Staff writer Carso and Rascoff review the latest Netflix series on the life of President and Williams alum James A. Garfield.
Was the assassin who killed President James Garfield really unwell? Did Chester A. Arthur like drunk boxing? We fact-check ...
Netflix’s latest historical dramas brings to life the story of the assassination of James Garfield. “It’s been the thrill of a lifetime seeing this crack team come together to bring James Garfield and ...
“The announcement of votes for me is not in accordance with my wishes,” James Abram Garfield pleaded from the podium of the Republican National Convention in Chicago, June 1880. “I have not consented, ...
On July 2, 1881, United States president James A. Garfield waited at Washington, D.C.’s Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Station to board a train that would take him to New England to begin his summer ...
Lucretia “Crete” Garfield was more than the wife of a short-lived president—she was James A. Garfield’s moral compass and closest advisor. The first lady helped shape her husband’s values and ...
“James A. Garfield is dead,” the Red Bank Register reported on Sept. 21, 1881, one of the many newspapers that delivered the sad news telegraphed from the Jersey Shore town of Long Branch that yet ...
Garfield had a short tenure as U.S. President, but it started with a ball at the Smithsonian's newest building.