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Description

A failed English businessman lost his fortune on Peruvian rice speculation in 1850s San Francisco. His solution? He declared himself Emperor of the United States, abolished Congress, and started printing his own currency. And instead of locking him up, the entire city fell in love with him.

Joshua Norton became Emperor Norton I during the chaos of California's Gold Rush, when San Francisco was a lawless boomtown filled with abandoned ships and fortune seekers. For over 20 years, he wandered the streets in full military regalia, inspecting police forces, issuing royal decrees, and dining at soup kitchens. When he died in 1880, more than 10,000 people lined the streets for his funeral—more than most actual presidents received.

This forgotten story reveals how one city's sense of humor became an act of resistance during America's most corrupt political era, and why sometimes the most meaningful leaders are the ones with no real power at all.

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