Skip to main content

Politics & Power Quote by Grover Cleveland

"A truly American sentiment recognizes the dignity of labor and the fact that honor lies in honest toil"

About this Quote

Cleveland’s line is a piece of political carpentry: sturdy, plainspoken, built to hold weight. In the late 19th century, “labor” wasn’t an abstract virtue word; it was a live wire. The country was lurching through industrial consolidation, brutal strikes, and widening class conflict. A president invoking the “dignity of labor” is not serenading the worker so much as trying to domesticate the category “labor” into something safely moral, safely patriotic, safely non-revolutionary.

The genius of the phrasing is how it relocates honor. Not in ancestry, not in wealth, not in speculation - but in “honest toil,” a term that quietly sets boundaries. “Toil” flatters the worker’s hardship, while “honest” acts like a velvet rope: it praises effort while implying that some forms of making money (or some forms of protest) don’t qualify. In an era when financiers and monopolists were often accused of extracting rather than producing, the sentence doubles as a rebuke to get-rich-quick capitalism without naming names. It’s populist in tone, conservative in aim.

“Truly American” is the other pressure point. Cleveland frames respect for work as national identity, not merely personal ethics. That move turns class antagonism into a loyalty test: to honor labor is to be American; to sneer at it is to stand outside the civic family. It’s an attempt to bind a fracturing society with a simple creed - one that dignifies workers, reassures the middle, and keeps the moral high ground firmly in the hands of the state.

Quote Details

TopicWork Ethic
Source
Verified source: Acceptance Letter to the Democratic National Convention (Grover Cleveland, 1884)
Text match: 98.04%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
A true American sentiment recognizes the dignity of labor and the fact that honor lies in honest toil. (pp. 293–296). This line appears in Grover Cleveland’s formal written acceptance of the Democratic presidential nomination, dated August 18, 1884 (Albany, N.Y.), addressed to Col. William F. Vilas (chairman) and other members of the convention’s notification committee. The American Presidency Project reproduces the text and explicitly cites the contemporary primary printed source: Official Proceedings of the National Democratic Convention, Held in Chicago, Ill., July 8th, 9th, 10th, and 11th, 1884 (New York: Douglas Taylor’s Democratic Printing House, 1884), pp. 293–296. Note that many modern quotation sites introduce it as “A truly American sentiment…,” but the primary text reads “A true American sentiment…”.
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Cleveland, Grover. (2026, February 8). A truly American sentiment recognizes the dignity of labor and the fact that honor lies in honest toil. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-truly-american-sentiment-recognizes-the-dignity-128843/

Chicago Style
Cleveland, Grover. "A truly American sentiment recognizes the dignity of labor and the fact that honor lies in honest toil." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-truly-american-sentiment-recognizes-the-dignity-128843/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"A truly American sentiment recognizes the dignity of labor and the fact that honor lies in honest toil." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-truly-american-sentiment-recognizes-the-dignity-128843/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Grover Add to List
A truly American sentiment: dignity of labor and honest toil
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

Grover Cleveland

Grover Cleveland (March 18, 1837 - June 24, 1908) was a President from USA.

24 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

Grover Cleveland, President
Grover Cleveland
Thomas Dekker, Dramatist
Thomas Dekker
George Henry Lewes, Philosopher
George Henry Lewes