  Gorman, Sen. Arthur Pue

  Grace, William

  Grady, Thomas

  Grand Island

  Haight, Albert

  Halpin, Frederick (Maria’s father-in-law)

  Halpin, Frederick (Maria’s first husband)

  Halpin, Frederick (Maria’s son)

  Halpin, Maria (Hovenden)

  affidavit of

  Beecher speech about

  claims rape

  death of

  Horatio King

  kidnaps son

  life in Buffalo

  life in New Rochelle

  marries Seacord

  pregnancy of

  reappearance in Buffalo

  reunited with baby

  Harper, Fletcher

  Harrison, Benjamin

  Hasbrouck, Dr. Ferdinand

  Hastings, Anna Cleveland

  Hayes, Rutherford B.

  Hendricks, Eliza

  Hendricks, Thomas A.

  Hibbard, Daniel

  Hill, David

  Hodges, G. C.

  Hoffman House

  Hovenden, Robert

  Hubbell, E. S.

  Hudson, William C.

  Huguenots

  Hunt, Wallace

  Hunter, Rielle

  Huntington, Lawrence D.

  Indianapolis Sentinel

 

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