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Grover Cleveland
22nd and 24th President of the United States
(March 4, 1885 to March 3, 1889 and March 4, 1893 to March 3, 1897)
Nickname: None listed.
(Derogatory nicknames for presidents are not listed.)
Born: March 18, 1837, in Caldwell, New Jersey
Died: June 24, 1908, in Princeton, New Jersey |
Father: Richard Falley Cleveland
Mother: Anne Neal Cleveland
Married: Frances Folsom (1864-1947), on June 2, 1886
Children: Ruth Cleveland (1891-1904); Esther Cleveland (1893-1980); Marion Cleveland (1895-1977); Richard Folsom Cleveland (1897-1974); Francis Grover Cleveland (1903-1995)
Religion: Presbyterian
Education: No formal education
Occupation: Lawyer
Political Party: Democrat
Other Government Positions:
- Sheriff of Erie County, NY, 1870-73
- Mayor of Buffalo, NY, 1882
- Governor of New York, 1883-85
Presidential Salary: $50,000/year
Presidential Election Results:
| Year |
|
Popular Votes |
Electoral Votes |
| 1884 |
Grover Cleveland |
4,879,507 |
219 |
|
James G. Blaine |
4,850,293 |
182 |
| 1888 |
Benjamin Harrison |
5,447,129 |
233 |
|
Grover Cleveland |
5,537,857 |
168 |
| 1892 |
Grover Cleveland |
5,555,426 |
277 |
|
Benjamin Harrison |
5,182,690 |
145 |
|
James B. Weaver |
1,029,846 |
22 |
Vice President: Thomas A. Hendricks (1885-89); Adlai E. Stevenson (1893-97)
Cabinet:
- Secretary of State
- Thomas F. Bayard (1885-89)
- Walter Q. Gresham (1893-95)
- Richard Olney (1895-97)
- Secretary of the Treasury
- Daniel Manning (1885-87)
- Charles S. Fairchild (1887-89)
- John G. Carlisle (1893-97)
- Secretary of War
- William C. Endicott (1885-89)
- Daniel S. Lamont (1893-97)
- Attorney General
- Augustus H. Garland (1885-89)
- Richard Olney (1893-95)
- Judson Harmon (1895-97)
- Postmaster General
- William F. Vilas (1885-88)
- Donald M. Dickinson (1888-89)
- Wilson S. Bissell (1893-95)
- William L. Wilson (1895-97)
- Secretary of the Navy
- William C. Whitney (1885-89)
- Hilary A. Herbert (1893-97)
- Secretary of the Interior
- Lucius Q. C. Lamar (1885-88)
- William F. Vilas (1888-89)
- Hoke Smith (1893-96)
- David R. Francis (1896-97)
- Secretary of Agriculture
- Norman J. Colman (1889)
- Julius Sterling Morton (1893-97)
Notable Events:
Internet Biographies:
- Grover Cleveland -- from The Presidents of the United States of America
- Compiled by the White House.
- Grover Cleveland -- from The American Presidency
- Grolier Online has created this resource from its collection of print articles in Encyclopedia Americana. Contains a full biography, written by Vincent P. De Santis of the University of Notre Dame, along with suggestions for further reading.
- Grover Cleveland -- from The American President
- From the Miller Center of Public Affairs at the University of Virginia, in addition to information on the Presidents themselves, they have first lady and cabinet member biographies, listings of presidential staff and advisers, and timelines detailing significant events in the lives of each administration.
- Grover Cleveland's Obituary -- from Dead Presidents
- The text from page 1 of The New York Times, June 25, 1908. Placed on the web by Manus Hand.
Historical Documents:
- First Inaugural Address (1885)
- Second Inaugural Address (1893)
- President Cleveland's Message on Relations with the Nation of Hawaii (1893)
- Ex-President Grover Cleveland on the Philippine Problem (1904)
Media Resources:
- Audio
- First minute of his 1892 campaign speech. Begins with the music "Hail to the Chief" (1:21)
- RealAudio | MP3 (636K)
- From the Vincent Voice Library at Michigan State University under the leadership of Dr. Maurice Crane.
Other Internet Resources:
- None
Points of Interest:
- He was born Stephen Grover Cleveland.
- Cleveland is the only president to serve two nonconsecutive terms.
- Cleveland discovered a cancerous growth on the roof of his mouth in the middle of the economic crisis of 1893. So that his illness would not cause a greater panic, he and several doctors snuck aboard a pleasure boat and removed the growth. The public thought he was on a fishing trip and never knew the truth until 1917.
- While sheriff of Erie County, New York, Cleveland was also the public executioner and personally hanged two murderers.
- Cleveland was the first executive movie star. In 1895, Alexander Black came to Washington and asked Cleveland to appear in "A Capital Courtship", his photoplay. He agreed to be filmed while signing a bill into law. "A Capital Courtship" was a big hit on the Lyceum Circuit.
- Since Cleveland was the sole supporter of his family during the Civil War, he paid a substitute to take his place.
- Cleveland answered the White House phone, personally.
- Cleveland vetoed 414 bills in his first term, more than double the 204 vetoes cast by all previous presidents. Cleveland used his veto powers 584 times during his two terms. This is the highest total of any president except
Franklin D. Roosevelt, who served three terms.
- "Death and Destruction" was the name that Grover Cleveland gave to his favorite hunting rifle.
- He was the only president married in the White House.
- According to the Curtiss Candy Company (and now Nestle ®), the Baby Ruth candy bar was named after Cleveland's baby daughter, Ruth. Snopes.com, the Urban Legends Reference Pages, argues that this is false and that the candy bar was named after famous baseball player Babe Ruth.
- The only president's child born in the White House was Cleveland's daughter Esther.
First Term
Previous President: Chester Alan Arthur | Next President: Benjamin Harrison
Second Term
Previous President: Benjamin Harrison | Next President: William McKinley
Last Updated January 24, 2007
©1996-2007. Robert S. Summers. All rights reserved.
Updated on 15 Apr 2008
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