The summer of 1885 was a scorcher, but that wasn’t the hot topic in America that year. On June 16, a national hero battling terminal cancer retreated to a small cottage in the cooler mountains of upstate New York in a valiant effort to finish his long awaited memoirs.
The famous Civil War general had spurned offers to write his memoirs for years, but circumstances had changed. In 1884, the same year his cancer was diagnosed, a Wall Street investment fund co-owned by his son Buck went bankrupt. Managing partner Ferdinand Ward was exposed for running a Ponzi scheme costing investors millions, which ruined the family finances of Ulysses S. Grant….