Posted on 06/30/2015 10:09:12 AM PDT by newgeezer
Americans love the 4th of Julyand for good reason. Writing to his wife in July 1776, John Adams hailed the Fourth as the day of deliverance and predicted that it would be celebrated by succeeding generations as the great anniversary festival. He correctly foresaw these annual celebrations with pomp and parade, with shows, games, sports, guns, bells, bonfires, and illuminations, from one end of this continent to the other, from this time forward forever more. On the first anniversary in 1777, the celebrations started, and they have continued ever since.
The year 2015 will be no exception. But as Americans turn their thoughts this year to the blessings of Independence Day, we should add one additionalless well knownblessing to the list. In addition to Independence Day, July 4th is also the birthday of one of our great presidents, the 30th President, Calvin Coolidge.
On July 4, 1872, Calvin Coolidge was born in Plymouth Notch, a small village in rural Vermont. It was here that he learned the New England puritan virtues that would define his character. Coolidge spoke often of his fathers hard work and his strong New England trait of great repugnance at seeing anything wasted. He came to view any kind of waste as a moral wrong. Another New England characteristic that young Coolidge absorbed was a total lack of pretenseand a strong aversion to anything, or anyone, pretentious. In his words, Country life does not always have breadth, but it has depth. Hard work, independent thinking, lack of pretense, sense of duty, perseverance, and scrupulous truthfulness all constituted the essence of Coolidges boyhood life in Plymouth Notch and became the trademarks of Coolidge the adult.
After graduating from Amherst College, Coolidge married, settled in Northampton, Massachusetts, and began what became a steady ascent in political life. First, he was elected to a series of local offices, followed by election to the state legislature, Lt. Governor, and finally Governor of Massachusetts. In 1919, as Governor, Coolidges successful settlement of the Boston Police Strike catapulted him into national prominence. With these famous words, There is no right to strike against the public safety by anybody, anytime, anywhere, Coolidge was suddenly famous. As a result, the Republican convention nominated him for Vice-President, as Warren Hardings running mate.
When President Harding died unexpectedly in 1923, the picture of Calvin Coolidge taking the oath of office became indelibly stamped on the countrys collective consciousness. Coolidge was vacationing at his fathers farm in Plymouth Notch when word of Hardings death came late in the night. He took the oath of office from his father, Colonel John Coolidge, a notary, in the small family living room by the light of a kerosene lamp. It is impossible to imagine a more appropriate backdrop for Coolidges rise to the presidency. He was the product of rural Americaa man without pretensestraightforward, frugal, and honest. This was Americans first glimpse of their new presidentand they liked what they saw.
The country soon discovered that Coolidge was totally unlike any national politician it had encountered. He seemed consistently to eschew the conventional political necessities of warmth and congeniality; and even more surprisingly, he was truly a man of few words. He was at once both, in William Allen Whites words, a throwback to the more primitive days of the Republic and also a highly successful modern politician, who was the first president to use radio, photography, and public relations adroitly. It was remarkable that this physically unimpressive, undramatic, reticent New Englander could have so dominated his era, elicited the affection of the public, and modeled the virtues that gave it substance. For an America that was experiencing postwar disillusionment and a bewildering modern secularism, Coolidge offered faith in a mythic America of honesty, hard work, thrift, and religion. As White concluded, Coolidge was in fact a genius, but this genius was surprisinglyfascinatingly unconventional in every way.
Coolidge proved, in historian Paul Johnsons words, to be the most internally consistent and single-minded of presidents. He oversaw a program of comprehensive tax reform, the reduction of the top marginal income tax rate from 70% to 24%, the removal of most Americans from the income tax rolls completely, the longest period of peacetime expansion and prosperity in U. S. history, and, astoundingly, an absolute reduction in the size of the federal bureaucracy. He was arguably Americas most successful conservative president.
On July 4, 1926, President Calvin Coolidge traveled to Philadelphia to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. He closed with these words: The Declaration of Independence is the product of the spiritual insight of the people. We live in an age of science and of abounding accumulation of material things. These did not create our Declaration. Our Declaration created them. The things of the spirit come first. Unless we cling to that, all our material prosperity, overwhelming though it may appear, will turn to a barren scepter in our grasp. If we are to maintain the great heritage which has been bequeathed to us, we must be like-minded as the fathers who created them.
We would do well to remember Coolidges words this Independence Day.
Cal was a good man, and a great leader. Common sense is against the law today, anyway........
And credit Harding for letting the Depression of 1920 run its course without gov’t intervention making it worse.
Thus setting the stage for the economic boom of the Twenties.
Ping!
I consider him to be the patron saint of the Tea Party.
A speech on taxes, the cost of government and its relation to the average man.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5puwTrLRhmw
There are around twenty-odd reasons for the boom period of the 1920s. I wouldn’t give Harding that much credit. Lowering the tax rates really helped a good bit. But the arrival of cars for the middle-class, the take-off of radio, rapid arrival of movies, vacations becoming a common thing for regular people, and the vast commercial awakening of sports in America all helped as well.
Great man. He also put a stop to the endless immigration that the public had had enough of.
It’s become kind of a fad now to favorably compare the hands-off approach of the gov’t to the 1920-21 depression, to the interventionist approach during the Great Depression and currently. Books, magazine articles, etc.
I think they make a good point.
Coolidge is one of my favorite Presidents of all time. I read his autobiography. A man of true of character.
A favorite joke had a pretty young woman approaching the president to explain that she had bet a friend she could make him say more than two words. “You lose,” Coolidge replied.
He’s my second-favorite president, after George Washington.
Thanks for that.
More evidence to suggest that many of our greatest presidents would be completely unelectable today. Not so much because of their politics, but rather, because of our ridiculous fixation on the superficial qualities.
(I continue to blame Amendment XIX. ;)
I’d argue Reagan was just as good...
But even Ronaldus Magnus claimed Coolidge was his favorite.
"I don't recall any candidate for president that ever injured himself very much by not talking"
"Nine tenths of a president's callers at the White House want something they ought not to have. I you keep dead still they will run down in three or four minutes."
Calvin Coolidge
Cool Cal ping.
Harding is unfairly maligned, we would do very well to have a President as “bad” as he was.
Coolidge also signed into law the National Origins Quota based immigration reform, which ended mass immigration and and ushered in an era of low-moderate immigration levels that lasted for forty years.
That was one of the great conservative successes of his Presidency, and it is that more than any thing else that modern Republicans should seek to replicate by ending this current unending wave of mass, democrat-importing immigration.
Coolidge beats Reagan easily on immigration. And I doubt Coolidge made such horrible choices for the Sup Court that Reagan did with O’Connor and Kennedy.
Coolidge’s only significant mistake was supporting Harding’s leftist lunacy with the Washington Naval Treaty, which in many ways started World War 2 in the Pacific.
Actually, Coolidge’s sole appointment to the Supreme Court, that of the sitting Attorney General Harlan Fiske Stone, was fairly lousy. He joined the left wing of the court in short order. FDR was so pleased with this “Republican”, he elevated him to Chief Justice when Charles Evans Hughes retired in 1941.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harlan_F._Stone
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