2013년 11월 29일 금요일

About 'monticello history'|History Trip to Monticello







About 'monticello history'|History Trip to Monticello








This               article               chronicles               the               ten               most               salacious,               high-profile,               political               sex               scandals               in               United               States               history               and,               where               applicable,               cites               books               written               about               or               mentioning               those               scandals.

1.

President               Bill               Clinton
               The               most               notorious               political               sex               scandal               in               American               history               occurred               between               42nd               President               of               the               United               States,               Bill               Clinton,               and               22-year-old               White               House               intern               Monica               Lewinsky.
               During               his               political               career,               which               included               multiple               terms               as               Governor               of               Arkansas               and               one               term               as               state               Attorney               General,               Clinton               was               rumored               to               have               been               involved               in               various               sex               scandals.

One               of               those               scandals--bound               to               the               Lewinsky               matter--involved               former               Arkansas               state               employee,               Paula               Jones.

Paula               Jones               alleged,               inter               alia,               that               when               Clinton               was               Governor               he               ordered               a               state               trooper               to               bring               her               to               a               room               at               the               Excelsior               Hotel               in               Little               Rock,               Arkansas,               where               Clinton               propositioned               her,               dropped               his               pants,               and               exposed               his               genitals.
               After               he               was               elected               President,               but               prior               to               the               expiration               of               the               statute               of               limitations,               Paula               Jones               instituted               a               sexual               harassment               lawsuit               against               the               President               arising               out               of               the               Excelsior               incident.

Clinton               initially               raised               several               constitutional               arguments               as               to               why               a               sitting               president               should               not               be               required               to               respond               to               civil               litigation.

Eventually,               the               issue               came               before               the               United               States               Supreme               Court               which               unanimously               ruled               against               the               President:               "Deferral               of               this               litigation               until               petitioner's               Presidency               ends               is               not               constitutionally               required."
               During               the               discovery               phase               of               the               Jones               lawsuit,               President               Clinton               submitted               to               a               sworn               deposition               at               the               White               House.

In               that               deposition,               Clinton               was               questioned               about               suspected               extramarital               affairs               with               other               government               employees,               including               Lewinsky.

After               much               wrangling,               Clinton               finally               responded:               :               "I               have               never               had               sexual               relations               with               Monica               Lewinsky."               Afterward,               however,               it               was               revealed               that               Lewinsky               purportedly               had               a               blue               dress               soiled               with               the               President's               DNA               during               a               sexual               encounter               at               the               White               House.

Under               pressure               to               acknowledge               the               extent               of               his               relationship               with               Lewinsky,               Clinton               reluctantly               admitted               that               he               and               Lewinsky               had               engaged               in               oral               sex               and               fondling               in               the               Oval               Office.

It               was               subsequently               disclosed               that               Clinton               engaged               in               extramarital               sex               acts               with               Lewinsky               on               nine               separate               occasions.

Clinton               maintained,               however,               that               he               did               not               perjure               himself               in               the               deposition               because               he               never               had               intercourse               with               Lewinsky-arguing               that               he               did               not               believe               that               fellatio,               cunnilingus               and               fondling               constituted               "sexual               relations."
               Subsequently,               two               Articles               of               Impeachment               were               introduced               in               the               U.S.

House               of               Representatives               charging               President               Clinton               with               perjury               and               obstruction               of               justice.

After               a               party               line               vote               in               the               House               Judiciary               Committee,               the               House               of               Representatives               impeached               Clinton               on               December               19,               1998,               by               votes               of               228-206               and               221-212               on               each               respective               article.

On               February               12,               1999,               however,               the               United               States               Senate               acquitted               the               President               by               votes               of               55-45               and               50-50.

As               a               result,               President               Clinton               was               not               removed               from               office.
               During               the               pendency               of               the               impeachment               proceedings,               Clinton               agreed               to               pay               Paula               Jones               the               sum               of               $850,000.00               to               settle               the               sexual               harassment               case.

President               Clinton               was               also               held               in               contempt               of               court               and               fined               $115,000               for               giving               false               testimony               in               his               deposition.

As               a               consequence,               he               was               disbarred               by               the               United               States               Supreme               Court               and               his               license               to               practice               law               in               Arkansas               was               suspended               for               five               years.
               Book(s):
               Kolb,               Marvin.

One               Scandalous               Story:               Clinton,               Lewinsky               and               the               Thirteen               Days               That               Tarnished               American               Journalism
               Starr,               Kenneth.

The               Starr               Report:               The               Official               Report               of               the               Independent               Counsel's               Investigation               of               the               President
               Toobin,               Jeffrey.

A               Vast               Conspiracy:               The               Real               Story               of               the               Sex               Scandal               that               Nearly               Brought               Down               a               President.
               2.

Senator               Strom               Thurmond
               The               longest               preserved               secret               in               the               history               of               political               sex               scandals,               former               presidential               candidate,               Governor               of               South               Carolina,               and               United               States               Senator               Strom               Thurmond,               a               long-time               segregationist               and               opponent               of               the               Civil               Rights               Act,               once               fathered               a               mixed-race               child               with               his               parent's               African-American               maid,               Carrie               "Tunch"               Butler.

The               child,               Essie               Mae               Washington-Williams,               was               born               to               16-year-old               Butler               and               22-year-old               Thurmond               in               1925.

She               was               raised               in               Pennsylvania               by               Butler's               older               sister               and               her               husband.
               In               1948,               when               his               daughter               was               23-years-old,               Thurmond               ran               for               the               Presidency               of               the               United               States               as               the               segregationist               Democratic               Party               (Dixiecrat)               candidate.

He               later               represented               South               Carolina               in               the               United               States               Senate               from               1954               to               2003,               first               as               a               Democrat               and               then               as               a               Republican.

In               the               lengthiest               filibuster               by               one               Senator               in               United               States               history,               Thurmond               once               spoke               for               24               hours               and               18               minutes               in               an               unsuccessful               attempt               to               derail               the               Civil               Rights               Act               of               1957.

In               2003,               Strom               Thurmond               left               office               at               the               age               of               100--the               oldest               and               longest-serving               senator               in               history.
               On               the               day               of               Senator               Thurmond's               death               on               June               26,               2003,               Essie               Mae               Washington-Williams               held               a               press               conference               disclosing               that               she               was               Thurmond's               oldest               child-then               78-years-old.

Washington-Williams               stated               that               she               did               not               publicly               reveal               that               she               was               the               Senator's               daughter               during               his               lifetime               out               of               love               and               devotion               to               him,               and               because               it               was               not               to               either               of               their               advantages.

She               further               stated               that               her               father               provided               generous               financial               assistance               to               her               well               into               her               adult               life,               including               paying               for               her               higher               education               and               providing               her               with               spending               money.

After               graduating               from               the               University               of               Southern               California               with               a               Masters               Degree,               Washington-Williams               established               her               career               as               a               school               teacher               in               the               Los               Angeles               public               schools.
               Shortly               after               Washington-Williams'               press               conference,               the               Thurmond               family               publicly               acknowledged               her               lineage.
               Book(s):
               Washington-Williams,               Essie               Mae.Dear               Senator:               A               Memoir               by               the               Daughter               of               Strom               Thurmond
               3.

President               Grover               Cleveland
               The               1884               Presidential               election               between               Democrat               Grover               Cleveland               and               Republican               James               Blaine               involved               the               first               widely               reported               political               sex               scandal               and               provided               a               template               for               how               to               come               through               such               scandals.
               On               July               21,               1884,               the               Buffalo               Evening               Telegraph               ran               a               sensational               story               titled:               "A               Terrible               Tale:               The               Pitiful               Story               of               Maria               Halpin               and               Governor               Cleveland's               Son."               The               scandal               was               that               Cleveland,               a               lifelong               bachelor,               fathered               a               son               out-of-wedlock               a               decade               earlier,               committed               the               mother               to               an               insane               asylum,               and               placed               his               child               in               an               orphanage.
               When               the               story               broke,               it               rapidly               spread               nationwide,               leading               to               a               spontaneous               discussion               regarding               the               public               integrity               and               personal               morality               of               elected               officials.

Blaine's               campaign               immediately               pounced,               insidiously               spreading               the               unofficial               campaign               slogan:               "Ma               Ma,               Where's               my               Pa?"               In               response,               Cleveland               immediately               advised               his               campaign               staff               to               concede               the               accusations               and               "Tell               the               Truth."               According               to               Cleveland,               he               accepted               the               word               of               Maria               Halpin               that               he               was               the               father               of               her               child,               that               she               later               began               to               drink               excessively               and               became               mentally               ill,               and               that               the               child               was               placed               in               an               orphanage               in               the               hope               that               he               would               be               adopted               into               a               stable               family.

The               campaign               thus               admitted               to               the               scandal,               but               played               it               down,               citing               Founding               Fathers               Benjamin               Franklin               and               Alexander               Hamilton               as               model               statesmen               engaged               in               similar               transgressions.

Cleveland's               campaign               also               pointed               out               that               he               was               widely               recognized               as               a               man               worthy               of               the               public               trust,               but               that               Blaine,               a               family-man,               was               oft               accused               of               being               financially               corrupt.
               Cleveland               narrowly               defeated               Blain               in               the               electoral               college,               219-182.

After               his               election,               Cleveland's               supporters               answered               the               slogan               of               the               Blain               campaign               with               "Gone               to               the               White               House,               ha               ha               ha!"
               On               June               2,               1886,               49-year-old               President               Cleveland               married               21-year-old               Francis               Folsom,               the               daughter               of               his               former,               deceased               law               partner.

Cleveland               and               his               wife               had               five               children.

The               President's               son               with               Maria               Halpin               went               on               to               become               a               medical               doctor.
               Book(s):
               Jeffers,               H.P.

An               Honest               President:               The               Life               and               Presidencies               of               Grover               Cleveland
               4.

President               Thomas               Jefferson
               Rumors               long               persisted               that               Founding               Father,               Thomas               Jefferson,               carried               on               an               extramarital               affair               with               one               of               his               slaves               at               Monticello.

In               September               1802,               during               Jefferson's               first               term               as               President,               those               rumors               morphed               into               a               sex               scandal               for               the               ages               when               political               journalist,               James               T.

Callender,               wrote               in               a               Richmond               newspaper               that               Jefferson               had               for               many               years               "kept,               as               his               concubine,               one               of               his               own               slaves.

Her               name               is               Sally."               Callender               further               reported               that               Jefferson               and               Sally               had               "several               children."               Adding               to               the               already               salacious               story,               the               President's               mistress               was               later               identified               as               Sally               Hemings,               the               out-of-wedlock               daughter               of               Jefferson's               father-in-law               and               thus               half-sister               of               Jefferson's               wife,               Martha.
               The               controversy               was               advanced               by               Jefferson's               Federalist               opponents               and               was               recounted               in               many               newspapers               during               the               balance               of               Jefferson's               presidency.

It               was               President               Jefferson's               policy,               however,               to               offer               no               public               response               to               ad               hominem               attacks               and               the               sex               scandal               had               no               ostensible               impact               on               his               presidency.
               In               November               1998,               DNA               studies               were               performed               to               determine               whether               Jefferson               had               fathered               any               of               Heming's               children.

The               Thomas               Jefferson               Foundation               thereafter               formed               a               research               committee               consisting               of               nine               members,               including               several               noted               historians,               to               review               the               DNA               reports               and               other               material               evidence.

In               January               2000,               the               committee               reported               that               the               weight               of               all               known               evidence               indicated               a               high               probability               that               President               Jefferson               was               the               father               of               Sally               Heming's               youngest               child,               Eston,               and               perhaps               all               six               of               her               children.
               Book(s):
               Gordon-Reed,               Annette.

Thomas               Jefferson               and               Sally               Hemings:               An               American               Controversy
               Lewis               and               Onuf.

Sally               Hemings               and               Thomas               Jefferson:               History,               Memory,               and               Civic               Culture               (Jeffersonian               America)
               5.

Presidential               primary               candidate               Gary               Hart
               Gary               Hart               served               as               a               United               States               Senator               from               Colorado               between               1975               and               1987.

Most               notably,               however,               Hart               competed               for               the               Democratic               nomination               for               President               in               1984               and               1988.

In               1987,               Hart               was               the               clear               frontrunner               for               the               Democratic               nomination               until               various               news               organizations               reported               that               he               was               engaged               in               an               extramarital               sex               scandal               with               model               and               commercial               actress,               Donna               Rice.
               In               April               of               1987,               Hart               officially               declared               his               candidacy               for               the               presidency.

Almost               immediately,               rumors               began               circulating               that               Hart               was               having               an               extramarital               affair.

In               an               interview               with               The               New               York               Times,               Hart               responded               to               the               rumors               by               challenging               the               press.

He               reportedly               said:               "Follow               me               around.

I               don't               care.

I'm               serious.

If               anybody               wants               to               put               a               tail               on               me,               go               ahead.

They'll               be               very               bored."
               Concurrent               with               The               New               York               Times               interview,               two               reporters               from               the               Miami               Herald               were               already               investigating               the               sex               scandal               allegations               against               Hart               and               staked               out               his               residence.

On               the               evening               of               May               2,               1987,               the               Herald               reporters               observed               a               young               woman               leaving               Hart's               Washington,               D.C.,               townhouse.

She               was               identified               as               model/actress,               Donna               Rice.

The               Herald               published               the               story               of               the               Rice               sighting               on               May               3,               1987.

In               response,               Hart               and               his               political               supporters               attacked               the               Herald               story               maintaining               that               the               relationship               between               Hart               and               Rice               was               platonic.
               On               May               5,               1987,               however,               the               Herald               received               a               tip               that               Hart               had               spent               the               night               with               a               young               woman               on               a               yacht               called               the               "Monkey               Business."               The               Herald               obtained               a               photograph               of               Hart               on               a               dock               with               Donna               Rice               sitting               on               his               lap               with               her               arms               wrapped               around               his               neck.

The               photograph               was               subsequently               published               in               the               National               Enquirer.
               On               May               8,               1987,               Hart               ended               his               campaign.

In               December               1987,               however,               he               attempted               to               reenter               the               primary.

After               being               rejected               by               voters               in               the               New               Hampshire               primary               and               on               Super               Tuesday,               Hart               again               withdrew               from               the               race.
               Book(s):
               Kessler,               Ronald.

In               the               President's               Secret               Service:               Behind               the               Scenes               with               Agents               in               the               Line               of               Fire               and               the               Presidents               They               Protect(mentioned)
               Slanksy,               Paul.

The               Little               Quiz               Book               of               Big               Political               Sex               Scandals(mentioned)
               6.

Presidential               primary               candidate               John               Edwards
               The               Democratic               nominee               for               Vice               President               in               2004,               presidential               hopeful               in               2008,               and               one               term               United               States               Senator               from               North               Carolina,               John               Edwards,               had               an               adulterous               affair               with               former               campaign               photographer,               Rielle               Hunter,               while               continually               campaigning               for               "the               great               moral               issues               that               face               our               country."
               In               October               2007,               The               National               Enquirer               began               a               series               of               reports               alleging               an               extramarital               affair               between               Edwards               and               Hunter.

For               nearly               a               year,               however,               Edwards               defiantly               denied               any               political               sex               scandal;               assisted,               in               large               part,               by               a               mainstream               media               blackout               of               the               matter.

But,               in               July               2008,               The               National               Enquirer               ran               another               exclusive               story,               this               time               exposing               Edwards               as               he               visited               Hunter               and               her               newborn               infant               at               the               Beverly               Hilton               Hotel               in               Beverly               Hills,               California.
               Forced               to               acknowledge               the               relationship,               Edwards               issued               a               statement               and               gave               an               ABC               interview               wherein               he               admitted               to               the               affair,               but               denied               being               the               father               of               Hunter's               child.

In               a               macabre               twist               on               the               story,               Edwards'               close               friend               and               campaign               confidant,               Andrew               Young,               recently               claimed               that               Edwards               once               promised               a               distraught               Hunter               that               he               would               marry               her               in               a               rooftop               ceremony               in               New               York               with               an               appearance               by               the               Dave               Matthews               Band               once               his               wife's               recurring               breast               cancer               took               her               life.
               In               May               2009,               it               was               reported               that               Edwards'               2008               presidential               campaign               is               being               investigated               by               the               United               States               Attorney's               Office               for               conversion               of               campaign               funds               related               to               the               Edwards-Hunter               political               sex               scandal.
               Book(s):
               Moon,               Robert.

Scam:               The               Liberal               Misinformation               Machine               And               Its               War               On               America               (mentioned)
               Slanksy,               Paul.

The               Little               Quiz               Book               of               Big               Political               Sex               Scandals               (mentioned)
               7.

U.S.

Representative               Gerry               Studds
               The               first               openly               gay               member               of               Congress,               Gerry               Studds               was               a               member               of               the               United               States               House               of               Representatives               from               Massachusetts               between               1973               and               1997.

In               1983,               Studds               was               censured               by               the               House               of               Representatives               after               being               involved               in               a               sex               scandal               with               a               17-year-old               Congressional               page               at               his               Washington,               D.C.

apartment.

Studds               also               admitted               to               having               sex               with               the               teen               during               a               2-week               trip               to               Portugal.

In               Washington               D.C.,               the               age-of-consent               was               16-years               old               and,               therefore,               Studds               never               faced               criminal               prosecution.
               Although               Studds               acknowledged               the               inappropriateness               of               having               a               sexual               relationship               with               a               subordinate,               he               defiantly               turned               his               back               on               the               members               of               the               House               during               the               reading               of               the               censure               motion.

Studds               argued               that               a               formal               censure               was               too               harsh               a               punishment               because               his               relationship               with               the               teenager               was               consensual               and               not               illegal.

Unpersuaded,               the               House               of               Representatives               voted               420-3               to               censure               Studds.

As               further               punishment,               Studds               was               also               stripped               of               his               Chairmanship               of               the               House               Merchant               Marine               Subcommittee.
               In               spite               of               his               trysts               with               the               teenager               and               the               1983               censure,               Studds'               constituents               reelected               him               to               the               House               of               Representatives               for               six               more               two-year               terms.
               Book(s):
               Slanksy,               Paul.

The               Little               Quiz               Book               of               Big               Political               Sex               Scandals               (mentioned)
               8.

U.S.

Representative               Barney               Frank
               In               1981,               Barney               Frank               was               elected               to               the               United               States               House               of               Representatives               from               Massachusetts.

In               1987,               he               joined               fellow               Massachusetts               congressman,               Gerry               Studds,               as               the               only               openly               gay               members               of               Congress.

In               1989,               he               again               followed               Studds               by               being               involved               in               a               lascivious               sex               scandal.
               In               1989,               Congressman               Frank               hired               prostitute,               Steve               Gobie,               paying               him               $80               for               sex.

Congressman               Frank               then               established               a               permanent               relationship               with               Gobie               (also               an               alleged               drug               user)               for               nearly               18               months.

As               part               of               that               relationship,               Frank               wrote               several               letters               to               Gobie's               probation               officer               on               Congressional               letterhead,               paid               Gobie               to               run               errands,               permitted               Gobie               to               use               his               apartment               and               car,               and               fixed               33               of               Gobie's               parking               tickets.

It               was               during               this               time               that               Gobie               started               his               own               male               prostitution               service,               running               it               from               Congressman               Frank's               apartment.
               The               scandal               was               first               reported               by               the               Washington               Times               on               August               25,               1989.

The               House               Ethics               Committee               subsequently               investigated               the               matter.

The               Committee               concluded               that               there               was               no               evidence               that               Frank               had               known               of               or               been               involved               in               any               illegal               activity,               but               they               recommended               a               reprimand               for               using               his               congressional               office               to               fix               Gobie's               parking               tickets.

The               House               voted               408-18               to               reprimand               Frank.
               Book(s):
               Slanksy,               Paul.

The               Little               Quiz               Book               of               Big               Political               Sex               Scandals               (mentioned)
               9.

Governor               James               "Jim"               McGreevey
               Jim               McGreevey,               the               52nd               Governor               of               New               Jersey,               resigned               his               office               in               August               2004               after               admitting               to               being               involved               in               an               extramarital,               homosexual               affair               with               an               Israeli               man,               Golan               Cipel,               who               he               appointed               as               New               Jersey               Homeland               Security               Adviser.

Governor               McGreevey               met               Cipel               during               a               during               a               trip               to               Israel               in               2000.
               In               2002,               McGreevey               came               under               heavy               criticism               for               appointing               Cipel               whose               qualifications               were               viewed               as               woefully               inadequate               for               his               position.

Moreover,               since               Cipel               was               not               a               U.S.

Citizen,               he               could               not               obtain               the               necessary               security               clearances               from               the               United               States               government               to               perform               his               fundamental               duties.

Consequently,               in               August               2002,               Cipel               resigned               his               position               at               the               request               of               the               Governor.
               Two-years               later,               just               prior               to               the               running               of               the               statute               of               limitations,               Cipel               threatened               McGreevey               with               a               sexual               harassment               lawsuit.

On               August               12,               2004,               up               against               that               threat,               Governor               McGreevey               (flanked               by               his               then-second               wife)               called               a               a               press               conference               where               he               admitted               to               the               sex               scandal,               announced               that               he               was               gay,               apologized               to               his               then               wife,               and               resigned               his               office               effective               November               15,               2004.
               Book(s):
               McGreevey,               Dina               Matos.

Silent               Partner:               A               Memoir               of               My               Marriage
               McGreevey,               James,               E.

The               Confession
               10.

Governor               Eliot               Spitzer
               Eliot               Spitzer               served               as               Governor               of               New               York               from               January               2007               to               March               2008.

Spitzer               previously               was               New               York               State               Attorney               General               where               he               was               an               aggressive               prosecutor.

Spitzer               resigned               the               governorship               after               he               was               exposed               in               a               high-end               prostitution               sex               scandal.
               On               March               10,               2008,               The               New               York               Times               reported               that               Governor               Spitzer               had               been               a               client               of               Emperors               Club               VIP               where               he               called               on               prostitute,               Ashley               Dupré.

According               to               various               reports,               investigators               believe               that               Spitzer               paid               up               to               $80,000               for               prostitutes               over               a               period               of               several               years               while               he               was               New               York               Attorney               General               and               Governor.
               Amid               threats               of               impeachment,               Spitzer               announced               on               March               12,               2008               that               he               would               resign               his               position               effective               March               17,               2008.
               Book(s):
               Elkind,               Peter.

Rough               Justice:               The               Rise               and               Fall               of               Eliot               Spitzer
               To               read               more               from               this               author               CLICK               HERE.






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    4. family-scherer.blogspot.com/   07/18/2010
      ...Charlottesville, Virginia. I spent my first day at Monticello, the beautiful home of Thomas Jefferson. "Monticello... place in the tunnels under Monticello, or the "Crossroads." When Jefferson...
    5. beyondtheblueridge.blogspot.com/   07/10/2010
      Monticello, home of Thomas Jefferson, sits on a beautiful hillside... all at the same time. I've been through Monticello many, many times and I love its grounds...
    6. delanceyplace.blogspot.com/   06/16/2009
      ...decide who would be best remembered in history - Franklin or Washington - but he knew for... the English,' wrote the Monticello patriarch in 1783. Adams returned...
    7. boardsanddimes.blogspot.com/   12/23/2005
      ... for themselves, this is a team game and the most popular players in history are the ones who play for others. The list is a long...
    8. quigleyblog.blogspot.com/   07/02/2009
      ...enclave, over his polite, urban professional opponent. History looks in one direction, forward. When Jackson...Harvard Law Review, the Boston Quincy neighborhood or Monticello for governance. To the contrary. One’s status would...
    9. jewaicious.wordpress.com/   12/24/2012
      ...book review: saving monticello , jefferson levy , levy family and monticello , marc leepson , monticello history , monticello jewish history , Saving Monticello review , uriah levy
    10. rbo-atlanta.blogspot.com/   04/18/2013
      ...of these six families via Getting Word , Monticello's oral history project. Monticello's Getting Word historians have interviewed some 180...
    11. Monticello History - Blog Homepage Results

      ... towns: Macon, Baldwyn, Guntown MS; Selma area Alabama, Spartanburg SC, Monticello Arkansas, Louisiana, and Gary IN...I'm sure there will be more...
      ...Thomas Foy 1894 - 1937, who was born in Monticello, San Juan County, Utah, United ...It includes genealogical and family history information about his life and ancestors...



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