Salacious Scandal of the Gilded Age: The Breckinridge-Pollard Affair

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  • Опубліковано 12 тра 2024
  • In 1893 a sensational trial in the District of Columbia pitted a young woman against a powerful US Congressman. The salacious allegations captivated the nation, and went to the very heart of the power structure of the Gilded age. The Breckinridge-Pollard affair is nearly forgotten today, but at the time it was, as a contemporary account of the trial explained, “The Most Noted Breach of Promise suit in the history of court records.”
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 318

  • @michaelshort7472
    @michaelshort7472 17 днів тому +60

    My Dad's grandmother went through this in 1900. She had a child and took the father to Federal court for breach of promise. It was a bench trial (no jury) and the case was called three times, and when the defendant never showed, the judge ruled in her favor. The child involved was my grandmother, who died in 1938 so I never knew her. My great-grandmother however, actually lived with us for a time. I never discovered all this until long after she was gone, and read about it in the copies of the local paper at the time. The name of the defendant was never mentioned, only my great-grandmother's name. I had to go to the courthouse and dig out the account of the trial from 1900! It made for fascinating reading, and made history come alive, much as The History Guy does!

    • @genaa6651
      @genaa6651 13 днів тому +7

      Kudos to your great grandma

    • @varschnitzschnur8795
      @varschnitzschnur8795 11 днів тому +5

      I noticed the defendant never came to court, and it was only after the third failure to show up that the judge decided the case in her favor.

  • @doggedout
    @doggedout 25 днів тому +51

    Love how someone described her as "an Adventuress" as an insult, when modern ears would hear it as - kind of cool.
    Then, she moves to Europe and becomes "and Adventuress" by the modern definition: A women who goes on adventures.

    • @Packhorse-bh8qn
      @Packhorse-bh8qn 20 днів тому +3

      @doggedout "Love how someone described her as "an Adventuress" as an insult, "
      You might want to look up the word, "euphemism".

  • @dennisud
    @dennisud 25 днів тому +48

    I was a student in Kentucky back in the 70s and they never said a thing about this scandal! Breckenridge was a huge politician there, and I can see why they would have buried it deep in history! Glad you covered this one!

  • @lesterpossum4088
    @lesterpossum4088 25 днів тому +34

    Seven years after the scandal, Theodore Dreiser wrote Sister Carrie; about a similar young woman “lead down the primrose path.” But Carrie’s self-worth prevails while her married lover’s life falls apart. Though scorned by moralists at the time, Carrie, like Madeleine Pollard, showed how modern public opinion could shift.

  • @ThomasEJohnson
    @ThomasEJohnson 25 днів тому +59

    Politicians haven’t changed much.

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 25 днів тому +2

      *The names and dates change, but the sensationalistic melodramatic soap operatic story remains the same*

    • @acmelka
      @acmelka 10 днів тому +2

      The only thing that has changed is that outrageous conduct by politicians used to be disqualifying, now it is a prerequisite

  • @BrilliantDesignOnline
    @BrilliantDesignOnline 25 днів тому +73

    I could tell from the outset that Breckinridge was a POS. Also, $15,000 to Pollard in that day was an absolute fortune: Good for her!(even though she never got it, but via karma, she lived her best life, while the other reaped his reward.) But, I must confess, hearing the lurid and salacious testimony has forever tainted my tender sensibilities.
    THG: You ROCK!

    • @Milkman4279
      @Milkman4279 25 днів тому +3

      $50,000

    • @tugboat2
      @tugboat2 23 дні тому +13

      @@Milkman4279She sued for $50,000 but was only awarded $15,000 (which she never received). Well, at least, she was vindicated of his breach of promise.

    • @user-gi8pk9uc7q
      @user-gi8pk9uc7q 16 днів тому +2

      @@tugboat2 Of course not, paying her would be admitting he did something wrong!

  • @nancywhitehead219
    @nancywhitehead219 25 днів тому +120

    Times change, but political cover ups never do.

    • @jliller
      @jliller 20 днів тому +8

      Times change, but men of power (political or otherwise) using that power to get sex never ends.

    • @george2113
      @george2113 14 днів тому

      ​@@jlillerI feel confident that women in power will abuse that power equally

    • @jliller
      @jliller 14 днів тому +2

      @@george2113 Some women will certainly abuse power, but I think propensity for abuse - especially the likelihood of using power for sexual conquest - is disproportionately a male trait.

  • @hbrws813
    @hbrws813 25 днів тому +62

    Fascinating. I had never heard this story.

  • @orbyfan
    @orbyfan 25 днів тому +39

    "He Denies Everything"--to quote a major figure in a political sex scandal from 70 years later, "Well, he would say that now, wouldn't he?"

    • @ghowell13
      @ghowell13 23 дні тому +3

      "What does the word 'is' mean?"
      I'll never forget that😂

  • @johnwriter8234
    @johnwriter8234 25 днів тому +73

    As a retired US Coast Guard veteran, I appreciate your display of the USCG Officers hat !!

  • @blue04mx53
    @blue04mx53 25 днів тому +78

    A Breach of promise suit seems like a really silly thing. But, then the way "History Guy' explains it it seems like it was one of the few ways women could seek justice at the time.
    Plus, the children being discarded and sent to asylums as if they were furniture is downright scary.

    • @erinobrien8793
      @erinobrien8793 25 днів тому +13

      As well as wives if they were deemed “unruly and uncontrollable”.

    • @nousernamesarevalid
      @nousernamesarevalid 23 дні тому +16

      Marriage arrangements were different in the past. A failed engagement could ruin a woman’s life back then.

    • @cremebrulee4759
      @cremebrulee4759 22 дні тому

      ​@@nousernamesarevalidyes. Women were dependent on men to take care of them. Without a man, a woman became either a burden on the family, or a burden on society. Spinsters with no family to care for them would do things like take in washing to try to survive.

    • @Packhorse-bh8qn
      @Packhorse-bh8qn 20 днів тому +3

      @blue04mx53 "A Breech of promise suit seems like a really silly thing"
      A.. pants of promise.. suit? What kind of haberdashery is this?

    • @jabbermocky4520
      @jabbermocky4520 20 днів тому +7

      He had all the power. She was doomed the moment she became his mistress. Yes, the children were disposed of by their father. Pollard had no choice but to surrender them for slaughter. She was very brave to bring the suit later. But she was irreparably "broken" the first time he touched her. He broke her, deliberately, that's why. Just because he could.

  • @feiorn
    @feiorn 25 днів тому +21

    Good on her for living what sounds like her best life after the trial!

  • @donovangray4246
    @donovangray4246 25 днів тому +101

    It's funny how a woman can be seduced and then called a "fallen woman" without the man having any responsibility for that name at all. A woman can not ruin her reputation all by herself.

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  25 днів тому +36

      That was the double-standard that was challenged in this case.

    • @memyselfandi8544
      @memyselfandi8544 25 днів тому

      It’s by design. The ruling class does evil and that’s that.

    • @velisvideos6208
      @velisvideos6208 25 днів тому +11

      In a way it is a backhanded compliment. Women are obviously more sensible and responsible than men. There never was a fallen man.

    • @memyselfandi8544
      @memyselfandi8544 25 днів тому +11

      The masonic ruling class in a nutshell.

    • @memyselfandi8544
      @memyselfandi8544 25 днів тому +5

      @@velisvideos6208 Adam was a fallen man the moment he listened to his wife, Eve. It’s been like that ever since. Wokeism for example.

  • @xjAlbert
    @xjAlbert 25 днів тому +103

    Seems applicable to characters seeking office today. So glad Miss Pollard found happiness across the Atlantic after years of abuse in the United States.

    • @auspiciouscloud8786
      @auspiciouscloud8786 25 днів тому +4

      Not to mention all those Disney lovers…. 😉🤨 (I wonder how many children get preg in that ring)

  • @kevinobrien2311
    @kevinobrien2311 25 днів тому +32

    fascinating scandal of yesteryear, rescued from its current state of obscurity -- a specialty of The History Guy -- Thanks, Lance!

  • @jchapman8248
    @jchapman8248 25 днів тому +31

    The opening pic of Kentucky Congressman William P. Breckinridge reminds me of the actor Monty Wooley (1888-1963).

    • @jec1ny
      @jec1ny 25 днів тому +2

      Monty Wooley's personal life would also have been quite scandalous had it become public knowledge during his lifetime. Happily, times have changed.

  • @mikey-wl2jt
    @mikey-wl2jt 25 днів тому +50

    Love how this case is what destroyed his political career and not, yanno, taking up arms against the union

    • @jliller
      @jliller 20 днів тому +3

      Kentucky and West Virginia didn't join the Confederacy, and many of their residents have regretted that decision ever since.

    • @SirenScorpio
      @SirenScorpio 16 днів тому +2

      ​@@jliller that's crazy... They're mad because the state didn't chose the wrong side🙆🏾‍♀️🤷🏾‍♀️ & I bet the saltiness of that is deep-seated and passed down by generations. 🤦🏾‍♀️🤦🏾‍♀️

    • @shelzp7272
      @shelzp7272 13 днів тому

      @jlillee Puh-leeze! WV broke off from Virginia in 1863 (during the middle of the Civil War) because the population didn’t want to be part of Virginia.

    • @jliller
      @jliller 13 днів тому

      @@shelzp7272 West Virginia's separation during the war was mostly an issue of longstanding state political issues. Also, while the western part of the new state was mostly Unionist, the eastern parts near the Virginia border sent a lot of men into the Confederate armies.
      Guess where the first Confederate memorial was erected. Richmond, Virginia? Charleston, South Carolina? Nope: Romney, West Virginia.

  • @I-am-awayTOM
    @I-am-awayTOM 25 днів тому +18

    This channel adds value to UA-cam.

  • @goodun2974
    @goodun2974 25 днів тому +13

    Considering Breckinridge's predilection for getting Pollard out of her corset, perhaps his punishment should have been putting him into one for a day or two!

  • @thomaslance5428
    @thomaslance5428 25 днів тому +22

    I'm really surprised they ruled in her favor. The entire time I was expecting, despite the evidence, that the men would find for Breckenridge.

    • @k.c1126
      @k.c1126 24 дні тому +7

      That would have made them look too bad. I think Pollard's age mattered. She was literally young enough to be his daughter. Even in the paternalistic society of the time that was a very bad look.

  • @jec1ny
    @jec1ny 25 днів тому +16

    Very interesting on a subject I knew little about. It prompted me to look up the legal history of "breach of promise" as I wanted to know when the law died out. To my astonishment, it has not completely died. Breach of promise remains an actionable civil offense in a number of American states. While such suits are rare, they do still occur.

  • @charmcitytoe
    @charmcitytoe 25 днів тому +14

    I'm not sure if it offers comfort or not; that my old hometown was just as insane 73 years before I would be born. What a show that must have been! Great stuff! 💯

    • @reefsroost696
      @reefsroost696 25 днів тому +1

      This is just one case that was written down to become part of history. You have to think there have been many that were not written about.

  • @corvid...
    @corvid... 25 днів тому +26

    Another great episode on a matter I would never have known about. I am always grateful for the chance to remember some piece of history that deserves to be remembered

  • @johnfun3394
    @johnfun3394 25 днів тому +7

    Politicians and their games and the regular people that pay the price. We will never learn.Thanks

  • @lauralafauve5520
    @lauralafauve5520 24 дні тому +10

    My favorite piece so far.
    A change in society brought about by a wronged woman and her lawyers.

  • @f3xpmartian
    @f3xpmartian 25 днів тому +18

    Though outwardly Mr. Breckinridge seemed a nice gentleman. His actions proved he was rotten in the core....

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 25 днів тому +6

      They say that if you want to test a man's character, give him power. Anyway, it's not what people do in public that counts, it's what they do when they think no one is watching.

    • @Dulcimertunes
      @Dulcimertunes 23 дні тому +1

      And immoral

    • @jliller
      @jliller 20 днів тому

      @@goodun2974 A lot of people fail that test even without having any real power. Entitlement is everywhere.

  • @juliebarnett9812
    @juliebarnett9812 25 днів тому +32

    Hallelujah!!! He lost! She won! I salute her.

  • @puckhockey4733
    @puckhockey4733 24 дні тому +7

    I know that most history is about war, so how could you NOT feature it, but I really appreciate your histories of things other than wars. Thanks for this!

  • @user-rn5ks8sf5x
    @user-rn5ks8sf5x 25 днів тому +9

    A tale as old as mankind. Hubris destroys fool.

  • @frankgulla2335
    @frankgulla2335 24 дні тому +5

    Dear THG, you do find the most interesting and educational moments in history that I am unaware of. Thank you.

  • @nhmooytis7058
    @nhmooytis7058 24 дні тому +8

    ❤ History Guy! No matter the topic he makes it fascinating.

  • @stevenmiller2427
    @stevenmiller2427 25 днів тому +8

    He was a lawyer and a politician wherefore not among the most honest of people.

    • @danstotland6386
      @danstotland6386 25 днів тому +1

      Libel and pure tripe. May your Family doctor represent you in your next trial (or divorce)!

    • @jliller
      @jliller 20 днів тому

      We have a legal system that inherently rewards lying.

  • @user-rb2wh1xh9r
    @user-rb2wh1xh9r 24 дні тому +3

    What a perfect story! Timely and riveting.

  • @user-oh2hs6jh5x
    @user-oh2hs6jh5x 25 днів тому +17

    Welcome to Monday! You know what to do.

  • @eliscanfield3913
    @eliscanfield3913 25 днів тому +12

    Good for her!!

  • @1st1anarkissed
    @1st1anarkissed 25 днів тому +7

    Wow, Pollard deserves a stamp. Breckinridge would have gotten along well today.

  • @johnsmartin1473
    @johnsmartin1473 25 днів тому +8

    and the good girl won.... how often did that happen? (rhetorical)

  • @rickyusa1000
    @rickyusa1000 25 днів тому +3

    There's no pirates in this story but a story about powerful men and "Fallen" women is just as good!

  • @ricksaint2000
    @ricksaint2000 19 днів тому +2

    Thank you History Guy

  • @jvinson4181
    @jvinson4181 23 дні тому +3

    I was so worried that he wouldn't be found guilty! Great topic, rhank you!

  • @BasicDrumming
    @BasicDrumming 24 дні тому +3

    I appreciate you and thank you for making content.

  • @wolfychicago
    @wolfychicago 16 днів тому +1

    This is a superb channel. Thank you!

  • @J3AD
    @J3AD 24 дні тому +1

    love the videos. great chunks of history, keep up the great work

  • @deniseconsultant1538
    @deniseconsultant1538 23 дні тому +3

    A job well done thank you

  • @petarnovakovich240
    @petarnovakovich240 25 днів тому +3

    I always enjoy these.

  • @mysterbear
    @mysterbear 17 днів тому +1

    Great story, well narrated, and with a satisfying conclusion. 🙏🏾

  • @pamelas1002
    @pamelas1002 25 днів тому +10

    Too bad she never collected her judgement. 😔

  • @kellybasham3113
    @kellybasham3113 25 днів тому +3

    Love your videos

  • @Dulcimertunes
    @Dulcimertunes 23 дні тому +3

    Must have been heartbreaking to give up her two babies

  • @stephenwoods4118
    @stephenwoods4118 25 днів тому +5

    Great story thank you, I love the Robin hood mug on the top of your bookshelf, time to rewatch 12 o'Clock high.

    • @williampawson5476
      @williampawson5476 8 годин тому +1

      I watched it last night ... one of the best war movies ever made ... lots to learn from it about leadership...

    • @stephenwoods4118
      @stephenwoods4118 8 годин тому

      @@williampawson5476 also about film making, the opening sequence is quite stunning.

  • @Ivy_1057
    @Ivy_1057 17 днів тому

    Very interesting! Thank you!

  • @constipatedinsincity4424
    @constipatedinsincity4424 25 днів тому +11

    Back in the Saddle Again Naturally

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 25 днів тому

      _yer slowin' down in yer old age_

  • @steveshoemaker6347
    @steveshoemaker6347 25 днів тому +1

    What a deal way back when......Thank THG🎀

  • @casparcoaster1936
    @casparcoaster1936 20 днів тому +1

    much obliged!!

  • @Cbabilon675
    @Cbabilon675 25 днів тому +13

    I'm curious to find out if he's the same general breckenridge, who is in charge of the confederate forces at the battle of stones river in murfreesboro tennessee. That is a Civil War battle that is worth remembering. Considering more people died per minute danette, gettysburg.

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  25 днів тому +21

      No- that was his cousin, former US Vice President John C Breckinridge

    • @danstotland6386
      @danstotland6386 25 днів тому +3

      @@TheHistoryGuyChannel Zounds ! there is an echo in the house.

  • @-.Steven
    @-.Steven 25 днів тому +1

    Very interesting!

  • @jerrylee7898
    @jerrylee7898 25 днів тому +5

    Being from Kentucky, I found this fascinating.

  • @marvwatkins7029
    @marvwatkins7029 12 днів тому +2

    I do like The History Guy bow tie!

  • @Chris-ut6eq
    @Chris-ut6eq 23 дні тому

    Good history story that I'd never heard before, thank you.
    FYI, the music at the end overpowers your voice. I'd recommend changing the mix so your voice is on top of a much lower background sound.

  • @davidcolin6519
    @davidcolin6519 25 днів тому +8

    Another marvellous story, marvellously told.
    i try very hard to teach my children history in memorable ways, but am no patch on you.

  • @stuartriefe1740
    @stuartriefe1740 25 днів тому +8

    Well, I managed to get in the door on time. Maybe I’ll earn extra credit. Greetings to all my fellow classmates from central Connecticut! Now let’s settle down and learn!

    • @peggyh4805
      @peggyh4805 6 днів тому

      Connecticut here also.

  • @stephen-ng
    @stephen-ng 25 днів тому +5

    I wonder if this Breckenridge was related to the Charles Breckenridge who headed up that disastrous embassy rescue mission to Tehran in 1979.

    • @mtroanoke
      @mtroanoke 25 днів тому +3

      You're thinking of Charlie Beckwith

  • @sugarplum5824
    @sugarplum5824 3 дні тому +2

    Why is the female granted the derogatory name of "fallen woman" but the man is still allowed to show his face in polite company? Society should be reminded that for every unwed mother, there is also an unwed father. Moral hypocrisy at its finest.

  • @TVGUY333
    @TVGUY333 24 дні тому +1

    Timely, indeed.

  • @nigelmcconnell1909
    @nigelmcconnell1909 25 днів тому +3

    Another informative story from the bearded age

  • @MrOhmikey
    @MrOhmikey 25 днів тому +83

    Great story Mr. Geiger. Especially appropriate in light of today's sad circus

    • @stephen-ng
      @stephen-ng 25 днів тому

      Scandals like this would be career ending, if promiscuity had been reigned in and curtailed immediately when it reared its head in the 1960s.

    • @katieandkevinsears7724
      @katieandkevinsears7724 25 днів тому +9

      Just another career politician doing what they do.

    • @davidcolin6519
      @davidcolin6519 25 днів тому +10

      @@katieandkevinsears7724 The difference is that Trump isn't a career politician. At least career politicians understand the basics of Constitutional Law. Not knowing even that has meant that trump has trampled over it, and the GOP, incapable of standing up to him, have allowed him to do so.
      in much the same way as Boris Johnson's premiership of the UK has led to the anihilation of rules of precedednce there, Trump's behaviour has ensured that US governance will be for ever weaker.
      To be absolutely clear, Trump is not "just anoither career politician" he is a fundamental threat to the USA and its Constitution.
      This has been 45 years in the making, but it all traces back to Reagan and his devil-may-care attitude to the truth.

    • @russcrawford3310
      @russcrawford3310 25 днів тому +4

      @@davidcolin6519 - I understand what you say, and I think my disagreement starts with Trump not understanding the Constitution, he does, how else could he abuse it so well? ..

    • @moralreality7328
      @moralreality7328 25 днів тому +1

      The charges levied by the "progressive" party are clearly timed to obstruct his re-election. The "crimes" were dug up and sat on until his re-election was announced. What we are witnessing is an attempted legal assassination of a presidential candidate. I'm not claiming the things he's being charged with didn't happen. However, the rule of law is being applied unequally, and the justice department is being wielded as a political tool. All politicians are liars seeking power and money. The less power we give them, the better as they're clearly imperfect.

  • @JohnMyers1970
    @JohnMyers1970 25 днів тому +7

    Ah… there is nothing new under the sun…

  • @bronwynecg
    @bronwynecg 25 днів тому +3

    Good morning! 👋🏽 😊

  • @lp-xl9ld
    @lp-xl9ld 25 днів тому +2

    The more things change...

  • @constipatedinsincity4424
    @constipatedinsincity4424 25 днів тому +7

    Hey History Guy🤓 the Honey 🍯 who is spending the weekend with me right now is named Breckenridge ! Get out of my head Hi Guy 🤓 the Mystical Connection continues!

  • @geegeelast7597
    @geegeelast7597 11 днів тому +1

    Her reputation would’ve been ruined. A serious, life ruining thing in those days.
    His friends possibly supported him, fearing the outing of their own affairs.

  • @TheCosmicGuy0111
    @TheCosmicGuy0111 25 днів тому +1

    Nice

  • @broadwaybaby348
    @broadwaybaby348 23 дні тому +2

    I understand that the Speaker of the House appeared on the steps of the court house to denounce the case.

  • @lindakay9552
    @lindakay9552 24 дні тому +2

    That's kinda creepy. I had a 3rd great grandfather, born 1807 Kentucky. John Preston Campbell. Tall, strong, long grey hair and beard, blue eyes. Confederate soldier. 😮

  • @slowturtle6745
    @slowturtle6745 25 днів тому +5

    How to make a political statement without making a political statement.

  • @Wextopher
    @Wextopher 25 днів тому +2

    .... condemned to repeat it.... ugh!

  • @Fostering-um8qh
    @Fostering-um8qh 7 днів тому +1

    "There is nothing new under the sun .." 😢

  • @ST-ff1zd
    @ST-ff1zd 24 дні тому +1

    Kentucky. A strange history.

  • @williamromine5715
    @williamromine5715 24 дні тому

    In the town I live in is a street named Breckenridge, but I am pretty sure it was not so named in honor of him.

  • @johnyricco1220
    @johnyricco1220 25 днів тому +1

    Can you do an episode of Sarah Althea Hill and her husband David Terry's attempted assassination of a US Supreme Court Justice?
    Terry was himself a Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court and wrote the state constitution. He is also known for killing Senator David Broderick in a duel over slavery. It's a forgotten episode for some reason. Even history buffs haven't heard of it.

  • @murraystewartj
    @murraystewartj 25 днів тому +10

    A great story, but I had to appreciate the irony that everything old is new again. Big politician tries to wiggle away from his sexual excapades by slut-shaming the woman and it backfires. Ms. Pollard lived a good life, even if the jerk never paid up. At least Stormy got paid.

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  25 днів тому +4

      That could describe multiple scandals

    • @dawnreneegmail
      @dawnreneegmail 25 днів тому +1

      @@TheHistoryGuyChannel Wilbur Mills and Fannie Flag some to mind!!

    • @mikeneely6190
      @mikeneely6190 25 днів тому

      Yup, the clintons were really scum bags in how they handled those "slutty" women. Even the liberal women backed scum bag Bill over those "women"

  • @SuperBizzle10
    @SuperBizzle10 5 днів тому +2

    Good for Miss Pollard and exposing Breckenridge for the lying weasel that he was although she didnt get any financial compensation in the end what happened to Breckenridge afterwards was compensation enough

  • @leoscheibelhut940
    @leoscheibelhut940 25 днів тому +31

    As an ex-Confederate officer, Breckenridge should never have been allowed to serve in government much less Congress. Allowing ex-Confederates to vote again was perhaps reasonable but allowing them into government aided the Lost Cause lie.
    Separately, Breckenridge was a cad and bounder.

    • @richardmalcolm1457
      @richardmalcolm1457 25 днів тому +7

      Interestingly, Breckinridge ended up as one of the most outspoken advocates for racial equality in the South.

    • @brianpendergast2894
      @brianpendergast2894 25 днів тому +1

      And Also a Scoundrel

    • @joshuabekel9700
      @joshuabekel9700 25 днів тому +1

      Look up the later life of William Mahone ("the hero of the crater").

    • @MarinCipollina
      @MarinCipollina 25 днів тому

      It's just as bad now.. We have JAN 06 insurrectionist and democracy hating supporters of the criminally fascist orange nazi serving in congress today.

    • @drdr76
      @drdr76 23 дні тому +1

      ...and that's exactly why we have this current b.s.. The South wasn't punished enough.

  • @user-qt7nq5xl1m
    @user-qt7nq5xl1m 25 днів тому +1

    Scandalous just scandalous

  • @robertalpy
    @robertalpy 22 дні тому

    You would think that a breach of promise suit would be too low a priority for The Supreme Court, but it was a member of the legislature she was filing against and he was likely powerful enough to get all the lower courts to pass it over. It's the only reason I can think of such a suit winding up on the Supreme Courts docket.

  • @loua1519
    @loua1519 19 днів тому +1

    Women barred from the courtroom? That's the most offensive aspect of this story.

  • @vaclav_fejt
    @vaclav_fejt 23 дні тому

    The "breach of promise" did indeed seem silly to me when reading the Chronicles of the Pickwick Club, but I didn't know at the time. Moreover, when that suit led to Mr. Pickwick being imprisoned in a debtor's prison, which was the subject of Dickens' critique. How can you expect a person to pay up when you lock them up, eh?

  • @MARKCARTLIDGE-sm3mz
    @MARKCARTLIDGE-sm3mz 25 днів тому +4

    Interesting as ever.❤

  • @FlaviusTheGrumpyCat
    @FlaviusTheGrumpyCat 22 дні тому +1

    Good for Pollard.
    Considering the age gap I can't find any fault with her for having an affair with a Confederate veteran. He obviously had coercive control over her considering how he decided where she went and what happened to their children.

  • @roberteells5269
    @roberteells5269 17 днів тому

    The amount she claimed in the suit was for $50,000, not $15,000.
    The most interesting point for me is the fact that $50,000 at that time, a little over 100 years ago, is the equivalent of $1 million today…
    How times change…

  • @saraross8396
    @saraross8396 19 днів тому +2

    The "me too" movement/philandering politicians unsurprisingly reaches far back, I see.

  • @helenel4126
    @helenel4126 25 днів тому +2

    Election to political office seems to make many men think they are irresistable to women.

  • @joerudnik9290
    @joerudnik9290 21 день тому +2

    You’d think that a man who is cheating on his wife would be considered a dissolute character. Hence a ‘fallen man’.😉😉😉

  • @George-nt8uw
    @George-nt8uw 23 дні тому

    Interesting case. I suppose it was dug-up to reflect on a current goings-on. Be careful, however, as this present case is not disputing that the alleged initial contact was not concluded with the customary financial compensation. Note, I said alleged! What is notable is that an alleged second contract with an alleged financial compensation for silence for the protection of privacy and reputation was entered upon and subsequently breached. The party who breached the second contract can and should be liable.

  • @zach7193
    @zach7193 25 днів тому +10

    Man, that's something. Feel like it reminds me of a scandal with Grover Cleveland about an illegitimate child. Also remind me of Trump's hush money scandals with Stormy Daniels and other women.

    • @dougsfriendskeeter
      @dougsfriendskeeter 25 днів тому

      Or hunter Biden screwing his brothers widow. Politicians really are the worst

  • @rconger24
    @rconger24 25 днів тому +1

    What has this to do with Breckinridge Colorado ?

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  24 дні тому +3

      The city in Colorado was, the story goes, named after Vice President John C Breckinridge, a cousin of William C. P. Breckinridge.

  • @richardreich8044
    @richardreich8044 23 дні тому +1

    Thanks for this fascinating clash of the Gilded Age and modernity. Very enjoyable outcome. But for salaciousness, and even horror, the murder of Stanford White over his relationship with Evelyn Nesbit cannot be surpassed.
    Took me a while to find, but of course you have an episode on White/Nesbit/Thaw! ua-cam.com/video/gWaBbyu-Bao/v-deo.html

  • @bigsarge2085
    @bigsarge2085 25 днів тому +1

    👍👍

  • @patrickfreeman8257
    @patrickfreeman8257 23 дні тому +1

    Wait...A US Congressman broke his promise? Say it ain't so.

  • @earlaagaard8175
    @earlaagaard8175 24 дні тому

    I guess what goes around comes around...... 🙂