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This was the campaign slogan used by Calvin Coolidge during his successful presidential campaign in 1924. The president and the press continued to use it, referring to Coolidge's steady but laid-back leadership style.
President Coolidge was respectable and stable. These were two of his strengths. This enabled him to clean up the corruption of the former administration.
Calvin Coolidge died unexpectedly on January 5, 1933 in Massachusetts. He suffered from coronary thrombosis for some years.
I have found a Calvin Coolidge coin of some type. Has picture of Coolidge and brief bio on the back of coin. Any idea what this coin is and when it was made? WHAT IT WORTH
•During dinner, a woman sitting next to Calvin Coolidge had retorted, "Mr. Coolidge, I've made a bet against a fellow who said it was impossible to get more than two words out of you." Coolidge, replied without even looking at her, "You lose."
Some websites have reported that Calvin Coolidge slept 10-11 hours a day. But actually, he got a "normal" 7-8 hours of sleep a night, and then took a nap at some point during his day, often after lunch.
Chester Alan Arthur and Calvin Coolidge were born in Vermont. Arthur was born so close to the Canadian border that some people said that he could not be president because he was born in a foreign country.
"the business of America is business"Calvin Coolidge 1925
The exact facts surrounding the first President to start the White House Christmas tree tradition are disputed. Some sources say it was President Franklin Pierce in either 1853 or 1856. Some sources say it was President Benjamin Harrison in 1888, 1889 or 1891. Since 1961 the theme of the decorations on the Christmas tree has been decided by the First Lady of the United States.
No- that's why Barack Obama made African American history by being the first president with some African ancestors.
He went back to his home in Northampton, Mass where he wrote his autobiography, a newspaper column and some magazine articles. He was in poor health and died less than four years after he left office.
Calvin Coolidge, Woodrow Wilson, Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt, Warren G. Harding