Coolidge and the Historians<br>Thomas B. Silver
It is hardly an exaggeration to say that Calvin Coolidge, the 30th President of the United States, has no academic defenders. He is almost universally regarded by historians as a fit object for denunciation and ridicule.
According to the conventional view, Coolidgeâs decade in national politics was bracketed by two crisesâthe Boston police strike and the Great Depressionâ which resulted in part from his weak and evasive political leadership. In between, it is said, Coolidge presided over a time of national peace and prosperity, during which business and the wealthy profited at the expense of farmers, labor, and other underprivileged groups. Coolidge approved of this state of affairs: he was a willing and enthusiastic tool of the business interests.
This book examines several of the major crises and battles in which Coolidge was involved during the years 1919-1929, as seen through the eyes of prominent historians of the period. Author Thomas B. Silver concludes that these historians have ignored or distorted Coolidgeâs speeches and deeds and have thereby created a one-eyed view of him, and of the 1920s, for students of American history.
Silverâs critique of the standard interpretation of the New Era clears the way for the writing of a new history to offer a full and balanced account of the Coolidge administration in place of the narrowly partisan accounts that have dominated modern historiography.Â
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Praise for Coolidge and the Historians
âCoolidge and the Historians . . . is one of those books that will, in the course of a generationâs slow circulation and dissemination, utterly change the way Americans view their history, and hence the way they view themselves.â âCharles R. Kesler, National Review
âCoolidge and the Historians is not only enlightening. It is also entertaining. Mr. Silverâs prose style is elegant and graceful. Trained as a political philosopher, he brings insights to the study of Mr. Coolidgeâs presidential statesmanship that go beyond the usual.ââMackubin T. Owens, The Washington Times
âThis is the volume that turned Americaâs eyes to a forgotten president. Through accurate and precise scholarship, Silver showed just how wrong the old evaluation of Coolidge was. In the process, Silver also demonstrated the power of a substantive rebuttalâto change minds, and to change history. Coolidge and the Historians is must reading for anyone interested in Calvin Coolidge.ââAmity Shlaes, Author, Coolidge

Description
It is hardly an exaggeration to say that Calvin Coolidge, the 30th President of the United States, has no academic defenders. He is almost universally regarded by historians as a fit object for denunciation and ridicule.
According to the conventional view, Coolidgeâs decade in national politics was bracketed by two crisesâthe Boston police strike and the Great Depressionâ which resulted in part from his weak and evasive political leadership. In between, it is said, Coolidge presided over a time of national peace and prosperity, during which business and the wealthy profited at the expense of farmers, labor, and other underprivileged groups. Coolidge approved of this state of affairs: he was a willing and enthusiastic tool of the business interests.
This book examines several of the major crises and battles in which Coolidge was involved during the years 1919-1929, as seen through the eyes of prominent historians of the period. Author Thomas B. Silver concludes that these historians have ignored or distorted Coolidgeâs speeches and deeds and have thereby created a one-eyed view of him, and of the 1920s, for students of American history.
Silverâs critique of the standard interpretation of the New Era clears the way for the writing of a new history to offer a full and balanced account of the Coolidge administration in place of the narrowly partisan accounts that have dominated modern historiography.Â
---
Praise for Coolidge and the Historians
âCoolidge and the Historians . . . is one of those books that will, in the course of a generationâs slow circulation and dissemination, utterly change the way Americans view their history, and hence the way they view themselves.â âCharles R. Kesler, National Review
âCoolidge and the Historians is not only enlightening. It is also entertaining. Mr. Silverâs prose style is elegant and graceful. Trained as a political philosopher, he brings insights to the study of Mr. Coolidgeâs presidential statesmanship that go beyond the usual.ââMackubin T. Owens, The Washington Times
âThis is the volume that turned Americaâs eyes to a forgotten president. Through accurate and precise scholarship, Silver showed just how wrong the old evaluation of Coolidge was. In the process, Silver also demonstrated the power of a substantive rebuttalâto change minds, and to change history. Coolidge and the Historians is must reading for anyone interested in Calvin Coolidge.ââAmity Shlaes, Author, Coolidge






















