Grover Cleveland
(1837 - 1908)
(1837 - 1908)
"I have only one thing to do, and that is to do right." |
22cd President of the United States from 1885 to 1889
Ex-President Grover Cleveland on the Philippine Problem
by Grover Cleveland
Boston: New England Anti-Imperialist League, 1904 When our Government entered upon a war for the professed purpose of aiding to self-government and releasing from foreign rule a struggling people whose cries for liberty were heard at our very doors, it rallied to its enthusiastic support a nation of freemen, in whose hearts and minds there was deeply fixed by heredity and tradition the living belief that all just powers of government are derived from the consent of the governed. It was the mockery of Fate that led us to an unexpected and unforeseen incident in this conflict, and placed in the path of our Government, while professing national righteousness, representing an honest and liberty-loving people, and intent on a benevolent, self-sacrificing errand, the temptation of sordid aggrandizement and the false glitter of world-power. No sincerely thoughtful American can recall what followed without amazement, nor without sadly realizing how the apathy of our people's trustfulness and their unreflecting acceptance of alluring representations can be played upon. No greater national fall from grace was ever known than that of the Government of the United States, when in the midst of high design, while still speaking words of sympathy with the weak who struggled against the strong, and while still professing to exemplify before the world a great Republic's love for self-government and its impulse to stay the bloody hand of oppression and conquest, it embraced an opportunity offered by the exigencies of its beneficent undertaking, to possess itself of territory thousands of miles from our coast, and to conquer and govern, without pretense of their consent, millions of resisting people -- a heterogeneous population largely mixed with elements hardly within the light of civilization, and all far from the prospect of assimilation with anything American. In one hand the party in power held aloft before our people the dazzling and misleading promise of commercial advantage and the glory of rivaling monarchical expansion, while with the other it slaughtered thousands of the abject possessors of the soil it coveted, and sent messages of death and disease to thousands of American homes. In the wildest exhibition of partisan rancor the Democratic party cannot be accused of reactionary opposition to any movement within the lines fixed by our national mission and traditions that tends to increase our country's greatness. It demands, however, that this mission and these traditions shall above all things be inviolably preserved as guides to our national activity and standards for the measurement of every national achievement. Democracy will not be cajoled into silence by the transient appearance of a manufactured or heedless public sentiment, but will speak, and trust for its vindication to the sober second thought of our people. Refusing to accept the shallow and discreditable pretense that our conquest in the Philippines has gone so far as to be beyond recall or correction, we insist that a nation as well as an individual is never so magnanimous or great as when false steps are retraced and the path of honesty and virtue is regained. The message of the Democracy to the American people should courageously enjoin that, in sincere and consistent compliance with the spirit and profession of our interference in behalf of Cuba's self-government, our beneficent designs toward her should also extend to the lands which, as an incident of such interference, have come under our control; that the people of the Philippine Islands should be aided in the establishment of a government of their own; and that when this is accomplished our interference in their domestic rule should cease.Grover Cleveland
Selected Works
************ The Century Magazine - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Century_Magazine
The Century Magazine was first published in the United States in 1881 by The Century ... According to an author writing in the New York Times, the publication of The Century "made New-York, instead .... figures, including a close friendship with Grover Cleveland which he wrote about upon the death of the former president.[PDF]Index to the Grover Cleveland papers. - Library of Congress
hdl.loc.gov/loc.gdc/scd0001.20101125003gc.1
Nov 25, 2010 - THIS INDEX to the Grover Cleveland Papers is a direct result of the wish of the. Congress and the ... of the Century Magazine and a longtime friend: "I have been so ..... that the writer of an unpublished letter or other manuscript ...The Presidential Campaign and Election of 1892
https://books.google.com/books?id=gLaaAAAAIAAJ
1942 - United States
In the former, Grover Cleveland and David Bennett Hill were the chief ... editor of the Century Magazine, and a friend of Cleveland, to Johnson Brigham, author, ...The Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine
https://books.google.com/books?id=orMGAQAAIAAJ
1909 - American literature
MIDSUMMER HOLIDAY NUMBER The Century Magazine Vol. LXXVIII AUGUST, 1909 No. 4GROVER CLEVELAND: A RECORD OF FRIENDSHIP BY RICHARD ... has seemed to the writernot only an obligation of friendship but of patriotism ...The Chautauquan: A Weekly Newsmagazine
https://books.google.com/books?id=DzQzAQAAMAAJ
1909
The Century Magazine is just beginning a series of Superbly Illustrated Papers ... prose stories and sketches, chiefly of Holland, by the author of “Hans Brinker, or the ... CENTURY MAGAZINEIN 1908-9 GROVER CLEVELAND -the real Grover.Grover Cleveland - The New York Times
www.nytimes.com/topic/person/grover-cleveland
Commentary and archival information about Grover Cleveland from The New ... Grover Cleveland and William F. McKinley come under authors' microscopes.List of books and articles about Grover Cleveland | Online Research ...
https://www.questia.com/library/history/united-states.../grover-cleveland
Discover librarian-selected research resources on Grover Cleveland from the Questia online library, including full-text online books, academic journals, magazines, newspapers and more. ... FREE! Presidential Problems By Grover Cleveland The Century Co., 1904 .... Search by ... Keyword; Title; Author; Subject; Publisher.The Century Magazine - Topics
www.revolvy.com/main/index.php?s=The%20Century%20Magazine...
The Century Magazine was first published in the United States in 1881 by The ... to an authorwriting in the New York Times, the publication of The Century "made .... friendship with Grover Cleveland which he wrote about upon the death of the ...Century Magazine - Topics
broom02.revolvy.com/main/index.php?s=Century%20Magazine...
The Century Magazine was first published in the United States in 1881 by The ... friendship with Grover Cleveland which he wrote about upon the death of the ... Henry W. Grady, responding a few months later, disputed the earlier author's ...The Century Magazine, Vol. 45: April, 1893 by Richard Watson Gilder ...
https://www.goodreads.com/.../32209473-the-century-magazine-vol-45
Sep 23, 2016 - Book cover for The Century Magazine, Vol. 45: April, 1893 ... Other Books by thisAuthor. Grover Cleveland: A Record of Friendship. by Richard ...Searches related to The Century magazine author grover clevelandReference: http://www.humanitiesweb.org/human.php?s=h&p=c&a=p&ID=23005http://www.humanitiesweb.org/spa/hcb/ID/214 http://www.humanitiesweb.org/spa/hcp/ID/28429 http://www.ipl.org/div/potus/gcleveland.html http://www.capitalcentury.com/1908.html **************************http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/gdc/scd0001/2010/20101125003gc/20101125003gc.pdf page 88 - shows 3 articles by Grover Cleveland Jan 9, 1904 B.3 p.5 * THIS INDEX to the Grover Cleveland Papers is a direct result of the wish of the Congress and the President, as expressed by Public Law 85-147 approved August 16, 1957, and amended by Public Laws 87-263 approved September 21, 1961, and 88-299 approved April 27, 1964, to arrange, index, and microfilm the papers of the Presidents in the Library of Congress in order "to preserve their contents against destruction by war or other calamity," to make the Presidential Papers -more "readily available for study and research," and to inspire informed patriotism. Presidents whose papers are in the Library are: George Washington James K. Polk Chester A. Arthur Thomas Jefferson Zachary Taylor Grover Cleveland James Madison Franklin Pierce Benjamin Harrison James Monroe Abraham Lincoln William McKinley Andrew Jackson Andrew Johnson Theodore Roosevelt Martin Van Buren Ulysses S. Grant William H. Taft William H. Harrison James A. Garfield Woodrow Wilson John Tyler Calvin Coolidge The microfilm of the Cleveland Papers became available in 1960. Positive copies of the film may be purchased from the Chief, Photoduplication Service, Library of Congress, Washington, D. C. 20540. A positive print is available for interlibrary loan through the Chief, Loan D~vision, Library of Congress. ************************** U.S. President Cleveland decides that the Provisional Government Must be Overthrown Criticism of U.S. President Cleveland: |
No comments:
Post a Comment