كالڤن كولدج

كالڤين كوليدج
John Calvin Coolidge
Calvin Coolidge photo portrait head and shoulders.jpg
رئيس الولايات المتحدة ال30
في المنصب
2 أغسطس, 1923 – March 4, 1929
نائب الرئيس None (1923–1925)
Charles G. Dawes, (1925–1929)
سبقه Warren G. Harding
خلفه Herbert Hoover
29th Vice President of the United States
في المنصب
4 مارس, 1921 – 2 أغسطس, 1923
الرئيس Warren G. Harding
سبقه Thomas R. Marshall
خلفه Charles G. Dawes
48 حاكم ماساتشوستس
في المنصب
2 يناير, 1919 – 6 يناير, 1921
Lieutenant Channing H. Cox
سبقه Samuel W. McCall
خلفه Channing H. Cox
46th Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts
في المنصب
6 يناير, 1916 – 2 يناير, 1919
الحاكم Samuel W. McCall
سبقه Grafton D. Cushing
خلفه Channing H. Cox
تفاصيل شخصية
وُلِد John Calvin Coolidge, Jr.
(1872-07-04)يوليو 4, 1872
Plymouth, Vermont
توفي يناير 5, 1933(1933-01-05) (aged 60)
نورثامتبون, ماساتشوستس
القومية American
الحزب Republican
الزوج
(m. 2004)
الأنجال
التعليم Amherst College (AB)
الجامعة الأم Amherst College
المهنة
  • Politician
  • lawyer
الدين Congregationalist
التوقيع Cursive signature in ink

كالفن كوليدج[1] (4 يوليو 1872 - 5 يناير 1933)، الرئيس الثلاثون للولايات المتحدة الأمريكية بالفترة من 1923 - 1929. Born in Vermont, Coolidge was a Republican lawyer from New England who climbed up the ladder of Massachusetts state politics, becoming the state's 48th governor. His response to the Boston Police Strike of 1919 thrust him into the national spotlight as a man of decisive action. Coolidge was elected the country's 29th vice president the next year, succeeding the presidency upon the sudden death of President Warren G. Harding in 1923. Elected in his own right in 1924, Coolidge gained a reputation as a small-government conservative distinguished by a taciturn personality and dry sense of humor, receiving the nickname "Silent Cal". Though his widespread popularity enabled him to run for a third term, he chose not to run again in 1928, remarking that ten years as president was (at the time) "longer than any other man has had it – too long!"

Throughout his gubernatorial career, Coolidge ran on the record of fiscal conservatism, strong support for women's suffrage, and a vague opposition to Prohibition.[2] During his presidency, he restored public confidence in the White House after the many scandals of the Harding administration. He signed into law the Indian Citizenship Act of 1924, which granted U.S. citizenship to all Native Americans, and oversaw a period of rapid and expansive economic growth known as the "Roaring Twenties", leaving office with considerable popularity.[3] He was known for his hands-off governing approach and pro-business stances. However, Coolidge did sign the Radio Act of 1927 into law that established the Federal Radio Commission (1927–1934), the equal-time rule for radio broadcasters in the United States, and restricted radio broadcasting licenses to stations that demonstrated that they served "the public interest, convenience, or necessity". As a Coolidge biographer wrote: "He embodied the spirit and hopes of the middle class, could interpret their longings and express their opinions. That he did represent the genius of the average is the most convincing proof of his strength."[4]

Scholars have ranked Coolidge in the lower half of U.S. presidents. He gains almost universal praise for his stalwart support of racial equality during a period of heightened racial tension in the United States,[5] and is highly praised by advocates of smaller government and laissez-faire economics, while supporters of an active central government generally view him far less favorably. His critics argue that he failed to use the country's economic boom to help struggling farmers and workers in other flailing industries,[6] and there is still much debate among historians as to the extent to which Coolidge's economic policies contributed to the onset of the Great Depression. However, it is widely accepted—including by his own Presidential Foundation—that the Federal Reserve System during his administration was partly responsible for the stock market crash of 1929 that occurred soon after he left office, which signaled the beginning of the Depression.[7]

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تاريخ الميلاد والأسرة

ولد جون كالڤن كوليدج الثاني في بلدة پليموث، ڤرمونت في 4 يوليو 1872 و هو الرئيس الوحيد الذي كان ولد في عيد الاستقلال الأمريكي. كوليدج كان الأكبر من الطفلين في أسرته التي كانت تأصلت من نيو إنجلاند. سلف كوليدج الذي كان إسمه جون كوليدج هاجر هن إنجلترا في تقريبا 1630 واستوطن في مستعمرة مساتشوستس. معظم أسلافه كانوا مزارعون لكن بعضهم كانوا مهنيين و سياسيين مثلا معمار تشارلز أليرتون كوليدج و دبلوماسي أرشيبالد كاري كوليدج و السناتور آرثر براون و ناشطة سياسية أولمبيا براون. والده كان مزارع فهو عمل كمدرس و كان عدالة للسلام لفترة. والدته عانيت من مرض ما كان ربما درن وماتت في 1885.

Coolidge's family had deep roots in New England. The earliest American ancestor, John Coolidge, emigrated from Cottenham, Cambridgeshire, England, around 1630 and settled in Watertown, Massachusetts.[8] Coolidge's great-great-grandfather, also named John Coolidge, was an American military officer in the Revolutionary War and one of the first selectmen of the town of Plymouth.[9] His grandfather Calvin Galusha Coolidge served in the Vermont House of Representatives.[10] Coolidge was also a descendant of Samuel Appleton, who settled in Ipswich and led the Massachusetts Bay Colony during King Philip's War.[11]


بداية العمل والزواج

Education and law practice

Coolidge attended Black River Academy and then St. Johnsbury Academy before enrolling at Amherst College, where he distinguished himself in the debating class. As a senior, he joined the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and graduated cum laude. While at Amherst, Coolidge was profoundly influenced by philosophy professor Charles Edward Garman—a Congregational mystic who had a neo-Hegelian philosophy.

Coolidge explained Garman's ethics forty years later:

[T]here is a standard of righteousness that might does not make right, that the end does not justify the means, and that expediency as a working principle is bound to fail. The only hope of perfecting human relationships is in accordance with the law of service under which men are not so solicitous about what they shall get as they are about what they shall give. Yet people are entitled to the rewards of their industry. What they earn is theirs, no matter how small or how great. But the possession of property carries the obligation to use it in a larger service...[12]

At his father's urging after graduation, Coolidge moved to Northampton, Massachusetts, to become a lawyer. Coolidge followed the common practice of apprenticing with a local law firm, Hammond & Field, and reading law with them. John C. Hammond and Henry P. Field, both Amherst graduates, introduced Coolidge to law practice in the county seat of Hampshire County, Massachusetts. In 1897, Coolidge was admitted to the Massachusetts bar, becoming a country lawyer.[13] With his savings and a small inheritance from his grandfather, Coolidge opened his own law office in Northampton in 1898. He practiced commercial law, believing that he served his clients best by staying out of court. As his reputation as a hard-working and diligent attorney grew, local banks and other businesses began to retain his services.[14]

Marriage and family

In 1903, Coolidge met Grace Goodhue, a University of Vermont graduate and teacher at Northampton's Clarke School for the Deaf. They married on October 4, 1905, at 2:30 p.m. in a small ceremony which took place in the parlor of Grace's family's house, having overcome her mother's objections to the marriage.[15] The newlyweds went on a honeymoon trip to Montreal, originally planned for two weeks but cut short by a week at Coolidge's request. After 25 years he wrote of Grace, "for almost a quarter of a century she has borne with my infirmities and I have rejoiced in her graces".[16]

The Coolidges had two sons: John (1906–2000) and Calvin Jr. (1908–1924). On June 30, 1924, Calvin Jr. had played tennis with his brother on the White House tennis courts without putting on socks and developed a blister on one of his toes. The blister subsequently degenerated into sepsis. Calvin Jr. died a little over a week later at the age of 16.[17] The President never forgave himself for Calvin Jr's death.[18] His eldest son John said it "hurt [Coolidge] terribly", and psychiatric biographer Robert E. Gilbert, author of The Tormented President: Calvin Coolidge, Death, and Clinical Depression, said that Coolidge "ceased to function as President after the death of his sixteen-year-old son". Gilbert explains in his book how Coolidge displayed all ten of the symptoms listed by the American Psychiatric Association as evidence of major depressive disorder following Calvin Jr.'s sudden death.[19] John later became a railroad executive, helped to start the Coolidge Foundation, and was instrumental in creating the President Calvin Coolidge State Historic Site.[20]

Coolidge was frugal, and when it came to securing a home, he insisted upon renting. He and his wife attended Northampton's Edwards Congregational Church before and after his presidency.[21][22]

مناصب سياسية محلية

مناصب في مجلس المدينة

مشرع الولاية ورئيس بلدية

Coolidge as a State Representative in 1908

In 1906, the local Republican committee nominated Coolidge for election to the Massachusetts House of Representatives. He won a close victory over the incumbent Democrat, and reported to Boston for the 1907 session of the Massachusetts General Court.[23] In his freshman term, Coolidge served on minor committees and, although he usually voted with the party, was known as a Progressive Republican, voting in favor of such measures as women's suffrage and the direct election of Senators.[24] While in Boston, Coolidge became an ally, and then a liegeman, of then U.S. Senator Winthrop Murray Crane who controlled the western faction of the Massachusetts Republican Party; Crane's party rival in the east of the commonwealth was U.S. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge.[25] Coolidge forged another key strategic alliance with Guy Currier, who had served in both state houses and had the social distinction, wealth, personal charm and broad circle of friends which Coolidge lacked, and which would have a lasting impact on his political career.[26] In 1907, he was elected to a second term, and in the 1908 session Coolidge was more outspoken, though not in a leadership position.[27]

Coolidge's home (1906−1930) in Northampton, Massachusetts

Instead of vying for another term in the State House, Coolidge returned home to his growing family and ran for mayor of Northampton when the incumbent Democrat retired. He was well liked in the town, and defeated his challenger by a vote of 1,597 to 1,409.[28] During his first term (1910 to 1911), he increased teachers' salaries and retired some of the city's debt while still managing to effect a slight tax decrease.[29] He was renominated in 1911, and defeated the same opponent by a slightly larger margin.[30]

In 1911, the State Senator for the Hampshire County area retired and successfully encouraged Coolidge to run for his seat for the 1912 session; Coolidge defeated his Democratic opponent by a large margin.[31] At the start of that term, he became chairman of a committee to arbitrate the "Bread and Roses" strike by the workers of the American Woolen Company in Lawrence, Massachusetts.[أ] After two tense months, the company agreed to the workers' demands, in a settlement proposed by the committee.[32] A major issue affecting Massachusetts Republicans that year was the party split between the progressive wing, which favored Theodore Roosevelt, and the conservative wing, which favored William Howard Taft. Although he favored some progressive measures, Coolidge refused to leave the Republican party.[33] When the new Progressive Party declined to run a candidate in his state senate district, Coolidge won reelection against his Democratic opponent by an increased margin.[33]

In the 1913 session, Coolidge enjoyed renowned success in arduously navigating to passage the Western Trolley Act, which connected Northampton with a dozen similar industrial communities in western Massachusetts.[34] Coolidge intended to retire after his second term as was the custom, but when the president of the state senate, Levi H. Greenwood, considered running for lieutenant governor, Coolidge decided to run again for the Senate in the hopes of being elected as its presiding officer.[35] Although Greenwood later decided to run for reelection to the Senate, he was defeated primarily due to his opposition to women's suffrage; Coolidge was in favor of the women's vote, won his re-election, and with Crane's help, assumed the presidency of a closely divided Senate.[36] After his election in January 1914, Coolidge delivered a published and frequently quoted speech entitled Have Faith in Massachusetts, which summarized his philosophy of government.[37]

"Do the day's work. If it be to protect the rights of the weak, whoever objects, do it. If it be to help a powerful corporation better to serve the people, whatever the opposition, do that. Expect to be called a stand-patter, but don't be a stand-patter. Expect to be called a demagogue, but don't be a demagogue. Don't hesitate to be as revolutionary as science. Don't hesitate to be as reactionary as the multiplication table. Don't expect to build up the weak by pulling down the strong. Don't hurry to legislate. Give administration a chance to catch up with legislation."
"Have Faith in Massachusetts" as delivered by Calvin Coolidge to the Massachusetts State Senate, 1914[37]

Coolidge's speech was well received, and he attracted some admirers on its account;[38] towards the end of the term, many of them were proposing his name for nomination to lieutenant governor. After winning reelection to the Senate by an increased margin in the 1914 elections, Coolidge was reelected unanimously to be President of the Senate.[39] Coolidge's supporters, led by fellow Amherst alumnus Frank Stearns, encouraged him again to run for lieutenant governor.[40] Stearns, an executive with the Boston department store R. H. Stearns, became another key ally, and began a publicity campaign on Coolidge's behalf before he announced his candidacy at the end of the 1915 legislative session.[41]


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Lieutenant Governor and Governor of Massachusetts (1916−1921)

Coolidge with his family (1900)

Coolidge entered the primary election for lieutenant governor and was nominated to run alongside gubernatorial candidate Samuel W. McCall. Coolidge was the leading vote-getter in the Republican primary, and balanced the Republican ticket by adding a western presence to McCall's eastern base of support.[42] McCall and Coolidge won the 1915 election to their respective one-year terms, with Coolidge defeating his opponent by more than 50,000 votes.[43]

In Massachusetts, the lieutenant governor does not preside over the state Senate, as is the case in many other states; nevertheless, as lieutenant governor, Coolidge was a deputy governor functioning as an administrative inspector and was a member of the governor's council. He was also chairman of the finance committee and the pardons committee.[44] As a full-time elected official, Coolidge discontinued his law practice in 1916, though his family continued to live in Northampton.[45] McCall and Coolidge were both reelected in 1916 and again in 1917. When McCall decided that he would not stand for a fourth term, Coolidge announced his intention to run for governor.[46]

1918 election

Coolidge was unopposed for the Republican nomination for Governor of Massachusetts in 1918. He and his running mate, Channing Cox, a Boston lawyer and Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, ran on the previous administration's record: fiscal conservatism, a vague opposition to Prohibition, support for women's suffrage, and support for American involvement in World War I.[2] The issue of the war proved divisive, especially among Irish and German Americans.[47] Coolidge was elected by a margin of 16,773 votes over his opponent, Richard H. Long, in the smallest margin of victory of any of his statewide campaigns.[48]

Boston Police Strike

In 1919, in reaction to a plan of the policemen of the Boston Police Department to register with a union, Police Commissioner Edwin U. Curtis announced that such an act would not be tolerated. In August of that year, the American Federation of Labor issued a charter to the Boston Police Union.[49] Curtis declared the union's leaders were guilty of insubordination and would be relieved of duty, but indicated he would cancel their suspension if the union was dissolved by September 4.[50] The mayor of Boston, Andrew Peters, convinced Curtis to delay his action for a few days, but with no results, and Curtis suspended the union leaders on September 8.[51] The following day, about three-quarters of the policemen in Boston went on strike.[52][ب] Coolidge, tacitly but fully in support of Curtis' position, closely monitored the situation but initially deferred to the local authorities. He anticipated that only a resulting measure of lawlessness could sufficiently prompt the public to understand and appreciate the controlling principle – that a policeman does not strike. That night and the next, there was sporadic violence and rioting in the unruly city.[53] Peters, concerned about sympathy strikes by the firemen and others, called up some units of the Massachusetts National Guard stationed in the Boston area pursuant to an old and obscure legal authority, and relieved Curtis of duty.[54]

"Your assertion that the Commissioner was wrong cannot justify the wrong of leaving the city unguarded. That furnished the opportunity; the criminal element furnished the action. There is no right to strike against the public safety by anyone, anywhere, any time. ... I am equally determined to defend the sovereignty of Massachusetts and to maintain the authority and jurisdiction over her public officers where it has been placed by the Constitution and laws of her people."
"Telegram from Governor Calvin Coolidge to Samuel Gompers", September 14, 1919[55]

Coolidge, sensing the severity of circumstances were then in need of his intervention, conferred with Crane's operative, William Butler, and then acted.[56] He called up more units of the National Guard, restored Curtis to office, and took personal control of the police force.[57] Curtis proclaimed that all of the strikers were fired from their jobs, and Coolidge called for a new police force to be recruited.[58] That night Coolidge received a telegram from AFL leader Samuel Gompers. "Whatever disorder has occurred", Gompers wrote, "is due to Curtis's order in which the right of the policemen has been denied…"[59] Coolidge publicly answered Gompers's telegram, denying any justification whatsoever for the strike – and his response launched him into the national consciousness.[59] Newspapers across the nation picked up on Coolidge's statement and he became the newest hero to opponents of the strike. Amid of the First Red Scare, many Americans were terrified of the spread of communist revolutions, like those that had taken place in Russia, Hungary, and Germany. While Coolidge had lost some friends among organized labor, conservatives across the nation had seen a rising star.[60] Although he usually acted with deliberation, the Boston police strike gave him a national reputation as a decisive leader, and as a strict enforcer of law and order.

1919 election

Coolidge inspects militia in Boston police strike

Coolidge and Cox were renominated for their respective offices in 1919. By this time Coolidge's supporters (especially Stearns) had publicized his actions in the Police Strike around the state and the nation and some of Coolidge's speeches were published in book form.[37] He faced the same opponent as in 1918, Richard Long, but this time Coolidge defeated him by 125,101 votes, more than seven times his margin of victory from a year earlier.[ت] His actions in the police strike, combined with the massive electoral victory, led to suggestions that Coolidge run for president in 1920.[62]

Legislation and vetoes as governor

By the time Coolidge was inaugurated on January 2, 1919, the First World War had ended, and Coolidge pushed the legislature to give a $100 bonus (equivalent to $1٬340 in 2022) to Massachusetts veterans. He also signed a bill reducing the work week for women and children from fifty-four hours to forty-eight, saying, "We must humanize the industry, or the system will break down."[63] He signed into law a budget that kept the tax rates the same, while trimming $4 million from expenditures, thus allowing the state to retire some of its debt.[64]

Coolidge also wielded the veto pen as governor. His most publicized veto prevented an increase in legislators' pay by 50%.[65] Although Coolidge was personally opposed to Prohibition, he vetoed a bill in May 1920 that would have allowed the sale of beer or wine of 2.75% alcohol or less, in Massachusetts in violation of the Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. "Opinions and instructions do not outmatch the Constitution," he said in his veto message. "Against it, they are void."[66]


نائب الرئيس (1921−1923)

1920 election

An original Harding-Coolidge campaign button

At the 1920 Republican National Convention, most of the delegates were selected by state party caucuses, not primaries. As such, the field was divided among many local favorites.[67] Coolidge was one such candidate, and while he placed as high as sixth in the voting, the powerful party bosses running the convention, primarily the party's U.S. Senators, never considered him seriously.[68] After ten ballots, the bosses and then the delegates settled on Senator Warren G. Harding of Ohio as their nominee for president.[69] When the time came to select a vice presidential nominee, the bosses also made and announced their decision on whom they wanted – Sen. Irvine Lenroot of Wisconsin – and then prematurely departed after his name was put forth, relying on the rank and file to confirm their decision. A delegate from Oregon, Wallace McCamant, having read Have Faith in Massachusetts, proposed Coolidge for vice president instead. The suggestion caught on quickly with the masses starving for an act of independence from the absent bosses, and Coolidge was unexpectedly nominated.[70]

The Democrats nominated another Ohioan, James M. Cox, for president and the Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Franklin D. Roosevelt, for vice president. The question of the United States joining the League of Nations was a major issue in the campaign, as was the unfinished legacy of Progressivism.[71] Harding ran a "front-porch" campaign from his home in Marion, Ohio, but Coolidge took to the campaign trail in the Upper South, New York, and New England – his audiences carefully limited to those familiar with Coolidge and those placing a premium upon concise and short speeches.[72] On November 2, 1920, Harding and Coolidge were victorious in a landslide, winning more than 60 percent of the popular vote, including every state outside the South.[71] They also won in Tennessee, the first time a Republican ticket had won a Southern state since Reconstruction.[71]


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"Silent Cal"

President Harding and Vice President Coolidge with their wives

The U.S. vice-presidency did not carry many official duties, but Coolidge was invited by President Harding to attend cabinet meetings, making him the first vice president to do so.[73] He gave a number of unremarkable speeches around the country.[74]

As vice president, Coolidge and his vivacious wife Grace were invited to quite a few parties, where the legend of "Silent Cal" was born. It is from this time that most of the jokes and anecdotes involving Coolidge originate, such as Coolidge being "silent in five languages".[75] Although Coolidge was known to be a skilled and effective public speaker, in private he was a man of few words and was commonly referred to as "Silent Cal". An apocryphal story has it that a person seated next to him at a dinner said to him, "I made a bet today that I could get more than two words out of you." He replied, "You lose."[76] However, on April 22, 1924, Coolidge himself said that the "You lose" quotation never occurred. The story about it was related by Frank B. Noyes, President of the Associated Press, to their membership at their annual luncheon at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel, when toasting and introducing Coolidge, who was the invited speaker. After the introduction and before his prepared remarks, Coolidge said to the membership, "Your President [referring to Noyes] has given you a perfect example of one of those rumors now current in Washington which is without any foundation."[77]

Coolidge often seemed uncomfortable among fashionable Washington society; when asked why he continued to attend so many of their dinner parties, he replied, "Got to eat somewhere."[78] Alice Roosevelt Longworth, a leading Republican wit, underscored Coolidge's silence and his dour personality: "When he wished he were elsewhere, he pursed his lips, folded his arms, and said nothing. He looked then precisely as though he had been weaned on a pickle."[79] Coolidge and his wife, Grace, who was a great baseball fan, once attended a Washington Senators game and sat through all nine innings without saying a word, except once when he asked her the time.[[#cite_note-FOOTNOTEBryson2013[[تصنيف:مقالات_بالمعرفة_بحاجة_لذكر_رقم_الصفحة_بالمصدر_from_October_2021]][[Category:Articles_with_invalid_date_parameter_in_template]]<sup_class="noprint_Inline-Template_"_style="white-space:nowrap;">&#91;<i>[[المعرفة:Citing_sources|<span_title="هذه_المقولة_تحتاج_مرجع_إلى_صفحة_محددة_أو_نطاق_من_الصفحات_تظهر_فيه_المقولة'"`UNIQ--nowiki-0000006B-QINU`"'_(October_2021)">صفحة&nbsp;مطلوبة</span>]]</i>&#93;</sup>-83|[80]]]

As president, Coolidge's reputation as a quiet man continued. "The words of a President have an enormous weight," he would later write, "and ought not to be used indiscriminately."[81] Coolidge was aware of his stiff reputation; indeed, he cultivated it. "I think the American people want a solemn ass as a President," he once told Ethel Barrymore, "and I think I will go along with them."[82] Some historians suggest that Coolidge's image was created deliberately as a campaign tactic,[83] while others believe his withdrawn and quiet behavior to be natural, deepening after the death of his son in 1924.[84] Dorothy Parker, upon learning that Coolidge had died, reportedly remarked, "How can they tell?"[85]

رئاسة 1923–1929

On August 2, 1923, President Harding died unexpectedly from a heart attack in San Francisco while on a speaking tour of the western United States. Vice President Coolidge was in Vermont visiting his family home, which had neither electricity nor a telephone, when he received word by messenger of Harding's death.[86] Coolidge dressed, said a prayer, and came downstairs to greet the reporters who had assembled.[86] His father, a notary public and justice of the peace, administered the oath of office in the family's parlor by the light of a kerosene lamp at 2:47 a.m. on August 3, 1923, whereupon the new President of the United States returned to bed.

Coolidge returned to Washington the next day, and was sworn in again by Justice Adolph A. Hoehling Jr. of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, to forestall any questions about the authority of a state official to administer a federal oath.[87] This second oath-taking remained a secret until it was revealed by Harry M. Daugherty in 1932, and confirmed by Hoehling.[88] When Hoehling confirmed Daugherty's story, he indicated that Daugherty, then serving as United States Attorney General, asked him to administer the oath without fanfare at the Willard Hotel.[88] According to Hoehling, he did not question Daugherty's reason for requesting a second oath-taking but assumed it was to resolve any doubt about whether the first swearing-in was valid.[88]

President Coolidge signing appropriation bills for the Veterans Bureau on the South Lawn during the garden party for wounded veterans, June 5, 1924. General John J. Pershing is at left. The man at right, looking on, appears to be Veterans Bureau Director Frank T. Hines.

The nation initially did not know what to make of Coolidge, who had maintained a low profile in the Harding administration; many had even expected him to be replaced on the ballot in 1924.[89] Coolidge believed that those of Harding's men under suspicion were entitled to every presumption of innocence, taking a methodical approach to the scandals, principally the Teapot Dome scandal, while others clamored for rapid punishment of those they presumed guilty.[90] Coolidge thought the Senate investigations of the scandals would suffice; this was affirmed by the resulting resignations of those involved. He personally intervened in demanding the resignation of Attorney General Harry M. Daugherty after he refused to cooperate with the congressional probe. He then set about to confirm that no loose ends remained in the administration, arranging for a full briefing on the wrongdoing. Harry A. Slattery reviewed the facts with him, Harlan F. Stone analyzed the legal aspects for him and Senator William E. Borah assessed and presented the political factors.[91]

Coolidge addressed Congress when it reconvened on December 6, 1923, giving a speech that supported many of Harding's policies, including Harding's formal budgeting process, the enforcement of immigration restrictions and arbitration of coal strikes ongoing in Pennsylvania.[92] The address to Congress was the first presidential speech to be broadcast over the radio.[93] The Washington Naval Treaty was proclaimed just one month into Coolidge's term, and was generally well received in the country.[94] In May 1924, the World War I veterans' World War Adjusted Compensation Act or "Bonus Bill" was passed over his veto.[95] Coolidge signed the Immigration Act later that year, which was aimed at restricting southern and eastern European immigration, but appended a signing statement expressing his unhappiness with the bill's specific exclusion of Japanese immigrants.[96] Just before the Republican Convention began, Coolidge signed into law the Revenue Act of 1924, which reduced the top marginal tax rate from 58% to 46%, as well as personal income tax rates across the board, increased the estate tax and bolstered it with a new gift tax.[97]

On June 2, 1924, Coolidge signed the act granting citizenship to all Native Americans born in the United States. By that time, two-thirds of them were already citizens, having gained it through marriage, military service (veterans of World War I were granted citizenship in 1919), or the land allotments that had earlier taken place.[98][99][100]

انتخابات 1924

1924 electoral vote results

The Republican Convention was held on June 10–12, 1924, in Cleveland, Ohio; Coolidge was nominated on the first ballot.[101] The convention nominated Frank Lowden of Illinois for vice president on the second ballot, but he declined; former Brigadier General Charles G. Dawes was nominated on the third ballot and accepted.[101]

The Democrats held their convention the next month in New York City. The convention soon deadlocked, and after 103 ballots, the delegates finally agreed on a compromise candidate, John W. Davis, with Charles W. Bryan nominated for vice president. The Democrats' hopes were buoyed when Robert M. La Follette, a Republican senator from Wisconsin, split from the GOP to form a new Progressive Party. Many believed that the split in the Republican party, like the one in 1912, would allow a Democrat to win the presidency.[102]

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."[103] Even as he mourned, Coolidge ran his standard campaign, not mentioning his opponents by name or maligning them, and delivering speeches on his theory of government, including several that were broadcast over the radio.[104] It was the most subdued campaign since 1896, partly because of Coolidge's grief, but also because of his naturally non-confrontational style.[105] The other candidates campaigned in a more modern fashion, but despite the split in the Republican party, the results were similar to those of 1920. Coolidge and Dawes won every state outside the South except Wisconsin, La Follette's home state. Coolidge won the election with 382 electoral votes and the popular vote by 2.5 million over his opponents' combined total.[106]

Industry and trade

"[I]t 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[107]

During Coolidge's presidency, the United States experienced a period of rapid economic growth known as the "Roaring Twenties". He left the administration's industrial policy in the hands of his activist Secretary of Commerce, Herbert Hoover, who energetically used government auspices to promote business efficiency and develop airlines and radio.[108] Coolidge disdained regulation and demonstrated this by appointing commissioners to the Federal Trade Commission and the Interstate Commerce Commission who did little to restrict the activities of businesses under their jurisdiction.[109] The regulatory state under Coolidge was, as one biographer described it, "thin to the point of invisibility".[110]

Historian Robert Sobel offers some context of Coolidge's laissez-faire ideology, based on the prevailing understanding of federalism during his presidency: "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. Did he support these measures while president? No, because in the 1920s, such matters were considered the responsibilities of state and local governments."[111][112]

Taxation and government spending

Coolidge adopted the taxation policies of his Secretary of the Treasury, Andrew Mellon, who advocated "scientific taxation" – the notion that lowering taxes will increase, rather than decrease, government receipts.[113] Congress agreed, and tax rates were reduced in Coolidge's term.[113] In addition to federal tax cuts, Coolidge proposed reductions in federal expenditures and retiring of the federal debt.[114] Coolidge's ideas were shared by the Republicans in Congress, and in 1924, Congress passed the Revenue Act of 1924, which reduced income tax rates and eliminated all income taxation for some two million people.[114] They reduced taxes again by passing the Revenue Acts of 1926 and 1928, all the while continuing to keep spending down so as to reduce the overall federal debt.[115] By 1927, only the wealthiest 2% of taxpayers paid any federal income tax.[115] Federal spending remained flat during Coolidge's administration, allowing one-fourth of the federal debt to be retired in total. State and local governments saw considerable growth, however, surpassing the federal budget in 1927.[116] By 1929, after Coolidge's series of tax rate reductions had cut the tax rate to 24 percent on those making over $100,000, the federal government collected more than a billion dollars in income taxes, of which 65 percent was collected from those making over $100,000. In 1921, when the tax rate on people making over $100,000 a year was 73 percent, the federal government collected a little over $700 million in income taxes, of which 30 percent was paid by those making over $100,000.[117]

Opposition to farm subsidies

Coolidge with his vice president, Charles G. Dawes

Perhaps the most contentious issue of Coolidge's presidency was relief for farmers. Some in Congress proposed a bill designed to fight falling agricultural prices by allowing the federal government to purchase crops to sell abroad at lower prices.[118] Agriculture Secretary Henry C. Wallace and other administration officials favored the bill when it was introduced in 1924, but rising prices convinced many in Congress that the bill was unnecessary, and it was defeated just before the elections that year.[119] In 1926, with farm prices falling once more, Senator Charles L. McNary and Representative Gilbert N. Haugen – both Republicans – proposed the McNary–Haugen Farm Relief Bill. The bill proposed a federal farm board that would purchase surplus production in high-yield years and hold it (when feasible) for later sale or sell it abroad.[120] 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."[120] Instead of manipulating prices, he favored instead Herbert Hoover's proposal to increase profitability by modernizing agriculture. Secretary Mellon wrote a letter denouncing the McNary-Haugen measure as unsound and likely to cause inflation, and it was defeated.[121]

After McNary-Haugen's defeat, Coolidge supported a less radical measure, the Curtis-Crisp Act, which would have created a federal board to lend money to farm co-operatives in times of surplus; the bill did not pass.[121] In February 1927, Congress took up the McNary-Haugen bill again, this time narrowly passing it, and Coolidge vetoed it.[122] In his veto message, he expressed the belief that the bill would do nothing to help farmers, benefiting only exporters and expanding the federal bureaucracy.[123] Congress did not override the veto, but it passed the bill again in May 1928 by an increased majority; again, Coolidge vetoed it.[122] "Farmers never have made much money," said Coolidge, the Vermont farmer's son. "I do not believe we can do much about it."[124]

Flood control

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.[125] Although he did eventually name Secretary Hoover to a commission in charge of flood relief, scholars argue that Coolidge overall showed a lack of interest in federal flood control.[125] 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.[126] On the other hand, Congress wanted a bill that would place the federal government completely in charge of flood mitigation.[127] When Congress passed a compromise measure in 1928, Coolidge declined to take credit for it and signed the bill in private on May 15.[128]

Civil rights

Osage men with Coolidge after he signed the bill granting Native Americans U.S. citizenship

According to one biographer, Coolidge was "devoid of racial prejudice", but rarely took the lead on civil rights. Coolidge disliked the Ku Klux Klan and no Klansman is known to have received an appointment from him. In the 1924 presidential election his opponents (Robert La Follette and John Davis), and his running mate Charles Dawes, often attacked the Klan but Coolidge avoided the subject.[129] During his administration, lynchings of African-Americans decreased and millions of people left the Ku Klux Klan.[130]

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."[131][132]

Coolidge repeatedly called for laws to make lynching a federal crime (it was already a state crime, though not always enforced). Congress refused to pass any such legislation. On June 2, 1924, Coolidge signed the Indian Citizenship Act, which granted U.S. citizenship to all Native Americans living on reservations. (Those off reservations had long been citizens.) [133] On June 6, 1924, Coolidge delivered a commencement address at historically black, non-segregated Howard University, in which he thanked and commended African Americans for their rapid advances in education and their contributions to U.S. society over the years, as well as their eagerness to render their services as soldiers in the World War, all while being faced with discrimination and prejudices at home.[134]

In a speech in October 1924, Coolidge stressed tolerance of differences as an American value and thanked immigrants for their contributions to U.S. society, saying that they have "contributed much to making our country what it is." He stated that although the diversity of peoples was a detrimental source of conflict and tension in Europe, it was peculiar for the United States that it was a "harmonious" benefit for the country. Coolidge further stated the United States should assist and help immigrants who come to the country and urged immigrants to reject "race hatreds" and "prejudices".[135][صفحة مطلوبة]

Foreign policy

Official portrait of Calvin Coolidge

Coolidge was neither well versed nor very interested in world affairs.[136] His focus was directed mainly at American business, especially pertaining to trade, and "Maintaining the Status Quo". Although not an isolationist, he was reluctant to enter into European involvements.[137] While Coolidge believed strongly in a non-interventionist foreign policy, he did believe that the United States was exceptional.[138]

Coolidge considered the 1920 Republican victory as a rejection of the Wilsonian position that the United States should join the League of Nations.[139] Coolidge believed the League did not serve American interests.[139] However, he spoke in favor of joining the Permanent Court of International Justice (World Court), provided that the nation would not be bound by advisory decisions.[140] In 1926, the Senate eventually approved joining the Court (with reservations).[141] The League of Nations accepted the reservations, but it suggested some modifications of its own.[142] The Senate failed to act and so the United States did not join the World Court.[142]

Coolidge authorized the Dawes Plan, a financial plan by Charles Dawes, to provide Germany partial relief from its reparations obligations from World War I. The plan initially provided stimulus for the German economy.[143] Additionally, Coolidge attempted to pursue further curbs on naval strength following the early successes of Harding's Washington Naval Conference by sponsoring the Geneva Naval Conference in 1927, which failed owing to a French and Italian boycott and ultimate failure of Great Britain and the United States to agree on cruiser tonnages. As a result, the conference was a failure and Congress eventually authorized for increased American naval spending in 1928.[144] The Kellogg–Briand Pact of 1928, named for Coolidge's Secretary of State, Frank B. Kellogg, and French foreign minister Aristide Briand, was also a key peacekeeping initiative. The treaty, ratified in 1929, committed signatories – the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, and Japan – to "renounce war, as an instrument of national policy in their relations with one another".[145] The treaty did not achieve its intended result – the outlawry of war – but it did provide the founding principle for international law after World War II.[146] Coolidge also continued the previous administration's policy of withholding recognition of the Soviet Union.[147]

Efforts were made to normalize ties with post-Revolution Mexico. Coolidge recognized Mexico's new governments under Álvaro Obregón and Plutarco Elías Calles, and continued American support for the elected Mexican government against the National League for the Defense of Religious Liberty during the Cristero War, lifting the arms embargo on that country; he also appointed Dwight Morrow as Ambassador to Mexico with the successful objective to avoid further American conflict with Mexico.[148][149][150]

Coolidge's administration would see continuity in the occupation of Nicaragua and Haiti, and an end to the occupation of the Dominican Republic in 1924 as a result of withdrawal agreements finalized during Harding's administration.[151] In 1925, Coolidge ordered the withdrawal of Marines stationed in Nicaragua following perceived stability after the 1924 Nicaraguan general election, but redeployed them there in January 1927 following failed attempts to peacefully resolve the rapid deterioration of political stability and avert the ensuing Constitutionalist War; Henry L. Stimson was later sent by Coolidge to mediate a peace deal that would end the civil war and extend American military presence in Nicaragua beyond Coolidge's term in office.[148]

To extend an olive branch to Latin American leaders embittered over America's interventionist policies in Central America and the Caribbean,[152] Coolidge led the U.S. delegation to the Sixth International Conference of American States, January 15–17, 1928, in Havana, Cuba, the only international trip Coolidge made during his presidency.[153] He would be the last sitting American president to visit Cuba until Barack Obama in 2016.[154]

For Canada, Coolidge authorized the St. Lawrence Seaway, a system of locks and canals that would provide large vessels passage between the Atlantic Ocean and the Great Lakes.[155][148]

Cabinet

Coolidge's cabinet in 1924, outside the White House.
Front row, left to right: Harry Stewart New, John W. Weeks, Charles Evans Hughes, Coolidge, Andrew Mellon, Harlan F. Stone, Curtis D. Wilbur.
Back row, left to right: James J. Davis, Henry C. Wallace, Herbert Hoover, Hubert Work.

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 Harding's counselors and policies until the next election. He kept Harding's able speechwriter Judson T. Welliver; Stuart Crawford replaced Welliver in November 1925.[156] 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).[94]

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.[157] 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.[158] 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.[159] Coolidge did not have a vice president during his first term, but Charles Dawes became vice president during Coolidge's second term, and Dawes and Coolidge clashed over farm policy and other issues.[160]

Judicial appointments

Coolidge appointed Harlan F. Stone first as Attorney General and then as a Supreme Court Justice.

Coolidge appointed one justice to the Supreme Court of the United States, Harlan F. Stone in 1925. Stone was Coolidge's fellow Amherst alumnus, a Wall Street lawyer and 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.[161] It does not appear that Coolidge considered appointing anyone other than Stone, although Stone himself had urged Coolidge to appoint Benjamin N. Cardozo.[162] 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.[163] President Franklin D. Roosevelt later appointed Stone to be chief justice.

Coolidge nominated 17 judges to the United States Courts of Appeals and 61 judges to the United States district courts. He appointed judges to various specialty courts as well, including Genevieve R. Cline, who became the first woman named to the federal judiciary when Coolidge placed her on the United States Customs Court in 1928.[164] Coolidge also signed the Judiciary Act of 1925 into law, allowing the Supreme Court more discretion over its workload.


إنتخابات 1928

Collection of video clips of President Coolidge

In the summer of 1927, Coolidge vacationed in the Black Hills of South Dakota, where he engaged in horseback riding and fly fishing and attended rodeos. He made Custer State Park his "summer White House". While on vacation, Coolidge surprisingly issued a terse statement that he would not seek a second full term as president: "I do not choose to run for President in 1928."[165] After allowing the reporters to take that in, Coolidge elaborated. "If I take another term, I will be in the White House till 1933 … Ten years in Washington is longer than any other man has had it – too long!"[166] 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."[167] After leaving office, he and Grace returned to Northampton, where he wrote his memoirs. The Republicans retained the White House in 1928 with a landslide by Herbert Hoover. Coolidge had been 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."[168] Even so, Coolidge had no desire to split the party by publicly opposing the nomination of the popular commerce secretary.[169]

بعد الرئاسة (1929–1933)

Coolidge addressing a crowd at Arlington National Cemetery's Roman-style Memorial Amphitheater in 1924

After his presidency, Coolidge retired to a spacious home in Northampton, "The Beeches".[170] He kept a Hacker runabout boat on the Connecticut River and was often observed on the water by local boating enthusiasts. During this period, he also served as chairman of the Non-Partisan Railroad Commission, an entity created by several banks and corporations to survey the country's long-term transportation needs and make recommendations for improvements. He was an honorary president of the American Foundation for the Blind, a director of New York Life Insurance Company, president of the American Antiquarian Society, and a trustee of Amherst College.[171]

Coolidge published his autobiography in 1929 and wrote a syndicated newspaper column, "Calvin Coolidge Says", from 1930 to 1931.[172] Faced with a Democratic landslide in the 1932 presidential election, some Republicans spoke of rejecting Hoover as their party's nominee, and instead drafting Coolidge to run. Coolidge made it clear that he was not interested in running again, and that he would publicly repudiate any effort to draft him.[173] Hoover was renominated, and Coolidge made several radio addresses in support of him. Hoover then lost the general election to Coolidge's 1920 vice presidential Democratic opponent Franklin D. Roosevelt in a landslide.[174]

الوفاة

Coolidge died suddenly from coronary thrombosis at "The Beeches", at 12:45 p.m., January 5, 1933, at age 60.[175] Shortly before his death, Coolidge confided to an old friend: "I feel I no longer fit in with these times."[176] Coolidge is buried in Plymouth Notch Cemetery, Plymouth Notch, Vermont. The nearby family home is maintained as one of the original buildings on the Calvin Coolidge Homestead District site. The State of Vermont dedicated a new visitors' center nearby to mark Coolidge's 100th birthday on July 4, 1972.

Radio, film, and commemorations

Coolidge with reporters and cameramen

Despite his reputation as a quiet and even reclusive politician, Coolidge made use of the new medium of radio and made radio history several times while president. He made himself available to reporters, giving 520 press conferences, meeting with reporters more regularly than any president before or since.[177] Coolidge's second inauguration was the first presidential inauguration broadcast on radio. On December 6, 1923, his speech to Congress was broadcast on radio,[178] the first presidential radio address.[179] Coolidge signed the Radio Act of 1927, which assigned regulation of radio to the newly created Federal Radio Commission. On August 11, 1924, Theodore W. Case, using the Phonofilm sound-on-film process he developed for Lee de Forest, filmed Coolidge on the White House lawn, making "Silent Cal" the first president to appear in a sound film. The title of the DeForest film was President Coolidge, Taken on the White House Grounds.[180][181] When Charles Lindbergh arrived in Washington on a U.S. Navy ship after his celebrated 1927 trans-Atlantic flight, President Coolidge welcomed him back to the U.S. and presented him with the Medal of Honor;[182] the event was captured on film.[183]

أهم القرارات الرئاسية

Collection of video clips of the president

الحكومة

Coolidge's cabinet in 1924, outside the White House
Front row, left to right: Harry Stewart New, John W. Weeks, Charles Evans Hughes, Coolidge, Andrew Mellon, Harlan F. Stone, Curtis D. Wilbur
Back row, left to right, James J. Davis, Henry C. Wallace, Herbert Hoover, Hubert Work
المنصب الاسم الفترة
الرئيس كالڤين كوليدج 1923-1929
نائب الرئيس لا أحد 1923-1925
  Charles G. Dawes 1925-1929
وزير الخارجية Charles Evans Hughes 1923-1925
  Frank B. Kellogg 1925-1929
وزير الخزانة أندرو ملون 1923-1929
Secretary of War John W. Weeks 1923-1925
  Dwight F. Davis 1925-1929
Attorney General Harry M. Daugherty 1923-1924
  Harlan F. Stone 1924-1925
  John G. Sargent 1925-1929
Postmaster General Harry S. New 1923-1929
Secretary of the Navy Edwin Denby 1923-1924
  Curtis D. Wilbur 1924-1929
وزير الداخلية Hubert Work 1923-1928
  Roy O. West 1928-1929
وزير الزراعة Henry C. Wallace 1923-1924
  Howard M. Gore 1924-1925
  William M. Jardine 1925-1929
وزير التجارة Herbert Hoover 1923-1928
  William F. Whiting 1928-1929
وزير العمل James J. Davis 1923-1929


ملاحظات

  1. ^ See also the main article, Lawrence textile strike, for a full description.
  2. ^ The exact total was 1,117 out of 1,544[52]
  3. ^ The tally was Coolidge 317,774, Long 192,673.[61]

الهامش

  1. ^ "John Coolidge, Guardian of President's Legacy. Dies at 93". The New York Times (in الإنجليزية الأمريكية). 2000-06-04. Retrieved 2019-05-11. [He] had originally been John Calvin Coolidge [Jr.], but dropped his first name to avoid confusion and later legally changed it.
  2. ^ أ ب Sobel 1998a, p. 111; McCoy 1967, pp. 75–76.
  3. ^ McCoy 1967, pp. 420–421; Greenberg 2006, pp. 49–53.
  4. ^ Fuess 1940, p. 500.
  5. ^ Sobel 1998a, pp. 12–13; Greenberg 2006, pp. 1–7.
  6. ^ Fieldstadt, Elisha (April 22, 2021). "Presidents ranked from worst to best". CBS News (in الإنجليزية الأمريكية). Archived from the original on February 3, 2021. Retrieved October 24, 2021.
  7. ^ "Significant Papers – Coolidge Prosperity Gave America the Reserve to Weather the Great Depression". Calvin Coolidge Presidential Foundation. Retrieved September 27, 2021.
  8. ^ Fuess 1940, p. 12.
  9. ^ Fuess 1940, p. 7.
  10. ^ Sobel 1998a, p. 24.
  11. ^ Roberts 1995, p. 199.
  12. ^ White 1938, pp. 43–44.
  13. ^ Shlaes 2013, pp. 66–68.
  14. ^ Fuess 1940, pp. 74–81; McCoy 1967, pp. 22–26.
  15. ^ Bryson 2013, p. 187.
  16. ^ White 1938, p. 61.
  17. ^ Shapell, Benjamin; Willen, Sara (July 6, 2017). "The Death of Calvin Coolidge Jr". Shapell Manuscript Foundation. Retrieved April 8, 2019.
  18. ^ Remini, Robert V.; Golway, Remini, Terry, eds. (2008). Fellow Citizens: The Penguin Book of U.S. Presidential Inaugural Addresses. Penguin Books. p. 307. ISBN 978-1440631573.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
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  20. ^ Martin 2000.
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  24. ^ Sobel 1998a, p. 62; Fuess 1940, p. 99.
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  26. ^ White 1938, pp. 99–102.
  27. ^ Sobel 1998a, pp. 68–69.
  28. ^ Sobel 1998a, p. 72.
  29. ^ Fuess 1940, pp. 106–107; Sobel 1998a, p. 74.
  30. ^ Fuess 1940, p. 108.
  31. ^ Sobel 1998a, p. 76.
  32. ^ Fuess 1940, pp. 110–111; McCoy 1967, pp. 45–46.
  33. ^ أ ب Sobel 1998a, pp. 79–80; Fuess 1940, p. 111.
  34. ^ White 1938, p. 105.
  35. ^ Fuess 1940, pp. 114–115.
  36. ^ White 1938, p. 111.
  37. ^ أ ب ت Coolidge 1919, pp. 2–9.
  38. ^ Sobel 1998a, pp. 90–92.
  39. ^ Sobel 1998a, p. 90; Fuess 1940, p. 124.
  40. ^ Sobel 1998a, pp. 92–98; Fuess 1940, pp. 133–136.
  41. ^ White 1938, p. 117.
  42. ^ Fuess 1940, pp. 139–142.
  43. ^ Fuess 1940, p. 145.
  44. ^ White 1938, p. 125.
  45. ^ Fuess 1940, pp. 151–152.
  46. ^ Sobel 1998a, pp. 107–110.
  47. ^ Sobel 1998a, p. 112.
  48. ^ Sobel 1998a, p. 115; McCoy 1967, p. 76.
  49. ^ Russell 1975, pp. 77–79; Sobel 1998a, p. 129.
  50. ^ Russell 1975, pp. 86–87.
  51. ^ Russell 1975, pp. 111–113; Sobel 1998a, pp. 133–136.
  52. ^ أ ب Russell 1975, p. 113.
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  54. ^ Russell 1975, p. 120.
  55. ^ Coolidge 1919, pp. 222–224.
  56. ^ White 1938, pp. 164–165.
  57. ^ Sobel 1998a, p. 142.
  58. ^ Russell 1975, pp. 182–183.
  59. ^ أ ب Sobel 1998a, p. 143.
  60. ^ Shlaes 2013, pp. 174–179.
  61. ^ Fuess 1940, p. 238.
  62. ^ Fuess 1940, pp. 239–243; McCoy 1967, pp. 102–113.
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  64. ^ Fuess 1940, p. 186.
  65. ^ Fuess 1940, p. 187; McCoy 1967, p. 81.
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  67. ^ Sobel 1998a, pp. 152–153.
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  69. ^ Fuess 1940, pp. 259–260.
  70. ^ White 1938, pp. 211–213.
  71. ^ أ ب ت Sobel 1998a, pp. 204–212.
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  73. ^ Sobel 1998a, pp. 210–211.
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  76. ^ Hannaford, p. 169.
  77. ^ "Coolidge for a New Arms Conference; Demands Constructive Federal Thrift; Favors Participation in German Loan – Sees Hope in Dawes Plan – Proposes Limitation Parley After Reparations Settlement – Intends to Punish Graft – Some Public Officers Guilty, He Says at Associated Press Annual Luncheon – Hears Political Reports – Though All Callers Except Col. George Harvey Describe Their Visits as Formal". The New York Times. April 23, 1924. p. 2. Retrieved June 10, 2019.
  78. ^ Sobel 1998a, p. 217.
  79. ^ Cordery 2008, p. 302.
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  82. ^ Greenberg 2006, p. 60.
  83. ^ Buckley, pp. 593–626.
  84. ^ Gilbert, pp. 87–109.
  85. ^ Greenberg 2006, p. 9.
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  87. ^ Fuess 1940, pp. 310–315.
  88. ^ أ ب ت "Confirms Daugherty's Story of Coolidge's Second Oath".
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  90. ^ White 1938, p. 265.
  91. ^ White 1938, pp. 272–277.
  92. ^ Fuess 1940, pp. 328–329; Sobel 1998a, pp. 248–49.
  93. ^ Shlaes 2013, p. 271.
  94. ^ أ ب Fuess 1940, pp. 320–322.
  95. ^ Fuess 1940, p. 341.
  96. ^ Fuess 1940, p. 342; Sobel 1998a, p. 269.
  97. ^ Sobel 1998a, pp. 278–279.
  98. ^ Madsen 2015, p. 168.
  99. ^ Kappler 1929.
  100. ^ Landry 2016.
  101. ^ أ ب Fuess 1940, pp. 345–346.
  102. ^ Sobel 1998a, p. 300.
  103. ^ Coolidge 1929, p. 190.
  104. ^ Sobel 1998a, pp. 300–301.
  105. ^ Sobel 1998a, pp. 302–303.
  106. ^ Fuess 1940, p. 354.
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المصادر

مصادر رئيسية

مصادر دراسية

  • Barry, John M., Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How It Changed America (1997), ISBN 0684840022.
  • Brandes, Joseph, Herbert Hoover and Economic Diplomacy. (1962)
  • Ferrell, Robert H., The Presidency of Calvin Coolidge (1998), ISBN 0700608923.
  • Fuess, Claude M., Calvin Coolidge: The Man from Vermont (1940), ISBN 0837193206.
  • Greenberg, David, Calvin Coolidge, The American Presidents Series, (2006), ISBN 0805069577.
  • Hannaford, Peter, The Quotable Calvin Coolidge (2001), ISBN 1884592333.
  • McCoy, Donald, Calvin Coolidge: The Quiet President (1967), ISBN 0945707231.
  • Russell, Francis, A City in Terror: Calvin Coolidge and the 1919 Boston Police Strike (1975), ISBN 0807050334.
  • Silver, Thomas B., Coolidge and the Historians (1983), ISBN 0890890382.
  • Sobel, Robert, Coolidge: An American Enigma (1998), ISBN 0895264102.
  • White, William Allen, A Puritan in Babylon: The Story of Calvin Coolidge (1938), قالب:ASIN.
  • Wilson, Joan Hoff, Herbert Hoover, Forgotten Progressive (1975), ISBN 0316944165.

غيرهم

An academic conference on Coolidge was held July 30–31, 1998, at the John F. Kennedy Library to mark the 75th anniversary of his lantern-light homestead inaugural.

طالع أيضاً

وصلات خارجية

مناصب سياسية
سبقه
Grafton D. Cushing
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts
1916 - 1919
تبعه
Channing H. Cox
سبقه
Samuel W. McCall
Governor of Massachusetts
1919 – 1921
سبقه
Thomas R. Marshall
نائب رئيس الولايات المتحدة
March 4, 1921 – August 2, 1923¹
شاغر
اللقب حمله بعد ذلك
Charles G. Dawes
سبقه
Warren G. Harding
رئيس الولايات المتحدة
August 2, 1923² – March 4, 1929
تبعه
Herbert Hoover
مناصب حزبية
سبقه
Charles W. Fairbanks
Republican Party vice presidential candidate
1920
تبعه
Charles G. Dawes
سبقه
Warren G. Harding
Republican Party presidential candidate
1924
تبعه
Herbert Hoover