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Happy Birthday President Coolidge

Posted: Wed Jul 04, 2012 8:04 pm
by Ad Orientem
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My favorite president was born 140 yrs ago today, July 4th 1872. Some facts about President Coolidge...

1. He was the last President to balance the budget every year while in office.
2. During his administration the top income tax rate fell to its lowest level in the history of the country up to the present day, at about 25%.
3. He paid down the national debt every year he was in office.
4. He cut spending in every department of the government during his administration.
5. Coolidge supported sound money and made sure the United States remained on a rigid gold standard. During his administration he encouraged, with only limited success, the European nations to return to a gold backed currency which they had abandoned during the Great War.
6. President Coolidge believed war was a monstrous and barbaric waste to which end he supported disarmament and the rather idealistic Kellog Briand Treaty that supposedly outlawed war.
7.  He was the last president who never learned how to drive a car. However he was sufficiently impressed with the Pierce Arrow touring car at the disposal of the President that when he left office he paid the US Government $900 for it. A new one would have cost at least $1200 but Coolidge pointed out that the car was "used" and refused to pay a dime more.
8. He was the last president who wrote all of his own speeches without an aid.
9. He intensely disliked telephones and refused to allow one in the oval office and generally refrained from using them as much as possible. He believed it was undignified for the President to communicate in such an impersonal manner and complained that you never knew who might be listening in.
10. Although he was in office during prohibition, he was privately opposed to coercion in personal habits. Nonetheless he felt duty bound to enforce the law of the land.
11. Coolidge was legendary for his economy not only with money, but also with his words. He was known as "Silent Cal" and was the butt of scores of jokes and amusing stories related to his tight wallet and lips not all of which were apocryphal.

Coolidge related the story about when he was a boy during the summer of 1880 he once asked his father for a penny after finishing his farm chores. His father asked him what he wanted the penny for and Coolidge responded that he wanted to buy a candy stick. His father shook his head sadly and explained that it was an election year and that it looked like the Democrats were going to win. If that happened it would mean hard times for the country and therefor he must learn to economize. Several months later the telegraph reported that Garfield and the Republicans had won the election. Cal then went to his father reminding him of their earlier conversation and "in view of such favorable intelligence I was able to secure the advance of the sum requested."

His wife Grace Coolidge told the story about how not long after they married a traveling salesman came to the door hawking a home medical guide. Impressed by the book Mrs. Coolidge bought it for the rather steep sum of $5.00 (about $100 in today's money). After a little bit Mrs. Coolidge became concerned about how her husband would react so she decided to just put the book on the shelf and see what came of it. And there it sat unremarked upon for years until one day she pulled it off the shelf to thumb through it and noticed a note penned in the flyleaf. There her husband had written "I find in this work no cure for a sucker."

One Sunday morning Cal went to church to hear a famous preacher. After he returned home he sat in his favorite chair and began to read the paper. His wife asked him if the preacher had been at church. Without moving his eyes from the paper he replied "yep." After a couple of minutes she asked him what was the subject of the sermon. Again not stirring from his paper Coolidge responded "sin." After a few more minutes Mrs. Coolidge asked "what did he have to say about it?" The President finally looked up from his paper in some evident exasperation and replied "he's against it."

Re: Happy Birthday President Coolidge

Posted: Wed Jul 04, 2012 9:08 pm
by AdamA
Have you ever read the fantastic novel "Seeing Calvin Coolidge in a Dream," by John Derbyshire?

http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0312156499

Wonderful book.

Re: Happy Birthday President Coolidge

Posted: Wed Jul 04, 2012 9:24 pm
by Ad Orientem
AdamA wrote: Have you ever read the fantastic novel "Seeing Calvin Coolidge in a Dream," by John Derbyshire?

http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0312156499

Wonderful book.
I have not read it, and indeed had not even heard of it. But it just went on my "to read" list.

Re: Happy Birthday President Coolidge

Posted: Thu Jul 05, 2012 7:42 am
by hoost
Ad,

Thanks for sharing. From what I know if him, which admittedly isn't all that much, I would say Calvin Coolidge is also my favorite President.  The story you shared about the Preacher/reading the paper reminds me a lot of something I would hear from my dad and my grandpa.  Is there a good biography of Coolidge?  I think I'd be interested in reading it.

Re: Happy Birthday President Coolidge

Posted: Thu Jul 05, 2012 7:59 am
by Lone Wolf
Thanks for posting!  Many of these facts I'd never heard.

President Coolidge was great.  Truly a different breed of politician than what you find today.

Re: Happy Birthday President Coolidge

Posted: Thu Jul 05, 2012 3:07 pm
by MediumTex
Coolidge appears to be a man who distinguished himself through what he didn't do, rather than through what he did do.

It's a rare politician who can hold power without the need to try it out from time to time just to see what it feels like.

Re: Happy Birthday President Coolidge

Posted: Thu Jul 05, 2012 5:12 pm
by Ad Orientem
MangoMan wrote:
Lone Wolf wrote: President Coolidge was great.  Truly a different breed of politician than what you find today.
Who among all of the current politicians, Democrat or Republican, would come closest in your opinion? Or put another way, if you could hand pick the next president, who would it be?
The only prominent politician I can think of who would be similar in outlook to Coolidge is Ron Paul. The others are all statists of varying types.

Re: Happy Birthday President Coolidge

Posted: Thu Jul 05, 2012 5:12 pm
by Pointedstick
MangoMan wrote: Who among all of the current politicians, Democrat or Republican, would come closest in your opinion? Or put another way, if you could hand pick the next president, who would it be?
I would somehow find the person who wanted it least, and give it to him/her. That's sort of how Coolidge got it himself, in fact. This is sort of the Lord Of The Rings school of thought where those most trustworthy with power are the ones who want it least.

Re: Happy Birthday President Coolidge

Posted: Thu Jul 05, 2012 9:47 pm
by Lone Wolf
Pointedstick wrote:
MangoMan wrote: Who among all of the current politicians, Democrat or Republican, would come closest in your opinion? Or put another way, if you could hand pick the next president, who would it be?
I would somehow find the person who wanted it least, and give it to him/her. That's sort of how Coolidge got it himself, in fact. This is sort of the Lord Of The Rings school of thought where those most trustworthy with power are the ones who want it least.
This is a good question and I agree with PointedStick's response.  The prototypical example of this is Cincinnatus, a man who was twice recruited to be dictator of Rome, each time relinquishing his powers as soon as the crisis had passed.  (He was literally pulled away from plowing his fields to do the job.)  You could see the Cincinnatus archetype replicated in the character of Maximus in the excellent early 2000's film Gladiator.

Looking more toward our own heroes, consider the example of George Washington, who gave up the job of commander-in-chief after the Revolutionary War was won.

Another interesting one to consider is Thomas Jefferson as outlined in this Slashdot piece:
Thomas Jefferson, the author of the Declaration of Independence, whose signing we celebrate today, was considered an expert in architecture, civil engineering, geography, mathematics, ethnology, anthropology, mechanics, and the sciences.
Overall, I like the idea of politicians that are great men/women first and pursue politics as a side job.  Our system no longer produces people like this as far as I can tell.

I think we could get pretty close to a Cincinnatus-like performance if we were to appoint Ron Paul as Chairman of the Federal Reserve.  :)

Re: Happy Birthday President Coolidge

Posted: Thu Jul 05, 2012 10:32 pm
by Ad Orientem
Someone was kind enough to email me another Coolidge story...
Coolidge was given some award by a local organization in his home state of Vermont. The object given as the symbol of the award was a ceremonial rake, of which the presenter gave a long-winded speech, explaining that the rake was made of oak, and how oak was symbolic of the finest virtues which Coolidge embodied- sturdy, strong, unbending, etc. Coolidge sat politely through this speech, received the award, and gave his one-word acceptance speech:

"Ash".

Re: Happy Birthday President Coolidge

Posted: Thu Jul 05, 2012 10:36 pm
by Ad Orientem
hoost wrote: Ad,

Thanks for sharing. From what I know if him, which admittedly isn't all that much, I would say Calvin Coolidge is also my favorite President.  The story you shared about the Preacher/reading the paper reminds me a lot of something I would hear from my dad and my grandpa.  Is there a good biography of Coolidge?  I think I'd be interested in reading it.
Hoost
Amazon has quite a few listed. I have only read a couple. Some of these look interesting.
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_i_ ... ooks%2C444

Re: Happy Birthday President Coolidge

Posted: Thu Jul 05, 2012 11:05 pm
by Ad Orientem
The first film of a President with sound. Coolidge makes a short speech.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5puwTrLR ... re=related

Audio recording of President Coolidge explaining his political philosophy.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=skEkhdQJ ... re=related

Re: Happy Birthday President Coolidge

Posted: Fri Jul 06, 2012 2:13 am
by smurff
Pointedstick wrote: I would somehow find the person who wanted it least, and give it to him/her. That's sort of how Coolidge got it himself, in fact. This is sort of the Lord Of The Rings school of thought where those most trustworthy with power are the ones who want it least.
Sounds like New Jersey Governor Chris Christie. :D

Re: Happy Birthday President Coolidge

Posted: Thu Jul 04, 2013 2:06 am
by Ad Orientem
Yep, it's my favorite president's birthday again.

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Re: Happy Birthday President Coolidge

Posted: Thu Jul 04, 2013 6:37 am
by WildAboutHarry
One of his campaign slogans seemed to fit the man:

"Keep Cool with Coolidge"

Re: Happy Birthday President Coolidge

Posted: Fri Jul 03, 2015 11:31 pm
by Ad Orientem
My favorite secular holiday has come around again...