Ulysses S. Grant
The Unlikely Hero
Chapter One
In the summer of 2003 Ulysses S. Grant made news all across
the country that he had, in his lifetime, done so much to reunite:
Some of his descendants, a good part of the more serious press,
and the Grant Monument Association objected strongly to pop diva
Beyoncé Knowles, accompanied by a "troupe of barely clad dancers,"
using his tomb in New York City's Riverside Park as the background
for a raucous, "lascivious," nationally televised July Fourth
concert.
Beyoncé and her fans hardly seemed aware of who Grant was, or
why such a fuss should be made about the presence of loud music,
suggestive dancing, partial nudity, and a huge, boisterous crowd in
front of his tomb, which, as the New York Times pointed out, had
once been a bigger tourist attraction than the Statue of Liberty. In
fact, except for a few members of the Grant family who had been
trying for years to get the bodies of General Grant and his wife,
Julia, removed from the tomb on the grounds that it had been allowed
to fall into a disgraceful state of repair and decay, the level of public indignation was low. The Times even felt compelled to comment
rather sniffily that the general was "no lo ... read full excerpt from: Ulysses S. Grant ebook