
JULY 4

Calvin Coolidge
Born July 4, 1872, in Plymouth, Vermont
Died January 5, 1933
30th president of the United States
(192329)
Calvin
Coolidge
Original Name - John Calvin Coolidge
Coolidge acceded to the presidency after the
death in office of Warren G. Harding, just as the
Harding scandals were coming to light. He
restored integrity to the executive branch of the
federal government while continuing the
conservative pro-business policies of his
predecessor.
Coolidge was the only son of John Calvin Coolidge
and Victoria Moor Coolidge. His father, whose
forebears had immigrated to America about 1630,
was a storekeeper who instilled in his son the
New England Puritan virtueshonesty,
industry, thrift, taciturnity, and
pietywhile his mother cultivated in him a
love of nature and books. A graduate of Amherst
College, Coolidge began practicing law in 1897.
In 1905 he married Grace Anna Goodhue, a teacher
in the Clarke Institute for the Deaf, with whom
he had two sons.
A Republican, Coolidge entered politics as a city
councilman in Northampton, Massachusetts, in
1898. He was elected mayor of Northampton in 1909
and then served in the Massachusetts state
government as senator (191115) and
lieutenant governor (191518). Elected
governor in 1918, Coolidge captured national
attention the following year when he called out
the state guard to quell violence and disorder
resulting from a strike by the Boston police, who
had formed a labour union to press their demands
for better pay and working conditions. When
labour leaders called on him to support their
demands for reinstatement of police officers who
had been fired for striking, Coolidge refused,
summing up his reasoning in a single sentence
that reverberated throughout the country:
There is no right to strike against the
public safety by anybody, anywhere, any
time.
That statementcombined with Coolidge's
strong stand against the Boston police at a time
when many Americans viewed organized labour as
too radicalcatapulted Coolidge onto the
Republican Party's ticket in 1920 as Harding's
vice-presidential running mate. The personality
of the taciturn Coolidge could not have provided
a greater contrast to that of the gregarious
Harding. In terms of policy, however, Harding and
Coolidge were nearly identical. Both were members
of the Old Guard Republicans, that conservative
segment of the party that had remained with
President William Howard Taft in 1912 when
Theodore Roosevelt left to form the Bull Moose
Party. Promising the American people a
return to normalcy, Harding and
Coolidge achieved the greatest popular vote
margin in presidential elections to that time,
crushing the Democratic ticket of James Cox and
Franklin Delano Roosevelt by 60 to 34 percent.
The electoral vote was equally one-sided: 404 to
127.
Acceding to the presidency upon Harding's
unexpected death (August 2, 1923), Coolidge took
the oath of office from his father, a notary
public, by the light of a kerosene lamp at 2:47
on August 3 at the family home in Plymouth,
Vermont. He inherited an administration mired in
scandal. Cautiously, quietly, and skillfully,
Coolidge rooted out the perpetrators and restored
integrity to the executive branch. A model of
personal rectitude himself, Coolidge convinced
the American people that the presidency was once
again in the hands of someone they could trust.
The change of ambience in the White House did not
miss the keen eye of Alice Roosevelt Longworth,
daughter of President Theodore Roosevelt, who
said that the new White House was as
different as a New England front parlor is from a
backroom in a speakeasy. ( primary source
document: The Destiny of America.)
At the Republican convention in 1924 Coolidge was
nominated virtually without opposition. Running
on the slogan Keep Cool with
Coolidge, he won a landslide victory over
conservative Democrat John W. Davis and
Progressive Party candidate Robert La Follette,
gaining about 54 percent of the popular vote to
Davis's 29 percent and La Follette's nearly 17
percent; in the electoral college Coolidge
received 382 votes to Davis's 136 and La
Follette's 13. ( primary source document:
Inaugural Address.)
Coolidge was famous for being a man of few but
well-chosen words. Despite his reputation,
Silent Cal, as he was called, had a
keen sense of humour, and he could be talkative
in private family settings. His wit was displayed
in a characteristic exchange with a Washington,
D.C., hostess, who told him, You must talk
to me, Mr. President. I made a bet today that I
could get more than two words out of you.
Coolidge replied, You lose.
Coolidge captured the prevailing sentiment of the
American people in the 1920s when he said,
The chief business of the American people
is business. The essence of the Coolidge
presidency was its noninterference in and
bolstering of American business and industry.
Government regulatory agencies, such as the
Federal Trade Commission, now were staffed by
people who sought to assist business expansion
rather than to police business practices. Most
Americans, identifying their own prosperity with
the growth of corporate profits, welcomed this
reversal of progressive reforms. They generally
agreed with the assessment of Oliver Wendell
Holmes, associate justice of the Supreme Court:
While I don't expect anything very
astonishing from [Coolidge] I don't want anything
very astonishing.
Key to the conservative, pro-business focus of
the Coolidge administration was Secretary of the
Treasury Andrew Mellon. A multimillionaire
himself, Mellon believed strongly that reducing
taxes for the rich was the best way to expand the
nation's wealth. He held that, as the rich
invested funds that otherwise would have been
taken away in taxes, new businesses would form
and older enterprises would expand and that the
result would be more jobs and greater national
production. Under the leadership of Coolidge and
Mellon, Congress sharply reduced income taxes and
estate taxes.
One form of business enterprise, however,
received almost no help from the Coolidge
administration: agriculture. Farmers constituted
the one group of producers clearly not
participating in the decade's prosperity. Twice
Congress passed the McNary-Haugen bill, calling
for the federal government to purchase surplus
crops. Twice (1927 and 1928) Coolidge vetoed it,
and the economic woes of American farmers
persisted well into the following decade.
Coolidge also vetoed a bill offering a bonus to
veterans of World War I; Congress overrode that
veto in 1924.
Reflecting its focus on internal economic growth,
the Coolidge administration showed little
interest in events outside the nation's borders.
Coolidge adamantly opposed U.S. membership in the
League of Nations, though he did increase
unofficial American involvement in the
international organization. Ironically for such
an inward-looking administration, two of its
members received the Nobel Prize for Peace. In
1925, Vice President Charles G. Dawes won the
prize for his program to help Germany meet its
war debt obligations, and Secretary of State
Frank B. Kellogg won it in 1929 for his role in
negotiating the Kellogg-Briand Pact, a
multinational agreement renouncing war as an
instrument of national policy.
In 1928, announcing, I do not choose to
run, Coolidge turned his back on what
surely would have been another election victory
and instead retired to Northampton. There he
wrote a syndicated newspaper column, several
magazine articles, and his autobiography (1929).
And there, a little less than four years after
leaving the White House, he died of a heart
attack. After his death, as the country suffered
through the worst economic crisis in its history,
many came to view the Coolidge era as a time of
inaction and complacency in the face of looming
disaster. Although Coolidge's personality
continued to be the butt of jokesupon
hearing that Coolidge was dead, the writer
Dorothy Parker quipped, How can they
tell?he was fondly remembered for his
quiet New England virtues and for the renewed
dignity and respect he brought to his office.
Coolidge was survived by first lady Grace
Coolidge, a woman whose outgoing personality
contrasted sharply with that of her tight-lipped
spouse. She lived another 24 years, during which
time she devoted herself to the needs of the
hearing-impaired.
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