Calvin Coolidge
At 2:30 on the morning of August 3, 1923, while visiting in Vermont, Calvin
Coolidge received word that he was President. By the light of a kerosene lamp, his
father, who was a notary public, administered the oath of office as Coolidge placed his
hand on the family Bible.
Coolidge was "distinguished for character more than for heroic achievement," wrote a
Democratic admirer, Alfred E. Smith. "His great task was to restore the dignity and prestige of
the Presidency when it had reached the lowest ebb in our history ... in a time of extravagance
and waste...."
Born in Plymouth, Vermont, on July 4, 1872, Coolidge was the son of a village
storekeeper. He was graduated from Amherst College with honors, and entered law and politics in
Northampton, Massachusetts. Slowly, methodically, he went up the political ladder from
councilman in Northampton to Governor of Massachusetts, as a Republican. En route he became
thoroughly conservative.
As President, Coolidge demonstrated his determination to preserve the old moral and economic
precepts amid the material prosperity which many Americans were enjoying.
He refused to use Federal economic power to check the growing boom or to
ameliorate the depressed condition of agriculture and certain industries. His first message to
Congress in December 1923 called for
isolation in foreign policy, and for tax cuts, economy, and limited aid to farmers.
He rapidly became popular. In 1924, as the beneficiary of what was becoming
known as "Coolidge prosperity," he polled more than 54 percent of the popular vote.
In his Inaugural he asserted that the country had achieved "a state of contentment seldom
before seen," and pledged himself to maintain the status quo. In subsequent years
he twice vetoed farm relief bills, and killed a plan to produce cheap Federal electric power on
the Tennessee River.
The political genius of President Coolidge, Walter Lippmann pointed out in 1926,
was his talent for effectively doing nothing: "This active inactivity suits the mood and
certain of the needs of the country admirably. It suits all the business interests which
want to be let alone.... And it suits all those who have become convinced that government in
this country has become dangerously complicated and top-heavy...."
Coolidge was both the most negative and remote of Presidents, and the most accessible.
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."
But no President was kinder in permitting himself to be photographed in Indian war
bonnets or cowboy dress, and in greeting a variety of delegations to the White House.
Both his dry Yankee wit and his frugality with words became legendary. His wife,
Grace Goodhue Coolidge, recounted that a young woman sitting next to Coolidge at a
dinner party confided to him she had bet she could get at least three words of conversation
from him. Without looking at her he quietly retorted, "You lose." And in 1928, while
vacationing in the Black Hills of South Dakota, he issued the most famous of his laconic
statements, "I do not choose to run for President in 1928."
By the time the disaster of the Great Depression hit the country, Coolidge was in retirement.
Before his death in January 1933, he confided to an old friend, ". . . I feel I no
longer fit in with these times."