He is the only one of our presidents to have been born on the
Fourth of July (1872 to be exact). Calvin Coolidge, the 30th of our
43 presidents was deeply patriotic and revered the basic
institutions of the nation, but he did not wear any of this on his
sleeve. Of the Stars and Stripes, he once said, “He who lives under
it and is loyal to it is loyal to truth and justice everywhere.”
That summarized his thoughts completely.
He was dubbed “Silent Cal,” for he was anything but loquacious.
When he did speak out or write, however, he was pithy or eloquent,
as the situation demanded. He used language with precision and
wasted no words. During the Boston police strike in 1919 he was
Governor of Massachusetts and came right to the point: “There is no
right to strike against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, any
time.”
Coolidges’s speeches and writings were often eloquent in their
simplicity. About the celebration of the nation’s Independence Day,
he wrote of its long-term significance in a July 3, 1930 newspaper
column, “Since 1776 we have been politically an independent nation,
but we do not need to emphasize our independence any more than we
need to emphasize our selfishness. We are in no danger of failing
to provide a very complete supply of both of them.”
Instead, he wrote, “Our greatness will (be) in a more adequate
recognition of our dependence.… On the economic, social and moral
side of life we are all dependent.… We grow in grace through
intercourse with our fellow men. We build our character
largely by meeting our obligations to others. We all live in the
same world. We are bound to a common destiny through a common
brotherhood. The path to glory does not lie in a sordid
individualism, a perverted independence or a narrow nationalism. It
lies toward the Golden Rule. The independence which the Fathers won
by declaring their reliance on Providence and pledging their lives,
their fortunes and their sacred honor, not to themselves, but to
each other, we cannot keep on any inferior
commitment.”
Mr. Hannaford is the author of The Quotable
Calvin Coolidge (Images From the Past, Inc.).
Stormzeye| 7.3.12 @ 7:53AM
Coolidge was a truly great conservative worthy of study and, though originally from Vermont, probably the last great public figure to come out of Massachusetts.
Moe Blotz| 7.3.12 @ 8:30AM
The state's name should be shortened to Machusetts, since the people there sent their ass to Washington.
Brookschwarzenegro | 7.3.12 @ 3:21PM
But you'll vote for Romney- politics makes strange bedfellows.
Moe Blotz| 7.3.12 @ 8:23PM
Who the (@*#&$)(}]! are you to tell me for whom I will cast a vote? I challenge you to deny that for the past fifty years my statement above could not be true.
OP4| 7.3.12 @ 9:07AM
The finest President of the 20th century. Coolidge is the model of what a conservative should be.
loulou| 7.3.12 @ 12:53PM
I agree.
Coolidge is up there with George Washington.
Brookschwarzenegro | 7.3.12 @ 3:23PM
"He who lives under it and is loyal to it is loyal to truth and justice everywhere."
Doesn't work in foreign policy: there is no genuine international law, hence no truth and justice.
Skippy| 7.3.12 @ 4:54PM
Still a dickhead I see.
RJ| 7.3.12 @ 10:08AM
I have been anxiously waiting for Amity Shlaes' biography on John Calvin Coolidge. It was scheduled for delivery in late June, but I understand there has been a delay. I hope it is not too long.
Hardcard| 7.3.12 @ 11:26AM
WHAT HAVE WE DONE TO OURSELVES AND OUR COUNTRY? WE NEED A NEW BIRTH IN THIS GREAT COUNTRY!!!!
Audax| 7.4.12 @ 6:59AM
My favorite Silent Cal story is at a White House reception, the matron sitting next to Silent Cal said, "Oh Mr. President I bet all my friends I could get more than 3 words out of you tonight"! President Coolidge turns to her and says: "You lose."