president herbert
hoover
thirty-first president
of the united states
interesting
facts
Parties at the White
House during Herbert Hoover's term
were big events. As many as 4,000
invitations to a gala
would be loaded on
trucks and hand delivered around
Washington.
quote
"We in America
today are nearer to the final triumph
over poverty than ever before in the
history of any land." -
Ironically, the Great Depression
ended ten years later.
biography
Son of a Quaker
blacksmith, Herbert Clark Hoover
brought to the Presidency an
unparalleled reputation for public
service as an engineer, administrator,
and humanitarian.
Born in an Iowa
village in 1874, he grew up in Oregon.
He enrolled at Stanford University
when it opened in 1891, graduating as
a mining engineer.
He married his
Stanford sweetheart, Lou Henry, and
they went to China, where he worked
for a private corporation as China's
leading engineer. In June 1900 the
Boxer Rebellion caught the Hoovers in
Tientsin. For almost a month the
settlement was under heavy fire. While
his wife worked in the hospitals,
Hoover directed the building of
barricades, and once risked his life
rescuing Chinese children.
One week before Hoover
celebrated his 40th birthday in
London, Germany declared war on
France, and the American Consul
General asked his help in getting
stranded tourists home. In six weeks
his committee helped 120,000 Americans
return to the United States. Next
Hoover turned to a far more difficult
task, to feed Belgium, which had been
overrun by the German army.
After the United
States entered the war, President
Wilson appointed Hoover head of the
Food Administration. He succeeded in
cutting consumption of foods needed
overseas and avoided rationing at
home, yet kept the Allies fed.
After the Armistice,
Hoover, a member of the Supreme
Economic Council and head of the
American Relief Administration,
organized shipments of food for
starving millions in central Europe.
He extended aid to famine-stricken
Soviet Russia in 1921. When a critic
inquired if he was not thus helping
Bolshevism, Hoover retorted, "Twenty
million people are starving. Whatever
their politics, they shall be fed!"
After capably serving
as Secretary of Commerce under
Presidents Harding and Coolidge,
Hoover became the Republican
Presidential nominee in 1928. He said
then: "We in America today are nearer
to the final triumph over poverty than
ever before in the history of any
land." His election seemed to ensure
prosperity. Yet within months the
stock market crashed, and the Nation
spiraled downward into depression.
After the crash Hoover
announced that while he would keep the
Federal budget balanced, he would cut
taxes and expand public works
spending.
In 1931 repercussions
from Europe deepened the crisis, even
though the President presented to
Congress a program asking for creation
of the Reconstruction Finance
Corporation to aid business,
additional help for farmers facing
mortgage foreclosures, banking reform,
a loan to states for feeding the
unemployed, expansion of public works,
and drastic governmental economy.
At the same time he
reiterated his view that while people
must not suffer from hunger and cold,
caring for them must be primarily a
local and voluntary responsibility.
His opponents in Congress, who he felt
were sabotaging his program for their
own political gain, unfairly painted
him as a callous and cruel President.
Hoover became the scapegoat for the
depression and was badly defeated in
1932. In the 1930's he became a
powerful critic of the New Deal,
warning against tendencies toward
statism.
In 1947 President
Truman appointed Hoover to a
commission, which elected him
chairman, to reorganize the Executive
Departments. He was appointed chairman
of a similar commission by President
Eisenhower in 1953. Many economies
resulted from both commissions'
recommendations. Over the years,
Hoover wrote many articles and books,
one of which he was working on when he
died at 90 in New York City on October
20, 1964.
