Background
Interest in her continued even after her father"s second presidential term was over.
Interest in her continued even after her father"s second presidential term was over.
Her birth between Cleveland"s two terms of office caused a national sensation. A sickly child, Cleveland contracted diphtheria in early January 1904. Doctors thought her case was mild, but she died four days after being diagnosed.
Cleveland is buried in Princeton Cemetery.
The Curtiss Candy Company asserted that the "Baby Ruth" candy bar (formerly known as Kandy Kake from 1900–1920) was named after Ruth Cleveland, a claim that the urban legends website Snopes.com has debunked. The renaming of the candy bar took place in 1921, thirty years after Ruth Cleveland"s birth and seventeen years after her death.
That same year, legendary baseball player George Herman Ruth, better known by the nickname Babe Ruth, was nearing the top of his popularity, having just broken the single-season home run record. As Richard Sandomir of The New York Times pointed out, "Foreign 85 years, Babe Ruth, the slugger, and Baby Ruth, the candy bar, have lived parallel lives in which it has been widely assumed that the latter was named for the former.
The confection"s creator, the Curtiss Candy Company, never admitted to what looks like an obvious connection – especially since Ruth hit 54 home runs the year before the first Baby Ruth was devoured.
Had it done so, Curtiss would have had to compensate Ruth. Instead, it eventually insisted the inspiration was "Baby Ruth" Cleveland, the daughter of President Grover Cleveland.