president calvin coolidge
thirtieth president of the united
states
interesting
facts
The laconic Calvin Coolidge (nicknamed
"Silent Cal"), spoke so little, that a dinner guest
bet that she could ellicit more than two words from
him. He replied "You lose."
quote
Before his death in January 1933, he
confided to an old friend, ". . . I feel I no
longer fit in with these times."
He once explained to Bernard
Baruch why he often sat silently through interviews: "Well,
Baruch, many times I say only 'yes' or 'no' to people.
Even that is too much. It winds them up for twenty
minutes more."
biography
Calvin Coolidge was born on July 4,
1872, in Plymouth, Vt., the son of John Calvin
Coolidge and Victoria Moor Coolidge. He was named John
Calvin for his father but dropped the John when he was
graduated from college. His father was a farmer,
storekeeper, and occasional political officeholder. As
Calvin grew up he learned to do farm chores. He helped
to fill the woodbox, drive the cattle to pasture, drop
seed potatoes at planting time, and drive the
horsedrawn mowing machine and rake at harvest. For
winter fun there were coasting, skating, and hayrides.
In summer he enjoyed fishing, swimming, and riding.
His boyhood was saddened by the illness of his mother
and her death when he was 12 years old.
The boy learned his politics along
with other lessons from his father. During the
Garfield-Hancock campaign of 1880, Calvin asked his
father for a penny to buy candy. John Coolidge
refused, explaining that if the Democrats should be
elected hard times could be expected. After Garfield
won, the lad reminded his father that the Republicans
had stayed in power. He got the penny.
Coolidge attended Black River Academy
in Ludlow, Vt., before he entered Amherst College in
Massachusetts. He was graduated laude from Amherst in
1895. He learned law in the old-fashioned way,
studying in a law firm at Northampton, Mass. He took
his first steps in politics in these years by doing
hard work on ward and city committees.
Coolidge was the opposite of the
popular picture of the back-slapping politician. He
was quiet, sincere, and rather shy; but he was able to
attract and hold the confidence of voters and
political leaders alike. He was elected and reelected
to one office after another. He served as state
representative, mayor of Northampton, state senator
and president of the state Senate, lieutenant
governor, and governor of Massachusetts. Always he
stood for economy, conservatism, and party regularity.
In 1905 Coolidge married Grace Anna Goodhue of
Burlington, Vt. They had two sons, John and Calvin.
Governor Coolidge came into nationwide
prominence during the police strike in Boston in 1919.
He let the mayor handle the problem until the police
left their posts and disorders arose. Then he summoned
the state guard to keep order. To a protest by a labor
leader he replied: "There is no right to strike
against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, any
time." At the Republican Convention the next year he
was nominated for the vice-presidency on the first
ballot. As vice-president, Coolidge was modest and
silent. He presided over the Senate and sat in Cabinet
meetings at President Harding's invitation. Harding's
death brought Coolidge into the presidency at a
critical time. Scandals in the Harding administration
were becoming public. Enormous graft in the Veterans'
Bureau and the Alien Property Custodian's office had
been revealed. The Senate opened an investigation of
private leases on naval oil reserves at Teapot Dome,
Wyo., and Elk Hills, Calif. They had been granted by
Albert B. Fall, Harding's secretary of the interior .
Following a resolution by Congress, Coolidge appointed
lawyers to prosecute those involved in the oil
scandal. Fall was convicted and imprisoned. Secretary
of the Navy Denby and Attorney General Daugherty
resigned under pressure.Coolidge was nominated for a
second term in 1924, with Charles G. Dawes of Illinois
as the vice-presidential nominee. The Democrats
nominated John W. Davis of West Virginia for the
presidency and Gov. Charles W. Bryan of Nebraska for
the vice-presidency. Insurgent Republicans put a
Progressive party ticket into the field, headed by
Sen. Robert M. La Follette of Wisconsin and Sen.
Burton K. Wheeler of Montana. Coolidge and Dawes won.
They received 382 electoral votes to 136 for Davis and
only 13 for La Follette.
In his messages to Congress Coolidge
called for tax reduction, immigration restriction,
extension of the civil service, reorganization of
government departments, river improvements, and
adherence to the World Court. Congress was frequently
uncooperative. A farm-bloc minority of progressive
Republicans held the balance of power. Coolidge vetoed
their McNary-Haugen bill, which was designed to
support farm prices by government subsidies. He also
vetoed a bill for a bonus, in the form of insurance,
for World War I veterans. Congress passed this bill
over his veto. Coolidge and Andrew Mellon, secretary
of the treasury, won the passage of economy measures.
They reduced the national debt by about a billion
dollars a year and cut taxes in all income brackets.
Business rather than politics made the
big news of the era. Industry was flourishing. Big
business became bigger through both growth and
consolidation. The 1920s saw 7,000 mergers in industry
and mining and the same trend in utilities,
merchandising, and banking. Advertising reached a new
peak, helping to move the huge quantities of
merchandise turned out by the factories. Chain stores,
mail-order houses, and installment buying were
expanding features of retail trade. Nearly every town
had its real-estate boom.
The stock market rocketed upward, attracting investors
and margin buyers from all ranks of society (See Stock
Market). Corporations found it easy to issue new
securities. Credit was overexpanded. Cheap money
flowed into foreign bond issues and a variety of
domestic projects, including 4 million dollars' worth
of brokers' loans. When conservative bankers and
economists were concerned over the extent of these
loans, Coolidge stated that their increase showed a
natural expansion of business. He had great faith in
the continued march of prosperity.
The so-called Coolidge prosperity did
not reach everyone. Farmers continued to suffer from
falling prices and the decline in foreign purchase of
their products. Farm mortgage foreclosures increased.
The labor picture was uneven. Jobholders enjoyed a
rising standard of living and a shorter work week.
Some large firms offered workers such services as
low-cost cafeterias, free medical care, profit-sharing
plans, and vacations with pay. The number of
unemployed, however, fluctuated between 1 1/2 and 2
million. Unions lost ground in numbers and influence.
Coolidge's popularity remained
unshaken, but in 1927 he issued a historical
statement: "I do not choose to run for president in
1928." In March 1929 he was succeeded by Herbert
Hoover and retired to Northampton where he wrote his
autobiography and magazine and newspaper articles. He
died suddenly on Jan. 5, 1933, and was buried in
Plymouth beside his son and father. His
`Autobiography' included little personal reporting,
thus perpetuating the image of the president who did
not talk.
