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"It is a Bad Looking Tenant" - Grover Cleveland's Secret Tumor

By 

Mütter EDU Staff

February 20, 2017

Greetings, once again, fellow historico-medico aficionados, and welcome to another installment of , our monthly journey into the realm of the medically unusual.

Observant regular readers will notice this publication appears on the twentieth of every month. It just so happens that February 20th is Presidents Day, our yearly celebration of America's highest elected office; in honor of the day, it seems fitting that we do another issue on Presidential medical history. We've done more than a few of those here, from whether Zachary Taylor , to the of Presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan, to whether a long inaugural address or the White House itself . Perhaps a more timely topic than I had initially planned, this issue examines the clandestine efforts of a select group to seek out and remove a dangerous foreign invader with very close connections to the President of the United States himself! Of course I'm talking about President Grover Cleveland's tumor and the secret surgeries to remove it (what did you think I was talking about?).

is another one of those Presidents who to modern audiences falls in that historical void between more famous Presidents such as Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt. Born in New York in 1837, he served as Mayor of Buffalo and Governor of New York and was elected President in 1884 and again in 1892, making him technically the 22nd and 24th US Presidents. Cleveland holds the distinction of the only US President to serve two non-consecutive terms.

In June 1893, a few months into the start of his second term, Cleveland visited his personal dentist, Dr. Kasson C. Gibson, complaining of discomfort in his upper jaw. Dismayed by what he saw, Gibson arranged for Robert Maitland O'Reilly, the US Army's attending surgeon and later US Surgeon General, to examine Cleveland's mouth whereupon he discovered what he described as "an ulcerative surface nearly as large as a quarter, with cauliflower granulations, and crater edges with at least one sinus extending to the bone, which is apparently roughened" on the roof of the President's mouth (R.M. O'Reilly to Joseph Bryant, June 19, 1893, William Williams Keen's Material Related to the Operation of President Cleveland, 1893, 1915-1918, MSS2/0076-07, box 1, folder 1, Historical Medical Library of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia). In other words: Grover Cleveland had a tumor growing in his upper jaw. Understandably concerned, the President consulted with his personal physician, a doctor by the name of Joseph Decatur Bryant. When asked whether Cleveland should have the tumor removed, Bryant frankly replied, "It is a bad looking tenant. Were it in my mouth I would have it removed at once" (Joseph D. Bryant to Col. Daniel Lamont, May 9, William Williams Keen's Material Related to the Operation of President Cleveland, 1893, 1915-1918, MSS2/0076-07, box 1, folder 4). A small collection of doctors along with Daniel Lamont, Cleveland's Secretary of War, arranged to evict the President's "bad looking tenant."

However, secrecy was to be maintained at all costs. The American economy was in a tumultuous state in 1893. Speculation, especially over railroads, had been responsible for a series of severe recessions dating back to the infamous Panic of 1873. The 1870s and 1880s were characterized by high unemployment, inflation, and labor unrest. Another economic meltdown plunged the country back into recession in early 1893 (again brought upon part by railroad speculation), known now as the Panic of 1893. A year later, Cleveland himself would  to put down a strike involving Pullman railroad workers. Cleveland feared news of his ill health would place greater strain on an already strained economy. As a result, he was emphatic that his tumor remain a secret.

Lamont, Bryant, and O'Reilly organized with a small group of medically-minded confederates to arrange for Cleveland to have his surgery on , a yacht owned by a friend of the President named E.C. Benedict. Among the doctors involved was . Keen was an extremely accomplished surgeon and a Fellow of the College of the Physicians of Philadelphia. Born in Philadelphia in 1837, Keen studied at Jefferson Medical College, served as an Army surgeon during the Civil War, and penned a paper with Silas Weir Mitchell (also a Fellow) on the treatment of gunshot wounds. After the war he became a pioneer in the study of brain surgery and was reportedly the first American to successfully remove a brain tumor. Along with Bryant, O'Reilly, and Keen, E.G. Janeway, John F. Erdmann, and Fred Hasbrook rounded out the rest of the team charged with removing President Cleveland's tumor.

On June 30, 1893, Cleveland arrived in Jersey City, NJ, and from there boarded the Oneida where the surgical team awaited him. Bryant successfully removed the tumor, along with five teeth and part of his jaw, the following day. The President was by all accounts in good spirits given the situation, and he remained on the Oneida until July 5, when he returned to Gray Gables, his Cape Cod estate. By all outward appearances, he had just returned from a long Fourth of July vacation. When a second tumor was discovered several days later, Cleveland returned to the Oneida on July 17th to have the second growth removed.

Discretion was to be maintained at all times. Bryant removed the tumor using specialized tools that would allow him to remove it through Cleveland's mouth. Rumors hold this was because he didn't want to lose his trademark mustache, but it is just as likely Cleveland wanted there to be no physical evidence of his procedure. Gibson designed a hard rubber prosthetic to replace the excised section of Cleveland's jaw, allowing the President to speak unimpeded. He also cast a mold of his jaw, followed by a second one several years later . As for Keen, Bryant wrote to him on July 6, praising his efforts and re-affirming the need for confidentiality.

However, even the best-kept secrets, especially when they involve the Commander in Chief, can be found out. On August 29, 1893, Elisha Jay Edwards of the Philadelphia Press broke the story in an article bearing the provocative title "The President is a Very Sick Man" (journalist Matthew Algeo later used this as the title for covering Cleveland's secret surgery). White House officials flatly denied the affair until September 22, 1917, when Keen published an article explaining the whole affair followed by a .

Today you can view both Cleveland's tumor as well as a "cheek retractor," one of the tools used in the procedure, at the Mütter Museum (Keen and Gibson on October 5, 1917). The jar containing the Presidential mass offers a fitting reminder of the secretive circumstances that led it its removal. The jar's label bears the warning, "Not to be photographed for newspaper or other similar public use."

Until next time, catch you on the strange side!

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