Grover Cleveland: Difference between revisions
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Born in a modest house in [[Caldwell, New Jersey]] on March 18, 1837, Stephen Grover Cleveland became the 22nd and 24th President of the United States — the | Born in a modest house in [[Caldwell, New Jersey]] on March 18, 1837, Stephen Grover Cleveland became the 22nd and 24th President of the United States — the first president in American history to serve two non-consecutive terms. He is also the only U.S. president both born and buried in New Jersey, a distinction that forever links the [[Garden State]] to one of its most consequential native sons. Rising from humble origins as the son of a Presbyterian minister, Cleveland built a political career defined by fiscal conservatism, anti-corruption crusading, and an uncompromising independence that earned him admirers and critics in equal measure. His ties to New Jersey span his entire life — from his birth in a church manse in Essex County to his retirement and death in [[Princeton, New Jersey|Princeton]], where he is interred at Princeton Cemetery. | ||
== Early Life and New Jersey Roots == | == Early Life and New Jersey Roots == | ||
Stephen Grover Cleveland was born on March 18, 1837, in Caldwell, New Jersey, to Ann (née Neal) and Richard Falley Cleveland. He was the fifth of nine children of Richard Falley Cleveland ( | Stephen Grover Cleveland was born on March 18, 1837, in Caldwell, New Jersey, to Ann (née Neal) and Richard Falley Cleveland. He was the fifth of nine children of Richard Falley Cleveland (1804–1853), a Presbyterian minister, and Ann Neal Cleveland (1806–1882). The family resided in the Presbyterian Church Manse on what is now Bloomfield Avenue — a home that served as the official residence for the pastor of the local [[First Presbyterian Church of Caldwell|First Presbyterian Church]]. | ||
He was named Stephen Grover to honor the first pastor of the church, though he would drop the "Stephen" entirely in adult life and go simply by Grover. Naomi Baldwin and Mary DeCamp Shippen served as midwives at his birth. | He was named Stephen Grover to honor the first pastor of the church, though he would drop the "Stephen" entirely in adult life and go simply by Grover. Naomi Baldwin and Mary DeCamp Shippen served as midwives at his birth. | ||
He was just four years old when his father | He was just four years old when his father relocated the family to upstate New York to serve another congregation. Grover was educated at Fayetteville Academy — a secondary school in Fayetteville, New York — and later at the Clinton Grammar School in Clinton, New York. He also undertook a mercantile apprenticeship as a young man. At 16, following the death of his father in 1853, Cleveland left school to help support his mother and younger siblings. Two years later, in 1855, he relocated to Buffalo, New York, to live with an uncle, who used his connections to set Cleveland up as a law clerk in a Buffalo law firm. Cleveland read law in that office and was admitted to the bar in 1859, beginning a legal career that would serve as his springboard into politics.<ref>{{cite web |title=Grover Cleveland |url=https://www.history.com/articles/grover-cleveland |work=History.com |date=2025-05-28 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
Although Cleveland spent the bulk of his formative and political years outside New Jersey, the state never let go of him. As a Democrat, Cleveland carried New Jersey in all three of his presidential campaigns, a testament to the regard his home state held for him even across decades of absence. | A point of occasional confusion is whether Cleveland was born in Caldwell or West Caldwell. At the time of his birth in 1837, the area was simply part of Caldwell Township; West Caldwell did not exist as a separate municipality until February 24, 1904, when it was incorporated as a borough from portions of Caldwell Township (then known as Fairfield Township). Cleveland's birthplace at 207 Bloomfield Avenue has always been within the boundaries of the borough of Caldwell, as it exists today. | ||
Although Cleveland spent the bulk of his formative and political years outside New Jersey, the state never let go of him. As a Democrat, Cleveland carried New Jersey in all three of his presidential campaigns — in 1884, 1888, and 1892 — a testament to the regard his home state held for him even across decades of absence.<ref>{{cite web |title=Grover Cleveland won New Jersey three times |url=https://newjerseyglobe.com/presidential-election/grover-cleveland-won-new-jersey-three-times-8/ |work=New Jersey Globe |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
== Political Rise and the Presidency == | == Political Rise and the Presidency == | ||
Cleveland's ascent in public life was rapid and built on a consistent refusal to yield to political pressure or patronage networks. He served as sheriff of Erie County, New York from 1871 to 1874, gaining a reputation for personal integrity in an era when graft was commonplace. In 1881, running as a Democrat, he was elected mayor of Buffalo, where he quickly built a reputation as a corruption fighter who vetoed wasteful city contracts and refused to play favorites with municipal appointments. Before the first year of his mayoral term was complete, his statewide reputation had grown sufficiently that he won election as Governor of New York in 1882. | |||
As governor, Cleveland was so opposed to unnecessary government spending that he vetoed eight bills sent up by the legislature in his first two months in office, including a bill that would have reduced elevated railway fares in New York City on the grounds that the measure was unconstitutional interference in a private contract. His willingness to defy both Tammany Hall Democrats and Republican machine politicians earned him national recognition as a reformer who put principle above party loyalty.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Life and Presidency of Grover Cleveland |url=https://www.whitehousehistory.org/the-life-and-presidency-of-grover-cleveland |work=White House Historical Association |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
In 1884, less than two years into his governorship, | In 1884, less than two years into his governorship, Cleveland won the Democratic presidential nomination and defeated Republican nominee James G. Blaine in a famously bitter campaign. The race was close enough that the outcome turned on New York State, and the famous last-minute slur by a Blaine supporter — calling the Democrats the party of "Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion" — is widely credited with costing Blaine critical Irish Catholic votes in New York. Cleveland won the presidency, becoming the first Democrat elected to that office since James Buchanan in 1856. He is also the only Democratic president to win election during the extended period of Republican domination of the White House that stretched from Abraham Lincoln's election in 1860 to the end of William Howard Taft's term in 1913.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Life and Presidency of Grover Cleveland |url=https://www.whitehousehistory.org/the-life-and-presidency-of-grover-cleveland |work=White House Historical Association |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
In his first term | In his first term, Cleveland cut the size of the federal government, vetoed bills he considered unnecessary spending, and signed the act creating the [[Interstate Commerce Commission]], which regulated interstate railroad rates — the first significant federal regulation of private industry. He pushed for the gold standard, which he viewed as anti-inflationary, and fought against the Civil War-era tariff, which he viewed as an unfair burden on ordinary consumers. In total, Cleveland vetoed 414 bills during his first term — more than twice the combined total of the 21 presidents who had served before him. The sheer volume of his vetoes earned him the nickname "The Veto President," a label that had previously been applied to Andrew Johnson.<ref>{{cite web |title=Grover Cleveland |url=https://www.history.com/articles/grover-cleveland |work=History.com |date=2025-05-28 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
Cleveland beat James Blaine in New Jersey in 1884 by a 50%–47% margin. He was defeated for a second consecutive term by Republican Benjamin Harrison in 1888, but even as the incumbent president lost the national Electoral College vote, he still carried New Jersey by a 50%–48% margin, demonstrating the durability of his support in his home state.<ref>{{cite web |title=Grover Cleveland won New Jersey three times |url=https://newjerseyglobe.com/presidential-election/grover-cleveland-won-new-jersey-three-times-8/ |work=New Jersey Globe |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> After his 1888 defeat, Cleveland returned to civilian life, resuming law practice in New York City. He regrouped politically and ran again in 1892, winning the rematch against Harrison. In the 1892 election, Cleveland won New Jersey by a 51%–46% margin on his way to recapturing the White House — making him the first, and for more than a century the only, president to serve two non-consecutive terms.<ref>{{cite web |title=Grover Cleveland won New Jersey three times |url=https://newjerseyglobe.com/presidential-election/grover-cleveland-won-new-jersey-three-times-8/ |work=New Jersey Globe |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
Cleveland's second term was dominated by economic crisis. The [[Panic of 1893]] — then the nation's worst and most prolonged depression to date — brought a cascade of bank failures, business bankruptcies, railroad collapses, and unemployment on a scale the country had not previously experienced. Cleveland responded by repealing the Sherman Silver Purchase Act, which he believed was destabilizing the currency, and by defending the gold standard against the inflationary free-silver movement championed by William Jennings Bryan and the populist wing of his own party. His handling of the depression, and in particular his use of federal troops to break the Pullman Strike of 1894 over the objections of Illinois Governor John Peter Altgeld, deeply divided the Democratic Party and effectively ended Cleveland's political influence within it by the time he left office in 1897.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Life and Presidency of Grover Cleveland |url=https://www.whitehousehistory.org/the-life-and-presidency-of-grover-cleveland |work=White House Historical Association |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
Cleveland | Cleveland's willingness to deploy federal troops domestically during the Pullman Strike set a precedent that has continued to be cited in contemporary debates about executive power. In 2025, President Donald Trump — who became the second president to serve non-consecutive terms, following Cleveland's precedent — invoked Cleveland's use of federal forces as historical justification for deploying National Guard troops to American cities, drawing renewed attention to Cleveland's presidential legacy more than a century after his death.<ref>{{cite web |title=Why one of Trump's favorite presidents sent troops to US cities |url=https://www.cnn.com/2025/10/25/politics/national-guard-troops-cities-grover-cleveland-explainer |work=CNN |date=2025-10-25 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
== Marriage, Family, and Personal Life == | == Marriage, Family, and Personal Life == | ||
Cleveland was 47 and a bachelor when he entered the White House in 1885. In June 1886, he married Frances Folsom, 28 years his junior and the daughter of his former law partner. To this day, Grover and Frances are the only presidential couple to have married in the White House. Frances, who was 21 at the time of the wedding, remains America's youngest First Lady. | Cleveland was 47 and a bachelor when he entered the White House in 1885. In June 1886, he married Frances Folsom, 28 years his junior and the daughter of his former law partner, Oscar Folsom. To this day, Grover and Frances are the only presidential couple to have married in the White House. Frances, who was 21 at the time of the wedding, remains America's youngest First Lady.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Life and Presidency of Grover Cleveland |url=https://www.whitehousehistory.org/the-life-and-presidency-of-grover-cleveland |work=White House Historical Association |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
The couple had five children: Ruth, Esther, Marion, Richard, and Francis. In 1904, Frances and Grover suffered the loss of their | The couple had five children: Ruth, Esther, Marion, Richard, and Francis. In 1904, Frances and Grover suffered the loss of their eldest child, Ruth, who died of diphtheria at the age of 12. Ruth is cited in some accounts as the namesake of the Baby Ruth candy bar, though the Curtiss Candy Company, which introduced the bar in 1921, never officially confirmed this origin story, and the claim remains historically contested. | ||
Cleveland, who was significantly overweight for most of his adult life, suffered from multiple health issues in his later years. In 1893, at the start of his second presidential term, he underwent a secret surgery aboard a yacht to remove a cancerous tumor from the roof of his mouth. The operation was kept hidden from the public for decades | Cleveland's 1884 presidential campaign was notable for another personal revelation: he publicly acknowledged fathering a child out of wedlock with Maria Halpin of Buffalo, choosing transparency over denial in what became one of the more remarkable admissions in presidential campaign history. Republican opponents chanted "Ma, Ma, where's my Pa?" — to which Cleveland's supporters responded after his victory, "Gone to the White House, Ha, Ha, Ha!" Cleveland's decision to own the scandal rather than deny it was widely credited with defusing it. | ||
Cleveland, who was significantly overweight for most of his adult life, suffered from multiple health issues in his later years. In 1893, at the start of his second presidential term, he underwent a secret surgery aboard a yacht on the East River to remove a cancerous tumor from the roof of his mouth. The operation, which involved the removal of a portion of his upper jaw and was performed under general anesthesia to prevent Cleveland from speaking, was kept hidden from the public for decades. Cleveland feared that news of his illness would worsen the already severe economic panic gripping the nation. The surgery was not publicly revealed until 1917, nine years after his death, when one of the participating physicians broke the story.<ref>{{cite web |title=Grover Cleveland |url=https://www.history.com/articles/grover-cleveland |work=History.com |date=2025-05-28 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
== Retirement in Princeton == | == Retirement in Princeton == | ||
After leaving the White House on March 4, 1897, Cleveland | After leaving the White House on March 4, 1897, Cleveland retired to Princeton, New Jersey, where he and his wife Frances had decided to settle even before the end of his second term. They purchased Westland Mansion, a substantial estate in Princeton that Mrs. Cleveland selected. Cleveland named the property "Westland" in honor of his close friend Andrew Fleming West, a classics professor and dean at Princeton University. Originally built in 1854 by a member of the prominent Stockton family, Westland resembles Morven, another Stockton family house in Princeton.<ref>{{cite web |title=Grover Cleveland Home, Westland, New Jersey |url=https://www.nps.gov/places/grover-cleveland-home-westland-new-jersey.htm |work=U.S. National Park Service |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
During his retirement years, Cleveland served as a trustee of Princeton University. He found himself in the middle of one of the university's most significant internal disputes, siding with Dean Andrew Fleming West's vision for a residential Graduate College against the competing plans of [[Woodrow Wilson]], then president of the university. Cleveland was among the majority of trustees who preferred West's proposal for the Graduate School's location and governance structure, a disagreement that contributed to Wilson's eventual departure from Princeton to pursue the New Jersey governorship — a stepping stone to his own presidency in 1913. Although Cleveland never attended college himself, he was a respected figure on campus, and Princeton students frequently marched to Westland Mansion to serenade him on his birthdays or to celebrate the outcome of football games. | |||
In 1897, some Democrats sought to draft Cleveland as their candidate for United States Senator from New Jersey. He declined, choosing the quieter life of a private citizen and occasional political commentator. He consulted periodically with President Theodore Roosevelt and was offered the chairmanship of a federal commission convened to address the Coal Strike of 1902, but was financially unable to accept the unpaid role.<ref>{{cite web |title=Grover Cleveland – New Jersey State Archives |url=https://www.nj.gov/state/archives/pclev001.html |work=New Jersey Department of State |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
In June 1908, the 71-year-old Cleveland suffered a | In June 1908, the 71-year-old Cleveland suffered a series of cardiac and renal failures and died at Westland Mansion on June 24, 1908. His reported last words were: "I have tried so hard to do right." His funeral was held two days later, and he was buried at [[Princeton Cemetery]], the historic burial ground of Nassau Presbyterian Church. His grave, flanked by those of his wife Frances and his daughter Ruth, is among the most visited of the many prominent gravesites at Princeton Cemetery. He remains the only president interred in the state of New Jersey.<ref>{{cite web |title=Grover Cleveland – New Jersey Hall of Fame |url=https://njhalloffame.org/hall-of-famers/2013-inductees/grover-cleveland/ |work=New Jersey Hall of Fame |date=2013 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
== The Grover Cleveland Birthplace State Historic Site == | == The Grover Cleveland Birthplace State Historic Site == | ||
The Grover Cleveland Birthplace State Historic Site, located at 207 Bloomfield Avenue in Caldwell, operates as the only museum in the United States dedicated to President Grover Cleveland. Originally called the Presbyterian Church | The Grover Cleveland Birthplace State Historic Site, located at 207 Bloomfield Avenue in Caldwell, operates as the only museum in the United States dedicated to President Grover Cleveland. Originally called the Presbyterian Church Manse, the structure was built in the early 1800s and is one of the two oldest surviving houses in Caldwell. Interest in preserving Cleveland's birthplace began during his tenure as governor of New York and grew steadily as his national political career advanced. The birthplace house first opened to the public in 1913.<ref>{{cite web |title=Grover Cleveland Birthplace |url=https://caldwell-nj.com/?SEC=EB8D8E00-9060-468C-B387-A112A72BAC3D |work=Borough of Caldwell, New Jersey | ||
Revision as of 02:56, 31 March 2026
Born in a modest house in Caldwell, New Jersey on March 18, 1837, Stephen Grover Cleveland became the 22nd and 24th President of the United States — the first president in American history to serve two non-consecutive terms. He is also the only U.S. president both born and buried in New Jersey, a distinction that forever links the Garden State to one of its most consequential native sons. Rising from humble origins as the son of a Presbyterian minister, Cleveland built a political career defined by fiscal conservatism, anti-corruption crusading, and an uncompromising independence that earned him admirers and critics in equal measure. His ties to New Jersey span his entire life — from his birth in a church manse in Essex County to his retirement and death in Princeton, where he is interred at Princeton Cemetery.
Early Life and New Jersey Roots
Stephen Grover Cleveland was born on March 18, 1837, in Caldwell, New Jersey, to Ann (née Neal) and Richard Falley Cleveland. He was the fifth of nine children of Richard Falley Cleveland (1804–1853), a Presbyterian minister, and Ann Neal Cleveland (1806–1882). The family resided in the Presbyterian Church Manse on what is now Bloomfield Avenue — a home that served as the official residence for the pastor of the local First Presbyterian Church.
He was named Stephen Grover to honor the first pastor of the church, though he would drop the "Stephen" entirely in adult life and go simply by Grover. Naomi Baldwin and Mary DeCamp Shippen served as midwives at his birth.
He was just four years old when his father relocated the family to upstate New York to serve another congregation. Grover was educated at Fayetteville Academy — a secondary school in Fayetteville, New York — and later at the Clinton Grammar School in Clinton, New York. He also undertook a mercantile apprenticeship as a young man. At 16, following the death of his father in 1853, Cleveland left school to help support his mother and younger siblings. Two years later, in 1855, he relocated to Buffalo, New York, to live with an uncle, who used his connections to set Cleveland up as a law clerk in a Buffalo law firm. Cleveland read law in that office and was admitted to the bar in 1859, beginning a legal career that would serve as his springboard into politics.[1]
A point of occasional confusion is whether Cleveland was born in Caldwell or West Caldwell. At the time of his birth in 1837, the area was simply part of Caldwell Township; West Caldwell did not exist as a separate municipality until February 24, 1904, when it was incorporated as a borough from portions of Caldwell Township (then known as Fairfield Township). Cleveland's birthplace at 207 Bloomfield Avenue has always been within the boundaries of the borough of Caldwell, as it exists today.
Although Cleveland spent the bulk of his formative and political years outside New Jersey, the state never let go of him. As a Democrat, Cleveland carried New Jersey in all three of his presidential campaigns — in 1884, 1888, and 1892 — a testament to the regard his home state held for him even across decades of absence.[2]
Political Rise and the Presidency
Cleveland's ascent in public life was rapid and built on a consistent refusal to yield to political pressure or patronage networks. He served as sheriff of Erie County, New York from 1871 to 1874, gaining a reputation for personal integrity in an era when graft was commonplace. In 1881, running as a Democrat, he was elected mayor of Buffalo, where he quickly built a reputation as a corruption fighter who vetoed wasteful city contracts and refused to play favorites with municipal appointments. Before the first year of his mayoral term was complete, his statewide reputation had grown sufficiently that he won election as Governor of New York in 1882.
As governor, Cleveland was so opposed to unnecessary government spending that he vetoed eight bills sent up by the legislature in his first two months in office, including a bill that would have reduced elevated railway fares in New York City on the grounds that the measure was unconstitutional interference in a private contract. His willingness to defy both Tammany Hall Democrats and Republican machine politicians earned him national recognition as a reformer who put principle above party loyalty.[3]
In 1884, less than two years into his governorship, Cleveland won the Democratic presidential nomination and defeated Republican nominee James G. Blaine in a famously bitter campaign. The race was close enough that the outcome turned on New York State, and the famous last-minute slur by a Blaine supporter — calling the Democrats the party of "Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion" — is widely credited with costing Blaine critical Irish Catholic votes in New York. Cleveland won the presidency, becoming the first Democrat elected to that office since James Buchanan in 1856. He is also the only Democratic president to win election during the extended period of Republican domination of the White House that stretched from Abraham Lincoln's election in 1860 to the end of William Howard Taft's term in 1913.[4]
In his first term, Cleveland cut the size of the federal government, vetoed bills he considered unnecessary spending, and signed the act creating the Interstate Commerce Commission, which regulated interstate railroad rates — the first significant federal regulation of private industry. He pushed for the gold standard, which he viewed as anti-inflationary, and fought against the Civil War-era tariff, which he viewed as an unfair burden on ordinary consumers. In total, Cleveland vetoed 414 bills during his first term — more than twice the combined total of the 21 presidents who had served before him. The sheer volume of his vetoes earned him the nickname "The Veto President," a label that had previously been applied to Andrew Johnson.[5]
Cleveland beat James Blaine in New Jersey in 1884 by a 50%–47% margin. He was defeated for a second consecutive term by Republican Benjamin Harrison in 1888, but even as the incumbent president lost the national Electoral College vote, he still carried New Jersey by a 50%–48% margin, demonstrating the durability of his support in his home state.[6] After his 1888 defeat, Cleveland returned to civilian life, resuming law practice in New York City. He regrouped politically and ran again in 1892, winning the rematch against Harrison. In the 1892 election, Cleveland won New Jersey by a 51%–46% margin on his way to recapturing the White House — making him the first, and for more than a century the only, president to serve two non-consecutive terms.[7]
Cleveland's second term was dominated by economic crisis. The Panic of 1893 — then the nation's worst and most prolonged depression to date — brought a cascade of bank failures, business bankruptcies, railroad collapses, and unemployment on a scale the country had not previously experienced. Cleveland responded by repealing the Sherman Silver Purchase Act, which he believed was destabilizing the currency, and by defending the gold standard against the inflationary free-silver movement championed by William Jennings Bryan and the populist wing of his own party. His handling of the depression, and in particular his use of federal troops to break the Pullman Strike of 1894 over the objections of Illinois Governor John Peter Altgeld, deeply divided the Democratic Party and effectively ended Cleveland's political influence within it by the time he left office in 1897.[8]
Cleveland's willingness to deploy federal troops domestically during the Pullman Strike set a precedent that has continued to be cited in contemporary debates about executive power. In 2025, President Donald Trump — who became the second president to serve non-consecutive terms, following Cleveland's precedent — invoked Cleveland's use of federal forces as historical justification for deploying National Guard troops to American cities, drawing renewed attention to Cleveland's presidential legacy more than a century after his death.[9]
Marriage, Family, and Personal Life
Cleveland was 47 and a bachelor when he entered the White House in 1885. In June 1886, he married Frances Folsom, 28 years his junior and the daughter of his former law partner, Oscar Folsom. To this day, Grover and Frances are the only presidential couple to have married in the White House. Frances, who was 21 at the time of the wedding, remains America's youngest First Lady.[10]
The couple had five children: Ruth, Esther, Marion, Richard, and Francis. In 1904, Frances and Grover suffered the loss of their eldest child, Ruth, who died of diphtheria at the age of 12. Ruth is cited in some accounts as the namesake of the Baby Ruth candy bar, though the Curtiss Candy Company, which introduced the bar in 1921, never officially confirmed this origin story, and the claim remains historically contested.
Cleveland's 1884 presidential campaign was notable for another personal revelation: he publicly acknowledged fathering a child out of wedlock with Maria Halpin of Buffalo, choosing transparency over denial in what became one of the more remarkable admissions in presidential campaign history. Republican opponents chanted "Ma, Ma, where's my Pa?" — to which Cleveland's supporters responded after his victory, "Gone to the White House, Ha, Ha, Ha!" Cleveland's decision to own the scandal rather than deny it was widely credited with defusing it.
Cleveland, who was significantly overweight for most of his adult life, suffered from multiple health issues in his later years. In 1893, at the start of his second presidential term, he underwent a secret surgery aboard a yacht on the East River to remove a cancerous tumor from the roof of his mouth. The operation, which involved the removal of a portion of his upper jaw and was performed under general anesthesia to prevent Cleveland from speaking, was kept hidden from the public for decades. Cleveland feared that news of his illness would worsen the already severe economic panic gripping the nation. The surgery was not publicly revealed until 1917, nine years after his death, when one of the participating physicians broke the story.[11]
Retirement in Princeton
After leaving the White House on March 4, 1897, Cleveland retired to Princeton, New Jersey, where he and his wife Frances had decided to settle even before the end of his second term. They purchased Westland Mansion, a substantial estate in Princeton that Mrs. Cleveland selected. Cleveland named the property "Westland" in honor of his close friend Andrew Fleming West, a classics professor and dean at Princeton University. Originally built in 1854 by a member of the prominent Stockton family, Westland resembles Morven, another Stockton family house in Princeton.[12]
During his retirement years, Cleveland served as a trustee of Princeton University. He found himself in the middle of one of the university's most significant internal disputes, siding with Dean Andrew Fleming West's vision for a residential Graduate College against the competing plans of Woodrow Wilson, then president of the university. Cleveland was among the majority of trustees who preferred West's proposal for the Graduate School's location and governance structure, a disagreement that contributed to Wilson's eventual departure from Princeton to pursue the New Jersey governorship — a stepping stone to his own presidency in 1913. Although Cleveland never attended college himself, he was a respected figure on campus, and Princeton students frequently marched to Westland Mansion to serenade him on his birthdays or to celebrate the outcome of football games.
In 1897, some Democrats sought to draft Cleveland as their candidate for United States Senator from New Jersey. He declined, choosing the quieter life of a private citizen and occasional political commentator. He consulted periodically with President Theodore Roosevelt and was offered the chairmanship of a federal commission convened to address the Coal Strike of 1902, but was financially unable to accept the unpaid role.[13]
In June 1908, the 71-year-old Cleveland suffered a series of cardiac and renal failures and died at Westland Mansion on June 24, 1908. His reported last words were: "I have tried so hard to do right." His funeral was held two days later, and he was buried at Princeton Cemetery, the historic burial ground of Nassau Presbyterian Church. His grave, flanked by those of his wife Frances and his daughter Ruth, is among the most visited of the many prominent gravesites at Princeton Cemetery. He remains the only president interred in the state of New Jersey.[14]
The Grover Cleveland Birthplace State Historic Site
The Grover Cleveland Birthplace State Historic Site, located at 207 Bloomfield Avenue in Caldwell, operates as the only museum in the United States dedicated to President Grover Cleveland. Originally called the Presbyterian Church Manse, the structure was built in the early 1800s and is one of the two oldest surviving houses in Caldwell. Interest in preserving Cleveland's birthplace began during his tenure as governor of New York and grew steadily as his national political career advanced. The birthplace house first opened to the public in 1913.<ref>{{cite web |title=Grover Cleveland Birthplace |url=https://caldwell-nj.com/?SEC=EB8D8E00-9060-468C-B387-A112A72BAC3D |work=Borough of Caldwell, New Jersey