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Grover Cleveland held a presidential record for over a century. His legacy still inspires his hometown

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For more than a century, President Grover Cleveland was in a league of his own as the only leader of the nation to serve non-consecutive terms as the 22nd and 24th president of the U.S. Now, Cleveland shares that honor with President-elect Donald Trump, who was the 45th president of the U.S. and will soon take office as the 47th. But in Cleveland’s hometown, locals still want to preserve his legacy. 

Cleveland was born the fifth of nine children in Caldwell, New Jersey, about 20 miles outside of New York City. His humble home was near the Presbyterian church where his father was a pastor. Now, his birthplace is across the street from a gas station and donut shop, and it remains a tour site — though some days, no one comes to visit, according to tour guide Sharon Farrell. 

Nationwide, there’s little to mark Cleveland, except for a rest area off the New Jersey turnpike. But in Caldwell, he’s still inspiring some residents. 

“How could you not be inspired?” said Carlos Pomares, who said that Cleveland was his inspiration to run for a local country commission. “The guy had a meteoric rise in a matter of four years, based on just being a hard worker, honest, brutally honest at times, and being one who just stuck to his beliefs.” 

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The sign honoring Grover Cleveland’s Caldwell birthplace.

CBS Saturday Morning


Pomares’ home is filled with Cleveland-related pieces of history, including ribbons, busts and a Grover Cleveland brandy bottle. Throughout the town, there are multiple places named for the former president, including apartments, a park and a middle school. There’s even a parking spot reserved for him.

Cleveland didn’t spend his whole life in Caldwell. During the middle of his life, he was a lawyer in Buffalo, New York, living in a small apartment above his law practice, according to author Troy Senik, who wrote “A Man of Iron,” a biography chronicling Cleveland’s life. Later, he would be the mayor of Buffalo and the governor of New York. 

Cleveland’s two presidential terms

Even before his run for president, Cleveland was seen as principled and ethical. He was drafted by Democratic party bosses to run for president amid an era of corruption, patronage and unethical powerbrokers, and took office for the first time in 1885. He made history, but not headlines. 

“If you’re looking at the late 19th century, if you’re looking at the Gilded Age, the debates are about tariffs. They’re about silver in the money supply. They’re about pensions for union veterans. We don’t know how to think about any of these things,” Senik said. “It’s not exciting stuff.” 

Cleveland lost his re-election race to Indiana Republican Benjamin Harrison in 1888, though he won the popular vote. He was initially content with his retirement and “somewhat relieved,” feeling that “he had done a decent job in his first term,” according to Senik. 

President Grover Cleveland
President Grover Cleveland.

Oscar White/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images


But in 1892, he was again pressured by party leaders to run. He narrowly vanquished Harrison and moved back into 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue — something his wife, who he married during his first term, always believed would happen. 

In the final days of Cleveland’s first term, Frances Folsom told “a member of the domestic staff in the White House ‘Make sure that you pack up everything very carefully because we want it to be just where we remember it when we come back,'” according to Senik. 

“The staffer assumes that they’re planning to visit in the Harrison administration. ‘Mrs. Cleveland, when will that be?'” Senik said. “And she said, ‘We’re coming back four years from today.'” 



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Explosion at Louisville plant leaves 11 employees injured

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At least 11 employees were taken to hospitals and residents were urged to shelter in place on Tuesday after an explosion at a Louisville, Kentucky, business.

The Louisville Metro Emergency Services reported on social media a “hazardous materials incident” at 1901 Payne St., in Louisville. The address belongs to a facility operated by Givaudan Sense Colour, a manufacturer of food colorings for soft drinks and other products, according to officials and online records.

Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg said emergency teams responded to the blast around 3 p.m. News outlets reported that neighbors heard what sounded like an explosion coming from the business. Overhead news video footage showed an industrial building with a large hole in its roof.

An image capture from aerial footage shows the aftermath of an explosion in Louisville, Kentucky, Nov. 12, 2024.
An image capture from aerial footage shows the aftermath of an explosion in Louisville, Kentucky, Nov. 12, 2024.

WLKY-TV


“The cause at this point of the explosion is unknown,” Greenberg said in a news conference. No one died in the explosion, he added.

Greenberg said officials spoke to employees inside the plant. “They have initially conveyed that everything was normal activity when the explosion occurred,” he said.

The Louisville Fire Department said in a post on the social platform X that multiple agencies were responding to a “large-scale incident.”

The Louisville Metro Emergency Services first urged people within a mile of the business to shelter in place, but that order was lifted in the afternoon. An evacuation order for the two surrounding blocks around the site of the explosion was still in place Tuesday afternoon. 



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Briefing held on classified documents leaker Jack Teixeira’s sentencing

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Briefing held on classified documents leaker Jack Teixeira’s sentencing – CBS News


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Joshua Levy, acting U.S. attorney for the District of Massachusetts, held a press conference Tuesday after the Pentagon classified documents leaker Jack Teixeira was sentenced to 15 years in prison. The former Air National guardsman admitted to illegally posting sensitive military information online.

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Aga Khan emerald, world’s most expensive green stone, fetches record $9 million at auction

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A rare square 37-carat emerald owned by the Aga Khan fetched nearly $9 million at auction in Geneva on Tuesday, making it the world’s most expensive green stone.

Sold by Christie’s, the Cartier diamond and emerald brooch, which can also be worn as a pendant, dethrones a piece of jewelry made by the fashion house Bulgari, which Richard Burton gave as a wedding gift to fellow actor Elizabeth Taylor, as the most precious emerald.

In 1960, Prince Sadruddin Aga Khan commissioned Cartier to set the emerald in a brooch with 20 marquise-cut diamonds for British socialite Nina Dyer, to whom he was briefly married.

Dyer then auctioned off the emerald to raise money for animals in 1969.

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A Christie’s employee poses with The Aga Khan Emerald, a cartier emerald and diamond brooch made with a square-shaped emerald of 37.00 carats, marquise-shaped diamonds, platinum and 18k yellow gold during a press preview in Geneva, on Nov. 7, 2024. 

FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP via Getty Images


By chance that was Christie’s very first such sale in Switzerland on the shores of Lake Geneva, with the emerald finding its way back to the 110th edition this year.

It was bought by jeweler Van Cleef & Arpels before passing a few years later into the hands of Harry Winston, nicknamed the “King of Diamonds.”

“Emeralds are hot right now, and this one ticks all the boxes,” said Christie’s EMEA Head of Jewellery Max Fawcett. “…We might see an emerald of this quality come up for sale once every five or six years.”

Also set with diamonds, the previous record-holder fetched $6.5 million at an auction of part of Hollywood legend Elizabeth Taylor’s renowned jewelry collection in New York.



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