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Old 02-22-2005, 03:16 PM
KSig RC KSig RC is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Who you calling "boy"? The name's Hand Banana . . .
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Quote:
Originally posted by IowaStatePhiPsi
psst...

Buchanan’s long-time living companion, William Rufus King, was referred to by critics as his “better half,” ‘’his wife,” and “Aunt Fancy.” Around Washington, the pair were known as the “Siamese twins,” slang at the time for gays and lesbians. And when King was appointed envoy to France, in 1844, Buchanan lamented to a friend that “I have gone wooing to several gentlemen, but have not succeeded with any of them.”

Other authors have noted that Senator King was called “Miss Nancy” by Andrew Jackson, “Mrs. James Buchanan” by James K. Polk’s law partner, and “Buchanan’s better half” and “Aunt Fancy” by others. Senator King was noted for his “fastidious habits and conspicuous intimacy with bachelor Buchanan.”

http://www.stanford.edu/~lindholm/chinf_buc.html

psssst . . .

" . . . I have now one request to make, and, for love of God and of your dear, departed daughter whom I loved infinitely more than any other human being could love, deny my not. Afford me the melancholy pleasure of seeing her body before its interment. I would not for the world be denied this request.

I might make another, but, from the misrepresentations which must have been made to you, I am almost afraid. I would like to follow her remains to the grave as a mourner. I would like to convince the world, and I hope to convince you, that she was infinitely dearer to me than life. I may sustain the shock of her death, but I feel that happiness has fled from me forever. The prayer which I make to God without ceasing is, that I yet may be able to show my veneration for the memory of my dear departed saint, by my respect and attachment for her surviving friends."

--James Buchanan, to his former fiance's father


This topic is certainly up for debate, and is nowhere near as cut-and-dried as you've presented it here, killer, although the theory as been in the air forever. If I can find the articles I had to read for AP AmHistory on this very topic, I'll try to post some - it's interesting, but very much vague and without real answer.
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