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Herbert Hoover

Herbert Clark Hoover (August 10, 1874 – October 20, 1964) was an American politician who served as the 31st president of the United States from 1929 to 1933. A member of the Republican Party, he held office during the onset of the Great Depression. A self-made man who became wealthy as a mining engineer, before his presidency, Hoover led the wartime Commission for Relief in Belgium, served as the director of the U.S. Food Administration, and served as the U.S. secretary of commerce.

Herbert Hoover
Hoover in 1928
31st President of the United States
In office
March 4, 1929 – March 4, 1933
Vice PresidentCharles Curtis
Preceded byCalvin Coolidge
Succeeded byFranklin D. Roosevelt
3rd United States Secretary of Commerce
In office
March 5, 1921 – August 21, 1928
President
Preceded byJoshua W. Alexander
Succeeded byWilliam F. Whiting
Director of the United States Food Administration
In office
August 21, 1917 – November 16, 1918
PresidentWoodrow Wilson
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byPosition abolished
Chairman of the Commission for Relief in Belgium
In office
October 22, 1914 – April 14, 1917
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byPosition abolished
Personal details
Born
Herbert Clark Hoover

(1874-08-10)August 10, 1874
West Branch, Iowa, U.S.
DiedOctober 20, 1964(1964-10-20) (aged 90)
New York City, U.S.
Resting placeHerbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum
Political partyIndependent (before 1920)
Republican (1920–1964)
Spouse
(m. 1899; died 1944)
Children
EducationStanford University (BS)
Signature

Born to a Quaker family in West Branch, Iowa, Hoover grew up in Oregon. He was one of the first graduates of the new Stanford University in 1895. He took a position with a London-based mining company working in Australia and China. He rapidly became a wealthy mining engineer. In 1914, the outbreak of World War I, he organized and headed the Commission for Relief in Belgium, an international relief organization that provided food to occupied Belgium. When the U.S. entered the war in 1917, president Woodrow Wilson appointed Hoover to lead the Food Administration. He became famous as his country's "food czar". After the war, Hoover led the American Relief Administration, which provided food to the starving millions in Central and Eastern Europe, especially Russia. Hoover's wartime service made him a favorite of many progressives, and he unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination in the 1920 U.S. presidential election.

Hoover served as the secretary of commerce under presidents Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge. Hoover was an unusually active and visible Cabinet member, becoming known as "Secretary of Commerce and Under-Secretary of all other departments." He was influential in the development of air travel and radio. He led the federal response to the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927. Hoover won the Republican nomination in the 1928 presidential election and defeated Democratic candidate Al Smith in a landslide. In 1929, Hoover assumed the presidency during a period of widespread economic stability. However, during his first year in office, the stock market crashed, signaling the onset of the Great Depression, which dominated Hoover's presidency. Hoover's response to the depression was widely seen as lackluster and he scapegoated Mexican Americans for the economic crisis. Approximately 1.5-2 million Mexican Americans were forcibly "repatriated" to Mexico in a forced migration campaign known as the Mexican Repatriation — a majority of them were born in the United States.

In the midst of the Great Depression, Hoover was decisively defeated by Democratic nominee Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1932 presidential election. Hoover's retirement was over 31 years long, one of the longest presidential retirements. He authored numerous works and became increasingly conservative in retirement. He strongly criticized Roosevelt's foreign policy and the New Deal. In the 1940s and 1950s, public opinion of Hoover improved largely due to his service in various assignments for presidents Harry S. Truman and Dwight D. Eisenhower, including chairing the influential Hoover Commission. Critical assessments of his presidency by historians and political scientists generally rank him as a significantly below-average president, although Hoover has received praise for his actions as a humanitarian and public official.[1][2][3]

Early life and education

 
Hoover's birthplace cottage in West Branch, Iowa

Herbert Clark Hoover was born on August 10, 1874, in West Branch, Iowa.[a] His father, Jesse Hoover, was a blacksmith and farm implement store owner of German, Swiss, and English ancestry.[4] Hoover's mother, Hulda Randall Minthorn, was raised in Norwich, Ontario, Canada, before moving to Iowa in 1859. Like most other citizens of West Branch, Jesse and Hulda were Quakers.[5] Around age two "Bertie", as he was called during that time, contracted a serious bout of croup, and was momentarily thought to have died until resuscitated by his uncle, John Minthorn.[6] As a young child he was often referred to by his father as "my little stick in the mud" when he repeatedly got trapped in the mud crossing the unpaved street.[7] Herbert's family figured prominently in the town's public prayer life, due almost entirely to mother Hulda's role in the church.[8] As a child, Hoover consistently attended schools, but he did little reading on his own aside from the Bible.[9] Hoover's father, noted by the local paper for his "pleasant, sunshiny disposition", died in 1880 at the age of 34 of a sudden heart attack.[10] Hoover's mother died in 1884 of typhoid, leaving Hoover, his older brother, Theodore, and his younger sister, May, as orphans.[11] Hoover lived the next 18 months with his uncle Allen Hoover at a nearby farm.[12][13]

 
Hoover in 1877

In November 1885, Hoover was sent to Newberg, Oregon, to live with his uncle John Minthorn, a Quaker physician and businessman whose own son had died the year before.[14] The Minthorn household was considered cultured and educational, and imparted a strong work ethic.[15] Much like West Branch, Newberg was a frontier town settled largely by Midwestern Quakers.[16] Minthorn ensured that Hoover received an education, but Hoover disliked the many chores assigned to him and often resented Minthorn. One observer described Hoover as "an orphan [who] seemed to be neglected in many ways".[17] Hoover attended Friends Pacific Academy (now George Fox University), but dropped out at the age of thirteen to become an office assistant for his uncle's real estate office (Oregon Land Company)[18] in Salem, Oregon. Though he did not attend high school, Hoover learned bookkeeping, typing, and mathematics at a night school.[19]

Hoover was a member of the inaugural "Pioneer Class" of Stanford University, entering in 1891 despite failing all the entrance exams except mathematics.[20][b] During his freshman year, he switched his major from mechanical engineering to geology after working for John Casper Branner, the chairman of Stanford's geology department. During his sophomore year, to reduce his costs, Hoover co-founded the first student housing cooperative at Stanford, "Romero Hall".[22] Hoover was a mediocre student, and he spent much of his time working in various part-time jobs or participating in campus activities.[23] Though he was initially shy among fellow students, Hoover won election as student treasurer and became known for his distaste for fraternities and sororities.[24] He served as student manager of both the baseball and football teams, and helped organize the inaugural Big Game versus the University of California.[25] During the summers before and after his senior year, Hoover interned under economic geologist Waldemar Lindgren of the United States Geological Survey; these experiences convinced Hoover to pursue a career as a mining geologist.[26]

Mining engineer

Bewick, Moreing

 
Hoover, aged 23; taken in Perth, Western Australia, in 1898

When Hoover graduated from Stanford in 1895, the country was in the midst of the Panic of 1893 and he initially struggled to find a job.[24] He worked in various low-level mining jobs in the Sierra Nevada Mountains until persuading prominent mining engineer Louis Janin to hire him.[27] After working as a mine scout for a year, Hoover was hired by Bewick, Moreing & Co. ("Bewick"), a London-based company that operated gold mines in Western Australia.[28] He first went to Coolgardie, then the center of the Eastern Goldfields, which was actually in Western Australia, receiving a $5,000 salary (equivalent to $175,880 in 2022). Conditions were harsh in the goldfields; Hoover described the Coolgardie and Murchison rangelands on the edge of the Great Victoria Desert as a land of "black flies, red dust and white heat".[29][30]

Hoover traveled constantly across the Outback to evaluate and manage the company's mines.[31] He convinced Bewick to purchase the Sons of Gwalia gold mine, which proved to be one of the most successful mines in the region.[32] Partly due to Hoover's efforts, the company eventually controlled approximately 50 percent of gold production in Western Australia.[33] Hoover brought in many Italian immigrants to cut costs and counter the labour movement of the Australian miners.[34][35] During his time with the mining company, Hoover became opposed to measures such as a minimum wage and workers' compensation, feeling that they were unfair to owners. Hoover's work impressed his employers, and in 1898 he was promoted to junior partner.[36] An open feud developed between Hoover and his boss, Ernest Williams, but Bewick's leaders defused the situation by offering Hoover a compelling position in China.[37]

Upon arriving in China, Hoover developed gold mines near Tianjin on behalf of Bewick and the Chinese-owned Chinese Engineering and Mining Company.[38] He became deeply interested in Chinese history, but gave up on learning the language to a fluent level. He publicly warned that Chinese workers were inefficient and racially inferior.[39] He made recommendations to improve the lot of the Chinese worker, seeking to end the practice of imposing long-term servitude contracts and to institute reforms for workers based on merit.[40] The Boxer Rebellion broke out shortly after the Hoovers arrived in China, trapping them and numerous other foreign nationals until a multi-national military force defeated Boxer forces in the Battle of Tientsin. Fearing the imminent collapse of the Chinese government, the director of the Chinese Engineering and Mining Company agreed to establish a new Sino-British venture with Bewick. After they established effective control over the new Chinese mining company, Hoover became the operating partner in late 1901.[41]

In this role, Hoover continually traveled the world on behalf of Bewick, visiting mines operated by the company on different continents. Beginning in December 1902, the company faced mounting legal and financial issues after one of the partners admitted to having fraudulently sold stock in a mine. More issues arose in 1904 after the British government formed two separate royal commissions to investigate Bewick's labor practices and financial dealings in Western Australia. After the company lost a lawsuit Hoover began looking for a way to get out of the partnership, and he sold his shares in mid-1908.[42]

Sole proprietor

 
Hoover in 1917 while a mining engineer

After leaving Bewick, Moreing, Hoover worked as a London-based independent mining consultant and financier. Though he had risen to prominence as a geologist and mine operator, Hoover focused much of his attention on raising money, restructuring corporate organizations, and financing new ventures.[43] He specialized in rejuvenating troubled mining operations, taking a share of the profits in exchange for his technical and financial expertise.[44] Hoover thought of himself and his associates as "engineering doctors to sick concerns", and he earned a reputation as a "doctor of sick mines".[45] He made investments on every continent and had offices in San Francisco; London; New York City; Paris; Petrograd; and Mandalay, British Burma.[46] By 1914, Hoover was a very wealthy man, with an estimated personal fortune of $4 million (equivalent to $116.86 million in 2022).[47]

Hoover co-founded the Zinc Corporation to extract zinc near the Australian city of Broken Hill, New South Wales.[48] The Zinc Corporation developed the froth flotation process to extract zinc from lead-silver ore[49] and operated the world's first selective ore differential flotation plant.[50] Hoover worked with the Burma Corporation, a British firm that produced silver, lead, and zinc in large quantities at the Namtu Bawdwin Mine.[51]: 90–96, 101–102 [52] He also helped increase copper production in Kyshtym, Russia, through the use of pyritic smelting. He also agreed to manage a separate mine in the Altai Mountains that, according to Hoover, "developed probably the greatest and richest single body of ore known in the world".[51]: 102–108 [53]

In his spare time, Hoover wrote. His lectures at Columbia and Stanford universities were published in 1909 as Principles of Mining, which became a standard textbook. The book reflects his move towards progressive ideals, as Hoover came to endorse eight-hour workdays and organized labor.[54] Hoover became deeply interested in the history of science, and he was especially drawn to the De re metallica, an influential 16th century work on mining and metallurgy by Georgius Agricola. In 1912, Hoover and his wife published the first English translation of De re metallica.[55] Hoover also joined the board of trustees at Stanford, and led a successful campaign to appoint John Branner as the university's president.[56]

Marriage and family

 
The Lou Henry Hoover House in Stanford, California, the couple's first and only permanent residence

During his senior year at Stanford, Hoover became smitten with a classmate named Lou Henry, though his financial situation precluded marriage at that time.[24] The daughter of a banker from Monterey, California, Lou Henry decided to study geology at Stanford after attending a lecture delivered by John C. Branner.[57] Immediately after earning a promotion in 1898, Hoover cabled Lou Henry, asking her to marry him. After she cabled back her acceptance of the proposal, Hoover briefly returned to the United States for their wedding.[36] They would remain married until Lou Henry Hoover's death in 1944.[58] Hoover was the first president to be a widower since Woodrow Wilson.

Though his Quaker upbringing strongly influenced his career, Hoover rarely attended Quaker meetings during his adult life.[59][60] Hoover and his wife had two children: Herbert Hoover Jr. (born in 1903) and Allan Henry Hoover (born in 1907).[36] The Hoover family began living in London in 1902, though they frequently traveled as part of Hoover's career.[61] After 1916, the Hoovers began living in the United States, maintaining homes in Stanford, California, and Washington, D.C.[62]

Hoover's elder brother Theodore also studied mining engineering at Stanford, and returned there to become dean of the engineering school. In retirement, Theodore bought a large property on the remote north coast of Santa Cruz County. The Theodore J. Hoover Natural Preserve is now part of Big Basin State Park.

World War I and aftermath

Relief in Europe

World War I broke out in August 1914, pitting Germany and its allies against France and its allies. The German Schlieffen plan was to achieve a quick victory by marching through neutral Belgium to envelop the French Army east of Paris. The maneuver failed to reach Paris but the Germans did control nearly all of Belgium for the entire war. Hoover and other London-based American businessmen established a committee to organize the return of the roughly 100,000 Americans stranded in Europe. Hoover was appointed as the committee's chairman and, with the assent of Congress and the Wilson administration, took charge of the distribution of relief to Americans in Europe.[63] Hoover later stated, "I did not realize it at the moment, but on August 3, 1914, my career was over forever. I was on the slippery road of public life."[64] By early October 1914, Hoover's organization had distributed relief to at least 40,000 Americans.[65]

The German invasion of Belgium in August 1914 set off a food crisis in Belgium, which relied heavily on food imports. The Germans refused to take responsibility for feeding Belgian citizens in captured territory, and the British refused to lift their blockade of German-occupied Belgium unless the U.S. government supervised Belgian food imports as a neutral party in the war.[66] With the cooperation of the Wilson administration and the CNSA, a Belgian relief organization, Hoover established the Commission for Relief in Belgium (CRB).[67] The CRB obtained and imported millions of tons of foodstuffs for the CNSA to distribute, and helped ensure that the German army did not appropriate the food. Private donations and government grants supplied the majority of its $11-million-a-month budget, and the CRB became a veritable independent republic of relief, with its own flag, navy, factories, mills, and railroads.[68] [69][failed verification]

Hoover worked 14-hour days from London, administering the distribution of over two million tons of food to nine million war victims. In an early form of shuttle diplomacy, he crossed the North Sea forty times to meet with German authorities and persuade them to allow food shipments.[70] He also convinced British Chancellor of the Exchequer David Lloyd George to allow individuals to send money to the people of Belgium, thereby lessening workload of the CRB.[71] At the request of the French government, the CRB began delivering supplies to the people of German-occupied Northern France in 1915.[72] American diplomat Walter Page described Hoover as "probably the only man living who has privately (i.e., without holding office) negotiated understandings with the British, French, German, Dutch, and Belgian governments".[73][74]

U.S. Food Administration

 
U.S. Food Administration poster

War upon Germany was declared in April 1917, and American food was essential to Allied victory. With the U.S. mobilizing for war, President Wilson appointed Hoover to head the U.S. Food Administration, which was charged with ensuring the nation's food needs during the war.[75] Hoover had hoped to join the administration in some capacity since at least 1916, and he obtained the position after lobbying several members of Congress and Wilson's confidant, Edward M. House.[76] Earning the appellation of "food czar", Hoover recruited a volunteer force of hundreds of thousands of women and deployed propaganda in movie theaters, schools, and churches.[77] He carefully selected men to assist in the agency leadership—Alonzo E. Taylor (technical abilities), Robert Taft (political associations), Gifford Pinchot (agricultural influence), and Julius Barnes (business acumen).[78]

World War I had created a global food crisis that dramatically increased food prices and caused food riots and starvation in the countries at war. Hoover's chief goal as food czar was to provide supplies to the Allied Powers, but he also sought to stabilize domestic prices and to prevent domestic shortages.[79] Under the broad powers granted by the Food and Fuel Control Act, the Food Administration supervised food production throughout the United States, and the administration made use of its authority to buy, import, store, and sell food.[80] Determined to avoid rationing, Hoover established set days for people to avoid eating specified foods and save them for soldiers' rations: meatless Mondays, wheatless Wednesdays, and "when in doubt, eat potatoes". These policies were dubbed "Hooverizing" by government publicists, in spite of Hoover's continual orders that publicity should not mention him by name.[81] The Food Administration shipped 23 million metric tons of food to the Allied Powers, preventing their collapse and earning Hoover great acclaim.[82] As head of the Food Administration, Hoover gained a following in the United States, especially among progressives who saw in Hoover an expert administrator and symbol of efficiency.[83] He was elected to the American Philosophical Society during his tenure.[84]

Post-war relief in Europe

World War I came to an end in November 1918, but Europe continued to face a critical food situation; Hoover estimated that as many as 400 million people faced the possibility of starvation.[85] The United States Food Administration became the American Relief Administration (ARA), and Hoover was charged with providing food to Central and Eastern Europe.[86] In addition to providing relief, the ARA rebuilt infrastructure in an effort to rejuvenate the economy of Europe.[87] Throughout the Paris Peace Conference, Hoover served as a close adviser to President Wilson, and he largely shared Wilson's goals of establishing the League of Nations, settling borders on the basis of self-determination, and refraining from inflicting a harsh punishment on the defeated Central Powers.[88] The following year, the famed British economist John Maynard Keynes wrote in The Economic Consequences of the Peace that if Hoover's realism, "knowledge, magnanimity and disinterestedness" had found wider play in the councils of Paris, the world would have had "the Good Peace".[89] After U.S. government funding for the ARA expired in mid-1919, Hoover transformed the ARA into a private organization, raising millions of dollars from private donors.[86] He also established the European Children's Fund, which provided relief to fifteen million children across fourteen countries.[90]

Despite the opposition of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge and other Republicans, Hoover provided aid to the defeated German nation after the war, as well as relief to famine-stricken Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic.[86] Hoover condemned the Bolsheviks but warned President Wilson against an intervention in the Russian Civil War, as he viewed the White Russian forces as little better than the Bolsheviks and feared the possibility of a protracted U.S. involvement.[91] The Russian famine of 1921–22 claimed six million people, but the intervention of the ARA likely saved millions of lives.[92] When asked if he was not helping Bolshevism by providing relief, Hoover stated, "twenty million people are starving. Whatever their politics, they shall be fed!"[86] Reflecting the gratitude of many Europeans, in July 1922, Soviet author Maxim Gorky told Hoover that "your help will enter history as a unique, gigantic achievement, worthy of the greatest glory, which will long remain in the memory of millions of Russians whom you have saved from death".[93]

In 1919, Hoover established the Hoover War Collection at Stanford University. He donated all the files of the Commission for Relief in Belgium, the U.S. Food Administration, and the American Relief Administration, and pledged $50,000 as an endowment (equivalent to $843,954 in 2022). Scholars were sent to Europe to collect pamphlets, society publications, government documents, newspapers, posters, proclamations, and other ephemeral materials related to the war and the revolutions that followed it. The collection was renamed the Hoover War Library in 1922 and is now known as the Hoover Institution Library and Archives.[94] During the post-war period, Hoover also served as the president of the Federated American Engineering Societies.[95][96]

1920 election

Hoover had been little known among the American public before 1914, but his service in the Wilson administration established him as a contender in the 1920 presidential election. Hoover's wartime push for higher taxes, criticism of Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer's actions during the First Red Scare, and his advocacy for measures such as the minimum wage, forty-eight-hour workweek, and elimination of child labor made him appealing to progressives of both parties.[97] Despite his service in the Democratic administration of Woodrow Wilson, Hoover had never been closely affiliated with either the Democrats or the Republicans. He initially sought to avoid committing to any party in the 1920 election, hoping that either of the two major parties would draft him for president at their national conventions.[98] In March 1920, he changed strategy and declared himself a Republican; he was motivated in large part by the belief that the Democrats had little chance of winning.[99] Despite his national renown, Hoover's service in the Wilson administration had alienated farmers and the conservative Old Guard of the GOP, and his presidential candidacy fizzled out after his defeat in the California primary by favorite son Hiram Johnson. At the 1920 Republican National Convention, Warren G. Harding emerged as a compromise candidate after the convention became deadlocked between supporters of Johnson, Leonard Wood, and Frank Orren Lowden.[97] Hoover backed Harding's successful campaign in the general election, and he began laying the groundwork for a future presidential run by building a base of strong supporters in the Republican Party.[100]

Secretary of Commerce (1921–1928)

 
Assistants William McCracken (left) and Walter Drake (right) with Secretary Hoover (center)

After his election as president in 1920, Harding rewarded Hoover for his support, offering to appoint him as either Secretary of the Interior or Secretary of Commerce. Secretary of Commerce was considered a minor Cabinet post, with limited and vaguely defined responsibilities, but Hoover decided to accept the position.[101] Hoover's progressive stances, continuing support for the League of Nations, and recent conversion to the Republican Party aroused opposition to his appointment from many Senate Republicans.[102] To overcome this opposition, Harding paired Hoover's nomination with that of conservative favorite Andrew Mellon as Secretary of the Treasury, and the nominations of both Hoover and Mellon were confirmed by the Senate. Hoover would serve as Secretary of Commerce from 1921 to 1929, serving under Harding and, after Harding's death in 1923, President Calvin Coolidge.[101] While some of the most prominent members of the Harding administration, including Attorney General Harry M. Daugherty and Secretary of Interior Albert B. Fall, were implicated in major scandals, Hoover emerged largely unscathed from investigations into the Harding administration.[103]

Hoover envisioned the Commerce Department as the hub of the nation's growth and stability.[104] His experience mobilizing the war-time economy convinced him that the federal government could promote efficiency by eliminating waste, increasing production, encouraging the adoption of data-based practices, investing in infrastructure, and conserving natural resources. Contemporaries described Hoover's approach as a "third alternative" between "unrestrained capitalism" and socialism, which was becoming increasingly popular in Europe.[105] Hoover sought to foster a balance among labor, capital, and the government, and for this, he has been variously labeled a corporatist or an associationalist.[106] A high priority was economic diplomacy, including promoting the growth of exports, as well as protection against monopolistic practices of foreign governments, especially regarding rubber and coffee.[107]

Hoover demanded, and received, authority to coordinate economic affairs throughout the government. He created many sub-departments and committees, overseeing and regulating everything from manufacturing statistics to air travel. In some instances, he "seized" control of responsibilities from other Cabinet departments when he deemed that they were not carrying out their responsibilities well; some began referring to him as the "Secretary of Commerce and Under-Secretary of all other departments".[104] In response to the Depression of 1920–21, he convinced Harding to assemble a presidential commission on unemployment, which encouraged local governments to engage in countercyclical infrastructure spending.[108] He endorsed much of Mellon's tax reduction program but favored a more progressive tax system and opposed the treasury secretary's efforts to eliminate the estate tax.[109]

Radio regulation and air travel

 
Hoover listening to a radio receiver, 1925

Between 1923 and 1929, the number of families with radios grew from 300,000 to 10 million,[110] and Hoover's tenure as Secretary of Commerce heavily influenced radio use in the United States. In the early and mid-1920s, Hoover's radio conferences played a key role in the organization, development, and regulation of radio broadcasting. Hoover also helped pass the Radio Act of 1927, which allowed the government to intervene and abolish radio stations that were deemed "non-useful" to the public. Hoover's attempts at regulating radio were not supported by all congressmen, and he received much opposition from the Senate and from radio station owners.[111][112][113]

Hoover was also influential in the early development of air travel, and he sought to create a thriving private industry boosted by indirect government subsidies. He encouraged the development of emergency landing fields, required all runways to be equipped with lights and radio beams, and encouraged farmers to make use of planes for crop dusting.[114] He also established the federal government's power to inspect planes and license pilots, setting a precedent for the later Federal Aviation Administration.[115]

As Commerce Secretary, Hoover hosted national conferences on street traffic collectively known as the National Conference on Street and Highway Safety. Hoover's chief objective was to address the growing casualty toll of traffic accidents, but the scope of the conferences grew and soon embraced motor vehicle standards, rules of the road, and urban traffic control. He left the invited interest groups to negotiate agreements among themselves, which were then presented for adoption by states and localities. Because automotive trade associations were the best organized, many of the positions taken by the conferences reflected their interests. The conferences issued a model Uniform Vehicle Code for adoption by the states and a Model Municipal Traffic Ordinance for adoption by cities. Both were widely influential, promoting greater uniformity between jurisdictions and tending to promote the automobile's priority in city streets.[116]

Hoover's image building

Phillips Payson O'Brien argues that Hoover had a Britain problem. He had spent so many years living in Britain and Australia, as an employee of British companies, there was a risk that he would be labeled a British tool. There were three solutions, all of which he tried in close collaboration with the media, which greatly admired him.[117] First came the image of the dispassionate scientist, emotionally uninvolved but always committed to finding and implementing the best possible solution. The second solution was to gain the reputation of a humanitarian, deeply concerned with the world's troubles, such as famine in Belgium, as well as specific American problems which he had solved as food commissioner during the world war. The third solution to was to fall back on that old tactic of twisting the British tail. He employed that solution in 1925–1926 in the worldwide rubber crisis. The American auto industry consumed 70% of the world's output, but British investors controlled much of the supply. Their plan was to drastically cut back on output from British Malaya, which had the effect of tripling rubber prices. Hoover energetically gave a series of speeches and interviews denouncing the monopolistic practice and demanding that it be ended. The American State Department wanted no such crisis and compromised the issue in 1926. By then Hoover had solved his image problem, and during his 1928 campaign he successfully squelched attacks that alleged he was too close to British interests.[118]

Other initiatives

 
Hoover (left) with President Warren Harding at a baseball game, 1921

With the goal of encouraging wise business investments, Hoover made the Commerce Department a clearinghouse of information. He recruited numerous academics from various fields and tasked them with publishing reports on different aspects of the economy, including steel production and films. To eliminate waste, he encouraged standardization of products like automobile tires and baby bottle nipples.[119] Other efforts at eliminating waste included reducing labor losses from trade disputes and seasonal fluctuations, reducing industrial losses from accident and injury, and reducing the amount of crude oil spilled during extraction and shipping. He promoted international trade by opening overseas offices to advise businessmen. Hoover was especially eager to promote Hollywood films overseas.[120] His "Own Your Own Home" campaign was a collaboration to promote ownership of single-family dwellings, with groups such as the Better Houses in America movement, the Architects' Small House Service Bureau, and the Home Modernizing Bureau. He worked with bankers and the savings and loan industry to promote the new long-term home mortgage, which dramatically stimulated home construction.[121] Other accomplishments included winning the agreement of U.S. Steel to adopt an eight-hour workday, and the fostering of the Colorado River Compact, a water rights compact among Southwestern states.[122]

Mississippi flood

The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 broke the banks and levees of the lower Mississippi River in early 1927, resulting in the flooding of millions of acres and leaving 1.5 million people displaced from their homes. Although disaster response did not fall under the duties of the Commerce Department, the governors of six states along the Mississippi River specifically asked President Coolidge to appoint Hoover to coordinate the response to the flood.[123] Believing that disaster response was not the domain of the federal government, Coolidge initially refused to become involved, but he eventually acceded to political pressure and appointed Hoover to chair a special committee to help the region.[124] Hoover established over one hundred tent cities and a fleet of more than six hundred vessels and raised $17 million (equivalent to $286.39 million in 2022). In large part due to his leadership during the flood crisis, by 1928, Hoover had begun to overshadow President Coolidge himself.[123] Though Hoover received wide acclaim for his role in the crisis, he ordered the suppression of reports of mistreatment of African Americans in refugee camps.[125] He did so with the cooperation of black American leader Robert Russa Moton, who was promised unprecedented influence once Hoover became president.[126]

Presidential election of 1928

Hoover quietly gathered support for a future presidential bid throughout the 1920s, but he carefully avoided alienating Coolidge, who possibly could have run for another term in the 1928 presidential election.[127] Along with the rest of the nation, he was surprised when Coolidge announced in August 1927 that he would not seek another term. With the impending retirement of Coolidge, Hoover immediately emerged as the front-runner for the 1928 Republican nomination, and he quickly put together a strong campaign team led by Hubert Work, Will H. Hays, and Reed Smoot.[128] Coolidge was unwilling to anoint Hoover as his successor; on one occasion he remarked that, "for six years that man has given me unsolicited advice—all of it bad".[129] Despite his lukewarm feelings towards Hoover, Coolidge had no desire to split the party by publicly opposing the popular Commerce Secretary's candidacy.[130]

Many wary Republican leaders cast about for an alternative candidate, such as Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon or former secretary of state Charles Evans Hughes.[131] However, Hughes and Mellon declined to run, and other potential contenders like Frank Orren Lowden and Vice President Charles G. Dawes failed to garner widespread support.[132] Hoover won the presidential nomination on the first ballot of the 1928 Republican National Convention. Convention delegates considered re-nominating Vice President Charles Dawes to be Hoover's running mate, but Coolidge, who hated Dawes, remarked that this would be "a personal affront" to him. The convention instead selected Senator Charles Curtis of Kansas.[133] Hoover accepted the nomination at Stanford Stadium, telling a huge crowd that he would continue the policies of the Harding and Coolidge administrations.[134] The Democrats nominated New York governor Al Smith, who became the first Catholic major party nominee for president.[135]

 
1928 electoral vote results

Hoover centered his campaign around the Republican record of peace and prosperity, as well as his own reputation as a successful engineer and public official. Averse to giving political speeches, Hoover largely stayed out of the fray and left the campaigning to Curtis and other Republicans.[136] Smith was more charismatic and gregarious than Hoover, but his campaign was damaged by anti-Catholicism and his overt opposition to Prohibition. Hoover had never been a strong proponent of Prohibition, but he accepted the Republican Party's plank in favor of it and issued an ambivalent statement calling Prohibition "a great social and economic experiment, noble in motive and far-reaching in purpose".[137] In the South, Hoover and the national party pursued a "lily-white" strategy, removing black Republicans from leadership positions in an attempt to curry favor with white Southerners.[138]

Hoover maintained polling leads throughout the 1928 campaign, and he decisively defeated Smith on election day, taking 58 percent of the popular vote and 444 of the 531 electoral votes.[139] Historians agree that Hoover's national reputation and the booming economy, combined with deep splits in the Democratic Party over religion and Prohibition, guaranteed his landslide victory.[140] Hoover's appeal to Southern white voters succeeded in cracking the "Solid South", and he won five Southern states.[141] Hoover's victory was positively received by newspapers; one wrote that Hoover would "drive so forcefully at the tasks now before the nation that the end of his eight years as president will find us looking back on an era of prodigious achievement".[142]

Hoover's detractors wondered why he did not do anything to reapportion congress after the 1920 United States Census which saw an increase in urban and immigrant populations. The 1920 Census was the first and only Decennial Census where the results were not used to reapportion Congress, which ultimately influenced the 1928 Electoral College and impacted the Presidential Election.[143][144]

Presidency (1929–1933)

 
Hoover's inauguration

Hoover saw the presidency as a vehicle for improving the conditions of all Americans by encouraging public-private cooperation—what he termed "volunteerism". He tended to oppose governmental coercion or intervention, as he thought they infringed on American ideals of individualism and self-reliance.[145] The first major bill that he signed, the Agricultural Marketing Act of 1929, established the Federal Farm Board in order to stabilize farm prices.[146] Hoover made extensive use of commissions to study issues and propose solutions, and many of those commissions were sponsored by private donors rather than by the government. One of the commissions started by Hoover, the Research Committee on Social Trends, was tasked with surveying the entirety of American society.[147] He appointed a Cabinet consisting largely of wealthy, business-oriented conservatives,[148] including Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon.[149] Lou Henry Hoover was an activist First Lady. She typified the new woman of the post–World War I era: intelligent, robust, and aware of multiple female possibilities.[150]

Great Depression

On taking office, Hoover said that "given the chance to go forward with the policies of the last eight years, we shall soon with the help of God, be in sight of the day when poverty will be banished from this nation".[151] Having seen the fruits of prosperity brought by technological progress, many shared Hoover's optimism, and the already bullish stock market climbed even higher on Hoover's accession.[152] This optimism concealed several threats to sustained U.S. economic growth, including a persistent farm crisis, a saturation of consumer goods like automobiles, and growing income inequality.[153] Most dangerous of all to the economy was excessive speculation that had raised stock prices far beyond their value.[154] Some regulators and bankers had warned Coolidge and Hoover that a failure to curb speculation would lead to "one of the greatest financial catastrophes that this country has ever seen," but both presidents were reluctant to become involved with the workings of the Federal Reserve System, which regulated banks.[155]

In late October 1929, the Stock Market Crash of 1929 occurred, and the worldwide economy began to spiral downward into the Great Depression.[156] The causes of the Great Depression remain a matter of debate,[157] but Hoover viewed a lack of confidence in the financial system as the fundamental economic problem facing the nation.[158] He sought to avoid direct federal intervention, believing that the best way to bolster the economy was through the strengthening of businesses such as banks and railroads. He also feared that allowing individuals on the "dole" would permanently weaken the country.[159] Instead, Hoover strongly believed that local governments and private giving should address the needs of individuals.[160]

Early policies

Though he attempted to put a positive spin on Black Tuesday, Hoover moved quickly to address the stock market collapse.[161] In the days following Black Tuesday, Hoover gathered business and labor leaders, asking them to avoid wage cuts and work stoppages while the country faced what he believed would be a short recession similar to the Depression of 1920–21.[162] Hoover also convinced railroads and public utilities to increase spending on construction and maintenance, and the Federal Reserve announced that it would cut interest rates.[163] In early 1930, Hoover acquired from Congress an additional $100 million to continue the Federal Farm Board lending and purchasing policies.[164] These actions were collectively designed to prevent a cycle of deflation and provide a fiscal stimulus.[163] At the same time, Hoover opposed congressional proposals to provide federal relief to the unemployed, as he believed that such programs were the responsibility of state and local governments and philanthropic organizations.[165]

Hoover had taken office hoping to raise agricultural tariffs in order to help farmers reeling from the farm crisis of the 1920s, but his attempt to raise agricultural tariffs became connected with a bill that broadly raised tariffs.[166] Hoover refused to become closely involved in the congressional debate over the tariff, and Congress produced a tariff bill that raised rates for many goods.[167] Despite the widespread unpopularity of the bill, Hoover felt that he could not reject the main legislative accomplishment of the Republican-controlled 71st Congress. Over the objection of many economists, Hoover signed the Smoot–Hawley Tariff Act into law in June 1930.[168] Canada, France, and other nations retaliated by raising tariffs, resulting in a contraction of international trade and a worsening of the economy.[169] Progressive Republicans such as Senator William E. Borah of Idaho were outraged when Hoover signed the tariff act, and Hoover's relations with that wing of the party never recovered.[170]

Later policies

 
Hoover in the Oval Office with Ted Joslin, 1932

By the end of 1930, the national unemployment rate had reached 11.9 percent, but it was not yet clear to most Americans that the economic downturn would be worse than the Depression of 1920–21.[171] A series of bank failures in late 1930 heralded a larger collapse of the economy in 1931.[172] While other countries left the gold standard, Hoover refused to abandon it;[173] he derided any other monetary system as "collectivism".[174] Hoover viewed the weak European economy as a major cause of economic troubles in the United States.[175] In response to the collapse of the German economy, Hoover marshaled congressional support behind a one-year moratorium on European war debts.[176] The Hoover Moratorium was warmly received in Europe and the United States, but Germany remained on the brink of defaulting on its loans.[177] As the worldwide economy worsened, democratic governments fell; in Germany, Nazi Party leader Adolf Hitler assumed power and dismantled the Weimar Republic.[178]

By mid-1931, the unemployment rate had reached 15 percent, giving rise to growing fears that the country was experiencing a depression far worse than recent economic downturns.[179] A reserved man with a fear of public speaking, Hoover allowed his opponents in the Democratic Party to define him as cold, incompetent, reactionary, and out-of-touch.[180] Hoover's opponents developed defamatory epithets to discredit him, such as "Hooverville" (the shanty towns and homeless encampments), "Hoover leather" (cardboard used to cover holes in the soles of shoes), and "Hoover blanket" (old newspaper used to cover oneself from the cold).[181] While Hoover continued to resist direct federal relief efforts, Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt of New York launched the Temporary Emergency Relief Administration to provide aid to the unemployed. Democrats positioned the program as a kinder alternative to Hoover's alleged apathy towards the unemployed, despite Hoover's belief that such programs were the responsibility of state and local governments.[182]

The economy continued to worsen, with unemployment rates nearing 23 percent in early 1932,[183] and Hoover finally heeded calls for more direct federal intervention.[184] In January 1932, he convinced Congress to authorize the establishment of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC), which would provide government-secured loans to financial institutions, railroads, and local governments.[185] The RFC saved numerous businesses from failure, but it failed to stimulate commercial lending as much as Hoover had hoped, partly because it was run by conservative bankers unwilling to make riskier loans.[186] The same month the RFC was established, Hoover signed the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, establishing 12 district banks overseen by a Federal Home Loan Bank Board in a manner similar to the Federal Reserve System.[187] He also helped arrange passage of the Glass–Steagall Act of 1932, emergency banking legislation designed to expand banking credit by expanding the collateral on which Federal Reserve banks were authorized to lend.[188] As these measures failed to stem the economic crisis, Hoover signed the Emergency Relief and Construction Act, a $2 billion public works bill, in July 1932.[183]

Budget policy

 
National debt as a fraction of GNP up from 20% to 40% under Hoover. From Historical Statistics US (1976).

After a decade of budget surpluses, the federal government experienced a budget deficit in 1931.[189] Though some economists, like William Trufant Foster, favored deficit spending to address the Great Depression, most politicians and economists believed in the necessity of keeping a balanced budget.[190] In late 1931, Hoover proposed a tax plan to increase tax revenue by 30 percent, resulting in the passage of the Revenue Act of 1932.[191] The act increased taxes across the board, rolling back much of the tax cut reduction program Mellon had presided over during the 1920s. Top earners were taxed at 63 percent on their net income, the highest rate since the early 1920s. The act also doubled the top estate tax rate, cut personal income tax exemptions, eliminated the corporate income tax exemption, and raised corporate tax rates.[192] Despite the passage of the Revenue Act, the federal government continued to run a budget deficit.[193]

Civil rights and Mexican Repatriation

 
Herbert and Lou Henry Hoover aboard a train in Illinois

Hoover seldom mentioned civil rights while he was president. He believed that African Americans and other races could improve themselves with education and individual initiative.[194] Hoover appointed more African Americans to federal positions than Harding and Coolidge combined, but many African American leaders condemned various aspects of the Hoover administration, including Hoover's unwillingness to push for a federal anti-lynching law.[195] Hoover also continued to pursue the lily-white strategy, removing African Americans from positions of leadership in the Republican Party in an attempt to end the Democratic Party's dominance in the South.[196] Though Robert Moton and some other black leaders accepted the lily-white strategy as a temporary measure, most African American leaders were outraged.[197] Hoover further alienated black leaders by nominating conservative Southern judge John J. Parker to the Supreme Court; Parker's nomination ultimately failed in the Senate due to opposition from the NAACP and organized labor.[198] Many black voters switched to the Democratic Party in the 1932 election, and African Americans would later become an important part of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal coalition.[199]

As part of his efforts to limit unemployment, Hoover sought to cut immigration to the United States, and in 1930 he promulgated an executive order requiring individuals to have employment before migrating to the United States.[200] The Hoover Administration began a campaign to prosecute illegal immigrants in the United States, which most strongly affected Mexican Americans, especially those living in Southern California.[201] Many of the deportations were overseen by state and local authorities who acted on the encouragement of the Hoover Administration.[202] During the 1930s, approximately one million Mexican Americans were forcibly "repatriated" to Mexico; approximately sixty percent of those deported were birthright citizens.[203] According to legal professor Kevin R. Johnson, the repatriation campaign meets the modern legal standards of ethnic cleansing, as it involved the forced removal of a racial minority by government actors.[204]

Hoover reorganized the Bureau of Indian Affairs to limit exploitation of Native Americans.[205]

Prohibition

On taking office, Hoover urged Americans to obey the Eighteenth Amendment and the Volstead Act, which had established Prohibition across the United States.[206] To make public policy recommendations regarding Prohibition, he created the Wickersham Commission.[207] Hoover had hoped that the commission's public report would buttress his stance in favor of Prohibition, but the report criticized the enforcement of the Volstead Act and noted the growing public opposition to Prohibition. After the Wickersham Report was published in 1931, Hoover rejected the advice of some of his closest allies and refused to endorse any revision of the Volstead Act or the Eighteenth Amendment, as he feared doing so would undermine his support among Prohibition advocates.[208] As public opinion increasingly turned against Prohibition, more and more people flouted the law, and a grassroots movement began working in earnest for Prohibition's repeal.[209] In January 1933, a constitutional amendment repealing the Eighteenth Amendment was approved by Congress and submitted to the states for ratification. By December 1933, it had been ratified by the requisite number of states to become the Twenty-first Amendment.[210]

Foreign relations

According to Leuchtenburg, Hoover was "the last American president to take office with no conspicuous need to pay attention to the rest of the world". Nevertheless, during Hoover's term, the world order established in the immediate aftermath of World War I began to crumble.[211] As president, Hoover largely made good on his pledge made prior to assuming office not to interfere in Latin America's internal affairs. In 1930, he released the Clark Memorandum, a rejection of the Roosevelt Corollary and a move towards non-interventionism in Latin America. Hoover did not completely refrain from the use of the military in Latin American affairs; he thrice threatened intervention in the Dominican Republic, and he sent warships to El Salvador to support the government against a left-wing revolution.[212] Notwithstanding those actions, he wound down the Banana Wars, ending the occupation of Nicaragua and nearly bringing an end to the occupation of Haiti.[213]

Hoover placed a priority on disarmament, which he hoped would allow the United States to shift money from the military to domestic needs.[214] Hoover and Secretary of State Henry L. Stimson focused on extending the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty, which sought to prevent a naval arms race.[215] As a result of Hoover's efforts, the United States and other major naval powers signed the 1930 London Naval Treaty.[216] The treaty represented the first time that the naval powers had agreed to cap their tonnage of auxiliary vessels, as previous agreements had only affected capital ships.[217]

At the 1932 World Disarmament Conference, Hoover urged further cutbacks in armaments and the outlawing of tanks and bombers, but his proposals were not adopted.[217]

In 1931, Japan invaded Manchuria, defeating the Republic of China's National Revolutionary Army and establishing Manchukuo, a puppet state. The Hoover administration deplored the invasion, but also sought to avoid antagonizing the Japanese, fearing that taking too strong a stand would weaken the moderate forces in the Japanese government and alienate a potential ally against the Soviet Union, which he saw as a much greater threat.[218] In response to the Japanese invasion, Hoover and Secretary of State Stimson outlined the Stimson Doctrine, which held that the United States would not recognize territories gained by force.[219]

Bonus Army

Thousands of World War I veterans and their families demonstrated and camped out in Washington, DC, during June 1932, calling for immediate payment of bonuses that had been promised by the World War Adjusted Compensation Act in 1924; the terms of the act called for payment of the bonuses in 1945. Although offered money by Congress to return home, some members of the "Bonus Army" remained. Washington police attempted to disperse the demonstrators, but they were outnumbered and unsuccessful. Shots were fired by the police in a futile attempt to attain order, and two protesters were killed while many officers were injured. Hoover sent U.S. Army forces led by General Douglas MacArthur to the protests. MacArthur, believing he was fighting a Communist revolution, chose to clear out the camp with military force. Though Hoover had not ordered MacArthur's clearing out of the protesters, he endorsed it after the fact.[220] The incident proved embarrassing for the Hoover administration and hurt his bid for re-election.[221]

1932 re-election campaign

By mid-1931 few observers thought that Hoover had much hope of winning a second term in the midst of the ongoing economic crisis.[222] The Republican expectations were so bleak that Hoover faced no serious opposition for re-nomination at the 1932 Republican National Convention. Coolidge and other prominent Republicans all passed on the opportunity to challenge Hoover.[223] Franklin D. Roosevelt won the presidential nomination on the fourth ballot of the 1932 Democratic National Convention, defeating the 1928 Democratic nominee, Al Smith. The Democrats attacked Hoover as the cause of the Great Depression, and for being indifferent to the suffering of millions.[224] As Governor of New York, Roosevelt had called on the New York legislature to provide aid for the needy, establishing Roosevelt's reputation for being more favorable toward government interventionism during the economic crisis.[225] The Democratic Party, including Al Smith and other national leaders, coalesced behind Roosevelt, while progressive Republicans like George Norris and Robert La Follette Jr. deserted Hoover.[226] Prohibition was increasingly unpopular and wets offered the argument that states and localities needed the tax money. Hoover proposed a new constitutional amendment that was vague on particulars. Roosevelt's platform promised repeal of the 18th Amendment.[227][228]

 
1932 electoral vote results

Hoover originally planned to make only one or two major speeches and to leave the rest of the campaigning to proxies, as sitting presidents had traditionally done. However, encouraged by Republican pleas and outraged by Democratic claims, Hoover entered the public fray. In his nine major radio addresses Hoover primarily defended his administration and his philosophy of government, urging voters to hold to the "foundations of experience" and reject the notion that government interventionism could save the country from the Depression.[229] In his campaign trips around the country, Hoover was faced with perhaps the most hostile crowds ever seen by a sitting president. Besides having his train and motorcades pelted with eggs and rotten fruit, he was often heckled while speaking, and on several occasions, the Secret Service halted attempts to hurt Hoover, including capturing one man nearing Hoover carrying sticks of dynamite, and another already having removed several spikes from the rails in front of the president's train.[230] Hoover's attempts to vindicate his administration fell on deaf ears, as much of the public blamed his administration for the depression.[231] In the electoral vote, Hoover lost 59–472, carrying six states.[232] Hoover won 39.6 percent of the popular vote, a plunge of 18.6 percentage points from his result in the 1928 election.[233]

Post-presidency (1933–1964)

Roosevelt administration

Opposition to New Deal

 
Hoover with Franklin D. Roosevelt, March 4, 1933

Hoover departed from Washington in March 1933, bitter at his election loss and continuing unpopularity.[234] As Coolidge, Harding, Wilson, and Taft had all died during the 1920s or early 1930s and Roosevelt died in office, Hoover was the sole living former president from 1933 to 1953. He and his wife lived in Palo Alto until her death in 1944, at which point Hoover began to live permanently at the Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York City.[235] During the 1930s, Hoover increasingly self-identified as a conservative.[236] He closely followed national events after leaving public office, becoming a constant critic of Franklin Roosevelt. In response to continued attacks on his character and presidency, Hoover wrote more than two dozen books, including The Challenge to Liberty (1934), which harshly criticized Roosevelt's New Deal. Hoover described the New Deal's National Recovery Administration and Agricultural Adjustment Administration as "fascistic", and he called the 1933 Banking Act a "move to gigantic socialism".[237]

Only 58 when he left office, Hoover held out hope for another term as president throughout the 1930s. At the 1936 Republican National Convention, Hoover's speech attacking the New Deal was well received, but the nomination went to Kansas governor Alf Landon.[238] In the general election, Hoover delivered numerous well-publicized speeches on behalf of Landon, but Landon was defeated by Roosevelt.[239] Though Hoover was eager to oppose Roosevelt at every turn, Senator Arthur Vandenberg and other Republicans urged the still-unpopular Hoover to remain out of the fray during the debate over Roosevelt's proposed Judiciary Reorganization Bill of 1937. At the 1940 Republican National Convention, he again hoped for the presidential nomination, but it went to the internationalist Wendell Willkie, who lost to Roosevelt in the general election.[240] Hoover remained the latest president to run for re-election after leaving office until 2022 when Donald Trump, following his win in 2016 and loss in 2020, announced his bid for 2024 presidential election.[241]

World War II

During a 1938 trip to Europe, Hoover met with Adolf Hitler and stayed at Hermann Göring's hunting lodge.[242] He expressed dismay at the persecution of Jews in Germany and believed that Hitler was mad, but did not present a threat to the U.S. Instead, Hoover believed that Roosevelt posed the biggest threat to peace, holding that Roosevelt's policies provoked Japan and discouraged France and the United Kingdom from reaching an "accommodation" with Germany.[243] After the September 1939 invasion of Poland by Germany, Hoover opposed U.S. involvement in World War II, including the Lend-Lease policy.[244] He was active in the isolationist America First Committee.[245] He rejected Roosevelt's offers to help coordinate relief in Europe,[246] but, with the help of old friends from the CRB, helped establish the Commission for Polish Relief.[247] After the beginning of the occupation of Belgium in 1940, Hoover provided aid for Belgian civilians, though this aid was described as unnecessary by German broadcasts.[248][249]

In December 1939, sympathetic Americans led by Hoover formed the Finnish Relief Fund to donate money to aid Finnish civilians and refugees after the Soviet Union had started the Winter War by attacking Finland, which had outraged Americans.[250] By the end of January, it had already sent more than two million dollars to the Finns.[251]

During a radio broadcast on June 29, 1941, one week after the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union, Hoover disparaged any "tacit alliance" between the U.S. and the USSR, stating, "if we join the war and Stalin wins, we have aided him to impose more communism on Europe and the world... War alongside Stalin to impose freedom is more than a travesty. It is a tragedy."[252] Much to his frustration, Hoover was not called upon to serve after the United States entered World War II due to his differences with Roosevelt and his continuing unpopularity.[235] He did not pursue the presidential nomination at the 1944 Republican National Convention, and, at the request of Republican nominee Thomas E. Dewey, refrained from campaigning during the general election.[253] In 1945, Hoover advised President Harry S. Truman to drop the United States' demand for the unconditional surrender of Japan because of the high projected casualties of the planned invasion of Japan, although Hoover was unaware of the Manhattan Project and the atomic bomb.[254]

Post-World War II

 
Hoover with his son Allan (left) and his grandson Andrew (above), 1950

Following World War II, Hoover befriended President Truman despite their ideological differences.[255] Because of Hoover's experience with Germany at the end of World War I, in 1946 Truman selected the former president to tour Allied-occupied Germany and Rome, Italy to ascertain the food needs of the occupied nations. After touring Germany, Hoover produced a number of reports critical of U.S. occupation policy.[256] He stated in one report that "there is the illusion that the New Germany left after the annexations can be reduced to a 'pastoral state.' It cannot be done unless we exterminate or move 25,000,000 people out of it."[257] On Hoover's initiative, a school meals program in the American and British occupation zones of Germany was begun on April 14, 1947; the program served 3,500,000 children.[258]

External audio
  National Press Club Luncheon Speakers, Herbert Hoover, March 10, 1954, 37:23, Hoover speaks starting at 7:25 about the second reorganization commission, Library of Congress[259]

Even more important, in 1947 Truman appointed Hoover to lead the Commission on Organization of the Executive Branch of the Government a new high level study. Truman accepted some of the recommendations of the "Hoover Commission" for eliminating waste, fraud, and inefficiency, consolidating agencies, and strengthening White House control of policy.[260][261] Though Hoover had opposed Roosevelt's concentration of power in the 1930s, he believed that a stronger presidency was required with the advent of the Atomic Age.[262] During the 1948 presidential election, Hoover supported Republican nominee Thomas Dewey's unsuccessful campaign against Truman, but he remained on good terms with Truman.[263] Hoover favored the United Nations in principle, but he opposed granting membership to the Soviet Union and other Communist states. He viewed the Soviet Union to be as morally repugnant as Nazi Germany and supported the efforts of Richard Nixon and others to expose Communists in the United States.[264]

In 1949, New York governor Thomas E. Dewey offered Hoover the Senate seat vacated by Robert F. Wagner. It was a matter of being senator for only two months and he declined.[265]

 
A photograph of Hoover in 1958

Hoover backed conservative leader Robert A. Taft at the 1952 Republican National Convention, but the party's presidential nomination instead went to Dwight D. Eisenhower, who went on to win the 1952 election.[266] Though Eisenhower appointed Hoover to another presidential commission, Hoover disliked Eisenhower, faulting the latter's failure to roll back the New Deal.[262] Hoover's public work helped to rehabilitate his reputation, as did his use of self-deprecating humor; he occasionally remarked that "I am the only person of distinction who's ever had a depression named after him."[267] In 1958, Congress passed the Former Presidents Act, offering a $25,000 yearly pension (equivalent to $253,576 in 2022) to each former president.[268] Hoover took the pension even though he did not need the money, possibly to avoid embarrassing Truman, whose allegedly precarious financial status played a role in the law's enactment.[269] In the early 1960s, President John F. Kennedy offered Hoover various positions; Hoover declined the offers but defended Kennedy after the Bay of Pigs invasion and was personally distraught by Kennedy's assassination in 1963.[270]

Hoover wrote several books during his retirement, including The Ordeal of Woodrow Wilson, in which he strongly defended Wilson's actions at the Paris Peace Conference.[271] In 1944, he began working on Freedom Betrayed, which he often referred to as his "magnum opus". In Freedom Betrayed, Hoover strongly critiques Roosevelt's foreign policy, especially Roosevelt's decision to recognize the Soviet Union in order to provide aid to that country during World War II.[272] The book was published in 2012 after being edited by historian George H. Nash.[273]

Death

Hoover faced three major illnesses during the last two years of his life, including an August 1962 operation in which a growth on his large intestine was removed.[274][275] He died in New York City on October 20, 1964, following massive internal bleeding.[276] Though Hoover's last spoken words are unknown, his last-known written words were a get-well message to his friend Harry Truman, six days before his death, after he heard that Truman had sustained injuries from slipping in a bathroom: "Bathtubs are a menace to ex-presidents for as you may recall a bathtub rose up and fractured my vertebrae when I was in Venezuela on your world famine mission in 1946. My warmest sympathy and best wishes for your recovery."[277] Two months earlier, on August 10, Hoover reached the age of 90, only the second U.S. president (after John Adams) to do so. When asked how he felt on reaching the milestone, Hoover replied, "Too old."[275] At the time of his death, Hoover had been out of office for over 31 years (11,553 days all together). This was the longest retirement in presidential history until Jimmy Carter broke that record in September 2012.[278]

Hoover was honored with a state funeral in which he lay in state in the United States Capitol rotunda.[279] President Lyndon Johnson and First Lady Lady Bird Johnson attended, along with former presidents Truman and Eisenhower. Then, on October 25, he was buried in West Branch, Iowa, near his presidential library and birthplace on the grounds of the Herbert Hoover National Historic Site. Afterwards, Hoover's wife, Lou Henry Hoover, who had been buried in Palo Alto, California, following her death in 1944, was re-interred beside him.[280] Hoover was the last surviving member of the Harding and Coolidge cabinets. John Nance Garner (the speaker of the House during the second half of Hoover's term) was the only person in Hoover's United States presidential line of succession he did not outlive.

Legacy

Historical reputation

Hoover was extremely unpopular when he left office after the 1932 election, and his historical reputation would not begin to recover until the 1970s. According to Professor David E. Hamilton, historians have credited Hoover for his genuine belief in voluntarism and cooperation, as well as the innovation of some of his programs. However, Hamilton also notes that Hoover was politically inept and failed to recognize the severity of the Great Depression.[281] Nicholas Lemann writes that Hoover has been remembered "as the man who was too rigidly conservative to react adeptly to the Depression, as the hapless foil to the great Franklin Roosevelt, and as the politician who managed to turn a Republican country into a Democratic one".[3] Polls of historians and political scientists have generally ranked Hoover in the bottom third of presidents. A 2018 poll of the American Political Science Association's Presidents and Executive Politics section ranked Hoover as the 36th best president.[282] A 2017 C-SPAN poll of historians also ranked Hoover as the 36th best president.[283]

Although Hoover is generally regarded as having had a failed presidency, he has also received praise for his actions as a humanitarian and public official.[3] Biographer Glen Jeansonne writes that Hoover was "one of the most extraordinary Americans of modern times," adding that Hoover "led a life that was a prototypical Horatio Alger story, except that Horatio Alger stories stop at the pinnacle of success".[284] Biographer Kenneth Whyte writes that, "the question of where Hoover belongs in the American political tradition remains a loaded one to this day. While he clearly played important roles in the development of both the progressive and conservative traditions, neither side will embrace him for fear of contamination with the other."[285]

Historian Richard Pipes, on his actions leading the American Relief Administration, said of him "Many statesmen occupy a prominent place in history for having sent millions to their death; Herbert Hoover, maligned for his performance as President, and soon forgotten in Russia, has the rare distinction of having saved millions."[286]

Views of race

Racist remarks and racial humor was common at the time, but Hoover never indulged in them while president and deliberate discrimination was anathema to him; he thought of himself as a friend to Black people and an advocate for their progress.[287] However many of his Black contemporaries had a different view; W. E. B. Du Bois described him as an "undemocratic racist who saw blacks as a species of 'sub-men'".[288] Some historians trace the disaffection of African Americans with the Republican party to his time in office especially due to his attempt to remove African Americans from leadership in the Republican party in the South.[288] Like many of his peers Hoover considered white people to be inherently superior to Black people in most spheres and that interracial marriages were bad; however, he did think education and work would improve Black people's standing, hence his support for the Tuskegee Institute.[288] His White House did break the color bar by inviting Jessie De Priest, wife of the first Black congressman elected in several decades, to a traditional tea for the wives of congressmen as well as later inviting the Tuskegee Institute choir (then under the direction of William Dawson).[289]

Memorials

The Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum is located in West Branch, Iowa next to the Herbert Hoover National Historic Site. The library is one of thirteen presidential libraries run by the National Archives and Records Administration. The Hoover–Minthorn House, where Hoover lived from 1885 to 1891, is located in Newberg, Oregon. His Rapidan fishing camp in Virginia, which he donated to the government in 1933, is now a National Historic Landmark within the Shenandoah National Park. The Lou Henry and Herbert Hoover House, built in 1919 in Stanford, California, is now the official residence of the president of Stanford University, and a National Historic Landmark. Also located at Stanford is the Hoover Institution, a think tank and research institution started by Hoover.

Hoover has been memorialized in the names of several things, including the Hoover Dam on the Colorado River and numerous elementary, middle, and high schools across the United States. Two minor planets, 932 Hooveria[290] and 1363 Herberta, are named in his honor.[291] The Polish capital of Warsaw has a square named after Hoover,[292] and the historic townsite of Gwalia, Western Australia contains the Hoover House Bed and Breakfast, where Hoover resided while managing and visiting the mine during the first decade of the twentieth century.[293] A medicine ball game known as Hooverball is named for Hoover; it was invented by White House physician Admiral Joel T. Boone to help Hoover keep fit while serving as president.[294]

Other honors

Hoover was inducted into the National Mining Hall of Fame in 1988 (inaugural class).[295] His wife was inducted into the hall in 1990.[296]

Hoover was inducted into the Australian Prospectors and Miners' Hall of Fame in the category Directors and Management.[297]

Hoover was awarded an honorary doctorate by the Charles University in Prague and University of Helsinki in March 1938.[298][299][300] The ceremonial sword is today on display in the lobby of the Hoover tower.

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Hoover later became the first president born west of the Mississippi River, and remains the only president born in Iowa.[4]
  2. ^ Hoover later claimed to be the first student at Stanford, by virtue of having been the first person in the first class to sleep in the dormitory.[21]

References

Citations

  1. ^ Levinson, Martin H. (2011). "Indexing and Dating America's 'Worst' Presidents". ETC: A Review of General Semantics. 68 (2): 147–155. ISSN 0014-164X. JSTOR 42579110.
  2. ^ Merry, Robert W. (January 3, 2021). "RANKED: Historians Don't Think Much of These Five U.S. Presidents". The National Interest. Retrieved February 25, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c Lemann, Nicholas (October 23, 2017). "Hating on Herbert Hoover". The New Yorker. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
  4. ^ a b Burner 1996, p. 4.
  5. ^ Whyte 2017, pp. 5–10.
  6. ^ Burner, p. 6.
  7. ^ Burner, p. 7.
  8. ^ Burner, p. 9.
  9. ^ Whyte 2017, pp. 13–14, 31.
  10. ^ Burner 1996, p. 10.
  11. ^ Whyte 2017, pp. 17–18.
  12. ^ "Column: President spent days of his boyhood only 90 miles away". August 19, 2017.
  13. ^ "National Park Service – The Presidents (Herbert Hoover)".
  14. ^ "Timeline". December 6, 2017.
  15. ^ Burner 1996, p. 12.
  16. ^ Whyte 2017, pp. 20–21.
  17. ^ Whyte 2017, pp. 22–24.
  18. ^ "Timeline". December 6, 2017.
  19. ^ Leuchtenburg 2009, pp. 4–6.
  20. ^ Burner 1996, p. 16.
  21. ^ Revsine, David 'Dave' (November 30, 2006), "One-sided numbers dominate Saturday's rivalry games", ESPN, Go, retrieved November 30, 2006
  22. ^ Lane, Rose Wilder (1920). The Making of Herbert Hoover. New York: The Century Co. pp. 130–139. Retrieved November 2, 2020.
  23. ^ Whyte 2017, pp. 35–39.
  24. ^ a b c Leuchtenburg 2009, pp. 6–9.
  25. ^ Big Games: College Football's Greatest Rivalries – Page 222
  26. ^ Whyte 2017, pp. 39–41.
  27. ^ Whyte 2017, pp. 46–48.
  28. ^ Whyte 2017, pp. 48–50.
  29. ^ "Herbert Hoover, the graduate: Have Stanford degree, will travel". Hoover Institution. June 15, 2011. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  30. ^ "What did the President do in Western Australia?", , Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum, archived from the original on January 18, 2012, retrieved January 18, 2012
  31. ^ Whyte 2017, pp. 54–55.
  32. ^ Whyte 2017, p. 56.
  33. ^ Nash 1983, p. 283.
  34. ^ Gwalia Historic Site, AU
  35. ^ "Hoover's Gold" (PDF). Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 2005. Retrieved June 17, 2010.
  36. ^ a b c Leuchtenburg 2009, pp. 10–13.
  37. ^ Burner 1996, p. 32.
  38. ^ Whyte 2017, pp. 70–71, 76.
  39. ^ Whyte 2017, pp. 72–73.
  40. ^ Burner 1996, p. 34.
  41. ^ Whyte 2017, pp. 77–81, 85–89.
  42. ^ Whyte 2017, pp. 88–93, 98, 102–104.
  43. ^ Whyte 2017, pp. 112–115.
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Further reading

Biographical

  • Best, Gary Dean. The Politics of American Individualism: Herbert Hoover in Transition, 1918–1921 (1975)
  • Best, Gary Dean. The Life of Herbert Hoover: Keeper of the Torch, 1933–1964. Palgrave Macmillan, 2013.
  • Clements, Kendrick A. The Life of Herbert Hoover: Imperfect Visionary, 1918–1928 (2010).
  • Edwards, Barry C. "Putting Hoover on the Map: Was the 31st President a Progressive?" Congress & the Presidency 41#1 (2014) pp 49–83
  • Hatfield, Mark. ed. Herbert Hoover Reassessed (2002)
  • Hawley, Ellis (1989), Herbert Hoover and the Historians.
  • Jeansonne, Glen. The Life of Herbert Hoover: Fighting Quaker, 1928–1933. Palgrave Macmillan; 2012.
  • Lloyd, Craig. Aggressive Introvert: A Study of Herbert Hoover and Public Relations Management, 1912–1932 (1973).
  • Nash, George H. The Life of Herbert Hoover: The Engineer 1874–1914 (1983); in-depth scholarly study
    • —— (1988), The Humanitarian, 1914–1917, The Life of Herbert Hoover, vol. 2.
    • —— (1996), Master of Emergencies, 1917–1918, The Life of Herbert Hoover, vol. 3.
  • Nash, Lee, ed. Understanding Herbert Hoover: Ten Perspectives (1987); essays by scholars
  • Smith, Richard Norton. An Uncommon Man: The Triumph of Herbert Hoover, (1987), biography concentrating on post 1932.
  • Walch, Timothy. ed. Uncommon Americans: The Lives and Legacies of Herbert and Lou Henry Hoover Praeger, 2003.
  • West, Hal Elliott. Hoover, the Fishing President: Portrait of the Man and his Life Outdoors (2005).

Scholarly studies

  • Arnold, Peri E. "The 'Great Engineer' as Administrator: Herbert Hoover and Modern Bureaucracy." Review of Politics 42.3 (1980): 329–348. JSTOR 1406794.
  • Barber, William J. From New Era to New Deal: Herbert Hoover, the Economists, and American Economic Policy, 1921–1933. (1985)
  • Claus Bernet (2009). "Hoover, Herbert". In Bautz, Traugott (ed.). Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL) (in German). Vol. 30. Nordhausen: Bautz. cols. 644–653. ISBN 978-3-88309-478-6.
  • Brandes, Joseph. Herbert Hoover and Economic Diplomacy: Department of Commerce Policy, 1921–1928. (U of Pittsburgh Press, 1970).
  • Britten, Thomas A. "Hoover and the Indians: the Case for Continuity in Federal Indian Policy, 1900–1933" Historian 1999 61(3): 518–538. ISSN 0018-2370.
  • Clements, Kendrick A. Hoover, Conservation, and Consumerism: Engineering the Good Life. University Press of Kansas, 2000
  • Dodge, Mark M., ed. Herbert Hoover and the Historians. (1989)
  • Fausold Martin L. and George Mazuzan, eds. The Hoover Presidency: A Reappraisal (1974)
  • Goodman, Mark, and Mark Gring. "The Radio Act of 1927: progressive ideology, epistemology, and praxis". Rhetoric & Public Affairs 3.3 (2000): 397–418.
  • Hawley, Ellis."Herbert Hoover and the Historians—Recent Developments: A Review Essay" Annals of Iowa 78#1 (2018) pp. 75–86 doi:10.17077/0003-4827.12547
  • Hawley, Ellis. "Herbert Hoover, the Commerce Secretariat, and the Vision of an 'Associative State', 1921–1928" January 10, 2021, at the Wayback Machine. Journal of American History, (June 1974) 61#1: 116–140.
  • Jansky Jr, C. M. "The contribution of Herbert Hoover to broadcasting." Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 1.3 (1957): 241–249.
  • Lee, David D. "Herbert Hoover and the Development of Commercial Aviation, 1921–1926." Business History Review 58.1 (1984): 78–102.
  • Lichtman, Allan J. Prejudice and the Old Politics: The Presidential Election of 1928 (1979)
  • Lisio, Donald J. The President and Protest: Hoover, MacArthur, and the Bonus Riot, 2d ed. (1994)
  • Lisio, Donald J. Hoover, Blacks, and Lily-whites: A Study of Southern Strategies (1985)
  • Parafianowicz, Halina. 'Herbert C. Hoover and Poland: 1919–1933. Between Myth and Reality'
  • Polsky, Andrew J., and Olesya Tkacheva. "Legacies Versus Politics: Herbert Hoover, Partisan Conflict, and the Symbolic Appeal of Associationalism in the 1920s." International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society 16.2 (2002): 207–235. online
  • Short, Brant. "The Rhetoric of the Post-Presidency: Herbert Hoover's Campaign against the New Deal, 1934–1936" Presidential Studies Quarterly (1991) 21#2 pp. 333–350 online
  • Sibley, Katherine A.S., ed. A Companion to Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover (2014); 616pp; essays by scholars stressing historiography
  • Wueschner, Silvano A. Charting Twentieth-Century Monetary Policy: Herbert Hoover and Benjamin Strong, 1917–1927. Greenwood, 1999

Primary sources

  • Myers, William Starr; Walter H. Newton, eds. (1936). The Hoover Administration; a documented narrative.
  • Hawley, Ellis, ed. (1974–1977). Herbert Hoover: Containing the Public Messages, Speeches, and Statements of the President, 4 vols.
  • Hoover, Herbert Clark (1934), The Challenge to Liberty.
  • —— (1938), Addresses Upon The American Road, 1933–1938.
  • —— (1941), Addresses Upon The American Road, 1940–41.
  • ——; and Gibson, Hugh (1942), The Problems of Lasting Peace.
  • —— (1949), Addresses Upon The American Road, 1945–48.
  • —— (1952a), (PDF), Memoirs, vol. 1, New York, archived from the original (PDF) on December 17, 2008{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link).
  • —— (1952b), (PDF), Memoirs, vol. 2, New York, archived from the original (PDF) on December 17, 2008{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link).
  • —— (1952c), (PDF), Memoirs, vol. 3, New York, archived from the original (PDF) on December 17, 2008{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link).
  • Miller, Dwight M.; Walch, Timothy, eds. (1998), Herbert Hoover and Franklin D. Roosevelt: A Documentary History, Contributions in American History, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, ISBN 978-0-313-30608-2
  • Hoover, Herbert Clark (2011), Nash, George H. (ed.), Freedom Betrayed: Herbert Hoover's Secret History of the Second World War and Its Aftermath, Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, ISBN 978-0-8179-1234-5.
  • Hoover, Herbert Clark (2013), Nash, George H. (ed.), The Crusade Years, 1933–1955: Herbert Hoover's Lost Memoir of the New Deal Era and Its Aftermath, Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, ISBN 978-0-8179-1674-9.

External links

herbert, hoover, this, article, about, president, united, states, other, uses, disambiguation, president, hoover, redirects, here, ship, president, hoover, herbert, clark, hoover, august, 1874, october, 1964, american, politician, served, 31st, president, unit. This article is about the president of the United States For other uses see Herbert Hoover disambiguation President Hoover redirects here For the ship see SS President Hoover Herbert Clark Hoover August 10 1874 October 20 1964 was an American politician who served as the 31st president of the United States from 1929 to 1933 A member of the Republican Party he held office during the onset of the Great Depression A self made man who became wealthy as a mining engineer before his presidency Hoover led the wartime Commission for Relief in Belgium served as the director of the U S Food Administration and served as the U S secretary of commerce Herbert HooverHoover in 192831st President of the United StatesIn office March 4 1929 March 4 1933Vice PresidentCharles CurtisPreceded byCalvin CoolidgeSucceeded byFranklin D Roosevelt3rd United States Secretary of CommerceIn office March 5 1921 August 21 1928PresidentWarren G Harding Calvin CoolidgePreceded byJoshua W AlexanderSucceeded byWilliam F WhitingDirector of the United States Food AdministrationIn office August 21 1917 November 16 1918PresidentWoodrow WilsonPreceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byPosition abolishedChairman of the Commission for Relief in BelgiumIn office October 22 1914 April 14 1917Preceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byPosition abolishedPersonal detailsBornHerbert Clark Hoover 1874 08 10 August 10 1874West Branch Iowa U S DiedOctober 20 1964 1964 10 20 aged 90 New York City U S Resting placeHerbert Hoover Presidential Library and MuseumPolitical partyIndependent before 1920 Republican 1920 1964 SpouseLou Henry m 1899 died 1944 wbr ChildrenHerbert Jr AllanEducationStanford University BS SignatureHoover s voice source source Announcing his 1931 economic stimulus planRecorded October 1931Born to a Quaker family in West Branch Iowa Hoover grew up in Oregon He was one of the first graduates of the new Stanford University in 1895 He took a position with a London based mining company working in Australia and China He rapidly became a wealthy mining engineer In 1914 the outbreak of World War I he organized and headed the Commission for Relief in Belgium an international relief organization that provided food to occupied Belgium When the U S entered the war in 1917 president Woodrow Wilson appointed Hoover to lead the Food Administration He became famous as his country s food czar After the war Hoover led the American Relief Administration which provided food to the starving millions in Central and Eastern Europe especially Russia Hoover s wartime service made him a favorite of many progressives and he unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination in the 1920 U S presidential election Hoover served as the secretary of commerce under presidents Warren G Harding and Calvin Coolidge Hoover was an unusually active and visible Cabinet member becoming known as Secretary of Commerce and Under Secretary of all other departments He was influential in the development of air travel and radio He led the federal response to the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 Hoover won the Republican nomination in the 1928 presidential election and defeated Democratic candidate Al Smith in a landslide In 1929 Hoover assumed the presidency during a period of widespread economic stability However during his first year in office the stock market crashed signaling the onset of the Great Depression which dominated Hoover s presidency Hoover s response to the depression was widely seen as lackluster and he scapegoated Mexican Americans for the economic crisis Approximately 1 5 2 million Mexican Americans were forcibly repatriated to Mexico in a forced migration campaign known as the Mexican Repatriation a majority of them were born in the United States In the midst of the Great Depression Hoover was decisively defeated by Democratic nominee Franklin D Roosevelt in the 1932 presidential election Hoover s retirement was over 31 years long one of the longest presidential retirements He authored numerous works and became increasingly conservative in retirement He strongly criticized Roosevelt s foreign policy and the New Deal In the 1940s and 1950s public opinion of Hoover improved largely due to his service in various assignments for presidents Harry S Truman and Dwight D Eisenhower including chairing the influential Hoover Commission Critical assessments of his presidency by historians and political scientists generally rank him as a significantly below average president although Hoover has received praise for his actions as a humanitarian and public official 1 2 3 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Mining engineer 2 1 Bewick Moreing 2 2 Sole proprietor 3 Marriage and family 4 World War I and aftermath 4 1 Relief in Europe 4 2 U S Food Administration 4 3 Post war relief in Europe 4 4 1920 election 5 Secretary of Commerce 1921 1928 5 1 Radio regulation and air travel 5 2 Hoover s image building 5 3 Other initiatives 5 4 Mississippi flood 5 5 Presidential election of 1928 6 Presidency 1929 1933 6 1 Great Depression 6 1 1 Early policies 6 1 2 Later policies 6 2 Budget policy 6 3 Civil rights and Mexican Repatriation 6 4 Prohibition 6 5 Foreign relations 6 6 Bonus Army 6 7 1932 re election campaign 7 Post presidency 1933 1964 7 1 Roosevelt administration 7 1 1 Opposition to New Deal 7 1 2 World War II 7 2 Post World War II 7 3 Death 8 Legacy 8 1 Historical reputation 8 2 Views of race 8 3 Memorials 8 4 Other honors 9 See also 10 Explanatory notes 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Works cited 12 Further reading 12 1 Biographical 12 2 Scholarly studies 12 3 Primary sources 13 External linksEarly life and education nbsp Hoover s birthplace cottage in West Branch Iowa Herbert Clark Hoover was born on August 10 1874 in West Branch Iowa a His father Jesse Hoover was a blacksmith and farm implement store owner of German Swiss and English ancestry 4 Hoover s mother Hulda Randall Minthorn was raised in Norwich Ontario Canada before moving to Iowa in 1859 Like most other citizens of West Branch Jesse and Hulda were Quakers 5 Around age two Bertie as he was called during that time contracted a serious bout of croup and was momentarily thought to have died until resuscitated by his uncle John Minthorn 6 As a young child he was often referred to by his father as my little stick in the mud when he repeatedly got trapped in the mud crossing the unpaved street 7 Herbert s family figured prominently in the town s public prayer life due almost entirely to mother Hulda s role in the church 8 As a child Hoover consistently attended schools but he did little reading on his own aside from the Bible 9 Hoover s father noted by the local paper for his pleasant sunshiny disposition died in 1880 at the age of 34 of a sudden heart attack 10 Hoover s mother died in 1884 of typhoid leaving Hoover his older brother Theodore and his younger sister May as orphans 11 Hoover lived the next 18 months with his uncle Allen Hoover at a nearby farm 12 13 nbsp Hoover in 1877In November 1885 Hoover was sent to Newberg Oregon to live with his uncle John Minthorn a Quaker physician and businessman whose own son had died the year before 14 The Minthorn household was considered cultured and educational and imparted a strong work ethic 15 Much like West Branch Newberg was a frontier town settled largely by Midwestern Quakers 16 Minthorn ensured that Hoover received an education but Hoover disliked the many chores assigned to him and often resented Minthorn One observer described Hoover as an orphan who seemed to be neglected in many ways 17 Hoover attended Friends Pacific Academy now George Fox University but dropped out at the age of thirteen to become an office assistant for his uncle s real estate office Oregon Land Company 18 in Salem Oregon Though he did not attend high school Hoover learned bookkeeping typing and mathematics at a night school 19 Hoover was a member of the inaugural Pioneer Class of Stanford University entering in 1891 despite failing all the entrance exams except mathematics 20 b During his freshman year he switched his major from mechanical engineering to geology after working for John Casper Branner the chairman of Stanford s geology department During his sophomore year to reduce his costs Hoover co founded the first student housing cooperative at Stanford Romero Hall 22 Hoover was a mediocre student and he spent much of his time working in various part time jobs or participating in campus activities 23 Though he was initially shy among fellow students Hoover won election as student treasurer and became known for his distaste for fraternities and sororities 24 He served as student manager of both the baseball and football teams and helped organize the inaugural Big Game versus the University of California 25 During the summers before and after his senior year Hoover interned under economic geologist Waldemar Lindgren of the United States Geological Survey these experiences convinced Hoover to pursue a career as a mining geologist 26 Mining engineerBewick Moreing nbsp Hoover aged 23 taken in Perth Western Australia in 1898When Hoover graduated from Stanford in 1895 the country was in the midst of the Panic of 1893 and he initially struggled to find a job 24 He worked in various low level mining jobs in the Sierra Nevada Mountains until persuading prominent mining engineer Louis Janin to hire him 27 After working as a mine scout for a year Hoover was hired by Bewick Moreing amp Co Bewick a London based company that operated gold mines in Western Australia 28 He first went to Coolgardie then the center of the Eastern Goldfields which was actually in Western Australia receiving a 5 000 salary equivalent to 175 880 in 2022 Conditions were harsh in the goldfields Hoover described the Coolgardie and Murchison rangelands on the edge of the Great Victoria Desert as a land of black flies red dust and white heat 29 30 Hoover traveled constantly across the Outback to evaluate and manage the company s mines 31 He convinced Bewick to purchase the Sons of Gwalia gold mine which proved to be one of the most successful mines in the region 32 Partly due to Hoover s efforts the company eventually controlled approximately 50 percent of gold production in Western Australia 33 Hoover brought in many Italian immigrants to cut costs and counter the labour movement of the Australian miners 34 35 During his time with the mining company Hoover became opposed to measures such as a minimum wage and workers compensation feeling that they were unfair to owners Hoover s work impressed his employers and in 1898 he was promoted to junior partner 36 An open feud developed between Hoover and his boss Ernest Williams but Bewick s leaders defused the situation by offering Hoover a compelling position in China 37 Upon arriving in China Hoover developed gold mines near Tianjin on behalf of Bewick and the Chinese owned Chinese Engineering and Mining Company 38 He became deeply interested in Chinese history but gave up on learning the language to a fluent level He publicly warned that Chinese workers were inefficient and racially inferior 39 He made recommendations to improve the lot of the Chinese worker seeking to end the practice of imposing long term servitude contracts and to institute reforms for workers based on merit 40 The Boxer Rebellion broke out shortly after the Hoovers arrived in China trapping them and numerous other foreign nationals until a multi national military force defeated Boxer forces in the Battle of Tientsin Fearing the imminent collapse of the Chinese government the director of the Chinese Engineering and Mining Company agreed to establish a new Sino British venture with Bewick After they established effective control over the new Chinese mining company Hoover became the operating partner in late 1901 41 In this role Hoover continually traveled the world on behalf of Bewick visiting mines operated by the company on different continents Beginning in December 1902 the company faced mounting legal and financial issues after one of the partners admitted to having fraudulently sold stock in a mine More issues arose in 1904 after the British government formed two separate royal commissions to investigate Bewick s labor practices and financial dealings in Western Australia After the company lost a lawsuit Hoover began looking for a way to get out of the partnership and he sold his shares in mid 1908 42 Sole proprietor nbsp Hoover in 1917 while a mining engineerAfter leaving Bewick Moreing Hoover worked as a London based independent mining consultant and financier Though he had risen to prominence as a geologist and mine operator Hoover focused much of his attention on raising money restructuring corporate organizations and financing new ventures 43 He specialized in rejuvenating troubled mining operations taking a share of the profits in exchange for his technical and financial expertise 44 Hoover thought of himself and his associates as engineering doctors to sick concerns and he earned a reputation as a doctor of sick mines 45 He made investments on every continent and had offices in San Francisco London New York City Paris Petrograd and Mandalay British Burma 46 By 1914 Hoover was a very wealthy man with an estimated personal fortune of 4 million equivalent to 116 86 million in 2022 47 Hoover co founded the Zinc Corporation to extract zinc near the Australian city of Broken Hill New South Wales 48 The Zinc Corporation developed the froth flotation process to extract zinc from lead silver ore 49 and operated the world s first selective ore differential flotation plant 50 Hoover worked with the Burma Corporation a British firm that produced silver lead and zinc in large quantities at the Namtu Bawdwin Mine 51 90 96 101 102 52 He also helped increase copper production in Kyshtym Russia through the use of pyritic smelting He also agreed to manage a separate mine in the Altai Mountains that according to Hoover developed probably the greatest and richest single body of ore known in the world 51 102 108 53 In his spare time Hoover wrote His lectures at Columbia and Stanford universities were published in 1909 as Principles of Mining which became a standard textbook The book reflects his move towards progressive ideals as Hoover came to endorse eight hour workdays and organized labor 54 Hoover became deeply interested in the history of science and he was especially drawn to the De re metallica an influential 16th century work on mining and metallurgy by Georgius Agricola In 1912 Hoover and his wife published the first English translation of De re metallica 55 Hoover also joined the board of trustees at Stanford and led a successful campaign to appoint John Branner as the university s president 56 Marriage and family nbsp The Lou Henry Hoover House in Stanford California the couple s first and only permanent residenceDuring his senior year at Stanford Hoover became smitten with a classmate named Lou Henry though his financial situation precluded marriage at that time 24 The daughter of a banker from Monterey California Lou Henry decided to study geology at Stanford after attending a lecture delivered by John C Branner 57 Immediately after earning a promotion in 1898 Hoover cabled Lou Henry asking her to marry him After she cabled back her acceptance of the proposal Hoover briefly returned to the United States for their wedding 36 They would remain married until Lou Henry Hoover s death in 1944 58 Hoover was the first president to be a widower since Woodrow Wilson Though his Quaker upbringing strongly influenced his career Hoover rarely attended Quaker meetings during his adult life 59 60 Hoover and his wife had two children Herbert Hoover Jr born in 1903 and Allan Henry Hoover born in 1907 36 The Hoover family began living in London in 1902 though they frequently traveled as part of Hoover s career 61 After 1916 the Hoovers began living in the United States maintaining homes in Stanford California and Washington D C 62 Hoover s elder brother Theodore also studied mining engineering at Stanford and returned there to become dean of the engineering school In retirement Theodore bought a large property on the remote north coast of Santa Cruz County The Theodore J Hoover Natural Preserve is now part of Big Basin State Park World War I and aftermathRelief in Europe Further information Presidency of Woodrow Wilson Main article Commission for Relief in Belgium World War I broke out in August 1914 pitting Germany and its allies against France and its allies The German Schlieffen plan was to achieve a quick victory by marching through neutral Belgium to envelop the French Army east of Paris The maneuver failed to reach Paris but the Germans did control nearly all of Belgium for the entire war Hoover and other London based American businessmen established a committee to organize the return of the roughly 100 000 Americans stranded in Europe Hoover was appointed as the committee s chairman and with the assent of Congress and the Wilson administration took charge of the distribution of relief to Americans in Europe 63 Hoover later stated I did not realize it at the moment but on August 3 1914 my career was over forever I was on the slippery road of public life 64 By early October 1914 Hoover s organization had distributed relief to at least 40 000 Americans 65 The German invasion of Belgium in August 1914 set off a food crisis in Belgium which relied heavily on food imports The Germans refused to take responsibility for feeding Belgian citizens in captured territory and the British refused to lift their blockade of German occupied Belgium unless the U S government supervised Belgian food imports as a neutral party in the war 66 With the cooperation of the Wilson administration and the CNSA a Belgian relief organization Hoover established the Commission for Relief in Belgium CRB 67 The CRB obtained and imported millions of tons of foodstuffs for the CNSA to distribute and helped ensure that the German army did not appropriate the food Private donations and government grants supplied the majority of its 11 million a month budget and the CRB became a veritable independent republic of relief with its own flag navy factories mills and railroads 68 69 failed verification Hoover worked 14 hour days from London administering the distribution of over two million tons of food to nine million war victims In an early form of shuttle diplomacy he crossed the North Sea forty times to meet with German authorities and persuade them to allow food shipments 70 He also convinced British Chancellor of the Exchequer David Lloyd George to allow individuals to send money to the people of Belgium thereby lessening workload of the CRB 71 At the request of the French government the CRB began delivering supplies to the people of German occupied Northern France in 1915 72 American diplomat Walter Page described Hoover as probably the only man living who has privately i e without holding office negotiated understandings with the British French German Dutch and Belgian governments 73 74 U S Food Administration Main article United States Food Administration nbsp U S Food Administration posterWar upon Germany was declared in April 1917 and American food was essential to Allied victory With the U S mobilizing for war President Wilson appointed Hoover to head the U S Food Administration which was charged with ensuring the nation s food needs during the war 75 Hoover had hoped to join the administration in some capacity since at least 1916 and he obtained the position after lobbying several members of Congress and Wilson s confidant Edward M House 76 Earning the appellation of food czar Hoover recruited a volunteer force of hundreds of thousands of women and deployed propaganda in movie theaters schools and churches 77 He carefully selected men to assist in the agency leadership Alonzo E Taylor technical abilities Robert Taft political associations Gifford Pinchot agricultural influence and Julius Barnes business acumen 78 World War I had created a global food crisis that dramatically increased food prices and caused food riots and starvation in the countries at war Hoover s chief goal as food czar was to provide supplies to the Allied Powers but he also sought to stabilize domestic prices and to prevent domestic shortages 79 Under the broad powers granted by the Food and Fuel Control Act the Food Administration supervised food production throughout the United States and the administration made use of its authority to buy import store and sell food 80 Determined to avoid rationing Hoover established set days for people to avoid eating specified foods and save them for soldiers rations meatless Mondays wheatless Wednesdays and when in doubt eat potatoes These policies were dubbed Hooverizing by government publicists in spite of Hoover s continual orders that publicity should not mention him by name 81 The Food Administration shipped 23 million metric tons of food to the Allied Powers preventing their collapse and earning Hoover great acclaim 82 As head of the Food Administration Hoover gained a following in the United States especially among progressives who saw in Hoover an expert administrator and symbol of efficiency 83 He was elected to the American Philosophical Society during his tenure 84 Post war relief in Europe Main article American Relief Administration World War I came to an end in November 1918 but Europe continued to face a critical food situation Hoover estimated that as many as 400 million people faced the possibility of starvation 85 The United States Food Administration became the American Relief Administration ARA and Hoover was charged with providing food to Central and Eastern Europe 86 In addition to providing relief the ARA rebuilt infrastructure in an effort to rejuvenate the economy of Europe 87 Throughout the Paris Peace Conference Hoover served as a close adviser to President Wilson and he largely shared Wilson s goals of establishing the League of Nations settling borders on the basis of self determination and refraining from inflicting a harsh punishment on the defeated Central Powers 88 The following year the famed British economist John Maynard Keynes wrote in The Economic Consequences of the Peace that if Hoover s realism knowledge magnanimity and disinterestedness had found wider play in the councils of Paris the world would have had the Good Peace 89 After U S government funding for the ARA expired in mid 1919 Hoover transformed the ARA into a private organization raising millions of dollars from private donors 86 He also established the European Children s Fund which provided relief to fifteen million children across fourteen countries 90 Despite the opposition of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge and other Republicans Hoover provided aid to the defeated German nation after the war as well as relief to famine stricken Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic 86 Hoover condemned the Bolsheviks but warned President Wilson against an intervention in the Russian Civil War as he viewed the White Russian forces as little better than the Bolsheviks and feared the possibility of a protracted U S involvement 91 The Russian famine of 1921 22 claimed six million people but the intervention of the ARA likely saved millions of lives 92 When asked if he was not helping Bolshevism by providing relief Hoover stated twenty million people are starving Whatever their politics they shall be fed 86 Reflecting the gratitude of many Europeans in July 1922 Soviet author Maxim Gorky told Hoover that your help will enter history as a unique gigantic achievement worthy of the greatest glory which will long remain in the memory of millions of Russians whom you have saved from death 93 In 1919 Hoover established the Hoover War Collection at Stanford University He donated all the files of the Commission for Relief in Belgium the U S Food Administration and the American Relief Administration and pledged 50 000 as an endowment equivalent to 843 954 in 2022 Scholars were sent to Europe to collect pamphlets society publications government documents newspapers posters proclamations and other ephemeral materials related to the war and the revolutions that followed it The collection was renamed the Hoover War Library in 1922 and is now known as the Hoover Institution Library and Archives 94 During the post war period Hoover also served as the president of the Federated American Engineering Societies 95 96 1920 election Further information 1920 United States presidential election Hoover had been little known among the American public before 1914 but his service in the Wilson administration established him as a contender in the 1920 presidential election Hoover s wartime push for higher taxes criticism of Attorney General A Mitchell Palmer s actions during the First Red Scare and his advocacy for measures such as the minimum wage forty eight hour workweek and elimination of child labor made him appealing to progressives of both parties 97 Despite his service in the Democratic administration of Woodrow Wilson Hoover had never been closely affiliated with either the Democrats or the Republicans He initially sought to avoid committing to any party in the 1920 election hoping that either of the two major parties would draft him for president at their national conventions 98 In March 1920 he changed strategy and declared himself a Republican he was motivated in large part by the belief that the Democrats had little chance of winning 99 Despite his national renown Hoover s service in the Wilson administration had alienated farmers and the conservative Old Guard of the GOP and his presidential candidacy fizzled out after his defeat in the California primary by favorite son Hiram Johnson At the 1920 Republican National Convention Warren G Harding emerged as a compromise candidate after the convention became deadlocked between supporters of Johnson Leonard Wood and Frank Orren Lowden 97 Hoover backed Harding s successful campaign in the general election and he began laying the groundwork for a future presidential run by building a base of strong supporters in the Republican Party 100 Secretary of Commerce 1921 1928 Further information Presidency of Warren G Harding and Presidency of Calvin Coolidge nbsp Assistants William McCracken left and Walter Drake right with Secretary Hoover center After his election as president in 1920 Harding rewarded Hoover for his support offering to appoint him as either Secretary of the Interior or Secretary of Commerce Secretary of Commerce was considered a minor Cabinet post with limited and vaguely defined responsibilities but Hoover decided to accept the position 101 Hoover s progressive stances continuing support for the League of Nations and recent conversion to the Republican Party aroused opposition to his appointment from many Senate Republicans 102 To overcome this opposition Harding paired Hoover s nomination with that of conservative favorite Andrew Mellon as Secretary of the Treasury and the nominations of both Hoover and Mellon were confirmed by the Senate Hoover would serve as Secretary of Commerce from 1921 to 1929 serving under Harding and after Harding s death in 1923 President Calvin Coolidge 101 While some of the most prominent members of the Harding administration including Attorney General Harry M Daugherty and Secretary of Interior Albert B Fall were implicated in major scandals Hoover emerged largely unscathed from investigations into the Harding administration 103 Hoover envisioned the Commerce Department as the hub of the nation s growth and stability 104 His experience mobilizing the war time economy convinced him that the federal government could promote efficiency by eliminating waste increasing production encouraging the adoption of data based practices investing in infrastructure and conserving natural resources Contemporaries described Hoover s approach as a third alternative between unrestrained capitalism and socialism which was becoming increasingly popular in Europe 105 Hoover sought to foster a balance among labor capital and the government and for this he has been variously labeled a corporatist or an associationalist 106 A high priority was economic diplomacy including promoting the growth of exports as well as protection against monopolistic practices of foreign governments especially regarding rubber and coffee 107 Hoover demanded and received authority to coordinate economic affairs throughout the government He created many sub departments and committees overseeing and regulating everything from manufacturing statistics to air travel In some instances he seized control of responsibilities from other Cabinet departments when he deemed that they were not carrying out their responsibilities well some began referring to him as the Secretary of Commerce and Under Secretary of all other departments 104 In response to the Depression of 1920 21 he convinced Harding to assemble a presidential commission on unemployment which encouraged local governments to engage in countercyclical infrastructure spending 108 He endorsed much of Mellon s tax reduction program but favored a more progressive tax system and opposed the treasury secretary s efforts to eliminate the estate tax 109 Radio regulation and air travel Main article Regulation of radio broadcast in the United States nbsp Hoover listening to a radio receiver 1925Between 1923 and 1929 the number of families with radios grew from 300 000 to 10 million 110 and Hoover s tenure as Secretary of Commerce heavily influenced radio use in the United States In the early and mid 1920s Hoover s radio conferences played a key role in the organization development and regulation of radio broadcasting Hoover also helped pass the Radio Act of 1927 which allowed the government to intervene and abolish radio stations that were deemed non useful to the public Hoover s attempts at regulating radio were not supported by all congressmen and he received much opposition from the Senate and from radio station owners 111 112 113 Hoover was also influential in the early development of air travel and he sought to create a thriving private industry boosted by indirect government subsidies He encouraged the development of emergency landing fields required all runways to be equipped with lights and radio beams and encouraged farmers to make use of planes for crop dusting 114 He also established the federal government s power to inspect planes and license pilots setting a precedent for the later Federal Aviation Administration 115 As Commerce Secretary Hoover hosted national conferences on street traffic collectively known as the National Conference on Street and Highway Safety Hoover s chief objective was to address the growing casualty toll of traffic accidents but the scope of the conferences grew and soon embraced motor vehicle standards rules of the road and urban traffic control He left the invited interest groups to negotiate agreements among themselves which were then presented for adoption by states and localities Because automotive trade associations were the best organized many of the positions taken by the conferences reflected their interests The conferences issued a model Uniform Vehicle Code for adoption by the states and a Model Municipal Traffic Ordinance for adoption by cities Both were widely influential promoting greater uniformity between jurisdictions and tending to promote the automobile s priority in city streets 116 Hoover s image building Phillips Payson O Brien argues that Hoover had a Britain problem He had spent so many years living in Britain and Australia as an employee of British companies there was a risk that he would be labeled a British tool There were three solutions all of which he tried in close collaboration with the media which greatly admired him 117 First came the image of the dispassionate scientist emotionally uninvolved but always committed to finding and implementing the best possible solution The second solution was to gain the reputation of a humanitarian deeply concerned with the world s troubles such as famine in Belgium as well as specific American problems which he had solved as food commissioner during the world war The third solution to was to fall back on that old tactic of twisting the British tail He employed that solution in 1925 1926 in the worldwide rubber crisis The American auto industry consumed 70 of the world s output but British investors controlled much of the supply Their plan was to drastically cut back on output from British Malaya which had the effect of tripling rubber prices Hoover energetically gave a series of speeches and interviews denouncing the monopolistic practice and demanding that it be ended The American State Department wanted no such crisis and compromised the issue in 1926 By then Hoover had solved his image problem and during his 1928 campaign he successfully squelched attacks that alleged he was too close to British interests 118 Other initiatives nbsp Hoover left with President Warren Harding at a baseball game 1921With the goal of encouraging wise business investments Hoover made the Commerce Department a clearinghouse of information He recruited numerous academics from various fields and tasked them with publishing reports on different aspects of the economy including steel production and films To eliminate waste he encouraged standardization of products like automobile tires and baby bottle nipples 119 Other efforts at eliminating waste included reducing labor losses from trade disputes and seasonal fluctuations reducing industrial losses from accident and injury and reducing the amount of crude oil spilled during extraction and shipping He promoted international trade by opening overseas offices to advise businessmen Hoover was especially eager to promote Hollywood films overseas 120 His Own Your Own Home campaign was a collaboration to promote ownership of single family dwellings with groups such as the Better Houses in America movement the Architects Small House Service Bureau and the Home Modernizing Bureau He worked with bankers and the savings and loan industry to promote the new long term home mortgage which dramatically stimulated home construction 121 Other accomplishments included winning the agreement of U S Steel to adopt an eight hour workday and the fostering of the Colorado River Compact a water rights compact among Southwestern states 122 Mississippi flood The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 broke the banks and levees of the lower Mississippi River in early 1927 resulting in the flooding of millions of acres and leaving 1 5 million people displaced from their homes Although disaster response did not fall under the duties of the Commerce Department the governors of six states along the Mississippi River specifically asked President Coolidge to appoint Hoover to coordinate the response to the flood 123 Believing that disaster response was not the domain of the federal government Coolidge initially refused to become involved but he eventually acceded to political pressure and appointed Hoover to chair a special committee to help the region 124 Hoover established over one hundred tent cities and a fleet of more than six hundred vessels and raised 17 million equivalent to 286 39 million in 2022 In large part due to his leadership during the flood crisis by 1928 Hoover had begun to overshadow President Coolidge himself 123 Though Hoover received wide acclaim for his role in the crisis he ordered the suppression of reports of mistreatment of African Americans in refugee camps 125 He did so with the cooperation of black American leader Robert Russa Moton who was promised unprecedented influence once Hoover became president 126 Presidential election of 1928 Main article 1928 United States presidential election Hoover quietly gathered support for a future presidential bid throughout the 1920s but he carefully avoided alienating Coolidge who possibly could have run for another term in the 1928 presidential election 127 Along with the rest of the nation he was surprised when Coolidge announced in August 1927 that he would not seek another term With the impending retirement of Coolidge Hoover immediately emerged as the front runner for the 1928 Republican nomination and he quickly put together a strong campaign team led by Hubert Work Will H Hays and Reed Smoot 128 Coolidge was unwilling to anoint Hoover as his successor on one occasion he remarked that for six years that man has given me unsolicited advice all of it bad 129 Despite his lukewarm feelings towards Hoover Coolidge had no desire to split the party by publicly opposing the popular Commerce Secretary s candidacy 130 Many wary Republican leaders cast about for an alternative candidate such as Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon or former secretary of state Charles Evans Hughes 131 However Hughes and Mellon declined to run and other potential contenders like Frank Orren Lowden and Vice President Charles G Dawes failed to garner widespread support 132 Hoover won the presidential nomination on the first ballot of the 1928 Republican National Convention Convention delegates considered re nominating Vice President Charles Dawes to be Hoover s running mate but Coolidge who hated Dawes remarked that this would be a personal affront to him The convention instead selected Senator Charles Curtis of Kansas 133 Hoover accepted the nomination at Stanford Stadium telling a huge crowd that he would continue the policies of the Harding and Coolidge administrations 134 The Democrats nominated New York governor Al Smith who became the first Catholic major party nominee for president 135 nbsp 1928 electoral vote resultsHoover centered his campaign around the Republican record of peace and prosperity as well as his own reputation as a successful engineer and public official Averse to giving political speeches Hoover largely stayed out of the fray and left the campaigning to Curtis and other Republicans 136 Smith was more charismatic and gregarious than Hoover but his campaign was damaged by anti Catholicism and his overt opposition to Prohibition Hoover had never been a strong proponent of Prohibition but he accepted the Republican Party s plank in favor of it and issued an ambivalent statement calling Prohibition a great social and economic experiment noble in motive and far reaching in purpose 137 In the South Hoover and the national party pursued a lily white strategy removing black Republicans from leadership positions in an attempt to curry favor with white Southerners 138 Hoover maintained polling leads throughout the 1928 campaign and he decisively defeated Smith on election day taking 58 percent of the popular vote and 444 of the 531 electoral votes 139 Historians agree that Hoover s national reputation and the booming economy combined with deep splits in the Democratic Party over religion and Prohibition guaranteed his landslide victory 140 Hoover s appeal to Southern white voters succeeded in cracking the Solid South and he won five Southern states 141 Hoover s victory was positively received by newspapers one wrote that Hoover would drive so forcefully at the tasks now before the nation that the end of his eight years as president will find us looking back on an era of prodigious achievement 142 Hoover s detractors wondered why he did not do anything to reapportion congress after the 1920 United States Census which saw an increase in urban and immigrant populations The 1920 Census was the first and only Decennial Census where the results were not used to reapportion Congress which ultimately influenced the 1928 Electoral College and impacted the Presidential Election 143 144 Presidency 1929 1933 Main article Presidency of Herbert Hoover nbsp Hoover s inaugurationHoover saw the presidency as a vehicle for improving the conditions of all Americans by encouraging public private cooperation what he termed volunteerism He tended to oppose governmental coercion or intervention as he thought they infringed on American ideals of individualism and self reliance 145 The first major bill that he signed the Agricultural Marketing Act of 1929 established the Federal Farm Board in order to stabilize farm prices 146 Hoover made extensive use of commissions to study issues and propose solutions and many of those commissions were sponsored by private donors rather than by the government One of the commissions started by Hoover the Research Committee on Social Trends was tasked with surveying the entirety of American society 147 He appointed a Cabinet consisting largely of wealthy business oriented conservatives 148 including Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon 149 Lou Henry Hoover was an activist First Lady She typified the new woman of the post World War I era intelligent robust and aware of multiple female possibilities 150 Great Depression See also Great Depression in the United States On taking office Hoover said that given the chance to go forward with the policies of the last eight years we shall soon with the help of God be in sight of the day when poverty will be banished from this nation 151 Having seen the fruits of prosperity brought by technological progress many shared Hoover s optimism and the already bullish stock market climbed even higher on Hoover s accession 152 This optimism concealed several threats to sustained U S economic growth including a persistent farm crisis a saturation of consumer goods like automobiles and growing income inequality 153 Most dangerous of all to the economy was excessive speculation that had raised stock prices far beyond their value 154 Some regulators and bankers had warned Coolidge and Hoover that a failure to curb speculation would lead to one of the greatest financial catastrophes that this country has ever seen but both presidents were reluctant to become involved with the workings of the Federal Reserve System which regulated banks 155 In late October 1929 the Stock Market Crash of 1929 occurred and the worldwide economy began to spiral downward into the Great Depression 156 The causes of the Great Depression remain a matter of debate 157 but Hoover viewed a lack of confidence in the financial system as the fundamental economic problem facing the nation 158 He sought to avoid direct federal intervention believing that the best way to bolster the economy was through the strengthening of businesses such as banks and railroads He also feared that allowing individuals on the dole would permanently weaken the country 159 Instead Hoover strongly believed that local governments and private giving should address the needs of individuals 160 Early policies Though he attempted to put a positive spin on Black Tuesday Hoover moved quickly to address the stock market collapse 161 In the days following Black Tuesday Hoover gathered business and labor leaders asking them to avoid wage cuts and work stoppages while the country faced what he believed would be a short recession similar to the Depression of 1920 21 162 Hoover also convinced railroads and public utilities to increase spending on construction and maintenance and the Federal Reserve announced that it would cut interest rates 163 In early 1930 Hoover acquired from Congress an additional 100 million to continue the Federal Farm Board lending and purchasing policies 164 These actions were collectively designed to prevent a cycle of deflation and provide a fiscal stimulus 163 At the same time Hoover opposed congressional proposals to provide federal relief to the unemployed as he believed that such programs were the responsibility of state and local governments and philanthropic organizations 165 Hoover had taken office hoping to raise agricultural tariffs in order to help farmers reeling from the farm crisis of the 1920s but his attempt to raise agricultural tariffs became connected with a bill that broadly raised tariffs 166 Hoover refused to become closely involved in the congressional debate over the tariff and Congress produced a tariff bill that raised rates for many goods 167 Despite the widespread unpopularity of the bill Hoover felt that he could not reject the main legislative accomplishment of the Republican controlled 71st Congress Over the objection of many economists Hoover signed the Smoot Hawley Tariff Act into law in June 1930 168 Canada France and other nations retaliated by raising tariffs resulting in a contraction of international trade and a worsening of the economy 169 Progressive Republicans such as Senator William E Borah of Idaho were outraged when Hoover signed the tariff act and Hoover s relations with that wing of the party never recovered 170 Later policies nbsp Hoover in the Oval Office with Ted Joslin 1932By the end of 1930 the national unemployment rate had reached 11 9 percent but it was not yet clear to most Americans that the economic downturn would be worse than the Depression of 1920 21 171 A series of bank failures in late 1930 heralded a larger collapse of the economy in 1931 172 While other countries left the gold standard Hoover refused to abandon it 173 he derided any other monetary system as collectivism 174 Hoover viewed the weak European economy as a major cause of economic troubles in the United States 175 In response to the collapse of the German economy Hoover marshaled congressional support behind a one year moratorium on European war debts 176 The Hoover Moratorium was warmly received in Europe and the United States but Germany remained on the brink of defaulting on its loans 177 As the worldwide economy worsened democratic governments fell in Germany Nazi Party leader Adolf Hitler assumed power and dismantled the Weimar Republic 178 By mid 1931 the unemployment rate had reached 15 percent giving rise to growing fears that the country was experiencing a depression far worse than recent economic downturns 179 A reserved man with a fear of public speaking Hoover allowed his opponents in the Democratic Party to define him as cold incompetent reactionary and out of touch 180 Hoover s opponents developed defamatory epithets to discredit him such as Hooverville the shanty towns and homeless encampments Hoover leather cardboard used to cover holes in the soles of shoes and Hoover blanket old newspaper used to cover oneself from the cold 181 While Hoover continued to resist direct federal relief efforts Governor Franklin D Roosevelt of New York launched the Temporary Emergency Relief Administration to provide aid to the unemployed Democrats positioned the program as a kinder alternative to Hoover s alleged apathy towards the unemployed despite Hoover s belief that such programs were the responsibility of state and local governments 182 The economy continued to worsen with unemployment rates nearing 23 percent in early 1932 183 and Hoover finally heeded calls for more direct federal intervention 184 In January 1932 he convinced Congress to authorize the establishment of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation RFC which would provide government secured loans to financial institutions railroads and local governments 185 The RFC saved numerous businesses from failure but it failed to stimulate commercial lending as much as Hoover had hoped partly because it was run by conservative bankers unwilling to make riskier loans 186 The same month the RFC was established Hoover signed the Federal Home Loan Bank Act establishing 12 district banks overseen by a Federal Home Loan Bank Board in a manner similar to the Federal Reserve System 187 He also helped arrange passage of the Glass Steagall Act of 1932 emergency banking legislation designed to expand banking credit by expanding the collateral on which Federal Reserve banks were authorized to lend 188 As these measures failed to stem the economic crisis Hoover signed the Emergency Relief and Construction Act a 2 billion public works bill in July 1932 183 Budget policy nbsp National debt as a fraction of GNP up from 20 to 40 under Hoover From Historical Statistics US 1976 After a decade of budget surpluses the federal government experienced a budget deficit in 1931 189 Though some economists like William Trufant Foster favored deficit spending to address the Great Depression most politicians and economists believed in the necessity of keeping a balanced budget 190 In late 1931 Hoover proposed a tax plan to increase tax revenue by 30 percent resulting in the passage of the Revenue Act of 1932 191 The act increased taxes across the board rolling back much of the tax cut reduction program Mellon had presided over during the 1920s Top earners were taxed at 63 percent on their net income the highest rate since the early 1920s The act also doubled the top estate tax rate cut personal income tax exemptions eliminated the corporate income tax exemption and raised corporate tax rates 192 Despite the passage of the Revenue Act the federal government continued to run a budget deficit 193 Civil rights and Mexican Repatriation Further information Lily white movement and Mexican Repatriation nbsp Herbert and Lou Henry Hoover aboard a train in IllinoisHoover seldom mentioned civil rights while he was president He believed that African Americans and other races could improve themselves with education and individual initiative 194 Hoover appointed more African Americans to federal positions than Harding and Coolidge combined but many African American leaders condemned various aspects of the Hoover administration including Hoover s unwillingness to push for a federal anti lynching law 195 Hoover also continued to pursue the lily white strategy removing African Americans from positions of leadership in the Republican Party in an attempt to end the Democratic Party s dominance in the South 196 Though Robert Moton and some other black leaders accepted the lily white strategy as a temporary measure most African American leaders were outraged 197 Hoover further alienated black leaders by nominating conservative Southern judge John J Parker to the Supreme Court Parker s nomination ultimately failed in the Senate due to opposition from the NAACP and organized labor 198 Many black voters switched to the Democratic Party in the 1932 election and African Americans would later become an important part of Franklin Roosevelt s New Deal coalition 199 As part of his efforts to limit unemployment Hoover sought to cut immigration to the United States and in 1930 he promulgated an executive order requiring individuals to have employment before migrating to the United States 200 The Hoover Administration began a campaign to prosecute illegal immigrants in the United States which most strongly affected Mexican Americans especially those living in Southern California 201 Many of the deportations were overseen by state and local authorities who acted on the encouragement of the Hoover Administration 202 During the 1930s approximately one million Mexican Americans were forcibly repatriated to Mexico approximately sixty percent of those deported were birthright citizens 203 According to legal professor Kevin R Johnson the repatriation campaign meets the modern legal standards of ethnic cleansing as it involved the forced removal of a racial minority by government actors 204 Hoover reorganized the Bureau of Indian Affairs to limit exploitation of Native Americans 205 Prohibition On taking office Hoover urged Americans to obey the Eighteenth Amendment and the Volstead Act which had established Prohibition across the United States 206 To make public policy recommendations regarding Prohibition he created the Wickersham Commission 207 Hoover had hoped that the commission s public report would buttress his stance in favor of Prohibition but the report criticized the enforcement of the Volstead Act and noted the growing public opposition to Prohibition After the Wickersham Report was published in 1931 Hoover rejected the advice of some of his closest allies and refused to endorse any revision of the Volstead Act or the Eighteenth Amendment as he feared doing so would undermine his support among Prohibition advocates 208 As public opinion increasingly turned against Prohibition more and more people flouted the law and a grassroots movement began working in earnest for Prohibition s repeal 209 In January 1933 a constitutional amendment repealing the Eighteenth Amendment was approved by Congress and submitted to the states for ratification By December 1933 it had been ratified by the requisite number of states to become the Twenty first Amendment 210 Foreign relations According to Leuchtenburg Hoover was the last American president to take office with no conspicuous need to pay attention to the rest of the world Nevertheless during Hoover s term the world order established in the immediate aftermath of World War I began to crumble 211 As president Hoover largely made good on his pledge made prior to assuming office not to interfere in Latin America s internal affairs In 1930 he released the Clark Memorandum a rejection of the Roosevelt Corollary and a move towards non interventionism in Latin America Hoover did not completely refrain from the use of the military in Latin American affairs he thrice threatened intervention in the Dominican Republic and he sent warships to El Salvador to support the government against a left wing revolution 212 Notwithstanding those actions he wound down the Banana Wars ending the occupation of Nicaragua and nearly bringing an end to the occupation of Haiti 213 Hoover placed a priority on disarmament which he hoped would allow the United States to shift money from the military to domestic needs 214 Hoover and Secretary of State Henry L Stimson focused on extending the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty which sought to prevent a naval arms race 215 As a result of Hoover s efforts the United States and other major naval powers signed the 1930 London Naval Treaty 216 The treaty represented the first time that the naval powers had agreed to cap their tonnage of auxiliary vessels as previous agreements had only affected capital ships 217 At the 1932 World Disarmament Conference Hoover urged further cutbacks in armaments and the outlawing of tanks and bombers but his proposals were not adopted 217 In 1931 Japan invaded Manchuria defeating the Republic of China s National Revolutionary Army and establishing Manchukuo a puppet state The Hoover administration deplored the invasion but also sought to avoid antagonizing the Japanese fearing that taking too strong a stand would weaken the moderate forces in the Japanese government and alienate a potential ally against the Soviet Union which he saw as a much greater threat 218 In response to the Japanese invasion Hoover and Secretary of State Stimson outlined the Stimson Doctrine which held that the United States would not recognize territories gained by force 219 Bonus Army Main article Bonus Army Thousands of World War I veterans and their families demonstrated and camped out in Washington DC during June 1932 calling for immediate payment of bonuses that had been promised by the World War Adjusted Compensation Act in 1924 the terms of the act called for payment of the bonuses in 1945 Although offered money by Congress to return home some members of the Bonus Army remained Washington police attempted to disperse the demonstrators but they were outnumbered and unsuccessful Shots were fired by the police in a futile attempt to attain order and two protesters were killed while many officers were injured Hoover sent U S Army forces led by General Douglas MacArthur to the protests MacArthur believing he was fighting a Communist revolution chose to clear out the camp with military force Though Hoover had not ordered MacArthur s clearing out of the protesters he endorsed it after the fact 220 The incident proved embarrassing for the Hoover administration and hurt his bid for re election 221 1932 re election campaign Main article 1932 United States presidential election By mid 1931 few observers thought that Hoover had much hope of winning a second term in the midst of the ongoing economic crisis 222 The Republican expectations were so bleak that Hoover faced no serious opposition for re nomination at the 1932 Republican National Convention Coolidge and other prominent Republicans all passed on the opportunity to challenge Hoover 223 Franklin D Roosevelt won the presidential nomination on the fourth ballot of the 1932 Democratic National Convention defeating the 1928 Democratic nominee Al Smith The Democrats attacked Hoover as the cause of the Great Depression and for being indifferent to the suffering of millions 224 As Governor of New York Roosevelt had called on the New York legislature to provide aid for the needy establishing Roosevelt s reputation for being more favorable toward government interventionism during the economic crisis 225 The Democratic Party including Al Smith and other national leaders coalesced behind Roosevelt while progressive Republicans like George Norris and Robert La Follette Jr deserted Hoover 226 Prohibition was increasingly unpopular and wets offered the argument that states and localities needed the tax money Hoover proposed a new constitutional amendment that was vague on particulars Roosevelt s platform promised repeal of the 18th Amendment 227 228 nbsp 1932 electoral vote resultsHoover originally planned to make only one or two major speeches and to leave the rest of the campaigning to proxies as sitting presidents had traditionally done However encouraged by Republican pleas and outraged by Democratic claims Hoover entered the public fray In his nine major radio addresses Hoover primarily defended his administration and his philosophy of government urging voters to hold to the foundations of experience and reject the notion that government interventionism could save the country from the Depression 229 In his campaign trips around the country Hoover was faced with perhaps the most hostile crowds ever seen by a sitting president Besides having his train and motorcades pelted with eggs and rotten fruit he was often heckled while speaking and on several occasions the Secret Service halted attempts to hurt Hoover including capturing one man nearing Hoover carrying sticks of dynamite and another already having removed several spikes from the rails in front of the president s train 230 Hoover s attempts to vindicate his administration fell on deaf ears as much of the public blamed his administration for the depression 231 In the electoral vote Hoover lost 59 472 carrying six states 232 Hoover won 39 6 percent of the popular vote a plunge of 18 6 percentage points from his result in the 1928 election 233 Post presidency 1933 1964 Roosevelt administration Opposition to New Deal Further information Presidency of Franklin D Roosevelt first and second terms nbsp Hoover with Franklin D Roosevelt March 4 1933Hoover departed from Washington in March 1933 bitter at his election loss and continuing unpopularity 234 As Coolidge Harding Wilson and Taft had all died during the 1920s or early 1930s and Roosevelt died in office Hoover was the sole living former president from 1933 to 1953 He and his wife lived in Palo Alto until her death in 1944 at which point Hoover began to live permanently at the Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York City 235 During the 1930s Hoover increasingly self identified as a conservative 236 He closely followed national events after leaving public office becoming a constant critic of Franklin Roosevelt In response to continued attacks on his character and presidency Hoover wrote more than two dozen books including The Challenge to Liberty 1934 which harshly criticized Roosevelt s New Deal Hoover described the New Deal s National Recovery Administration and Agricultural Adjustment Administration as fascistic and he called the 1933 Banking Act a move to gigantic socialism 237 Only 58 when he left office Hoover held out hope for another term as president throughout the 1930s At the 1936 Republican National Convention Hoover s speech attacking the New Deal was well received but the nomination went to Kansas governor Alf Landon 238 In the general election Hoover delivered numerous well publicized speeches on behalf of Landon but Landon was defeated by Roosevelt 239 Though Hoover was eager to oppose Roosevelt at every turn Senator Arthur Vandenberg and other Republicans urged the still unpopular Hoover to remain out of the fray during the debate over Roosevelt s proposed Judiciary Reorganization Bill of 1937 At the 1940 Republican National Convention he again hoped for the presidential nomination but it went to the internationalist Wendell Willkie who lost to Roosevelt in the general election 240 Hoover remained the latest president to run for re election after leaving office until 2022 when Donald Trump following his win in 2016 and loss in 2020 announced his bid for 2024 presidential election 241 World War II Further information Presidency of Franklin D Roosevelt third and fourth terms During a 1938 trip to Europe Hoover met with Adolf Hitler and stayed at Hermann Goring s hunting lodge 242 He expressed dismay at the persecution of Jews in Germany and believed that Hitler was mad but did not present a threat to the U S Instead Hoover believed that Roosevelt posed the biggest threat to peace holding that Roosevelt s policies provoked Japan and discouraged France and the United Kingdom from reaching an accommodation with Germany 243 After the September 1939 invasion of Poland by Germany Hoover opposed U S involvement in World War II including the Lend Lease policy 244 He was active in the isolationist America First Committee 245 He rejected Roosevelt s offers to help coordinate relief in Europe 246 but with the help of old friends from the CRB helped establish the Commission for Polish Relief 247 After the beginning of the occupation of Belgium in 1940 Hoover provided aid for Belgian civilians though this aid was described as unnecessary by German broadcasts 248 249 In December 1939 sympathetic Americans led by Hoover formed the Finnish Relief Fund to donate money to aid Finnish civilians and refugees after the Soviet Union had started the Winter War by attacking Finland which had outraged Americans 250 By the end of January it had already sent more than two million dollars to the Finns 251 During a radio broadcast on June 29 1941 one week after the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union Hoover disparaged any tacit alliance between the U S and the USSR stating if we join the war and Stalin wins we have aided him to impose more communism on Europe and the world War alongside Stalin to impose freedom is more than a travesty It is a tragedy 252 Much to his frustration Hoover was not called upon to serve after the United States entered World War II due to his differences with Roosevelt and his continuing unpopularity 235 He did not pursue the presidential nomination at the 1944 Republican National Convention and at the request of Republican nominee Thomas E Dewey refrained from campaigning during the general election 253 In 1945 Hoover advised President Harry S Truman to drop the United States demand for the unconditional surrender of Japan because of the high projected casualties of the planned invasion of Japan although Hoover was unaware of the Manhattan Project and the atomic bomb 254 Post World War II Further information Presidency of Harry S Truman and Presidency of Dwight D Eisenhower nbsp Hoover with his son Allan left and his grandson Andrew above 1950Following World War II Hoover befriended President Truman despite their ideological differences 255 Because of Hoover s experience with Germany at the end of World War I in 1946 Truman selected the former president to tour Allied occupied Germany and Rome Italy to ascertain the food needs of the occupied nations After touring Germany Hoover produced a number of reports critical of U S occupation policy 256 He stated in one report that there is the illusion that the New Germany left after the annexations can be reduced to a pastoral state It cannot be done unless we exterminate or move 25 000 000 people out of it 257 On Hoover s initiative a school meals program in the American and British occupation zones of Germany was begun on April 14 1947 the program served 3 500 000 children 258 External audio nbsp National Press Club Luncheon Speakers Herbert Hoover March 10 1954 37 23 Hoover speaks starting at 7 25 about the second reorganization commission Library of Congress 259 Even more important in 1947 Truman appointed Hoover to lead the Commission on Organization of the Executive Branch of the Government a new high level study Truman accepted some of the recommendations of the Hoover Commission for eliminating waste fraud and inefficiency consolidating agencies and strengthening White House control of policy 260 261 Though Hoover had opposed Roosevelt s concentration of power in the 1930s he believed that a stronger presidency was required with the advent of the Atomic Age 262 During the 1948 presidential election Hoover supported Republican nominee Thomas Dewey s unsuccessful campaign against Truman but he remained on good terms with Truman 263 Hoover favored the United Nations in principle but he opposed granting membership to the Soviet Union and other Communist states He viewed the Soviet Union to be as morally repugnant as Nazi Germany and supported the efforts of Richard Nixon and others to expose Communists in the United States 264 In 1949 New York governor Thomas E Dewey offered Hoover the Senate seat vacated by Robert F Wagner It was a matter of being senator for only two months and he declined 265 nbsp A photograph of Hoover in 1958Hoover backed conservative leader Robert A Taft at the 1952 Republican National Convention but the party s presidential nomination instead went to Dwight D Eisenhower who went on to win the 1952 election 266 Though Eisenhower appointed Hoover to another presidential commission Hoover disliked Eisenhower faulting the latter s failure to roll back the New Deal 262 Hoover s public work helped to rehabilitate his reputation as did his use of self deprecating humor he occasionally remarked that I am the only person of distinction who s ever had a depression named after him 267 In 1958 Congress passed the Former Presidents Act offering a 25 000 yearly pension equivalent to 253 576 in 2022 to each former president 268 Hoover took the pension even though he did not need the money possibly to avoid embarrassing Truman whose allegedly precarious financial status played a role in the law s enactment 269 In the early 1960s President John F Kennedy offered Hoover various positions Hoover declined the offers but defended Kennedy after the Bay of Pigs invasion and was personally distraught by Kennedy s assassination in 1963 270 Hoover wrote several books during his retirement including The Ordeal of Woodrow Wilson in which he strongly defended Wilson s actions at the Paris Peace Conference 271 In 1944 he began working on Freedom Betrayed which he often referred to as his magnum opus In Freedom Betrayed Hoover strongly critiques Roosevelt s foreign policy especially Roosevelt s decision to recognize the Soviet Union in order to provide aid to that country during World War II 272 The book was published in 2012 after being edited by historian George H Nash 273 Death Hoover faced three major illnesses during the last two years of his life including an August 1962 operation in which a growth on his large intestine was removed 274 275 He died in New York City on October 20 1964 following massive internal bleeding 276 Though Hoover s last spoken words are unknown his last known written words were a get well message to his friend Harry Truman six days before his death after he heard that Truman had sustained injuries from slipping in a bathroom Bathtubs are a menace to ex presidents for as you may recall a bathtub rose up and fractured my vertebrae when I was in Venezuela on your world famine mission in 1946 My warmest sympathy and best wishes for your recovery 277 Two months earlier on August 10 Hoover reached the age of 90 only the second U S president after John Adams to do so When asked how he felt on reaching the milestone Hoover replied Too old 275 At the time of his death Hoover had been out of office for over 31 years 11 553 days all together This was the longest retirement in presidential history until Jimmy Carter broke that record in September 2012 278 Hoover was honored with a state funeral in which he lay in state in the United States Capitol rotunda 279 President Lyndon Johnson and First Lady Lady Bird Johnson attended along with former presidents Truman and Eisenhower Then on October 25 he was buried in West Branch Iowa near his presidential library and birthplace on the grounds of the Herbert Hoover National Historic Site Afterwards Hoover s wife Lou Henry Hoover who had been buried in Palo Alto California following her death in 1944 was re interred beside him 280 Hoover was the last surviving member of the Harding and Coolidge cabinets John Nance Garner the speaker of the House during the second half of Hoover s term was the only person in Hoover s United States presidential line of succession he did not outlive LegacyHistorical reputation Hoover was extremely unpopular when he left office after the 1932 election and his historical reputation would not begin to recover until the 1970s According to Professor David E Hamilton historians have credited Hoover for his genuine belief in voluntarism and cooperation as well as the innovation of some of his programs However Hamilton also notes that Hoover was politically inept and failed to recognize the severity of the Great Depression 281 Nicholas Lemann writes that Hoover has been remembered as the man who was too rigidly conservative to react adeptly to the Depression as the hapless foil to the great Franklin Roosevelt and as the politician who managed to turn a Republican country into a Democratic one 3 Polls of historians and political scientists have generally ranked Hoover in the bottom third of presidents A 2018 poll of the American Political Science Association s Presidents and Executive Politics section ranked Hoover as the 36th best president 282 A 2017 C SPAN poll of historians also ranked Hoover as the 36th best president 283 Although Hoover is generally regarded as having had a failed presidency he has also received praise for his actions as a humanitarian and public official 3 Biographer Glen Jeansonne writes that Hoover was one of the most extraordinary Americans of modern times adding that Hoover led a life that was a prototypical Horatio Alger story except that Horatio Alger stories stop at the pinnacle of success 284 Biographer Kenneth Whyte writes that the question of where Hoover belongs in the American political tradition remains a loaded one to this day While he clearly played important roles in the development of both the progressive and conservative traditions neither side will embrace him for fear of contamination with the other 285 Historian Richard Pipes on his actions leading the American Relief Administration said of him Many statesmen occupy a prominent place in history for having sent millions to their death Herbert Hoover maligned for his performance as President and soon forgotten in Russia has the rare distinction of having saved millions 286 Views of race Racist remarks and racial humor was common at the time but Hoover never indulged in them while president and deliberate discrimination was anathema to him he thought of himself as a friend to Black people and an advocate for their progress 287 However many of his Black contemporaries had a different view W E B Du Bois described him as an undemocratic racist who saw blacks as a species of sub men 288 Some historians trace the disaffection of African Americans with the Republican party to his time in office especially due to his attempt to remove African Americans from leadership in the Republican party in the South 288 Like many of his peers Hoover considered white people to be inherently superior to Black people in most spheres and that interracial marriages were bad however he did think education and work would improve Black people s standing hence his support for the Tuskegee Institute 288 His White House did break the color bar by inviting Jessie De Priest wife of the first Black congressman elected in several decades to a traditional tea for the wives of congressmen as well as later inviting the Tuskegee Institute choir then under the direction of William Dawson 289 Memorials The Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum is located in West Branch Iowa next to the Herbert Hoover National Historic Site The library is one of thirteen presidential libraries run by the National Archives and Records Administration The Hoover Minthorn House where Hoover lived from 1885 to 1891 is located in Newberg Oregon His Rapidan fishing camp in Virginia which he donated to the government in 1933 is now a National Historic Landmark within the Shenandoah National Park The Lou Henry and Herbert Hoover House built in 1919 in Stanford California is now the official residence of the president of Stanford University and a National Historic Landmark Also located at Stanford is the Hoover Institution a think tank and research institution started by Hoover Hoover has been memorialized in the names of several things including the Hoover Dam on the Colorado River and numerous elementary middle and high schools across the United States Two minor planets 932 Hooveria 290 and 1363 Herberta are named in his honor 291 The Polish capital of Warsaw has a square named after Hoover 292 and the historic townsite of Gwalia Western Australia contains the Hoover House Bed and Breakfast where Hoover resided while managing and visiting the mine during the first decade of the twentieth century 293 A medicine ball game known as Hooverball is named for Hoover it was invented by White House physician Admiral Joel T Boone to help Hoover keep fit while serving as president 294 nbsp Hoover Presidential Library located in West Branch Iowa nbsp A plaque in Poznan honoring Hoover nbsp Medal depicting Hoover by Devreese GodefroiOther honors Hoover was inducted into the National Mining Hall of Fame in 1988 inaugural class 295 His wife was inducted into the hall in 1990 296 Hoover was inducted into the Australian Prospectors and Miners Hall of Fame in the category Directors and Management 297 Hoover was awarded an honorary doctorate by the Charles University in Prague and University of Helsinki in March 1938 298 299 300 The ceremonial sword is today on display in the lobby of the Hoover tower See alsoProgressive Era Roaring TwentiesExplanatory notes Hoover later became the first president born west of the Mississippi River and remains the only president born in Iowa 4 Hoover later claimed to be the first student at Stanford by virtue of having been the first person in the first class to sleep in the dormitory 21 ReferencesCitations Levinson Martin H 2011 Indexing and Dating America s Worst Presidents ETC A Review of General Semantics 68 2 147 155 ISSN 0014 164X JSTOR 42579110 Merry Robert W January 3 2021 RANKED Historians Don t Think Much of These Five U S Presidents The National Interest Retrieved February 25 2022 a b c Lemann Nicholas October 23 2017 Hating on Herbert Hoover The New Yorker Retrieved February 18 2019 a b Burner 1996 p 4 Whyte 2017 pp 5 10 Burner p 6 Burner p 7 Burner p 9 Whyte 2017 pp 13 14 31 Burner 1996 p 10 Whyte 2017 pp 17 18 Column President spent days of his boyhood only 90 miles away August 19 2017 National Park Service The Presidents Herbert Hoover Timeline December 6 2017 Burner 1996 p 12 Whyte 2017 pp 20 21 Whyte 2017 pp 22 24 Timeline December 6 2017 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 4 6 Burner 1996 p 16 Revsine David Dave November 30 2006 One sided numbers dominate Saturday s rivalry games ESPN Go retrieved November 30 2006 Lane Rose Wilder 1920 The Making of Herbert Hoover New York The Century Co pp 130 139 Retrieved November 2 2020 Whyte 2017 pp 35 39 a b c Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 6 9 Big Games College Football s Greatest Rivalries Page 222 Whyte 2017 pp 39 41 Whyte 2017 pp 46 48 Whyte 2017 pp 48 50 Herbert Hoover the graduate Have Stanford degree will travel Hoover Institution June 15 2011 Retrieved January 24 2013 What did the President do in Western Australia FAQ Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum archived from the original on January 18 2012 retrieved January 18 2012 Whyte 2017 pp 54 55 Whyte 2017 p 56 Nash 1983 p 283 Gwalia Historic Site AU Hoover s Gold PDF Australian Broadcasting Corporation 2005 Retrieved June 17 2010 a b c Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 10 13 Burner 1996 p 32 Whyte 2017 pp 70 71 76 Whyte 2017 pp 72 73 Burner 1996 p 34 Whyte 2017 pp 77 81 85 89 Whyte 2017 pp 88 93 98 102 104 Whyte 2017 pp 112 115 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 11 13 Nash 1983 p 392 Hoover Herbert C 1952 The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover Years of Adventure 1874 1920 London Hollis amp Carter p 99 Nash 1983 p 569 Whyte 2017 p 115 Burner 1996 pp 24 43 Blainey Geoffrey 1963 The Rush That Never Ended Melbourne Melbourne University Press pp 265 268 a b Hoover Herbert C 1952 The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover Years of Adventure 1874 1920 London Hollis amp Carter Nash 1983 p 381 Kennan George 1891 Siberia and the Exile System London James R Osgood McIlvaine amp Co pp 165 286 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 18 20 Whyte 2017 pp 119 120 Whyte 2017 pp 124 125 Whyte 2017 pp 43 44 Whyte 2017 p 109 Whyte 2017 pp 109 123 369 370 Hamilton David E October 4 2016 Herbert Hoover Life Before the Presidency Miller Center Retrieved February 19 2019 Whyte 2017 pp 90 96 103 Whyte 2017 pp 182 183 207 208 312 Whyte 2017 pp 132 136 The Humanitarian Years The Museum Exhibit Galleries Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum archived from the original on January 9 2011 retrieved February 16 2011 Whyte 2017 pp 137 138 Whyte 2017 pp 140 142 Whyte 2017 pp 143 144 Burner 1996 p 79 George H Nash The Great Humanitarian Herbert Hoover the Relief of Belgium and the Reconstruction of Europe after War I The Tocqueville Review 38 2 2017 55 70 Hudson John October 6 2014 Christmas 1914 The First World War at Home and Abroad History Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 7509 6038 0 Whyte 2017 pp 158 159 Whyte 2017 p 163 Hendrick Burton Jesse Wilson Woodrow 1926 The life and letters of Walter H Page Doubleday Page p 313 Wilson Woodrow Link Arthur Stanley 1982 The Papers of Woodrow Wilson Princeton University Press p 369 ISBN 978 0 691 04690 7 vol 40 p 369 Burner 1996 pp 96 97 Whyte 2017 pp 178 187 191 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 41 43 Burner 1996 p 101 Whyte 2017 pp 183 185 Whyte 2017 pp 198 199 Burner 1996 pp 104 109 Whyte 2017 pp 212 213 Whyte 2017 pp 204 206 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved October 2 2023 Whyte 2017 pp 214 215 a b c d Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 41 43 57 58 Whyte 2017 pp 215 217 Whyte 2017 pp 216 222 Keynes 1919 p 247 Whyte 2017 p 224 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 43 45 Food as a Weapon Hoover Digest Hoover Institution How the U S saved a starving Soviet Russia PBS film highlights Stanford scholar s research on the 1921 23 famine Archived January 30 2012 at the Wayback Machine Stanford University April 4 2011 Hoover Institution Timeline Hoover Institution Retrieved September 25 2017 Zieger Robert H January 13 2015 Republicans and Labor 1919 1929 University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 8131 6499 1 via Google Books Himmelberg Robert F January 16 1962 Antitrust and Regulation During World War I and the Republican Era 1917 1932 Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 8153 1406 6 via Google Books a b Leuchtenburg 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problem that arose with general dissemination as opposed to point to point transmission of messages by wireless The American was Herbert Hoover Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 53 54 Whyte 2017 p 271 Peter D Norton Fighting Traffic The Dawn of the Motor Age in the American City MIT Press 2008 pp 178 197 ISBN 0 262 14100 0 George H Nash The Great Enigma and the Great Engineer in John E Haynes ed Calvin Coolidge and the Coolidge Era 1998 pp 149 80 Phillips Payson O Brien Herbert Hoover Anglo American Relations and Republican Party Politics in the 1920s Diplomacy amp Statecraft 22 2 2011 200 218 Whyte 2017 pp 257 200 Hart 1998 Hutchison Janet 1997 Building for Babbitt the State and the Suburban Home Ideal Journal of Policy History 9 2 184 210 doi 10 1017 S0898030600005923 S2CID 155048376 Whyte 2017 pp 269 271 a b Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 68 71 Whyte 2017 pp 328 329 Whyte 2017 pp 333 335 Robert Moton and the Colored Advisory Commission PBS org Whyte 2017 pp 322 323 Whyte 2017 pp 335 338 Ferrell 1957 p 195 McCoy 1967 pp 390 391 Wilson 1975 pp 122 123 Rusnak Robert J Spring 1983 Andrew W Mellon Reluctant Kingmaker Presidential Studies Quarterly 13 2 269 278 JSTOR 27547924 Whyte 2017 pp 338 339 Mencken Henry Louis Nathan George Jean 1929 The American Mercury p 404 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 71 72 Whyte 2017 pp 344 345 350 Whyte 2017 pp 343 346 Whyte 2017 pp 349 351 Garcia 1980 pp 462 463 Whyte 2017 pp 355 360 Elesha Coffman The Religious Issue in Presidential Politics American Catholic Studies Winter 2008 119 4 pp 1 20 Garcia 1980 Whyte 2017 pp 369 370 Slayton Robert A June 2 2002 Empire Statesman The Rise and Redemption of Al Smith New York Simon and Schuster p 13 ISBN 978 0 684 86302 3 Finan Christomer M June 2 2002 Alfred E Smith The Happy Warrior Hill and Wang ISBN 0 8090 3033 0 Biography Miller center October 4 2016 Fausold 1985 pp 65 66 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 84 85 Fausold 1985 p 34 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 81 82 See generally Nancy Beck Young Lou Henry Hoover Activist First Lady University Press of Kansas 2005 Roark James L Johnson Michael P Cohen Patricia Cline Stage Sarah Hartmann Susan M 2012 The American Promise Volume C A History of the United States Since 1890 Bedford St Martin s p 772 ISBN 978 0 312 56944 0 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 80 81 Fausold 1985 pp 65 68 Kennedy 1999 pp 35 36 Fausold 1985 pp 68 71 Fausold 1985 pp 72 74 Kaufman 2012 p 502 Houck 2000 pp 155 156 Carcasson 1998 pp 350 351 Leuchtenburg 2009b Fausold 1985 pp 74 75 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 104105 a b Kennedy 1999 pp 53 55 Harris Gaylord Warren Herbert Hoover and the Great Depression New York Oxford University Press 1959 p 175 Fausold 1985 pp 147 149 Fausold 1985 pp 93 97 Whyte 2017 pp 399 402 414 Whyte 2017 pp 414 415 Kumiko Koyama The Passage of the Smoot Hawley Tariff Act Why Did the President Sign the Bill Journal of Policy History 2009 21 2 pp 163 86 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 91 92 Kennedy 1999 pp 58 59 Kennedy 1999 pp 65 66 Kennedy 1999 pp 77 78 Eichengreen amp Temin 2000 pp 196 197 Fausold 1985 pp 143 144 Whyte 2017 pp 441 444 449 Whyte 2017 pp 450 452 Herring 2008 pp 485 486 Fausold 1985 pp 140 141 Carcasson 1998 pp 351 352 Cabanes Bruno 2014 The Great War and the Origins of Humanitarianism 1918 1924 Cambridge University Press p 206 ISBN 978 1 107 02062 7 Whyte 2017 pp 457 459 a b Fausold 1985 pp 162 166 Olson 1972 pp 508 511 Fausold 1985 pp 153 154 Fausold 1985 pp 162 163 Rappleye 2016 pp 309 Whyte 2017 pp 483 484 Rappleye 2016 p 303 Fausold 1985 pp 158 159 Whyte 2017 pp 472 488 489 Ippolito Dennis S 2012 Deficits Debt and the New Politics of Tax Policy Cambridge University Press p 35 ISBN 978 1 139 85157 2 Fausold 1985 pp 159 161 Lisio Donald J Hoover Blacks amp Lily Whites A Study of Southern Strategies University of North Carolina Press 1985 excerpt Garcia 1980 pp 471 474 Garcia 1980 pp 462 464 Garcia 1980 pp 464 465 Garcia 1980 pp 465 467 Garcia 1980 pp 476 477 Rappleye 2016 p 247 Hoffman 1973 pp 206 207 Hoffman 1973 pp 208 217 218 Johnson 2005 pp 4 5 Johnson 2005 p 6 The Ordeal of Herbert Hoover National Archives August 15 2016 Retrieved May 2 2022 Whyte 2017 pp 372 373 Leuchtenburg 2009 p 85 Whyte 2017 pp 433 435 Kyvig David E 1979 Repealing National Prohibition Chicago IL The University of Chicago Press p 49 Huckabee David C September 30 1997 Ratification of Amendments to the U S Constitution PDF Congressional Research Service reports Washington D C Congressional Research Service The Library of Congress Leuchtenburg 2009 p 117 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 120 121 Fausold 1985 pp 183 186 Fausold 1985 p 58 Herring 2008 pp 479 480 Fausold 1985 pp 175 176 a b Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 117 119 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 122 123 Current Richard N 1954 The Stimson Doctrine and the Hoover Doctrine The American Historical Review 59 3 513 542 doi 10 2307 1844715 JSTOR 1844715 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 136 138 Dickson Paul Allen Thomas B February 2003 Marching on History Smithsonian Retrieved February 7 2017 Fausold 1985 pp 193 194 Fausold 1985 pp 194 195 Carcasson 1998 pp 353 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 138 140 Fausold 1985 pp 211 212 Prohibition After the 1932 Elections CQ Researcher Herbert Brucker How Long O Prohibition The North American Review 234 4 1932 pp 347 357 online Carcasson 1998 pp 359 Gibbs Nancy November 10 2008 When New President Meets Old It s Not Always Pretty Time Archived from the original on November 11 2008 Carcasson 1998 pp 361 362 Fausold 1985 pp 212 213 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 142 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 147 149 a b Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 155 156 Whyte 2017 pp 555 557 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 147 151 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 151 153 Short Brant 1991 The Rhetoric of the Post Presidency Herbert Hoover s Campaign against the New Deal 1934 1936 Presidential Studies Quarterly 21 2 333 350 JSTOR 27550722 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 147 154 Zeitz Joshua November 15 2022 4 Ex Presidents Who Ran Again And What They Mean for Trump Politico Retrieved June 8 2023 Whyte 2017 pp 558 559 Kosner Edward October 28 2017 A Wonder Boy on the Wrong Side of History The Wall Street Journal New York City Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 152 154 Katznelson Ira 2013 Fear Itself The New Deal and the Origins of our Time New York NY Liveright Publishing Corporation ISBN 978 0 87140 450 3 OCLC 783163618 Whyte 2017 p 565 Jeansonne 2016 pp 328 329 The Great Humanitarian Herbert Hoover s Food Relief Efforts Cornell College Retrieved February 28 2020 Churchill Winston August 20 1940 The Few Speech International Churchill Society Retrieved February 28 2020 FOREIGN TRADE Amtorg s Spree Time February 19 1940 Archived from the original on October 14 2010 THE CONGRESS Sounding Trumpets Time January 29 1940 Archived from the original on October 14 2010 Robinson Edgar Eugene 1973 Hoover Herbert Clark Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 Chicago Illinois Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc pp 676 77 Whyte 2017 p 572 Cohen Jared April 9 2019 Accidental presidents eight men who changed America First hardcover ed New York Simon amp Schuster p 313 ISBN 978 1 5011 0982 9 OCLC 1039375326 Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 157 158 Beschloss Michael R 2002 The Conquerors Roosevelt Truman and the Destruction of Hitler s Germany 1941 1945 New York City Simon amp Schuster p 277 ISBN 978 0 7432 4454 1 UN Chronicle March 18 1947 The Marshall Plan at 60 The General s Successful War on Poverty The United Nations Archived from the original on April 14 2008 Retrieved June 17 2010 Shephard Roy J 2014 An Illustrated History of Health and Fitness from Pre History to our Post Modern World New York City Axel Springer SE p 782 National Press Club Luncheon Speakers Herbert Hoover March 10 1954 Library of Congress Retrieved October 20 2016 Richard Norton Smith An Uncommon Man 1984 pp 371 380 Christopher D McKenna Agents of adhocracy management consultants and the reorganization of the executive branch 1947 1949 Business and Economic History 1996 101 111 a b Leuchtenburg 2009 pp 158 159 Whyte 2017 pp 587 588 Whyte 2017 pp 592 594 Herbert Hoover The Crusade Years 1933 1955 Herbert Hoover s Lost Memoir of the New Deal Era and Its Aftermath edited by George H Nash Hoover Institution Press 2013 p 13 Whyte 2017 p 595 Whyte 2017 p 592 Smith Stephanie March 18 2008 Former Presidents Federal Pension and Retirement Benefits PDF Congressional Research Service U S Senate Retrieved November 18 2008 Martin Joseph William 1960 My First Fifty Years in Politics as Told to Robert J Donovan McGraw Hill p 249 Whyte 2017 p 601 Whyte 2017 pp 571 604 605 Whyte 2017 p 606 Yerxa Donald A September 2012 Freedom Betrayed An interview with George H Nash about Herbert Hoover s Magnum Opus Historically Speaking XIII 4 Whyte 2017 pp 606 607 a b Hoover Marks 90th Year Today Predicts New Gains for Nation Because of Its Freedoms The New York Times August 10 1964 Retrieved March 25 2019 Phillips McCandlish October 21 1964 Herbert Hoover Is Dead Ex President 90 Served Country in Varied Fields The Learning Network The New York Times on the web Retrieved March 25 2019 Mancini Mark August 30 2013 Harry Truman and Herbert Hoover An Unlikely Friendship Mentalfloss org Mentalfloss Retrieved April 6 2019 Dillon John September 9 2012 The Record Setting Ex Presidency of Jimmy Carter The Atlantic Boston Massachusetts Emerson Collective Retrieved March 25 2019 Lying in State or in Honor Washington D C Architect of the Capitol Retrieved March 25 2019 Gravesite nps gov National Park Service U S Department of the Interior Retrieved March 25 2019 Hamilton David E October 4 2016 HERBERT HOOVER IMPACT AND LEGACY Miller Center Retrieved December 5 2017 Rottinghaus Brandon Vaughn Justin S February 19 2018 How Does Trump Stack Up Against the Best and Worst Presidents The New York Times Archived from the original on March 10 2019 Presidential Historians Survey 2017 C SPAN Retrieved May 14 2018 Jeansonne 2016 pp 1 2 Whyte 2017 p 610 Pipes Richard 1993 Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime Knopf p 419 Jeansonne G April 3 2012 The Life of Herbert Hoover Fighting Quaker 1928 1933 Springer ISBN 978 1 137 11189 0 a b c Garcia George F 1979 Herbert Hoover and the Issue of Race The Annals of Iowa 44 7 507 515 doi 10 17077 0003 4827 8609 ISSN 0003 4827 Retrieved May 11 2019 William L Dawson Tribute Tuskegee University www tuskegee edu Retrieved March 5 2023 Schmadel Lutz D 2007 932 Hooveria Dictionary of Minor Planet Names Springer Berlin Heidelberg p 83 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 29925 7 933 ISBN 978 3 540 00238 3 Schmadel Lutz D 2007 1363 Herberta Dictionary of Minor Planet Names Springer Berlin Heidelberg p 110 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 29925 7 1364 ISBN 978 3 540 00238 3 An American Friendship Herbert Hoover and Poland Library amp Archives Stanford University Hoover Institution August 1 2005 archived from the original on January 1 2011 retrieved February 17 2011 Gwalia House Archived April 9 2013 at the Wayback Machine Gwalia org au Retrieved on July 14 2013 History of Hoover Ball Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum Archived from the original on October 25 2012 Retrieved June 30 2014 Hoover MiningHallOfFame org Archived from the original on June 11 2020 Retrieved June 11 2020 Hoover MiningHallOfFame org Archived from the original on November 23 2019 Retrieved June 11 2020 Hoover Herbert Clark mininghalloffame com au Retrieved June 21 2021 Herbert Hoover z chudeho synka nejmocnejsim muzem planety in Czech Temata July 26 2017 Retrieved June 21 2021 USA n entinen presidentti Herbert Hoover vastaanottaa tohtorinmiekan ja vihitaan kunniatohtoriksi finna fi 1938 Retrieved November 9 2020 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Panu January 26 1986 Kunniatohtori Hoover PDF Oulu Oulu lehti Retrieved November 9 2020 Works cited Burner David 1996 1979 Herbert Hoover The Public Life Easton Press Originally published as Burner David 1979 Herbert Hoover The Public Life Knopf Doubleday ISBN 978 0 394 46134 2 Carcasson Martin Spring 1998 Herbert Hoover and the Presidential Campaign of 1932 The Failure of Apologia Presidential Studies Quarterly 28 2 349 365 JSTOR 27551864 Eichengreen Barry Temin Peter 2000 The Gold Standard and the Great Depression PDF Contemporary European History 9 2 183 207 doi 10 1017 S0960777300002010 JSTOR 20081742 S2CID 158383956 Fausold Martin L 1985 The Presidency of Herbert C Hoover University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0259 9 Ferrell Robert H 1998 The Presidency of Calvin Coolidge University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0892 8 Ferrell Robert H 1957 American Diplomacy in the Great Depression Hoover Stimson Foreign Policy 1929 1933 Yale University Press Garcia George F January 1 1980 Black Disaffection From the Republican Party During the Presidency of Herbert Hoover 1928 1932 The Annals of Iowa 45 6 462 477 doi 10 17077 0003 4827 8734 ISSN 0003 4827 Hart David M 1998 Herbert Hoover s Last Laugh the Enduring Significance of the Associative State in the United States Journal of Policy History 10 4 419 444 doi 10 1017 S0898030600007156 S2CID 154120555 Herring George C 2008 From Colony to Superpower U S Foreign Relations Since 1776 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 507822 0 Hoffman Abraham May 1973 Stimulus to Repatriation The 1931 Federal Deportation Drive and the Los Angeles Mexican Community Pacific Historical Review 42 2 205 219 doi 10 2307 3638467 JSTOR 3638467 Houck Davis W 2000 Rhetoric as Currency Herbert Hoover and the 1929 Stock Market Crash Rhetoric amp Public Affairs 3 2 155 181 doi 10 1353 rap 2010 0156 ISSN 1094 8392 S2CID 154447214 Johnson Kevin Fall 2005 The Forgotten Repatriation of Persons of Mexican Ancestry and Lessons for the War on Terror Pace Law Review 26 1 1 26 doi 10 58948 2331 3528 1147 S2CID 140417518 Jeansonne Glen 2016 Herbert Hoover A Life Penguin ISBN 978 1 101 99100 8 Kaufman Bruce E 2012 Wage Theory New Deal Labor Policy and the Great Depression Were Government and Unions to Blame Industrial and Labor Relations Review 65 3 501 532 doi 10 1177 001979391206500302 hdl 10072 48703 JSTOR 24368882 S2CID 54877676 Kennedy David M 1999 Freedom from Fear The American People in Depression and War 1929 1945 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 503834 7 Keynes John Maynard 1919 The Economic Consequences of the Peace Harcourt Brace and Howe Leuchtenburg William E 2009 Herbert Hoover Times Books Henry Holt and Company ISBN 978 0 8050 6958 7 Leuchtenburg William E Summer 2009 The Wrong Man at the Wrong Time American Heritage 59 2 McCoy Donald R 1967 Calvin Coolidge The Quiet President Macmillan ISBN 978 1 4680 1777 9 Nash George H 1983 The Life of Herbert Hoover The Engineer 1874 1914 W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 01634 5 Book 1 in The Life of Herbert Hoover Series O Brien Patrick G Rosen Philip T 1981 Hoover and the Historians the Resurrection of a President The Annals of Iowa 46 2 83 99 doi 10 17077 0003 4827 8816 Olson James S October 1972 Gifford Pinchot and the Politics of Hunger 1932 1933 Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 96 4 508 520 JSTOR 20090681 Rappleye 2016 Herbert Hoover in the White House The Ordeal of the Presidency Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 4516 4869 0 Whyte Kenneth 2017 Hoover An Extraordinary Life in Extraordinary Times Knopf ISBN 978 0 307 59796 0 Wilson Joan Hoff 1975 Herbert Hoover Forgotten Progressive Little Brown ISBN 978 0 316 94416 8 Further readingMain article Bibliography of Herbert Hoover Biographical Best Gary Dean The Politics of American Individualism Herbert Hoover in Transition 1918 1921 1975 Best Gary Dean The Life of Herbert Hoover Keeper of the Torch 1933 1964 Palgrave Macmillan 2013 Clements Kendrick A The Life of Herbert Hoover Imperfect Visionary 1918 1928 2010 Edwards Barry C Putting Hoover on the Map Was the 31st President a Progressive Congress amp the Presidency 41 1 2014 pp 49 83 Hatfield Mark ed Herbert Hoover Reassessed 2002 Hawley Ellis 1989 Herbert Hoover and the Historians Jeansonne Glen The Life of Herbert Hoover Fighting Quaker 1928 1933 Palgrave Macmillan 2012 Lloyd Craig Aggressive Introvert A Study of Herbert Hoover and Public Relations Management 1912 1932 1973 Nash George H The Life of Herbert Hoover The Engineer 1874 1914 1983 in depth scholarly study 1988 The Humanitarian 1914 1917 The Life of Herbert Hoover vol 2 1996 Master of Emergencies 1917 1918 The Life of Herbert Hoover vol 3 Nash Lee ed Understanding Herbert Hoover Ten Perspectives 1987 essays by scholars Smith Richard Norton An Uncommon Man The Triumph of Herbert Hoover 1987 biography concentrating on post 1932 Walch Timothy ed Uncommon Americans The Lives and Legacies of Herbert and Lou Henry Hoover Praeger 2003 West Hal Elliott Hoover the Fishing President Portrait of the Man and his Life Outdoors 2005 Scholarly studies Arnold Peri E The Great Engineer as Administrator Herbert Hoover and Modern Bureaucracy Review of Politics 42 3 1980 329 348 JSTOR 1406794 Barber William J From New Era to New Deal Herbert Hoover the Economists and American Economic Policy 1921 1933 1985 Claus Bernet 2009 Hoover Herbert In Bautz Traugott ed Biographisch Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon BBKL in German Vol 30 Nordhausen Bautz cols 644 653 ISBN 978 3 88309 478 6 Brandes Joseph Herbert Hoover and Economic Diplomacy Department of Commerce Policy 1921 1928 U of Pittsburgh Press 1970 Britten Thomas A Hoover and the Indians the Case for Continuity in Federal Indian Policy 1900 1933 Historian 1999 61 3 518 538 ISSN 0018 2370 Clements Kendrick A Hoover Conservation and Consumerism Engineering the Good Life University Press of Kansas 2000 Dodge Mark M ed Herbert Hoover and the Historians 1989 Fausold Martin L and George Mazuzan eds The Hoover Presidency A Reappraisal 1974 Goodman Mark and Mark Gring The Radio Act of 1927 progressive ideology epistemology and praxis Rhetoric amp Public Affairs 3 3 2000 397 418 Hawley Ellis Herbert Hoover and the Historians Recent Developments A Review Essay Annals of Iowa 78 1 2018 pp 75 86 doi 10 17077 0003 4827 12547 Hawley Ellis Herbert Hoover the Commerce Secretariat and the Vision of an Associative State 1921 1928 Archived January 10 2021 at the Wayback Machine Journal of American History June 1974 61 1 116 140 Jansky Jr C M The contribution of Herbert Hoover to broadcasting Journal of Broadcasting amp Electronic Media 1 3 1957 241 249 Lee David D Herbert Hoover and the Development of Commercial Aviation 1921 1926 Business History Review 58 1 1984 78 102 Lichtman Allan J Prejudice and the Old Politics The Presidential Election of 1928 1979 Lisio Donald J The President and Protest Hoover MacArthur and the Bonus Riot 2d ed 1994 Lisio Donald J Hoover Blacks and Lily whites A Study of Southern Strategies 1985 Parafianowicz Halina Herbert C Hoover and Poland 1919 1933 Between Myth and Reality Polsky Andrew J and Olesya Tkacheva Legacies Versus Politics Herbert Hoover Partisan Conflict and the Symbolic Appeal of Associationalism in the 1920s International Journal of Politics Culture and Society 16 2 2002 207 235 online Short Brant The Rhetoric of the Post Presidency Herbert Hoover s Campaign against the New Deal 1934 1936 Presidential Studies Quarterly 1991 21 2 pp 333 350 online Sibley Katherine A S ed A Companion to Warren G Harding Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover 2014 616pp essays by scholars stressing historiography Wueschner Silvano A Charting Twentieth Century Monetary Policy Herbert Hoover and Benjamin Strong 1917 1927 Greenwood 1999 Primary sources Myers William Starr Walter H Newton eds 1936 The Hoover Administration a documented narrative Hawley Ellis ed 1974 1977 Herbert Hoover Containing the Public Messages Speeches and Statements of the President 4 vols Hoover Herbert Clark 1934 The Challenge to Liberty 1938 Addresses Upon The American Road 1933 1938 1941 Addresses Upon The American Road 1940 41 and Gibson Hugh 1942 The Problems of Lasting Peace 1949 Addresses Upon The American Road 1945 48 1952a Years of adventure 1874 1920 PDF Memoirs vol 1 New York archived from the original PDF on December 17 2008 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link 1952b The Cabinet and the Presidency 1920 1933 PDF Memoirs vol 2 New York archived from the original PDF on December 17 2008 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link 1952c The Great Depression 1929 1941 PDF Memoirs vol 3 New York archived from the original PDF on December 17 2008 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Miller Dwight M Walch Timothy eds 1998 Herbert Hoover and Franklin D Roosevelt A Documentary History Contributions in American History Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 30608 2 Hoover Herbert Clark 2011 Nash George H ed Freedom Betrayed Herbert Hoover s Secret History of the Second World War and Its Aftermath Stanford CA Hoover Institution Press ISBN 978 0 8179 1234 5 Hoover Herbert Clark 2013 Nash George H ed The Crusade Years 1933 1955 Herbert Hoover s Lost Memoir of the New Deal Era and Its Aftermath Stanford CA Hoover Institution Press ISBN 978 0 8179 1674 9 External linksWorks by Herbert Hoover at Project Gutenberg Appearances on C SPAN Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum Herbert Hoover National Historic Site National Park Service Herbert Hoover collected news and commentary at The New York Times Herbert Hoover at IMDb nbsp Works by Herbert Hoover at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Portals nbsp Biography nbsp 1920s nbsp Conservatism nbsp Geology nbsp Politics nbsp Iowa nbsp United StatesHerbert Hoover at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Herbert Hoover amp oldid 1195844013, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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