Saturday, June 13, 2026

Grover Cleveland: The President Who Lost the White House—Then Won It Back

 

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Few realize that only one man ever lost the presidency, left office, and then came back to win it again.

That man was Grover Cleveland.

It sounds like the plot of a political drama, but it actually happened. Cleveland served as the 22nd President of the United States, lost reelection, and then returned four years later to become the 24th president. More than a century later, he remains the only president in American history to pull off such a comeback.

For a generation of Americans, Cleveland was one of the most recognizable figures in the country. His portrait appeared in newspapers, magazines, campaign materials, and political cartoons from coast to coast. Supporters admired his honesty. Opponents criticized his stubbornness. Almost everyone had an opinion about him.

Emma Calve: The Opera Diva Who Conquered the World—and Then Vanished from History

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Today, only dedicated opera fans are likely to recognize the name Emma Calvé.

A hundred years ago, it was a different story.

Calvé was one of the most celebrated singers on the planet. Audiences packed opera houses to hear her perform. Critics praised her dramatic intensity. Admirers crossed oceans for the chance to see her on stage. At the height of her career, she was not merely a performer—she was an international sensation.

Born in France in 1858, Emma Calvé rose from humble beginnings to become one of the greatest opera stars of her generation. Her voice was admired throughout Europe and America, but it was her emotional performances that truly set her apart.

Unlike many singers of her era, Calvé didn’t simply sing a role. She became the character.

That commitment made her legendary in operas such as Carmen, where her portrayal was so powerful that many critics considered it the definitive interpretation of the role. Audiences didn’t just hear the music—they felt it.

Lillian Russell: The American Woman Who Started The Celebrity Craze

 

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There was a time when almost every American knew the name Lillian Russell.

Newspapers followed her every move. Theatergoers packed houses to see her perform. Publishers splashed her image across magazines, advertising cards, and souvenir prints. At the height of her fame, Russell wasn’t just an actress—she was one of the biggest celebrities in the United States.

Today, however, most people have never heard of her.

Born in 1860, Russell rose to fame during the Gilded Age, a period when America was exploding with wealth, innovation, and entertainment. Long before movies and television created household names, stage performers were the country’s biggest stars. Among them, none shone brighter than Lillian Russell.

Blessed with a powerful singing voice and undeniable charisma, Russell became a leading performer in comic opera and musical theater. Audiences loved her talent, but they were equally fascinated by her glamorous lifestyle, high-profile romances, and larger-than-life personality.

Lulu Glaser: One Of Broadway’s Biggest Stars You Never Heard Of

 

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For a few brief years in the early 1900s, Lulu Glaser was one of the biggest names on the American stage.

Today, most people have never heard of her.

A century ago, however, theatergoers packed houses to see Glaser perform in hit musical comedies, and her photographs appeared in newspapers and magazines across the country. Her image was familiar to audiences from New York to San Francisco.

Born in the late nineteenth century, Glaser built her career during a period when Broadway was rapidly becoming America’s entertainment capital. Before movies took over popular culture, stage performers were celebrities. Fans collected their portraits, read interviews, and followed their careers much the same way people follow movie stars today.

Thursday, June 11, 2026

Consuelo Vanderbilt, Duchess of Marlborough

 

If ever there was a poster child for the phrase “money can’t buy happiness,” it was Consuelo Vanderbilt.

Born into the Vanderbilt fortune in 1877, Consuelo grew up surrounded by mansions, servants, and more money than most people could spend in ten lifetimes. She was beautiful, wealthy, and famous before she was old enough to vote. Society reporters followed her around like paparazzi.

Sounds great, right?

Not exactly.

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Gunfighter Clay Allison

 

Clay Allison amused himself shooting up small towns and dancehalls, and 
making gentlemen dance barefoot to the accompaniement of his bullets

Clay Allison’s “trigger finger was the busiest in the early 80s,” wrote the Albuquerque Morning Journal. “His record was twenty-one dead men, whose graves were scattered from Dodge City to Santa Fe.”

The article said, “Clay spent his time amusing himself shooting up small towns and dance halls, and making gentlemen dance barefoot to the accompaniment of his bullets.”

One of Allison’s first kills was a desperado named Chunk. They met up at Red River Station in New Mexico on January 7, 1874. Chunk was out to get Allison because Clay had killed his uncle.

The two men sat on opposite sides of the dinner table, each man itching for an opportunity to draw. Chunk made the first move. He dropped his knife on the floor and reached below the table to grab it. Allison didn’t miss a beat—he pulled his pistol and let Chunk have it—right between the eyes. The Evening Star said, “A little red spot between Chunk’s eye showed where the bullet had entered, and the man, swaying from side to side, bent gradually over and soon was perfectly still, with his face buried in the dish.”

Doc Holliday: Frontier Gambler, Gunfighter, And Sometimes Lawman

 

Doc Holliday

Bat Masterson spoke admiringly about most of the big-name gunfighters of the Old West, but he had a particularly low opinion of Doc Holliday. “I never liked him, and few persons did. He had a mean disposition and differed from most of the big gunfighters in that he would seek a fight...He had few friends anywhere in the West.” Virgil Earp told the Arizona Daily Star, “There was something peculiar about Doc...outside of us boys. I don’t think he had a friend in the territory.”

Although Masterson didn’t come right out and call Holliday a coward, he said, unlike Wild Bill and Wyatt Earp, who were as good with their fists as they were with their pistols, Doc Holliday was a “physical weakling.” His opinion was that a fifteen-year-old could make easy work of him in a “go-as-you-please fistfight.” But as soon as you put a gun in his hand, danger transformed Doc Holliday from a 98-pound weakling into a raging madman.

Like most legendary figures of the Old West, so much of what’s been written about Doc Holliday is contradictory at best. In the Encyclopedia of Western Gunfighters (1942), Bill O’Neal credits Doc with just two kills in eight gunfights, far from the dozens of kills and near kills most biographers attribute to him.

Doc Holliday was like a fish out of water in Dodge City and Tombstone. He was a dentist by profession, but a gambler and a gunfighter by choice.