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Grover, North Carolina
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==History== Grover is classified as a small town where railway and highway routes [[Interstate 85]] and [[U.S. Route 29]] cross the state line between [[North Carolina]] and [[South Carolina]]. It was previously named Whitaker and legally was in South Carolina. The name change to Grover in 1885 was in honor of President [[Grover Cleveland]].<ref>{{cite book | url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_9V1IAAAAMAAJ | title=The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States | publisher=Govt. Print. Off. | author=Gannett, Henry | year=1905 | pages=[https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_9V1IAAAAMAAJ/page/n144 145]}}</ref> Gingerbread Row, (Cleveland Avenue - NC Highway 226) has an antique look with many restored homes in beautiful colors. A railroad-dominated town started when the Atlanta Charlotte Airline Railway placed a turntable for engines to be spun. They operated from the 1880s to the 1920s and [[Southern Railway (U.S.)]] continues to carry passengers to this day (now known as [[Norfolk Southern]]). Mail drops and pickups by train occurred several times per day in Grover often with the mail bag put on a hook while the train came through at speed. [[Amtrak]] also operates on the line (under permission) and carries passengers from [[Atlanta]] to [[Charlotte, North Carolina|Charlotte]], [[Richmond, Virginia|Richmond]], [[Boston]], and [[New York City]]. [[George W. Bush]] made a rail stop in Grover during his U.S. Presidential campaign. Grover is also home to international companies like Eaton, Commercial Vehicle Group, Southern Power, 84 Lumber, Uniquetex, and the US Presidential Culinary Museum and Library. [[Hatcher Hughes]] previously lived in Grover and won the [[Pulitzer Prize]] in 1924 for his Broadway play, ''[[Hell-Bent Fer Heaven]]'', a show about his own people from the area of the foothills - where Grover is located. He was a professor at the Ivy League college [[Columbia University]]. The Hambright (Hambrecht) family of [[Philadelphia]] and [[Prussia]] lives in Grover and built the tallest and largest mansion there in 1879 under the guidance of Doctor Alfred Frederick Hambright (Hambrecht). Grover also hosts a former [[White House]] Chef and manager of the Presidential resort and conference center [[Camp David]], Martin CJ Mongiello, who lives there.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.shelbystar.com/news/20180402/annual-egg-roll-returns-to-cleveland-county | title=From DC to Grover }}</ref> Grover is a part of [[Cleveland County, North Carolina]]. The county is named after Colonel [[Benjamin Cleveland]] (Cleaveland - Thorkil de Cleveland of Cleveland County York, England in the year 1066) - of the King's Mountain battle - a companion of Colonel [[Frederick Hambright]] (with his son John by his side) during the Revolutionary War. Grover holds as many North Carolina Official Historical Markers as the county seat of Shelby. It was the town of entry by The Marquess, Lord Charles Cornwallis when he invaded North Carolina with his cavalry, artillery, and army. The butcher of New Jersey, Major Patrick Ferguson, also camped near parts of present-day Grover, prior to battle on King's Mountain, a local mountain range named after the King Family that lived there. In 1887, the legislature voted to change the name of Grover's County - to the more utilized English word version of, "Cleveland", from its previous version of Cleaveland. President Grover Cleveland had been in office since 1885 (the first Democrat elected after the [[American Civil War]]). [[File:Map of Cleveland County North Carolina With Municipal and Township Labels.PNG|thumb|300px|Map of Cleveland County, North Carolina With Municipal and Township Labels]] [[File:Train engine in Grover NC.jpg|thumb|300px|A train engine in Grover ready to spin on the turn-table circa 1885 - antique postcard]] [[File:The famed Hambright family Renn's Cafeteria.jpg|thumb|left|300px|The famed Hambright (Hambrecht) family dynasty crown jewel mansion that welcomed people to Grover for 30 years from 1948 to 1978 is now The Inn of the Patriots, since 2008]] <!-- Deleted image removed: [[File:Hatcher Hughes.jpg|thumb|300px|Grover, NC former resident and 1924 Pulitzer Prize winning playwright, Harvey Hatcher Hughes - a lecturer at Columbia University]] --> This portion of history affected local matters. A German bachelor, Grover Cleveland, was ill at ease at first with all the comforts of the [[White House]]. "I must go to dinner," he wrote to a friend, "but I wish it was to eat a pickled herring, a Swiss cheese, and a chop at Louis' instead of the French stuff I shall find." He gained advance publicity and coverage as did the town of Grover. A portion of the original plan encompassed renaming the town after the President's first name to attain notice. In June 1886, this predicament would be fixed for Grover. President Cleveland married 21-year-old [[Frances Folsom]]; he was the only President ever married in the [[White House]]. This historic event and the ensuing honeymoon took on news attention. The name change of Grover's county took on epic proportions shortly after this event. The town, White House and county historically affected each other in an unpredicted manner. In 1887, Cleaveland County held a referendum and vote to change its name to the more popular spelling of, "Cleveland". The latest, mistaken report of this (verified July 2008) with a letter delivered by the US Postal Service, from the White House Historical Society to The Inn of the Patriots, 301 Cleveland Avenue, Grover Cleveland, NC 28073. No such town exists in America. Cleveland Avenue (Route 226) runs through Grover - parallel to Main Street. Many Hambright's (Hambrecht's), Hamrick's and Herndon's lived on Cleveland Avenue. Today, the Shiloh Presbyterian Church (built in 1905) remains next to Doctor Alfred Hambright's (Hambrecht) home that was built after the [[American Civil War|Civil War]]. A statue was dedicated to Colonel Frederick Hambright (Hambrecht Prussian family) and US Marine Corporal, Clyde Furman Horton on July 1, 2008. The [[Shiloh Presbyterian Church Cemetery]] was listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]] in 2011.<ref name="nps">{{cite web|url=http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/listings/20111230.htm|title=National Register of Historic Places Listings|date=December 30, 2011|work=Weekly List of Actions Taken on Properties: 12/19/11 through 12/23/11|publisher=National Park Service}}</ref> Many other prominent names dominate the makeup of Grover and are listed repeatedly in reference level books of the Cleveland County Library System, families like Herndon, Hambright (Hambrecht), Hamrick, Rountree, Keeter, Graham, Cleaveland, Cleveland, Scruggs, and Goforth. Within the history of Grover - it is often confused with President Grover Cleveland versus Benjamin Cleveland and where the names came from. Although, each Cleveland are related - going back to Amos Cleveland, of Massachusetts and Cleveland, Ohio. Grover is in the process of restoring itself to a town with a 'turn-of-the-century look and feel'.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.shelbystar.com/news/20180212/grover-looks-to-improve-town-park | title=Grover looks to improve town park }}</ref> Its train and spinning engine turntable with history applied for such in a 2010 North Carolina Main Street program. The current mayor is Bill Willis. The town historian for a long period was Doctor Cobia Goforth who died in late 2017.{{citation needed|date=April 2017}} {{clear left}}
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