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Presidency of Calvin Coolidge

Calvin Coolidge's tenure as the 30th president of the United States began on August 2, 1923, when Coolidge became president upon Warren G. Harding's death, and ended on March 4, 1929. A Republican from Massachusetts, Coolidge had been vice president for 2 years, 151 days when he succeeded to the presidency upon the sudden death of Harding. Elected to a full four–year term in 1924, Coolidge gained a reputation as a small-government conservative. Coolidge was succeeded by former Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover after the 1928 presidential election.

Presidency of Calvin Coolidge
August 2, 1923 – March 4, 1929
CabinetSee list
PartyRepublican
Election1924
SeatWhite House

Seal of the president
(1894–1945)
Library website

Coolidge adeptly handled the aftermath of several Harding administration scandals, and by the end of 1924 he had dismissed most officials implicated in the scandals. He presided over a strong economy and sought to shrink the regulatory role of the federal government. Along with Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon, Coolidge won the passage of three major tax cuts. Using powers delegated to him by the 1922 Fordney–McCumber Tariff, Coolidge kept tariff rates high in order to protect American manufacturing profits and high wages. He blocked passage of the McNary–Haugen Farm Relief Bill, which would have involved the federal government in the persistent farm crisis by raising prices paid to farmers for five crops. The strong economy combined with restrained government spending produced consistent government surpluses, and total federal debt shrank by one quarter during Coolidge's presidency. Coolidge also signed the Immigration Act of 1924, which greatly restricted immigration into the United States. In foreign policy, Coolidge continued to keep the United States out of membership or major engagement with the League of Nations. However he supported disarmament agreements and sponsored the Kellogg–Briand Pact of 1928 to outlaw most wars.

Coolidge was greatly admired during his time in office, and he surprised many by declining to seek another term. Public opinion on Coolidge soured shortly after he left office as the nation plunged into the Great Depression. Many linked the nation's economic collapse to Coolidge's policy decisions, which did nothing to discourage the wild speculation that was going on and rendered so many vulnerable to economic ruin. Though his reputation underwent a renaissance during the Ronald Reagan administration, modern assessments of Coolidge's presidency are divided. He is adulated among advocates of smaller government and laissez-faire; supporters of an active central government generally view him less favorably, while both sides praise his support of racial equality.[1]

Accession edit

 
Coolidge signing several bills as General John J. Pershing looks on

Coolidge, who served as the governor of Massachusetts from 1919 through 1921 was nominated at the 1920 Republican National Convention for the ticket of Warren G. Harding for president and Coolidge for vice president. Coolidge became the Vice President of the United States after the Republican ticket was victorious in the 1920 presidential election. On August 2, 1923, President Harding died unexpectedly while on a speaking tour of the Western United States. Vice President Coolidge was visiting his family home in Vermont when he received word by a messenger of Harding's death.[2] Coolidge's father, a notary public, administered the oath of office in the family parlor at 2:47 a.m. on August 3, 1923. The following day, Coolidge traveled to Washington, D.C., where he was sworn in again by Justice Adolph A. Hoehling Jr. of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia.[3] Coolidge addressed Congress when it reconvened on December 6, 1923, expressing support for many of Harding's policies, including Harding's formal budgeting process and the enforcement of immigration restrictions.[4]

Administration edit

The Coolidge cabinet
OfficeNameTerm
PresidentCalvin Coolidge1923–1929
Vice Presidentnone1923–1925
Charles G. Dawes1925–1929
Secretary of StateCharles Evans Hughes1923–1925
Frank B. Kellogg1925–1929
Secretary of the TreasuryAndrew Mellon1923–1929
Secretary of WarJohn W. Weeks1923–1925
Dwight F. Davis1925–1929
Attorney GeneralHarry M. Daugherty1923–1924
Harlan F. Stone1924–1925
John G. Sargent1925–1929
Postmaster GeneralHarry S. New1923–1929
Secretary of the NavyEdwin Denby1923–1924
Curtis D. Wilbur1924–1929
Secretary of the InteriorHubert Work1923–1928
Roy Owen West1928–1929
Secretary of AgricultureHenry Cantwell Wallace1923–1924
Howard Mason Gore1924–1925
William Marion Jardine1925–1929
Secretary of CommerceHerbert Hoover1923–1928
William F. Whiting1928–1929
Secretary of LaborJames J. Davis1923–1929

Although a few of Harding's cabinet appointees were scandal-tarred, Coolidge initially retained all of them out of an ardent conviction that, as successor to a deceased elected president, he was obligated to retain his predecessor's counselors and policies until the next election. He kept Harding's able speechwriter Judson T. Welliver; Stuart Crawford replaced Welliver in November 1925.[5] Coolidge appointed C. Bascom Slemp, a Virginia Congressman and experienced federal politician, to work jointly with Edward T. Clark, a Massachusetts Republican organizer whom he retained from his vice-presidential staff, as Secretaries to the President (a position equivalent to the modern White House Chief of Staff).[6]

Perhaps the most powerful person in Coolidge's Cabinet was Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon, who controlled the administration's financial policies and was regarded by many, including House Minority Leader John Nance Garner, as more powerful than Coolidge himself.[7] Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover also held a prominent place in Coolidge's Cabinet, in part because Coolidge found value in Hoover's ability to win positive publicity with his pro-business proposals.[8] Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes directed Coolidge's foreign policy until he resigned in 1925 following Coolidge's re-election. He was replaced by Frank B. Kellogg, who had previously served as a senator and as the ambassador to Great Britain. Coolidge made two other appointments following his re-election, with William M. Jardine taking the position of Secretary of Agriculture and John G. Sargent becoming Attorney General.[9] Coolidge appointed Sargent only after the Senate rejected his first choice, Charles B. Warren, who was the first Cabinet nominee to be rejected by the Senate since 1868.[10] Coolidge did not have a vice president during his first term, but Charles Dawes became vice president at the start of Coolidge's second term. Dawes and Coolidge clashed over farm policy and other issues.[11]

Judicial appointments edit

Coolidge appointed only Harlan Fiske Stone to the Supreme Court of the United States. Stone was Coolidge's fellow Amherst alumnus, a Wall Street lawyer, and a conservative Republican. Stone was serving as dean of Columbia Law School when Coolidge appointed him to be attorney general in 1924 to restore the reputation tarnished by Harding's Attorney General, Harry M. Daugherty.[12] Stone proved to be a firm believer in judicial restraint and was regarded as one of the court's three liberal justices who would often vote to uphold New Deal legislation.[13]

Coolidge nominated 17 judges to the United States Courts of Appeals, and 61 judges to the United States district courts. He appointed Genevieve R. Cline to the United States Customs Court, making Cline the first woman to serve in the federal judiciary.[14] Coolidge also signed the Judiciary Act of 1925 into law, allowing the Supreme Court more discretion over its workload.

Domestic affairs edit

Harding administration scandals edit

In the waning days of Harding's administration, several scandals had begun to emerge into public view. Though Coolidge was not implicated in any corrupt dealings, he faced with the fallout of the scandals in the early days of his presidency. The Teapot Dome Scandal tainted the careers of former Secretary of the Interior Albert B. Fall (who had resigned in March 1923) and Secretary of the Navy Edwin Denby, and additional scandals implicated Attorney General Harry M. Daugherty and former Veterans Bureau director Charles R. Forbes. A bipartisan Senate investigation led by Thomas J. Walsh and Robert LaFolette began just weeks into Coolidge's presidency. As the investigation uncovered further misconduct, Coolidge appointed Atlee Pomerene and Owen Roberts as special prosecutors, but he remained personally unconvinced as to the guilt of Harding's appointees. Despite congressional pressure, he refused to dismiss Denby, who instead resigned of his own accord in March 1924. That same month, after Daugherty refused to resign, Coolidge fired him. Coolidge also replaced the Director of the Bureau of Investigation, William J. Burns, with J. Edgar Hoover. The investigation by Pomerene and Roberts, combined with the departure of the scandal-tarred Harding appointees, served to disassociate Coolidge from the Harding administration's misdeeds.[15] By May 1924, Harding's scandals had largely receded from public attention, though a separate scandal involving former Postmaster General Will H. Hays would briefly garner headlines in 1928.[16]

Election of 1924 edit

The nation initially did not know what to make of Coolidge, who had maintained a low profile in the Harding administration; many even expected him to be replaced on the ballot in the 1924 presidential election.[17] The 1923 United Mine Workers coal strike presented an immediate challenge to Coolidge, who avoided becoming closely involved in the strike. Pennsylvania Governor Gifford Pinchot, a progressive Republican and potential rival for the 1924 presidential nomination, quickly settled the strike with little input from the federal government. Pinchot's settlement of the strike backfired, as he took the blame for rising coal prices, and Coolidge quickly consolidated his power among Republican elites.[18] Potential opponents like Governor Frank Lowden of Illinois and General Leonard Wood failed to generate support for a challenge to Coolidge, while automobile magnate Henry Ford endorsed Coolidge for president in December 1923.[19]

The Republican Convention was held on June 10–12, 1924, in Cleveland, Ohio; Coolidge was nominated on the first ballot.[20] Coolidge's nomination made him the second unelected president to win his party's nomination for another term, after Theodore Roosevelt.[21] Prior to the convention, Coolidge courted progressive Senator William Borah to join the ticket, but Borah refused to relinquish his Senate seat.[22] Republicans then nominated Lowden for vice president on the second ballot, but he also declined. Finally diplomat and banker Charles G. Dawes was nominated on the third ballot.[20]

The Democrats held their convention the next month in New York City. Wilson's Treasury Secretary William Gibbs McAdoo had been regarded by many as the front-runner, but his candidacy was damaged by his connection to the Teapot Dome Scandal. Nonetheless, he entered the convention as one of the two strongest candidates, alongside Governor Al Smith of New York.[23] Smith and McAdoo epitomized the divide in the Democratic Party; Smith drew support from Northeastern cities, with their large ethnic populations of Catholics and Jews. McAdoo's base was in the Protestant strongholds of the rural South and West.[24] The convention deadlocked over the presidential nominee, and after 103 ballots, the delegates finally agreed on a little-known compromise candidate, John W. Davis, who picked the brother of William Jennings Bryan. The Democrats' hopes were buoyed when Robert LaFollette, a Republican senator from Wisconsin, split from the GOP to form a new Progressive Party. La Follette's Progressives were hostile to the conservatism of both major party candidates, and energized by the ongoing farm crisis.[25] They hoped to throw the election to the House by denying the Republican ticket an electoral vote majority, and some Progressives hoped to permanently disrupt the two-party system.[26] On the other hand, many believed that the split in the Republican party, like the one in 1912, would allow a Democrat to win the presidency.[27]

 
1924 electoral vote results

After the conventions and the death of his younger son Calvin, Coolidge became withdrawn; he later said that "when he [the son] died, the power and glory of the Presidency went with him."[28] It was the most subdued Republican campaign in memory, partly because of Coolidge's grief, but also because of his naturally non-confrontational style.[29] Coolidge relied on advertising executive Bruce Barton to lead his messaging campaign, and Barton's ads depicted Coolidge as a symbol of solidity in an era of speculation.[30][31] Although the Republicans had been tarred by several scandals, by 1924 several Democrats had also been implicated and the partisan responsibility of the issue had been muddled.[32] Coolidge and Dawes won every state outside the South except Wisconsin, La Follette's home state. Coolidge won 54 percent of the popular vote, while Davis took just 28.8 percent and La Follette won 16.6 percent, one of the strongest third-party presidential showings in U.S. history. In the concurrent congressional elections, Republicans increased their majorities in the House and Senate.[33]

Economy and regulation edit

It is probable that a press which maintains an intimate touch with the business currents of the nation is likely to be more reliable than it would be if it were a stranger to these influences. After all, the chief business of the American people is business. They are profoundly concerned with buying, selling, investing and prospering in the world. (emphasis added)
President Calvin Coolidge's address to the American Society of Newspaper Editors, Washington D.C., January 25, 1925[34]

During Coolidge's presidency, the United States experienced a period of rapid economic growth known as the "Roaring Twenties."[35] Unemployment remained low while the country's gross domestic product rose from $85.2 billion in 1924 to $101.4 in 1929.[36] According to Nathan Miller, "the postwar years ushered in an age of consumerism with a broader base of participation than had ever existed before in America or anywhere else."[37] The number of automobiles in the United States increased from 7 million in 1919 to 23 million in 1929, while the percentage of households with electricity rose from 16 percent in 1912 to 60 percent in the mid-1920s.[35]

The regulatory state under Coolidge was, as one biographer described it, "thin to the point of invisibility."[38] Coolidge believed that promoting the interests of manufacturers was good for society as a whole, and he sought to reduce taxes and regulations on businesses while imposing tariffs to protect those interests against foreign competition.[39] Coolidge demonstrated his disdain for regulation by appointing commissioners to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Interstate Commerce Commission who did little to restrict the activities of businesses under their jurisdiction.[40] Under leadership of Chairman William E. Humphrey, a Coolidge appointee, the FTC largely stopped prosecuting anti-trust cases, allowing companies like Alcoa to dominate entire industries.[41] Coolidge also avoided interfering with the workings of the Federal Reserve, which kept interest rates low and allowed for the expansion of margin trading in the stock market.[42] The 1922 Fordney–McCumber Tariff allowed the president some leeway in determining tariff rates, and Coolidge used his power to raise the already-high rates set by Fordney–McCumber.[43] He also staffed the United States Tariff Commission, a board that advised the president on tariff rates, with businessmen who favored high tariffs.[44]

Secretary of Commerce Hoover energetically used government auspices to promote business efficiency and develop new industries like air travel and radio.[45] Hoover was a strong proponent of cooperation between government and business, and he organized numerous conferences of intellectuals and businessmen which made various recommendations. Relatively few reforms were passed, but the proposals created the image of an active administration.[46] Between 1923 and 1929, the number of families with radios grew from 300,000 (or approximately 1 percent) to 10 million,[47] which grew further to a majority of U.S. households by 1931 and 75 percent of U.S. households by 1937.[48][49] The Radio Act of 1927 established the Federal Radio Commission (FRC) under the auspices of the Commerce Department, and the FRC granted numerous licenses to large, commercial radio stations that demonstrated that they served "the public interest, convenience, or necessity", and the Act also established the equal-time rule for radio broadcasters in the United States.[50][51] At Hoover's request, Congress passed the Air Commerce Act, which granted the Commerce Department the authority to regulate air travel.[52] The Coolidge administration provided matching funds for roads under the authorization of the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1921.[53] The total mileage of highways doubled in the 1920s, and the administration helped establish the United States Numbered Highway System, which provided for orderly designation of highways and uniform signage on those highways.[54]

Some have labeled Coolidge as an adherent of the laissez-faire ideology, which some critics claim led to the Great Depression.[55] Historian Robert Sobel argues instead that Coolidge's belief in federalism guided his economic policy, writing, "as Governor of Massachusetts, Coolidge supported wages and hours legislation, opposed child labor, imposed economic controls during World War I, favored safety measures in factories, and even worker representation on corporate boards...such matters were considered the responsibilities of state and local governments."[56][57] Historian David Greenberg argues that Coolidge's economic policies, designed primarily to bolster American industry, are best described as Hamiltonian rather than laissez-faire.[39]

Taxation and government spending edit

Coolidge took office in the aftermath of World War I, during which the United States had raised taxes to unprecedented rates.[58] Coolidge's taxation policy was largely set by Treasury Secretary Mellon, who held that "scientific taxation"—lower taxes—would actually increase rather than decrease government receipts.[59] The Revenue Act of 1921, which had been proposed by Mellon, had reduced the top marginal tax rate from 71 percent to 58 percent, and Mellon sought to further reduce rates and abolish other taxes during Coolidge's presidency.[60]

Coolidge spent early 1924 opposing the World War Adjusted Compensation Act or "Bonus Bill," which he believed would be a fiscally irresponsible expenditure.[61] With a budget surplus, many legislators wanted to reward the veterans of World War I with extra compensation, arguing that the soldiers had been paid poorly during the war. Coolidge and Mellon preferred to use the budget surplus to cut taxes, and they did not believe that the country could pass the Bonus Bill, cut taxes, and maintain a balanced budget. However, the Bonus Bill gained wide support and was endorsed by several prominent Republicans, including Henry Cabot Lodge and Charles Curtis. Congress overrode Coolidge's veto of the Bonus Bill, handing the president a defeat in his first major legislative battle.[62]

With his legislative priorities in jeopardy following the debate over the Bonus Bill, Coolidge backed off on his goal of lowering the top tax rate down to 25 percent.[63] After much legislative haggling, Congress passed the Revenue Act of 1924, which reduced income tax rates and eliminated all income taxation for some two million people.[64] The act reduced the top marginal tax rate from 58 percent to 46 percent, but increased the estate tax and bolstered it with a new gift tax.[65] After his re-election in 1924, Coolidge sought further tax reductions,[66] and Congress cut taxes with the Revenue Acts of 1926 and 1928. Congress abolished the gift tax in 1926, but Mellon was unable to win repeal of the estate tax, which had been established by the Revenue Act of 1916. In addition to cutting top rates, the tax acts also increased the amount of income exempt from taxation, and by 1928 only 2 percent of taxpayers paid any federal income tax. By 1930, one-third of federal revenue came from income taxes, one-third from corporate taxes, and most of the remaining third came from the tariff and excise taxes on tobacco.[67]

Coolidge inherited a budget surplus of $700 million, but also a federal debt of $22.3 billion, with most of that debt having been accumulated in World War I.[68] Federal spending remained flat during Coolidge's administration, contributing to the retirement of about one-fourth of the federal debt. Coolidge would be the last president to significantly reduce the total amount of federal debt until Bill Clinton's tenure in the 1990s, although intervening presidents would preside over a reduction of debt in proportion to the country's gross domestic product.[69]

Immigration edit

A strong nativist movement had arisen in the years prior to Coolidge's presidency,[70] with hostility focused on immigrants from Eastern Europe, Southeastern Europe, and East Asia.[71] A constituent writing to Senator William Borah reflected the opinion of many who favored immigration restriction, stating "immigration should be completely stopped for at least one generation until we can assimilate and Americanize the millions who are in our midst."[72] Prior to Coolidge's presidency, Congress had passed the Immigration Act of 1917, which imposed a literacy test on immigrants, and the Emergency Quota Act of 1921, which put a temporary cap on the number of immigrants accepted into the country.[70] In the years after the passage of the Emergency Quota Act, members of Congress debated the substance of a permanent immigration bill. Most leaders of both parties favored a permanent bill that would greatly restrict immigration, with the major exception being Al Smith and other urban Democrats.[73] Business leaders had previously favored unlimited immigration to the United States, but mechanization, the entrance of women into the labor force, and the migration of Southern blacks into the North had all contributed to reduced demand for foreign-born labor.[74]

Coolidge endorsed an extension of the cap on immigration in his 1923 State of the Union, but his administration was less supportive of the continuation of the National Origins Formula, which effectively restricted immigration from countries outside of Northwestern Europe. Secretary of State Hughes strongly opposed the quotas, particularly the total ban on Japanese immigration, which violated the Gentlemen's Agreement of 1907 with Japan. Despite his own reservations, Coolidge chose to sign the restrictive Immigration Act of 1924.[70] The Emergency Quota Act had limited annual immigration from any given country to 3% of the immigrant population from that country living in the United States in 1920; the Immigration Act of 1924 changed this to 2% percent of the immigrant population from a given country living in the United States in 1890.[75] As the Immigration Act of 1924 remained in force until the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, it greatly affected the demographics of immigration for several decades.[70]

Opposition to farm subsidies edit

 
Coolidge with his vice president, Charles G. Dawes

Perhaps the most contentious issue of Coolidge's presidency was relief for farmers, whose incomes had collapsed after World War I.[76] Many farmers were unable to sell their crops, in a phenomenon known as overproduction. Contributing factors to agricultural overproduction included increasing competition on world markets and the introduction of tractors, which increased the productivity of individual farmers and opened up farmland that had previously been devoted to growing crops used to feed farm animals.[77] Overproduction led to an ongoing farm crisis that proved devastating to many rural areas.[78] The farm crisis was a major political issue throughout the 1920s as farmers remained a powerful voting bloc despite the rising tide of urbanization.[79]

Secretary of Agriculture Henry Cantwell Wallace floated the possibility of restricting the number of acres that each farmer would be allowed to farm, but the unpopularity of this proposal among farmers made it politically infeasible.[80] After the 1924 elections, the Coolidge administration introduced an agricultural plan that emphasized agricultural cooperatives to help control prices, but it found little favor among farmers.[81] The farm bloc instead coalesced behind the ideas of George Peek, whose proposals to raise farm prices inspired the McNary–Haugen Farm Relief Bill.[82] McNary–Haugen proposed the establishment of a federal farm board that would purchase surplus production in high-yield years and hold it for later sale or sell it abroad.[83] The government would lose money in selling the crops abroad, but would recoup some of that loss through fees on farmers who benefited from the program.[84] Proponents of the bill argued that the program was little different from protective tariffs, which they argued were used to disproportionately benefit industrial concerns.[85] Coolidge opposed McNary-Haugen, declaring that agriculture must stand "on an independent business basis," and said that "government control cannot be divorced from political control."[86] The first and second incarnations of the McNary-Haugen bill were defeated in 1924 and 1925, but the bill remained popular as the farm crisis continued.[87]

A decline in cotton prices in 1925 raised the possibility that Southern congressmen would join with Western congressmen in supporting a major agricultural bill. Seeking to prevent the creation of a major new government program, Coolidge sought to peel away potential supporters of McNary-Haugen and mobilized businessmen and other groups in opposition to the bill.[88] He supported the Curtis-Crisp Act, which would have created a federal board to lend money to farm co-operatives in times of surplus, but the bill floundered in Congress.[89] In February 1927, Congress took up the McNary-Haugen bill again, this time narrowly passing it, and Coolidge vetoed it.[90] In his veto message, Coolidge expressed the belief that the bill would do nothing to help farmers, benefiting only exporters and expanding the federal bureaucracy.[91] Congress did not override the veto, but it passed the bill again in May 1928 by an increased majority; again, Coolidge vetoed it.[90] "Farmers never have made much money," said Coolidge, adding, "I do not believe we can do much about it."[92] Secretary Jardine developed his own plan to address the farm crisis that established a Federal Farm Board, and his plan eventually would form the basis of the Agricultural Marketing Act of 1929, which was passed months after Coolidge left office.[93]

Great Mississippi Flood edit

Coolidge has often been criticized for his actions during the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927, the worst natural disaster to hit the Gulf Coast until Hurricane Katrina in 2005.[94] He initially declined the request of six governors to provide federal assistance and visit the site of the flooding.[95] Although he did eventually name Secretary Hoover to a head a federal commission in charge of flood relief, scholars argue that Coolidge overall showed a lack of interest in federal flood control.[94] Coolidge did not believe that personally visiting the region after the floods would accomplish anything, and that it would be seen as mere political grandstanding. He also did not want to incur the federal spending that flood control would require; he believed property owners should bear much of the cost.[96] Congress, meanwhile, favored a bill that would place the federal government completely in charge of flood mitigation.[97] When Congress passed a compromise measure in 1928, Coolidge declined to take credit for it and signed the Flood Control Act of 1928 in private on May 15.[98]

Labor edit

Union membership declined during the 1920s, partly because of consistently rising wages and the declining length of the average work week. Compared to previous years, Coolidge's tenure saw relatively few strikes, and the only major labor disturbance Coolidge faced was the 1923 anthracite coal strike.[99] Coolidge generally avoided labor issues, leaving the administration's response to unrest in the mines to Hoover. Hoover produced the Jacksonville agreement, a voluntary compact between miners and mining companies, but the agreement had little effect.[100] During the 1920s, the conservative Taft Court issued several holdings that damaged labor unions and allowed federal courts to use injunctions to end strikes. The Supreme Court was also hostile to federal regulations designed to ensure minimal working conditions, and it declared minimum wage laws unconstitutional in the 1923 case of Adkins v. Children's Hospital.[101]

In June 1924, after the Supreme Court twice struck down federal laws regulating and taxing goods produced by employees under the ages of 14 and 16, Congress approved an amendment to the United States Constitution that would specifically authorize Congress to regulate "labor of persons under eighteen years of age".[102] Coolidge expressed support for the amendment in his first State of the Union.[103] The amendment, commonly known as the Child Labor Amendment, was never ratified by the requisite number of states, and, as there was no time limit set for its ratification, is still pending before the states.[104] However, the Supreme Court made the Child Labor Amendment a moot issue with its ruling in the 1941 case of United States v. Darby Lumber Co..[105]

Other issues edit

Prohibition edit

The Eighteenth Amendment, ratified in 1920, had effectively established the prohibition of alcoholic beverages in the United States, and the Volstead Act had established penalties for violating the amendment.[106] Coolidge personally opposed Prohibition, but sought to enforce federal law and refrained from serving liquor in the White House.[107] Though Congress had established the Bureau of Prohibition to enforce the Volstead Act, federal enforcement of Prohibition was lax. As most states left enforcement of Prohibition to the federal government, the illegal production of alcoholic beverages flourished.[108] Leaders of organized crime like Arnold Rothstein and Al Capone arranged for the importation of alcohol from Canada and other locations, and the profitability of bootlegging contributed to the rising influence of organized crime.[109] Nonetheless, alcohol consumption fell dramatically during the 1920s, in part due to the high price of alcoholic drinks.[110]

Civil rights edit

The ratification of the 19th amendment in August 1920 gave women the right to vote in every state in time for the 1920 elections. Politicians responded to the greatly enlarged electorate by emphasizing issues of special interest to women, especially prohibition, child health, public schools, and world peace.[111] Women did respond to these issues, but in terms of general voting they had the same outlook and the same voting behavior as men. Thus by 1928 they realized that special appeals had little effect and there was less special attention. [112] See Women's suffrage in the United States

 
Osage men with Coolidge after he signed the bill granting Native Americans on reservations full citizenship

Coolidge spoke in favor of the civil rights of African-Americans, saying in his first State of the Union address that their rights were "just as sacred as those of any other citizen" under the U.S. Constitution and that it was a "public and a private duty to protect those rights."[113][114] He appointed no known members of the Ku Klux Klan to office; indeed, the Klan lost most of its influence during his term.[115] He also repeatedly called for laws to prohibit lynching, saying in his 1923 State of the Union address that it was a "hideous crime" of which African-Americans were "by no means the sole sufferers" but made up the "majority of the victims."[114] However, congressional attempts to pass anti-lynching legislation were blocked by Southern Democrats.[116] Coolidge did not emphasize the appointment of African-Americans to federal positions, and he did not appoint any prominent blacks during his tenure as president.[117] Women suffrage had little effect in the South, where very few black women were allowed to vote.

On June 2, 1924, Coolidge signed the Indian Citizenship Act, which granted U.S. citizenship to all American Indians, while permitting them to retain tribal land and cultural rights. By that time, two-thirds of Native Americans were already citizens, having gained citizenship through marriage, military service, or the land allotments that had earlier taken place.[118][119][120] The act was unclear on whether the federal government or the tribal leaders retained tribal sovereignty.[121] Coolidge also appointed the Committee of One Hundred, a reform panel to examine federal institutions and programs dealing with Indian nations. This committee recommended that the government conduct an in-depth investigation into reservation life, resulting in the Meriam Report of 1928.[citation needed]

Foreign affairs edit

League of Nations and World Court edit

Although not an isolationist, Coolidge was reluctant to enter into foreign alliances.[122] He considered the 1920 Republican victory as a rejection of the Wilsonian position that the United States should join the League of Nations.[123] While not completely opposed to the idea, Coolidge believed the League, as then constituted, did not serve American interests, and he did not advocate membership.[123] He spoke in favor of the United States joining the Permanent Court of International Justice (World Court), provided that the nation would not be bound by advisory decisions.[124] In 1926, the Senate eventually approved joining the Court (with reservations).[125] The League of Nations accepted the reservations, but it suggested some modifications of its own. The Senate failed to act on the modifications, and the United States never joined the World Court.[126]

Reparations and war debts edit

In the aftermath of World War I, several European nations struggled with debt, much of which was owed to the United States. These European nations were in turn owed an enormous sum from Germany in the form of World War I reparations, and the German economy buckled under the weight of these reparations. Coolidge rejected calls to forgive Europe's debt or lower tariffs on European goods, but the Occupation of the Ruhr in 1923 stirred him to action. On Secretary of State Hughes's initiative, Coolidge appointed Charles Dawes to lead an international commission to reach an agreement on Germany's reparations. The resulting Dawes Plan provided for restructuring of the German debt, and the United States loaned money to Germany to help it repay its debt to other countries. The Dawes Plan led to a boom in the German economy, as well as a sentiment of international cooperation.[127]

Building on the success of the Dawes Plan, U.S. ambassador Alanson B. Houghton helped organize the Locarno Conference in October 1925. The conference was designed to ease tensions between Germany and France, the latter of which feared a German rearmament. In the Locarno Treaties, France, Belgium, and Germany each agreed to respect the borders established by the Treaty of Versailles and pledged not to attack each other. Germany also agreed to arbitrate its eastern boundaries with the states created in the Treaty of Versailles.[128]

Disarmament and renunciation of war edit

Coolidge's primary foreign policy initiative was the Kellogg–Briand Pact of 1928, named for Secretary of State Kellogg and French foreign minister Aristide Briand. Nearly all major countries signed it. The treaty, ratified in 1929, committed signatories to "renounce war, as an instrument of national policy in their relations with one another."[129] The treaty did not achieve the immediate ending of wars—but it did provide the founding principle for international law after World War II.[130] Coolidge's policy of international disarmament allowed the administration to decrease military spending, a part of Coolidge's broader policy of decreasing government spending.[131] Coolidge also favored an extension of the Washington Naval Treaty to cover cruisers, but the U.S., Britain, and Japan were unable to come to an agreement at the Geneva Naval Conference.[132]

Coolidge was impressed with the success of the Washington Naval Conference of 1921–22, and called a second international conference in 1927 to deal with related naval issues, especially putting limits on the number of warships under 10,000 tons. The Geneva Naval Conference failed because France refused to participate, and also because most of the delegates were admirals who did not want to limit their fleets.[133]

Latin America edit

After the Mexican Revolution, the U.S. had refused to recognize the government of Álvaro Obregón, one of the revolution's leaders. Secretary of State Hughes had worked with Mexico to normalize relations during the Harding administration, and President Coolidge recognized the Mexican government in 1923. To help Obregón defeat a rebellion, Coolidge also lifted an embargo on Mexico and encouraged U.S. banks to loan money to the Mexican government. In 1924, Plutarco Elías Calles took office as President of Mexico, and Calles sought to limit American property claims and take control of the holdings of the Catholic Church. However, Ambassador Dwight Morrow convinced Calles to allow Americans to retain their rights to property purchased before 1917, and Mexico and the United States enjoyed good relations for the remainder of Coolidge's presidency.[134] With the aid of a Catholic priest from the U.S., Morrow also helped bring an end to the Cristero War, a Catholic revolt against Calles's government.[135]

The United States' occupation of Nicaragua and Haiti continued under Coolidge's administration, though Coolidge withdrew American troops from the Dominican Republic in 1924.[136] The U.S. established a domestic constabulary in the Dominican Republic to promote internal order without the need for U.S. intervention, but the constabulary's leader, Rafael Trujillo, eventually seized power.[137] Coolidge led the U.S. delegation to the Sixth International Conference of American States, January 15–17, 1928, in Havana, Cuba. This was the only international trip Coolidge made during his presidency.[138] There, he extended an olive branch to Latin American leaders embittered over America's interventionist policies in Central America and the Caribbean.[139] For 88 years he was the only sitting president to have visited Cuba, until Barack Obama did so in 2016.[140]

Under the leadership of economist Edwin W. Kemmerer, the U.S. extended its influence in Latin America through financial advisers. With the support of the State Department, Kemmerer negotiated agreements with Colombia, Chile, and other countries in which the countries received loans and agreed to follow the advice of U.S. financial advisers. These "Kemmerized" countries received substantial investments and became increasingly dependent on trade with the United States. While the countries enjoyed good economic conditions in the 1920s, many would struggle in the 1930s.[141]

East Asia edit

Relations with Japan had warmed with the signing of the Washington Naval Treaty and were further bolstered by U.S. aid in the aftermath of the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake, which killed as many as 200,000 Japanese and left another 2 million homeless. However, relations soured with the passage of the Immigration Act of 1924, which banned immigration from Japan to the United States. U.S. officials encouraged Japan to protest the ban while the legislation was drafted, but Japanese threats backfired as supporters of the legislation used the threats to galvanize opposition to Japanese immigration. The immigration legislation sparked a major backlash in Japan, strengthening the position of those in Japan who favored expansionism over cooperation with Western powers.[71]

The Coolidge administration at first avoided engagement with the Republic of China, which was led by Sun Yat-sen and his successor, Chiang Kai-shek. The administration protested the Northern Expedition when it resulted in attacks on foreigners, and refused to consider renegotiating treaties reached with China when it had been under the rule of the Qing dynasty. In 1927, Chiang purged his government of Communists and began to seek U.S. support. Seeking closer relations with China, Secretary of State Kellogg agreed to grant tariff autonomy, meaning that China would have the right to set import duties on American goods.[142]

Election of 1928 edit

 
1928 electoral vote results

After the 1924 election, many pundits assumed that Coolidge would seek another term in 1928, but Coolidge had other plans. While on vacation in mid-1927, Coolidge issued a terse statement that he would not seek a second full term as president.[143] In his memoirs, Coolidge explained his decision not to run: "The Presidential office takes a heavy toll of those who occupy it and those who are dear to them. While we should not refuse to spend and be spent in the service of our country, it is hazardous to attempt what we feel is beyond our strength to accomplish."[144] With Coolidge's retirement, speculation on the 1928 Republican presidential nominee focused on Senator Charles Curtis, Senator William Borah, former Governor Frank Lowden, Vice President Dawes, former Secretary of State Hughes, and, especially, Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover.[145]

Coolidge was reluctant to endorse Hoover as his successor; on one occasion he remarked that "for six years that man has given me unsolicited advice—all of it bad."[146] Hoover also faced opposition from Mellon and other conservatives due to Hoover's progressive stance on some issues.[147] Nonetheless, Hoover's standing at the head of the party was solidified by his handling of the Great Mississippi Flood, and he faced little opposition at the 1928 Republican National Convention.[148] Accepting the presidential nomination, Hoover stated, "we in America today are nearer to the final triumph over poverty than ever before in the history of any land...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."[149]

Having been badly defeated in the last two presidential elections, and still facing bitter divisions between the Southern and Northeastern wings of the party, few Democrats believed their party would win the 1928 presidential election. By the time of the 1928 Democratic National Convention, Al Smith had emerged as the prohibitive favorite for the presidential nomination. Like Hoover, Smith was nominated on the first ballot of his party's national convention.[150] Smith's policies differed little from those of Hoover, and the 1928 presidential campaign instead centered on Smith's character, affiliation with the Catholic Church, and opposition to Prohibition.[151] Hoover won a landslide victory, even taking Smith's home state of New York and several states in the Solid South.[152]

Historical reputation edit

Jason Roberts in 2014 argues that Coolidge's legacy is still passionately debated by scholars and politicians. He writes:

An introverted man, he nonetheless was a successful politician who won all but one election....He was perceived as a conservative yet supported many progressive issues at the state and local level. He was viewed as a traditionalist yet successfully exploited the new technologies of the day such as film and radio. This enigmatic man put his stamp on the policies of the 1920s.[153]

Coolidge was generally popular with the American people. He inspired trust, especially for his quiet devotion to duty. Claude Feuss wrote in 1940:

The qualities which Coolidge displayed as a young legislator were faithfulness to duty, reliability, discretion, tolerance, integrity, and common sense. The same qualities were his as president. "throughout his career we find in him a deep-seated regard for law, for authority, or tradition.[154]

McCoy emphasizes Coolidge's efficiency as president:

As chief executive, Coolidge was effective because of his simple, direct, and responsible style. He normally formulated his policies only after consultation and study. Coolidge expected his subordinates to do their jobs efficiently based on those policies and it was clear that if they could not do so, he might replace them. Consequently, the president generally received faithful service from his appointees. He reinforced this by effectively using the Bureau of the Budget to control executive expenditures and programs. If Coolidge did not have a lot to administer compared with later presidents, he administered what he did have exceptionally well. Coolidge was also an excellent spokesman for his administration. He held regular press conferences—his only innovation as president—which he handled like an affable though strict schoolmaster.[155]

Critical commentary increased with the onset of the Great Depression shortly after he left office, when opponents linked the economic troubles to Coolidge's economic policies. Coolidge's reputation in foreign policy also suffered in the 1930s as it became clear that certain policies had come undone under pressure from Germany and Japan. In the 1980s, Ronald Reagan and other conservatives looked to the Coolidge administration as a model of laissez-faire policy.[156] Ferrell praises Coolidge for avoiding major scandals and reducing the debt, but criticizes Coolidge's inactivity in foreign policy and his failure to respond to rising stock market speculation.[157]

Polls of historians and political scientists have generally ranked Coolidge as a below-average president. A 2018 poll of the American Political Science Association’s Presidents and Executive Politics section ranked Coolidge as the 28th best president.[158] A 2017 C-SPAN poll of historians ranked Coolidge as the 27th best president.[159] Greenberg writes:

Scholarly opinion looks upon the Coolidge presidency with skepticism, ranking him relatively low among American chief executives in terms of his administration's positive impact and legacy. Despite his personal integrity, he offered no sweeping vision or program of action that the presidencies of Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson had led the public to associate with presidential greatness.[156]

References edit

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Bibliography edit

Scholarly sources edit

  • Adler, Selig. The Uncertain Giant, 1921–1941: American Foreign Policy Between the Wars (1965).
  • Barry, John M. (1997). Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How It Changed America. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0684840024.
  • Ciment, James. Encyclopedia of the Jazz Age: From the End of World War I to the Great Crash (2015). Excerpt
  • Cohen, Warren I. Empire Without Tears: America’s Foreign Relations 1921–1933. (1987)
  • Deloria, Vincent (1992). American Indian Policy in the Twentieth Century. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0806124247.
  • Ellis, L. Ethan. Republican foreign policy, 1921–1933 (1968)
  • Ellis, L. Ethan. Frank B. Kellogg and American Foreign Relations, 1925–1929 (1961).
  • Ferrell, Robert H. (1998). The Presidency of Calvin Coolidge. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0700608928.
  • Freeman, Jo (2002). A Room at a Time: How Women Entered Party Politics. Rowman and Littlefield. ISBN 978-0847698059.
  • Fuess, Claude M. (1940). Calvin Coolidge: The Man from Vermont. Little, Brown.
  • Graff, Henry F., ed. The Presidents: A Reference History (3rd ed. 2002) online
  • Greenberg, David (2006). Calvin Coolidge. The American Presidents Series. Times Books. ISBN 978-0805069570.
  • Herring, George C. (2008). From Colony to Superpower; U.S. Foreign Relations Since 1776. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195078220.
  • Hicks, John D. Republican Ascendancy: 1921–1933 (1960) Online, scholarly survey focused on politics.
  • Leuchtenburg, William. The Perils of Prosperity, 1914–32 (1958) politics, econmomics & society; Online free to borrow
  • Louria, Margot. Triumph and Downfall: America’s Pursuit of Peace and Prosperity, 1921–1933 (2001)
  • McCoy, Donald R. (1967). Calvin Coolidge: The Quiet President. Macmillan.
  • Miller, Nathan (2003). New World Coming: The 1920s and the Making of Modern America. Scribner. ISBN 0684852950.
  • Murray, Robert K. The Politics of Normalcy: Governmental Theory and Practice in the Harding-Coolidge Era (1973).
  • Palmer, Niall. The 20s in America: Politics and History (Edinburgh University Press, 2006)
  • Rhodes, Benjamin D. United States Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period, 1918-1941: The Golden Age of American Diplomatic and Military Complacency (Greenwood, 2001). online
  • Shlaes, Amity (2013). Coolidge. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0061967559.
  • Sibley, Katherine A.S., ed. A Companion to Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover (2014); 616pp; essays by scholars stressing historiography online
  • Silver, Thomas B. Coolidge and the Historians (1982) 159 pages; favors Coolidge
  • Sobel, Robert (1998). Coolidge: An American Enigma. Regnery Publishing. ISBN 978-0895264107.
  • White, William Allen (1938). A Puritan in Babylon: The Story of Calvin Coolidge. Macmillan.

Articles edit

  • Bates, J. Leonard (1955). "The Teapot Dome Scandal and the Election of 1924". The American Historical Review. 60 (2): 303–322. doi:10.2307/1843188. JSTOR 1843188.
  • Blair, John L. "Coolidge the Image-Maker: The President and the Press, 1923–1929." New England Quarterly (1973) #4: 499–522. Online
  • Buckley, Kerry W. (December 2003). "'A President for the "Great Silent Majority': Bruce Barton's Construction of Calvin Coolidge". The New England Quarterly. 76 (4): 593–626. doi:10.2307/1559844. JSTOR 1559844.
  • Clemens, Cyril, and Athern P. Daggett, "Coolidge's 'I Do Not Choose to Run': Granite or Putty?." New England Quarterly (1945) 19#2: 147–163. online
  • Cornwell Jr, Elmer E. "Coolidge and presidential leadership." Public Opinion Quarterly 21.2 (1957): 265–278. Online
  • Felzenberg, Alvin S. (Fall 1998). "Calvin Coolidge and Race: His Record in Dealing with the Racial Tensions of the 1920s". New England Journal of History. 55 (1): 83–96.
  • Galston, Miriam (November 1995). "Activism and Restraint: The Evolution of Harlan Fiske Stone's Judicial Philosophy". 70 Tulane Law Review 137+.
  • Keller, Robert R. (1982). "Supply-Side Economic Policies during the Coolidge-Mellon Era". Journal of Economic Issues. 16 (3): 773–790. doi:10.1080/00213624.1982.11504032. JSTOR 4225215.
  • Leffler, Melvyn P. "American Policy Making and European Stability, 1921–1933." Pacific Historical Review 46.2 (1977): 207–228. online
  • McKercher, Brian. "Reaching for the Brass Ring: The Recent Historiography of Interwar American Foreign Relations." Diplomatic History 15.4 (1991): 565–598. online
  • Polsky, Andrew J.; Tkacheva, Olesya (2002). "Legacies versus Politics: Herbert Hoover, Partisan Conflict, and the Symbolic Appeal of Associationalism in the 1920s" (PDF). International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society. 16 (2): 207–235. doi:10.1023/a:1020525029722. hdl:2027.42/43975. JSTOR 20020160. S2CID 142508983.
  • Roberts, Jason. "The Biographical Legacy of Calvin Coolidge and the 1924 Presidential Election." in Sibley, ed., A Companion to Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover (2014): 193–211.
  • Rusnak, Robert J. (1983). "Andrew W. Mellon: Reluctant Kingmaker". Presidential Studies Quarterly. 13 (2): 269–278. JSTOR 27547924.
  • Shideler, James H. (1950). "The La Follette Progressive Party Campaign of 1924". The Wisconsin Magazine of History. 33 (4): 444–457. JSTOR 4632172.
  • Sobel, Robert. "Coolidge and American Business" (Calvin Coolidge Presidential Foundation, 1988) online
  • Webster, Joel. "Coolidge against the world: Peace, prosperity, and foreign policy in the 1920s." (2017).(MA thesis, James madison U. 2017) online
  • Williams, C. Fred (Spring 1996). "William M. Jardine and the Foundations for Republican Farm Policy, 1925–1929". Agricultural History. 70 (2): 216–232. JSTOR 3744534.
  • Williams, William Appleman. "The Legend of Isolationism in the 1920s." Science & Society (1954): 1–20. Highly influential article from the Wisconsin school argues. US foreign policy was not isolationist, but was economically very involved with the world. Online
  • Zieger, Robert H. (1965). "Pinchot and Coolidge: The Politics of the 1923 Anthracite Crisis". The Journal of American History. 52 (3): 566–581. doi:10.2307/1890848. JSTOR 1890848.

Primary sources edit

  • Coolidge, Calvin (1919). Have Faith in Massachusetts: A Collection of Speeches and Messages (2nd ed.). Houghton Mifflin.
  • Coolidge, Calvin (2004) [1926]. Foundations of the Republic: Speeches and Addresses. University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 1410215989.
  • Coolidge, Calvin (1929). The Autobiography of Calvin Coolidge. Cosmopolitan Book Corp. ISBN 0944951031.
  • Coolidge, Calvin (2001). Peter Hannaford (ed.). The Quotable Calvin Coolidge: Sensible Words for a New Century. Images From The Past, Incorporated. ISBN 978-1884592331.
  • Coolidge, Calvin (1964). Ferrell, Robert H.; Quint, Howard H. (eds.). The Talkative President: The Off-the Record Press Conferences of Calvin Coolidge. University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 082409705X. LCCN 78066526.

External links edit

  • Calvin Coolidge Presidential Library & Museum
  • Calvin Coolidge Presidential Foundation
  • Miller Center on the Presidency at U of Virginia, brief articles on Coolidge and his presidency

presidency, calvin, coolidge, chronological, guide, timeline, calvin, coolidge, presidency, calvin, coolidge, tenure, 30th, president, united, states, began, august, 1923, when, coolidge, became, president, upon, warren, harding, death, ended, march, 1929, rep. For a chronological guide see Timeline of the Calvin Coolidge presidency Calvin Coolidge s tenure as the 30th president of the United States began on August 2 1923 when Coolidge became president upon Warren G Harding s death and ended on March 4 1929 A Republican from Massachusetts Coolidge had been vice president for 2 years 151 days when he succeeded to the presidency upon the sudden death of Harding Elected to a full four year term in 1924 Coolidge gained a reputation as a small government conservative Coolidge was succeeded by former Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover after the 1928 presidential election Presidency of Calvin Coolidge August 2 1923 March 4 1929CabinetSee listPartyRepublicanElection1924SeatWhite House Warren G HardingHerbert Hoover Seal of the president 1894 1945 Library websiteCoolidge adeptly handled the aftermath of several Harding administration scandals and by the end of 1924 he had dismissed most officials implicated in the scandals He presided over a strong economy and sought to shrink the regulatory role of the federal government Along with Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon Coolidge won the passage of three major tax cuts Using powers delegated to him by the 1922 Fordney McCumber Tariff Coolidge kept tariff rates high in order to protect American manufacturing profits and high wages He blocked passage of the McNary Haugen Farm Relief Bill which would have involved the federal government in the persistent farm crisis by raising prices paid to farmers for five crops The strong economy combined with restrained government spending produced consistent government surpluses and total federal debt shrank by one quarter during Coolidge s presidency Coolidge also signed the Immigration Act of 1924 which greatly restricted immigration into the United States In foreign policy Coolidge continued to keep the United States out of membership or major engagement with the League of Nations However he supported disarmament agreements and sponsored the Kellogg Briand Pact of 1928 to outlaw most wars Coolidge was greatly admired during his time in office and he surprised many by declining to seek another term Public opinion on Coolidge soured shortly after he left office as the nation plunged into the Great Depression Many linked the nation s economic collapse to Coolidge s policy decisions which did nothing to discourage the wild speculation that was going on and rendered so many vulnerable to economic ruin Though his reputation underwent a renaissance during the Ronald Reagan administration modern assessments of Coolidge s presidency are divided He is adulated among advocates of smaller government and laissez faire supporters of an active central government generally view him less favorably while both sides praise his support of racial equality 1 Contents 1 Accession 2 Administration 3 Judicial appointments 4 Domestic affairs 4 1 Harding administration scandals 4 2 Election of 1924 4 3 Economy and regulation 4 4 Taxation and government spending 4 5 Immigration 4 6 Opposition to farm subsidies 4 7 Great Mississippi Flood 4 8 Labor 4 9 Other issues 4 9 1 Prohibition 4 9 2 Civil rights 5 Foreign affairs 5 1 League of Nations and World Court 5 2 Reparations and war debts 5 3 Disarmament and renunciation of war 5 4 Latin America 5 5 East Asia 6 Election of 1928 7 Historical reputation 8 References 9 Bibliography 9 1 Scholarly sources 9 2 Articles 9 3 Primary sources 10 External linksAccession editSee also First inauguration of Calvin Coolidge and Presidency of Warren G Harding nbsp Coolidge signing several bills as General John J Pershing looks onCoolidge who served as the governor of Massachusetts from 1919 through 1921 was nominated at the 1920 Republican National Convention for the ticket of Warren G Harding for president and Coolidge for vice president Coolidge became the Vice President of the United States after the Republican ticket was victorious in the 1920 presidential election On August 2 1923 President Harding died unexpectedly while on a speaking tour of the Western United States Vice President Coolidge was visiting his family home in Vermont when he received word by a messenger of Harding s death 2 Coolidge s father a notary public administered the oath of office in the family parlor at 2 47 a m on August 3 1923 The following day Coolidge traveled to Washington D C where he was sworn in again by Justice Adolph A Hoehling Jr of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia 3 Coolidge addressed Congress when it reconvened on December 6 1923 expressing support for many of Harding s policies including Harding s formal budgeting process and the enforcement of immigration restrictions 4 Administration editThe Coolidge cabinetOfficeNameTermPresidentCalvin Coolidge1923 1929Vice Presidentnone1923 1925Charles G Dawes1925 1929Secretary of StateCharles Evans Hughes1923 1925Frank B Kellogg1925 1929Secretary of the TreasuryAndrew Mellon1923 1929Secretary of WarJohn W Weeks1923 1925Dwight F Davis1925 1929Attorney GeneralHarry M Daugherty1923 1924Harlan F Stone1924 1925John G Sargent1925 1929Postmaster GeneralHarry S New1923 1929Secretary of the NavyEdwin Denby1923 1924Curtis D Wilbur1924 1929Secretary of the InteriorHubert Work1923 1928Roy Owen West1928 1929Secretary of AgricultureHenry Cantwell Wallace1923 1924Howard Mason Gore1924 1925William Marion Jardine1925 1929Secretary of CommerceHerbert Hoover1923 1928William F Whiting1928 1929Secretary of LaborJames J Davis1923 1929Although a few of Harding s cabinet appointees were scandal tarred Coolidge initially retained all of them out of an ardent conviction that as successor to a deceased elected president he was obligated to retain his predecessor s counselors and policies until the next election He kept Harding s able speechwriter Judson T Welliver Stuart Crawford replaced Welliver in November 1925 5 Coolidge appointed C Bascom Slemp a Virginia Congressman and experienced federal politician to work jointly with Edward T Clark a Massachusetts Republican organizer whom he retained from his vice presidential staff as Secretaries to the President a position equivalent to the modern White House Chief of Staff 6 Perhaps the most powerful person in Coolidge s Cabinet was Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon who controlled the administration s financial policies and was regarded by many including House Minority Leader John Nance Garner as more powerful than Coolidge himself 7 Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover also held a prominent place in Coolidge s Cabinet in part because Coolidge found value in Hoover s ability to win positive publicity with his pro business proposals 8 Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes directed Coolidge s foreign policy until he resigned in 1925 following Coolidge s re election He was replaced by Frank B Kellogg who had previously served as a senator and as the ambassador to Great Britain Coolidge made two other appointments following his re election with William M Jardine taking the position of Secretary of Agriculture and John G Sargent becoming Attorney General 9 Coolidge appointed Sargent only after the Senate rejected his first choice Charles B Warren who was the first Cabinet nominee to be rejected by the Senate since 1868 10 Coolidge did not have a vice president during his first term but Charles Dawes became vice president at the start of Coolidge s second term Dawes and Coolidge clashed over farm policy and other issues 11 Judicial appointments editMain article Calvin Coolidge judicial appointments See also Harlan F Stone Supreme Court nomination Coolidge appointed only Harlan Fiske Stone to the Supreme Court of the United States Stone was Coolidge s fellow Amherst alumnus a Wall Street lawyer and a conservative Republican Stone was serving as dean of Columbia Law School when Coolidge appointed him to be attorney general in 1924 to restore the reputation tarnished by Harding s Attorney General Harry M Daugherty 12 Stone proved to be a firm believer in judicial restraint and was regarded as one of the court s three liberal justices who would often vote to uphold New Deal legislation 13 Coolidge nominated 17 judges to the United States Courts of Appeals and 61 judges to the United States district courts He appointed Genevieve R Cline to the United States Customs Court making Cline the first woman to serve in the federal judiciary 14 Coolidge also signed the Judiciary Act of 1925 into law allowing the Supreme Court more discretion over its workload Domestic affairs editHarding administration scandals edit See also Ohio Gang In the waning days of Harding s administration several scandals had begun to emerge into public view Though Coolidge was not implicated in any corrupt dealings he faced with the fallout of the scandals in the early days of his presidency The Teapot Dome Scandal tainted the careers of former Secretary of the Interior Albert B Fall who had resigned in March 1923 and Secretary of the Navy Edwin Denby and additional scandals implicated Attorney General Harry M Daugherty and former Veterans Bureau director Charles R Forbes A bipartisan Senate investigation led by Thomas J Walsh and Robert LaFolette began just weeks into Coolidge s presidency As the investigation uncovered further misconduct Coolidge appointed Atlee Pomerene and Owen Roberts as special prosecutors but he remained personally unconvinced as to the guilt of Harding s appointees Despite congressional pressure he refused to dismiss Denby who instead resigned of his own accord in March 1924 That same month after Daugherty refused to resign Coolidge fired him Coolidge also replaced the Director of the Bureau of Investigation William J Burns with J Edgar Hoover The investigation by Pomerene and Roberts combined with the departure of the scandal tarred Harding appointees served to disassociate Coolidge from the Harding administration s misdeeds 15 By May 1924 Harding s scandals had largely receded from public attention though a separate scandal involving former Postmaster General Will H Hays would briefly garner headlines in 1928 16 Election of 1924 edit Main article 1924 United States presidential election The nation initially did not know what to make of Coolidge who had maintained a low profile in the Harding administration many even expected him to be replaced on the ballot in the 1924 presidential election 17 The 1923 United Mine Workers coal strike presented an immediate challenge to Coolidge who avoided becoming closely involved in the strike Pennsylvania Governor Gifford Pinchot a progressive Republican and potential rival for the 1924 presidential nomination quickly settled the strike with little input from the federal government Pinchot s settlement of the strike backfired as he took the blame for rising coal prices and Coolidge quickly consolidated his power among Republican elites 18 Potential opponents like Governor Frank Lowden of Illinois and General Leonard Wood failed to generate support for a challenge to Coolidge while automobile magnate Henry Ford endorsed Coolidge for president in December 1923 19 The Republican Convention was held on June 10 12 1924 in Cleveland Ohio Coolidge was nominated on the first ballot 20 Coolidge s nomination made him the second unelected president to win his party s nomination for another term after Theodore Roosevelt 21 Prior to the convention Coolidge courted progressive Senator William Borah to join the ticket but Borah refused to relinquish his Senate seat 22 Republicans then nominated Lowden for vice president on the second ballot but he also declined Finally diplomat and banker Charles G Dawes was nominated on the third ballot 20 The Democrats held their convention the next month in New York City Wilson s Treasury Secretary William Gibbs McAdoo had been regarded by many as the front runner but his candidacy was damaged by his connection to the Teapot Dome Scandal Nonetheless he entered the convention as one of the two strongest candidates alongside Governor Al Smith of New York 23 Smith and McAdoo epitomized the divide in the Democratic Party Smith drew support from Northeastern cities with their large ethnic populations of Catholics and Jews McAdoo s base was in the Protestant strongholds of the rural South and West 24 The convention deadlocked over the presidential nominee and after 103 ballots the delegates finally agreed on a little known compromise candidate John W Davis who picked the brother of William Jennings Bryan The Democrats hopes were buoyed when Robert LaFollette a Republican senator from Wisconsin split from the GOP to form a new Progressive Party La Follette s Progressives were hostile to the conservatism of both major party candidates and energized by the ongoing farm crisis 25 They hoped to throw the election to the House by denying the Republican ticket an electoral vote majority and some Progressives hoped to permanently disrupt the two party system 26 On the other hand many believed that the split in the Republican party like the one in 1912 would allow a Democrat to win the presidency 27 nbsp 1924 electoral vote resultsAfter the conventions and the death of his younger son Calvin Coolidge became withdrawn he later said that when he the son died the power and glory of the Presidency went with him 28 It was the most subdued Republican campaign in memory partly because of Coolidge s grief but also because of his naturally non confrontational style 29 Coolidge relied on advertising executive Bruce Barton to lead his messaging campaign and Barton s ads depicted Coolidge as a symbol of solidity in an era of speculation 30 31 Although the Republicans had been tarred by several scandals by 1924 several Democrats had also been implicated and the partisan responsibility of the issue had been muddled 32 Coolidge and Dawes won every state outside the South except Wisconsin La Follette s home state Coolidge won 54 percent of the popular vote while Davis took just 28 8 percent and La Follette won 16 6 percent one of the strongest third party presidential showings in U S history In the concurrent congressional elections Republicans increased their majorities in the House and Senate 33 Economy and regulation edit See also Lochner era and Regulation of radio broadcast in the United States It is probable that a press which maintains an intimate touch with the business currents of the nation is likely to be more reliable than it would be if it were a stranger to these influences After all the chief business of the American people is business They are profoundly concerned with buying selling investing and prospering in the world emphasis added President Calvin Coolidge s address to the American Society of Newspaper Editors Washington D C January 25 1925 34 During Coolidge s presidency the United States experienced a period of rapid economic growth known as the Roaring Twenties 35 Unemployment remained low while the country s gross domestic product rose from 85 2 billion in 1924 to 101 4 in 1929 36 According to Nathan Miller the postwar years ushered in an age of consumerism with a broader base of participation than had ever existed before in America or anywhere else 37 The number of automobiles in the United States increased from 7 million in 1919 to 23 million in 1929 while the percentage of households with electricity rose from 16 percent in 1912 to 60 percent in the mid 1920s 35 The regulatory state under Coolidge was as one biographer described it thin to the point of invisibility 38 Coolidge believed that promoting the interests of manufacturers was good for society as a whole and he sought to reduce taxes and regulations on businesses while imposing tariffs to protect those interests against foreign competition 39 Coolidge demonstrated his disdain for regulation by appointing commissioners to the Federal Trade Commission FTC and the Interstate Commerce Commission who did little to restrict the activities of businesses under their jurisdiction 40 Under leadership of Chairman William E Humphrey a Coolidge appointee the FTC largely stopped prosecuting anti trust cases allowing companies like Alcoa to dominate entire industries 41 Coolidge also avoided interfering with the workings of the Federal Reserve which kept interest rates low and allowed for the expansion of margin trading in the stock market 42 The 1922 Fordney McCumber Tariff allowed the president some leeway in determining tariff rates and Coolidge used his power to raise the already high rates set by Fordney McCumber 43 He also staffed the United States Tariff Commission a board that advised the president on tariff rates with businessmen who favored high tariffs 44 Secretary of Commerce Hoover energetically used government auspices to promote business efficiency and develop new industries like air travel and radio 45 Hoover was a strong proponent of cooperation between government and business and he organized numerous conferences of intellectuals and businessmen which made various recommendations Relatively few reforms were passed but the proposals created the image of an active administration 46 Between 1923 and 1929 the number of families with radios grew from 300 000 or approximately 1 percent to 10 million 47 which grew further to a majority of U S households by 1931 and 75 percent of U S households by 1937 48 49 The Radio Act of 1927 established the Federal Radio Commission FRC under the auspices of the Commerce Department and the FRC granted numerous licenses to large commercial radio stations that demonstrated that they served the public interest convenience or necessity and the Act also established the equal time rule for radio broadcasters in the United States 50 51 At Hoover s request Congress passed the Air Commerce Act which granted the Commerce Department the authority to regulate air travel 52 The Coolidge administration provided matching funds for roads under the authorization of the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1921 53 The total mileage of highways doubled in the 1920s and the administration helped establish the United States Numbered Highway System which provided for orderly designation of highways and uniform signage on those highways 54 Some have labeled Coolidge as an adherent of the laissez faire ideology which some critics claim led to the Great Depression 55 Historian Robert Sobel argues instead that Coolidge s belief in federalism guided his economic policy writing as Governor of Massachusetts Coolidge supported wages and hours legislation opposed child labor imposed economic controls during World War I favored safety measures in factories and even worker representation on corporate boards such matters were considered the responsibilities of state and local governments 56 57 Historian David Greenberg argues that Coolidge s economic policies designed primarily to bolster American industry are best described as Hamiltonian rather than laissez faire 39 Taxation and government spending edit See also Andrew Mellon Secretary of the Treasury Coolidge took office in the aftermath of World War I during which the United States had raised taxes to unprecedented rates 58 Coolidge s taxation policy was largely set by Treasury Secretary Mellon who held that scientific taxation lower taxes would actually increase rather than decrease government receipts 59 The Revenue Act of 1921 which had been proposed by Mellon had reduced the top marginal tax rate from 71 percent to 58 percent and Mellon sought to further reduce rates and abolish other taxes during Coolidge s presidency 60 Coolidge spent early 1924 opposing the World War Adjusted Compensation Act or Bonus Bill which he believed would be a fiscally irresponsible expenditure 61 With a budget surplus many legislators wanted to reward the veterans of World War I with extra compensation arguing that the soldiers had been paid poorly during the war Coolidge and Mellon preferred to use the budget surplus to cut taxes and they did not believe that the country could pass the Bonus Bill cut taxes and maintain a balanced budget However the Bonus Bill gained wide support and was endorsed by several prominent Republicans including Henry Cabot Lodge and Charles Curtis Congress overrode Coolidge s veto of the Bonus Bill handing the president a defeat in his first major legislative battle 62 With his legislative priorities in jeopardy following the debate over the Bonus Bill Coolidge backed off on his goal of lowering the top tax rate down to 25 percent 63 After much legislative haggling Congress passed the Revenue Act of 1924 which reduced income tax rates and eliminated all income taxation for some two million people 64 The act reduced the top marginal tax rate from 58 percent to 46 percent but increased the estate tax and bolstered it with a new gift tax 65 After his re election in 1924 Coolidge sought further tax reductions 66 and Congress cut taxes with the Revenue Acts of 1926 and 1928 Congress abolished the gift tax in 1926 but Mellon was unable to win repeal of the estate tax which had been established by the Revenue Act of 1916 In addition to cutting top rates the tax acts also increased the amount of income exempt from taxation and by 1928 only 2 percent of taxpayers paid any federal income tax By 1930 one third of federal revenue came from income taxes one third from corporate taxes and most of the remaining third came from the tariff and excise taxes on tobacco 67 Coolidge inherited a budget surplus of 700 million but also a federal debt of 22 3 billion with most of that debt having been accumulated in World War I 68 Federal spending remained flat during Coolidge s administration contributing to the retirement of about one fourth of the federal debt Coolidge would be the last president to significantly reduce the total amount of federal debt until Bill Clinton s tenure in the 1990s although intervening presidents would preside over a reduction of debt in proportion to the country s gross domestic product 69 Immigration edit See also History of immigration to the United States A strong nativist movement had arisen in the years prior to Coolidge s presidency 70 with hostility focused on immigrants from Eastern Europe Southeastern Europe and East Asia 71 A constituent writing to Senator William Borah reflected the opinion of many who favored immigration restriction stating immigration should be completely stopped for at least one generation until we can assimilate and Americanize the millions who are in our midst 72 Prior to Coolidge s presidency Congress had passed the Immigration Act of 1917 which imposed a literacy test on immigrants and the Emergency Quota Act of 1921 which put a temporary cap on the number of immigrants accepted into the country 70 In the years after the passage of the Emergency Quota Act members of Congress debated the substance of a permanent immigration bill Most leaders of both parties favored a permanent bill that would greatly restrict immigration with the major exception being Al Smith and other urban Democrats 73 Business leaders had previously favored unlimited immigration to the United States but mechanization the entrance of women into the labor force and the migration of Southern blacks into the North had all contributed to reduced demand for foreign born labor 74 Coolidge endorsed an extension of the cap on immigration in his 1923 State of the Union but his administration was less supportive of the continuation of the National Origins Formula which effectively restricted immigration from countries outside of Northwestern Europe Secretary of State Hughes strongly opposed the quotas particularly the total ban on Japanese immigration which violated the Gentlemen s Agreement of 1907 with Japan Despite his own reservations Coolidge chose to sign the restrictive Immigration Act of 1924 70 The Emergency Quota Act had limited annual immigration from any given country to 3 of the immigrant population from that country living in the United States in 1920 the Immigration Act of 1924 changed this to 2 percent of the immigrant population from a given country living in the United States in 1890 75 As the Immigration Act of 1924 remained in force until the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 it greatly affected the demographics of immigration for several decades 70 Opposition to farm subsidies edit nbsp Coolidge with his vice president Charles G DawesPerhaps the most contentious issue of Coolidge s presidency was relief for farmers whose incomes had collapsed after World War I 76 Many farmers were unable to sell their crops in a phenomenon known as overproduction Contributing factors to agricultural overproduction included increasing competition on world markets and the introduction of tractors which increased the productivity of individual farmers and opened up farmland that had previously been devoted to growing crops used to feed farm animals 77 Overproduction led to an ongoing farm crisis that proved devastating to many rural areas 78 The farm crisis was a major political issue throughout the 1920s as farmers remained a powerful voting bloc despite the rising tide of urbanization 79 Secretary of Agriculture Henry Cantwell Wallace floated the possibility of restricting the number of acres that each farmer would be allowed to farm but the unpopularity of this proposal among farmers made it politically infeasible 80 After the 1924 elections the Coolidge administration introduced an agricultural plan that emphasized agricultural cooperatives to help control prices but it found little favor among farmers 81 The farm bloc instead coalesced behind the ideas of George Peek whose proposals to raise farm prices inspired the McNary Haugen Farm Relief Bill 82 McNary Haugen proposed the establishment of a federal farm board that would purchase surplus production in high yield years and hold it for later sale or sell it abroad 83 The government would lose money in selling the crops abroad but would recoup some of that loss through fees on farmers who benefited from the program 84 Proponents of the bill argued that the program was little different from protective tariffs which they argued were used to disproportionately benefit industrial concerns 85 Coolidge opposed McNary Haugen declaring that agriculture must stand on an independent business basis and said that government control cannot be divorced from political control 86 The first and second incarnations of the McNary Haugen bill were defeated in 1924 and 1925 but the bill remained popular as the farm crisis continued 87 A decline in cotton prices in 1925 raised the possibility that Southern congressmen would join with Western congressmen in supporting a major agricultural bill Seeking to prevent the creation of a major new government program Coolidge sought to peel away potential supporters of McNary Haugen and mobilized businessmen and other groups in opposition to the bill 88 He supported the Curtis Crisp Act which would have created a federal board to lend money to farm co operatives in times of surplus but the bill floundered in Congress 89 In February 1927 Congress took up the McNary Haugen bill again this time narrowly passing it and Coolidge vetoed it 90 In his veto message Coolidge expressed the belief that the bill would do nothing to help farmers benefiting only exporters and expanding the federal bureaucracy 91 Congress did not override the veto but it passed the bill again in May 1928 by an increased majority again Coolidge vetoed it 90 Farmers never have made much money said Coolidge adding I do not believe we can do much about it 92 Secretary Jardine developed his own plan to address the farm crisis that established a Federal Farm Board and his plan eventually would form the basis of the Agricultural Marketing Act of 1929 which was passed months after Coolidge left office 93 Great Mississippi Flood edit Coolidge has often been criticized for his actions during the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 the worst natural disaster to hit the Gulf Coast until Hurricane Katrina in 2005 94 He initially declined the request of six governors to provide federal assistance and visit the site of the flooding 95 Although he did eventually name Secretary Hoover to a head a federal commission in charge of flood relief scholars argue that Coolidge overall showed a lack of interest in federal flood control 94 Coolidge did not believe that personally visiting the region after the floods would accomplish anything and that it would be seen as mere political grandstanding He also did not want to incur the federal spending that flood control would require he believed property owners should bear much of the cost 96 Congress meanwhile favored a bill that would place the federal government completely in charge of flood mitigation 97 When Congress passed a compromise measure in 1928 Coolidge declined to take credit for it and signed the Flood Control Act of 1928 in private on May 15 98 Labor edit See also Labor history of the United States Union membership declined during the 1920s partly because of consistently rising wages and the declining length of the average work week Compared to previous years Coolidge s tenure saw relatively few strikes and the only major labor disturbance Coolidge faced was the 1923 anthracite coal strike 99 Coolidge generally avoided labor issues leaving the administration s response to unrest in the mines to Hoover Hoover produced the Jacksonville agreement a voluntary compact between miners and mining companies but the agreement had little effect 100 During the 1920s the conservative Taft Court issued several holdings that damaged labor unions and allowed federal courts to use injunctions to end strikes The Supreme Court was also hostile to federal regulations designed to ensure minimal working conditions and it declared minimum wage laws unconstitutional in the 1923 case of Adkins v Children s Hospital 101 In June 1924 after the Supreme Court twice struck down federal laws regulating and taxing goods produced by employees under the ages of 14 and 16 Congress approved an amendment to the United States Constitution that would specifically authorize Congress to regulate labor of persons under eighteen years of age 102 Coolidge expressed support for the amendment in his first State of the Union 103 The amendment commonly known as the Child Labor Amendment was never ratified by the requisite number of states and as there was no time limit set for its ratification is still pending before the states 104 However the Supreme Court made the Child Labor Amendment a moot issue with its ruling in the 1941 case of United States v Darby Lumber Co 105 Other issues edit Prohibition edit Main article Prohibition in the United States The Eighteenth Amendment ratified in 1920 had effectively established the prohibition of alcoholic beverages in the United States and the Volstead Act had established penalties for violating the amendment 106 Coolidge personally opposed Prohibition but sought to enforce federal law and refrained from serving liquor in the White House 107 Though Congress had established the Bureau of Prohibition to enforce the Volstead Act federal enforcement of Prohibition was lax As most states left enforcement of Prohibition to the federal government the illegal production of alcoholic beverages flourished 108 Leaders of organized crime like Arnold Rothstein and Al Capone arranged for the importation of alcohol from Canada and other locations and the profitability of bootlegging contributed to the rising influence of organized crime 109 Nonetheless alcohol consumption fell dramatically during the 1920s in part due to the high price of alcoholic drinks 110 Civil rights edit The ratification of the 19th amendment in August 1920 gave women the right to vote in every state in time for the 1920 elections Politicians responded to the greatly enlarged electorate by emphasizing issues of special interest to women especially prohibition child health public schools and world peace 111 Women did respond to these issues but in terms of general voting they had the same outlook and the same voting behavior as men Thus by 1928 they realized that special appeals had little effect and there was less special attention 112 See Women s suffrage in the United States nbsp Osage men with Coolidge after he signed the bill granting Native Americans on reservations full citizenshipCoolidge spoke in favor of the civil rights of African Americans saying in his first State of the Union address that their rights were just as sacred as those of any other citizen under the U S Constitution and that it was a public and a private duty to protect those rights 113 114 He appointed no known members of the Ku Klux Klan to office indeed the Klan lost most of its influence during his term 115 He also repeatedly called for laws to prohibit lynching saying in his 1923 State of the Union address that it was a hideous crime of which African Americans were by no means the sole sufferers but made up the majority of the victims 114 However congressional attempts to pass anti lynching legislation were blocked by Southern Democrats 116 Coolidge did not emphasize the appointment of African Americans to federal positions and he did not appoint any prominent blacks during his tenure as president 117 Women suffrage had little effect in the South where very few black women were allowed to vote On June 2 1924 Coolidge signed the Indian Citizenship Act which granted U S citizenship to all American Indians while permitting them to retain tribal land and cultural rights By that time two thirds of Native Americans were already citizens having gained citizenship through marriage military service or the land allotments that had earlier taken place 118 119 120 The act was unclear on whether the federal government or the tribal leaders retained tribal sovereignty 121 Coolidge also appointed the Committee of One Hundred a reform panel to examine federal institutions and programs dealing with Indian nations This committee recommended that the government conduct an in depth investigation into reservation life resulting in the Meriam Report of 1928 citation needed Foreign affairs editFurther information History of U S foreign policy 1913 1933 League of Nations and World Court edit Although not an isolationist Coolidge was reluctant to enter into foreign alliances 122 He considered the 1920 Republican victory as a rejection of the Wilsonian position that the United States should join the League of Nations 123 While not completely opposed to the idea Coolidge believed the League as then constituted did not serve American interests and he did not advocate membership 123 He spoke in favor of the United States joining the Permanent Court of International Justice World Court provided that the nation would not be bound by advisory decisions 124 In 1926 the Senate eventually approved joining the Court with reservations 125 The League of Nations accepted the reservations but it suggested some modifications of its own The Senate failed to act on the modifications and the United States never joined the World Court 126 Reparations and war debts edit Main article Dawes Plan In the aftermath of World War I several European nations struggled with debt much of which was owed to the United States These European nations were in turn owed an enormous sum from Germany in the form of World War I reparations and the German economy buckled under the weight of these reparations Coolidge rejected calls to forgive Europe s debt or lower tariffs on European goods but the Occupation of the Ruhr in 1923 stirred him to action On Secretary of State Hughes s initiative Coolidge appointed Charles Dawes to lead an international commission to reach an agreement on Germany s reparations The resulting Dawes Plan provided for restructuring of the German debt and the United States loaned money to Germany to help it repay its debt to other countries The Dawes Plan led to a boom in the German economy as well as a sentiment of international cooperation 127 Building on the success of the Dawes Plan U S ambassador Alanson B Houghton helped organize the Locarno Conference in October 1925 The conference was designed to ease tensions between Germany and France the latter of which feared a German rearmament In the Locarno Treaties France Belgium and Germany each agreed to respect the borders established by the Treaty of Versailles and pledged not to attack each other Germany also agreed to arbitrate its eastern boundaries with the states created in the Treaty of Versailles 128 Disarmament and renunciation of war edit Main article Kellogg Briand Pact Coolidge s primary foreign policy initiative was the Kellogg Briand Pact of 1928 named for Secretary of State Kellogg and French foreign minister Aristide Briand Nearly all major countries signed it The treaty ratified in 1929 committed signatories to renounce war as an instrument of national policy in their relations with one another 129 The treaty did not achieve the immediate ending of wars but it did provide the founding principle for international law after World War II 130 Coolidge s policy of international disarmament allowed the administration to decrease military spending a part of Coolidge s broader policy of decreasing government spending 131 Coolidge also favored an extension of the Washington Naval Treaty to cover cruisers but the U S Britain and Japan were unable to come to an agreement at the Geneva Naval Conference 132 Coolidge was impressed with the success of the Washington Naval Conference of 1921 22 and called a second international conference in 1927 to deal with related naval issues especially putting limits on the number of warships under 10 000 tons The Geneva Naval Conference failed because France refused to participate and also because most of the delegates were admirals who did not want to limit their fleets 133 Latin America edit After the Mexican Revolution the U S had refused to recognize the government of Alvaro Obregon one of the revolution s leaders Secretary of State Hughes had worked with Mexico to normalize relations during the Harding administration and President Coolidge recognized the Mexican government in 1923 To help Obregon defeat a rebellion Coolidge also lifted an embargo on Mexico and encouraged U S banks to loan money to the Mexican government In 1924 Plutarco Elias Calles took office as President of Mexico and Calles sought to limit American property claims and take control of the holdings of the Catholic Church However Ambassador Dwight Morrow convinced Calles to allow Americans to retain their rights to property purchased before 1917 and Mexico and the United States enjoyed good relations for the remainder of Coolidge s presidency 134 With the aid of a Catholic priest from the U S Morrow also helped bring an end to the Cristero War a Catholic revolt against Calles s government 135 The United States occupation of Nicaragua and Haiti continued under Coolidge s administration though Coolidge withdrew American troops from the Dominican Republic in 1924 136 The U S established a domestic constabulary in the Dominican Republic to promote internal order without the need for U S intervention but the constabulary s leader Rafael Trujillo eventually seized power 137 Coolidge led the U S delegation to the Sixth International Conference of American States January 15 17 1928 in Havana Cuba This was the only international trip Coolidge made during his presidency 138 There he extended an olive branch to Latin American leaders embittered over America s interventionist policies in Central America and the Caribbean 139 For 88 years he was the only sitting president to have visited Cuba until Barack Obama did so in 2016 140 Under the leadership of economist Edwin W Kemmerer the U S extended its influence in Latin America through financial advisers With the support of the State Department Kemmerer negotiated agreements with Colombia Chile and other countries in which the countries received loans and agreed to follow the advice of U S financial advisers These Kemmerized countries received substantial investments and became increasingly dependent on trade with the United States While the countries enjoyed good economic conditions in the 1920s many would struggle in the 1930s 141 East Asia edit Relations with Japan had warmed with the signing of the Washington Naval Treaty and were further bolstered by U S aid in the aftermath of the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake which killed as many as 200 000 Japanese and left another 2 million homeless However relations soured with the passage of the Immigration Act of 1924 which banned immigration from Japan to the United States U S officials encouraged Japan to protest the ban while the legislation was drafted but Japanese threats backfired as supporters of the legislation used the threats to galvanize opposition to Japanese immigration The immigration legislation sparked a major backlash in Japan strengthening the position of those in Japan who favored expansionism over cooperation with Western powers 71 The Coolidge administration at first avoided engagement with the Republic of China which was led by Sun Yat sen and his successor Chiang Kai shek The administration protested the Northern Expedition when it resulted in attacks on foreigners and refused to consider renegotiating treaties reached with China when it had been under the rule of the Qing dynasty In 1927 Chiang purged his government of Communists and began to seek U S support Seeking closer relations with China Secretary of State Kellogg agreed to grant tariff autonomy meaning that China would have the right to set import duties on American goods 142 Election of 1928 editMain article 1928 United States presidential election nbsp 1928 electoral vote resultsAfter the 1924 election many pundits assumed that Coolidge would seek another term in 1928 but Coolidge had other plans While on vacation in mid 1927 Coolidge issued a terse statement that he would not seek a second full term as president 143 In his memoirs Coolidge explained his decision not to run The Presidential office takes a heavy toll of those who occupy it and those who are dear to them While we should not refuse to spend and be spent in the service of our country it is hazardous to attempt what we feel is beyond our strength to accomplish 144 With Coolidge s retirement speculation on the 1928 Republican presidential nominee focused on Senator Charles Curtis Senator William Borah former Governor Frank Lowden Vice President Dawes former Secretary of State Hughes and especially Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover 145 Coolidge was reluctant to endorse Hoover as his successor on one occasion he remarked that for six years that man has given me unsolicited advice all of it bad 146 Hoover also faced opposition from Mellon and other conservatives due to Hoover s progressive stance on some issues 147 Nonetheless Hoover s standing at the head of the party was solidified by his handling of the Great Mississippi Flood and he faced little opposition at the 1928 Republican National Convention 148 Accepting the presidential nomination Hoover stated we in America today are nearer to the final triumph over poverty than ever before in the history of any land 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 149 Having been badly defeated in the last two presidential elections and still facing bitter divisions between the Southern and Northeastern wings of the party few Democrats believed their party would win the 1928 presidential election By the time of the 1928 Democratic National Convention Al Smith had emerged as the prohibitive favorite for the presidential nomination Like Hoover Smith was nominated on the first ballot of his party s national convention 150 Smith s policies differed little from those of Hoover and the 1928 presidential campaign instead centered on Smith s character affiliation with the Catholic Church and opposition to Prohibition 151 Hoover won a landslide victory even taking Smith s home state of New York and several states in the Solid South 152 Historical reputation editJason Roberts in 2014 argues that Coolidge s legacy is still passionately debated by scholars and politicians He writes An introverted man he nonetheless was a successful politician who won all but one election He was perceived as a conservative yet supported many progressive issues at the state and local level He was viewed as a traditionalist yet successfully exploited the new technologies of the day such as film and radio This enigmatic man put his stamp on the policies of the 1920s 153 Coolidge was generally popular with the American people He inspired trust especially for his quiet devotion to duty Claude Feuss wrote in 1940 The qualities which Coolidge displayed as a young legislator were faithfulness to duty reliability discretion tolerance integrity and common sense The same qualities were his as president throughout his career we find in him a deep seated regard for law for authority or tradition 154 McCoy emphasizes Coolidge s efficiency as president As chief executive Coolidge was effective because of his simple direct and responsible style He normally formulated his policies only after consultation and study Coolidge expected his subordinates to do their jobs efficiently based on those policies and it was clear that if they could not do so he might replace them Consequently the president generally received faithful service from his appointees He reinforced this by effectively using the Bureau of the Budget to control executive expenditures and programs If Coolidge did not have a lot to administer compared with later presidents he administered what he did have exceptionally well Coolidge was also an excellent spokesman for his administration He held regular press conferences his only innovation as president which he handled like an affable though strict schoolmaster 155 Critical commentary increased with the onset of the Great Depression shortly after he left office when opponents linked the economic troubles to Coolidge s economic policies Coolidge s reputation in foreign policy also suffered in the 1930s as it became clear that certain policies had come undone under pressure from Germany and Japan In the 1980s Ronald Reagan and other conservatives looked to the Coolidge administration as a model of laissez faire policy 156 Ferrell praises Coolidge for avoiding major scandals and reducing the debt but criticizes Coolidge s inactivity in foreign policy and his failure to respond to rising stock market speculation 157 Polls of historians and political scientists have generally ranked Coolidge as a below average president A 2018 poll of the American Political Science Association s Presidents and Executive Politics section ranked Coolidge as the 28th best president 158 A 2017 C SPAN poll of historians ranked Coolidge as the 27th best president 159 Greenberg writes Scholarly opinion looks upon the Coolidge presidency with skepticism ranking him relatively low among American chief executives in terms of his administration s positive impact and legacy Despite his personal integrity he offered no sweeping vision or program of action that the presidencies of Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson had led the public to associate with presidential greatness 156 References edit Sobel pp 12 13 Greenberg pp 1 7 Fuess pp 308 309 Fuess pp 310 315 Fuess pp 328 329 Sobel pp 248 249 Greenberg pp 48 49 Fuess pp 320 322 Rusnak 1983 pp 270 271 Polsky amp Tkacheva 2002 pp 224 227 Greenberg pp 111 112 Ferrell p 31 Charles G Dawes 30th Vice President 1925 1929 US Senate Archived from the original on 6 November 2014 Retrieved 2 February 2017 Fuess p 364 Galston 110 Freeman p 216 Greenberg pp 49 53 Ferrell pp 47 48 Sobel pp 226 228 Fuess pp 303 305 Ferrell pp 43 51 Zieger 1965 pp 566 581 Ferrell pp 53 54 a b Fuess pp 345 346 Greenberg pp 91 94 Ferrell pp 55 57 Ferrell pp 57 58 Miller p 165 Shideler 1950 pp 448 449 Shideler 1950 pp 449 450 Sobel p 300 Coolidge 1929 p 190 Sobel pp 302 303 Buckley pp 616 417 Terry Hynes Media Manipulation and Political Campaigns Bruce Barton and the Presidential Elections of the Jazz Age Journalism History 4 3 1977 93 Bates 1955 pp 319 323 Greenberg pp 106 107 Shlaes p 324 a b Greenberg pp 68 69 Miller pp 274 281 Miller pp 150 151 Ferrell p 72 a b Greenberg pp 12 13 Ferrell pp 66 72 Sobel p 318 Ferrell pp 71 72 Greenberg pp 146 148 Greenberg pp 72 73 Ferrell p 70 Ferrell pp 64 65 Polsky amp Tkacheva 2002 pp 226 227 Ferrell pp 32 33 Putnam Robert D 2000 Bowling Alone The Collapse and Revival of American Community New York Simon amp Schuster p 217 ISBN 978 0684832838 Craig Steve 2004 How America Adopted Radio Demographic Differences in Set Ownership Reported in the 1930 1950 U S Censuses Journal of Broadcasting amp Electronic Media Routledge 48 2 179 195 doi 10 1207 s15506878jobem4802 2 S2CID 145186571 Greenberg pp 131 132 Radio Act of 1927 Public Law 69 632 February 23 1927 pages 186 200 Miller pp 318 319 Ferrell p 32 Ferrell pp 100 101 Ferrell p 207 Sobel Robert Coolidge and American Business John F Kennedy Library and Museum Archived from the original on March 8 2006 Greenberg p 47 Ferrell p 62 Keller 1982 p 780 Sobel pp 310 311 Greenberg pp 127 229 Greenberg pp 71 72 Fuess p 341 Greenberg pp 77 79 Greenberg pp 79 80 Sobel pp 310 311 Fuess pp 382 383 Sobel pp 278 279 Greenberg p 128 Ferrell pp 169 171 Ferrell p 26 Greenberg pp 3 a b c d Greenberg pp 82 84 a b Herring 2008 pp 467 468 Ferrell pp 113 Ferrell pp 113 114 Miller pp 148 149 Ferrell pp 114 115 Ferrell p 41 Ferrell pp 81 83 Williams pp 216 218 Ferrell p 83 Ferrell pp 83 84 Ferrell pp 85 88 Ferrell pp 88 89 Fuess pp 383 384 Ferrell p 89 Ferrell p 90 Fuess pp 383 84 Ferrell pp 89 90 Ferrell pp 90 93 Sobel p 327 a b Fuess p 388 Ferrell p 93 Sobel p 331 Ferrell p 86 Williams pp 230 231 a b Sobel p 315 Barry pp 286 287 Greenberg pp 132 135 Miller p 344 McCoy pp 330 331 Barry pp 372 374 Greenberg p 135 Ferrell pp 73 74 Ferrell pp 75 76 Ferrell pp 78 80 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 Greenberg p 76 Four amendments that almost made it into the constitution Constitution Daily Philadelphia The National Constitution Center March 23 2014 Archived from the original on March 5 2017 Retrieved March 3 2017 Vile John R 2003 Encyclopedia of Constitutional Amendments Proposed Amendments and Amending Issues 1789 2002 ABC CLIO p 63 ISBN 978 1851094288 Ferrell pp 105 106 Miller pp 137 138 Ferrell pp 106 107 Miller pp 296 297 301 Ferrell p 107 Lynn Dumenil The Modern Temper American Culture and Society in the 1920s 1995 pp 98 144 Kristi Andersen After Suffrage Women in Partisan and Electoral Politics before the New Deal 1996 Sobel p 250 McCoy pp 328 329 a b s Calvin Coolidge s First State of the Union Address Felzenberg pp 83 96 Sobel pp 249 250 Ferrell pp 109 110 Madsen Deborah L ed 2015 The Routledge Companion to Native American Literature Routledge p 168 ISBN 978 1317693192 Charles Kappler 1929 Indian affairs laws and treaties Vol IV Treaties Government Printing Office Archived from the original on 2008 10 11 Retrieved 2008 10 14 Alysa Landry Calvin Coolidge First Sitting Prez Adopted by Tribe Starts Desecration of Mount Rushmore Archived 2016 11 11 at the Wayback Machine Indian Country Today 26 July 2016 accessed same day Deloria p 91 Sobel p 342 a b McCoy pp 184 185 McCoy p 360 McCoy p 363 Greenberg pp 114 116 Greenberg pp 88 90 Herring 2008 pp 459 460 Fuess pp 421 423 McCoy pp 380 381 Greenberg pp 123 124 Keller 1982 p 778 Miller p 349 Norman Gibbs The Naval Conferences of the Interwar Years A study in Anglo American Relations Naval War College Review 30 1 Special issue Summer 1977 pp 50 63 Online Greenberg pp 117 119 Herring 2008 p 477 Fuess pp 414 417 Ferrell pp 122 123 Herring 2008 p 473 Travels of President Calvin Coolidge U S Department of State Office of the Historian Calvin Coolidge Foreign Affairs millercenter org Miller Center of Public Affairs University of Virginia Archived from the original on February 20 2016 Retrieved February 24 2016 Kim Susanna December 18 2014 Here s What Happened the Last Time a US President Visited Cuba ABC News Retrieved March 1 2016 Herring 2008 pp 471 472 Herring 2008 pp 467 470 Cyril Clemens and Athern P Daggett Coolidge s I Do Not Choose to Run Granite or Putty New England Quarterly 1945 19 2 147 163 online Coolidge 1929 p 239 Miller p 342 Ferrell p 195 Miller pp 342 343 Miller pp 348 351 Miller p 359 Miller pp 351 352 Miller pp 360 3361 Miller pp 362 363 Jason Roberts The Biographical Legacy of Calvin Coolidge in the 1924 Presidential Election online p 193 Claude M Fuess 1940 Calvin Coolidge The Man from Vermont pp 494 495 ISBN 978 1446549049 Donald McCoy Coolidge Calvin in American National Biography 1999 https doi org 10 1093 anb 9780198606697 article 0600109 a b Greenberg David 4 October 2016 Calvin Coolidge Impact and Legacy Miller Center Retrieved 4 December 2017 Ferrell pp 206 207 Rottinghaus Brandon Vaughn Justin S 19 February 2018 How Does Trump Stack Up Against the Best and Worst Presidents The New York Times Retrieved 14 May 2018 Presidential Historians Survey 2017 C SPAN Retrieved 14 May 2018 Bibliography editScholarly sources edit Adler Selig The Uncertain Giant 1921 1941 American Foreign Policy Between the Wars 1965 Barry John M 1997 Rising Tide The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How It Changed America Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0684840024 Ciment James Encyclopedia of the Jazz Age From the End of World War I to the Great Crash 2015 Excerpt Cohen Warren I Empire Without Tears America s Foreign Relations 1921 1933 1987 Deloria Vincent 1992 American Indian Policy in the Twentieth Century University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0806124247 Ellis L Ethan Republican foreign policy 1921 1933 1968 Ellis L Ethan Frank B Kellogg and American Foreign Relations 1925 1929 1961 Ferrell Robert H 1998 The Presidency of Calvin Coolidge University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0700608928 Freeman Jo 2002 A Room at a Time How Women Entered Party Politics Rowman and Littlefield ISBN 978 0847698059 Fuess Claude M 1940 Calvin Coolidge The Man from Vermont Little Brown Graff Henry F ed The Presidents A Reference History 3rd ed 2002 online Greenberg David 2006 Calvin Coolidge The American Presidents Series Times Books ISBN 978 0805069570 Herring George C 2008 From Colony to Superpower U S Foreign Relations Since 1776 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195078220 Hicks John D Republican Ascendancy 1921 1933 1960 Online scholarly survey focused on politics Leuchtenburg William The Perils of Prosperity 1914 32 1958 politics econmomics amp society Online free to borrow Louria Margot Triumph and Downfall America s Pursuit of Peace and Prosperity 1921 1933 2001 McCoy Donald R 1967 Calvin Coolidge The Quiet President Macmillan Miller Nathan 2003 New World Coming The 1920s and the Making of Modern America Scribner ISBN 0684852950 Murray Robert K The Politics of Normalcy Governmental Theory and Practice in the Harding Coolidge Era 1973 Palmer Niall The 20s in America Politics and History Edinburgh University Press 2006 Rhodes Benjamin D United States Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period 1918 1941 The Golden Age of American Diplomatic and Military Complacency Greenwood 2001 online Shlaes Amity 2013 Coolidge New York HarperCollins ISBN 978 0061967559 Sibley Katherine A S ed A Companion to Warren G Harding Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover 2014 616pp essays by scholars stressing historiography online Silver Thomas B Coolidge and the Historians 1982 159 pages favors Coolidge Sobel Robert 1998 Coolidge An American Enigma Regnery Publishing ISBN 978 0895264107 White William Allen 1938 A Puritan in Babylon The Story of Calvin Coolidge Macmillan Articles edit Bates J Leonard 1955 The Teapot Dome Scandal and the Election of 1924 The American Historical Review 60 2 303 322 doi 10 2307 1843188 JSTOR 1843188 Blair John L Coolidge the Image Maker The President and the Press 1923 1929 New England Quarterly 1973 4 499 522 Online Buckley Kerry W December 2003 A President for the Great Silent Majority Bruce Barton s Construction of Calvin Coolidge The New England Quarterly 76 4 593 626 doi 10 2307 1559844 JSTOR 1559844 Clemens Cyril and Athern P Daggett Coolidge s I Do Not Choose to Run Granite or Putty New England Quarterly 1945 19 2 147 163 online Cornwell Jr Elmer E Coolidge and presidential leadership Public Opinion Quarterly 21 2 1957 265 278 Online Felzenberg Alvin S Fall 1998 Calvin Coolidge and Race His Record in Dealing with the Racial Tensions of the 1920s New England Journal of History 55 1 83 96 Galston Miriam November 1995 Activism and Restraint The Evolution of Harlan Fiske Stone s Judicial Philosophy 70 Tulane Law Review 137 Keller Robert R 1982 Supply Side Economic Policies during the Coolidge Mellon Era Journal of Economic Issues 16 3 773 790 doi 10 1080 00213624 1982 11504032 JSTOR 4225215 Leffler Melvyn P American Policy Making and European Stability 1921 1933 Pacific Historical Review 46 2 1977 207 228 online McKercher Brian Reaching for the Brass Ring The Recent Historiography of Interwar American Foreign Relations Diplomatic History 15 4 1991 565 598 online Polsky Andrew J Tkacheva Olesya 2002 Legacies versus Politics Herbert Hoover Partisan Conflict and the Symbolic Appeal of Associationalism in the 1920s PDF International Journal of Politics Culture and Society 16 2 207 235 doi 10 1023 a 1020525029722 hdl 2027 42 43975 JSTOR 20020160 S2CID 142508983 Roberts Jason The Biographical Legacy of Calvin Coolidge and the 1924 Presidential Election in Sibley ed A Companion to Warren G Harding Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover 2014 193 211 Rusnak Robert J 1983 Andrew W Mellon Reluctant Kingmaker Presidential Studies Quarterly 13 2 269 278 JSTOR 27547924 Shideler James H 1950 The La Follette Progressive Party Campaign of 1924 The Wisconsin Magazine of History 33 4 444 457 JSTOR 4632172 Sobel Robert Coolidge and American Business Calvin Coolidge Presidential Foundation 1988 online Webster Joel Coolidge against the world Peace prosperity and foreign policy in the 1920s 2017 MA thesis James madison U 2017 online Williams C Fred Spring 1996 William M Jardine and the Foundations for Republican Farm Policy 1925 1929 Agricultural History 70 2 216 232 JSTOR 3744534 Williams William Appleman The Legend of Isolationism in the 1920s Science amp Society 1954 1 20 Highly influential article from the Wisconsin school argues US foreign policy was not isolationist but was economically very involved with the world Online Zieger Robert H 1965 Pinchot and Coolidge The Politics of the 1923 Anthracite Crisis The Journal of American History 52 3 566 581 doi 10 2307 1890848 JSTOR 1890848 Primary sources edit Coolidge Calvin 1919 Have Faith in Massachusetts A Collection of Speeches and Messages 2nd ed Houghton Mifflin Coolidge Calvin 2004 1926 Foundations of the Republic Speeches and Addresses University Press of the Pacific ISBN 1410215989 Coolidge Calvin 1929 The Autobiography of Calvin Coolidge Cosmopolitan Book Corp ISBN 0944951031 Coolidge Calvin 2001 Peter Hannaford ed The Quotable Calvin Coolidge Sensible Words for a New Century Images From The Past Incorporated ISBN 978 1884592331 Coolidge Calvin 1964 Ferrell Robert H Quint Howard H eds The Talkative President The Off the Record Press Conferences of Calvin Coolidge University of Massachusetts Press ISBN 082409705X LCCN 78066526 External links editPresidency of Calvin Coolidge at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource Calvin Coolidge Presidential Library amp Museum Calvin Coolidge Presidential Foundation Miller Center on the Presidency at U of Virginia brief articles on Coolidge and his presidencyText of a number of Coolidge speeches Miller Center of Public Affairs Presidency of Calvin Coolidge collected news and commentary at The New York Times Calvin Coolidge A Resource Guide Library of Congress Works by or about Presidency of Calvin Coolidge at Internet Archive President Coolidge Taken on the White House Ground the first presidential film with sound recording Presidency of Calvin Coolidge at Curlie Life Portrait of Calvin Coolidge from C SPAN s American Presidents Life Portraits September 27 1999 Calvin Coolidge at IMDb Portals nbsp United States nbsp Politics nbsp Conservatism nbsp 1920s Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Presidency of Calvin Coolidge 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