President Coolidge was respectable and stable. These were two of his strengths. This enabled him to clean up the corruption of the former administration.
well im sure he was awesome in bed. ;D
Calvin Coolidge was the 30th president of the United States. He was conservative and believed in a small government, which had little say in what businesses did. So, in short, the way Coolidge felt about government regulation of business activity, is that he didn't like it, and he didn't believe in it.
some may think Theodore roosevelt was a bad president and some may think he was a good president it just matters who thinks he was a bad or good president.
because he was no good a president
He grew up Catholic. He recognized the idolatry. He called the Pope anti-Christ. He wrote the Institutes. In addition to the above first answer, listed below are more specific views of John Calvin and Catholicism: * As like Luther, Calvin believed that the Bible was the final authority on Christianity, not Papal Authorities; * Calvin formulated the doctrine of "Predestination"'; and * Calvin denied the Catholic position that only good works can enable a person's salvation. In addition, Calvin was instrumental in spreading Protestantism throughout Europe.
trade and sailing
good
yes, was against an active government and he wasn't a good president but, a lot of good things happened while he was president
He was the vice president when President Harding died on August 3, 1923. He was re-elected in 1924 to a full term of his own.
good
Calvin Coolidge. His main policy was "do as little as possible." (John) Calvin Coolidge (1872 - 1933), was a former anti-labor governor of Massachusetts. He was elected as Harding's vice-president and became president upon Harding's death in 1923. He was elected in his own right the following year and served until 1929.
Calvin Coolidge was a insignificant president who didn't really accomplish anything there are almost no sources or facts about him and he was extremely lazy because he let his cabinet members do most of his work.
Coolidge was honest and was a effective administrator as governor. He attracted attention for his work in the national Republican party and so was nominated for vice-president. When he became president, he cleaned up the corruption left by Harding, times were good and Coolidge was charming in a quiet, unobtrusive way.
Yes, he was generally popular. He won 58% of the vote in 1924 and his Republican successor did the same in 1928. Times were good and Coolidge was an honest man.
I am not sure what you want to know and what period of his life you are asking about. By the time he was President, cars were common. Horses were being phased out. There was a good passenger rail system. Cities had street cars and subways and gasoline buses.
President Calvin Coolidge presided over a period of time (the mid-1920s) when America was prosperous and at peace. His pro-business policies were welcomed by corporations. He was also the first president to use radio on a regular basis, and while he did not have a great radio voice, he seemed to enjoy being on the air, especially when campaigning. It is difficult to say he was a great president, but he certainly was a good president: he took over after the sudden death of President Harding, stabilized the country, and kept America moving forward during his time in office.
The economy was booming and times seemed good to most people. In actual fact, unsafe banking practices were going on and conditions were on the verge of a terrible world-wide depression.
To the best of my knowledge - yes. This action kept the American people involved and hopeful throughout the depression. Actually, it was Franklin Roosevelt (FDR), not Theodore, who was president during the depression. He was the originator of "fireside chats" where he spoke to the nation regularly about the state of the country. He also read them the funny papers. On December 6, 1923, President Coolidge was the first president to have his inauguration heard on the radio and the first president to make a radio broadcast. The first presidential political speech on the radio originated from New York City and was broadcast on 5 radio stations. An audience estimated to be about 5 million people listened in to hear Coolidge speak. In Life and Time of Warren G. Harding: Our After-War President, historian Joe Mitchell Chapple provides a transcript of a Coolidge White House radio address from December 10, 1923. In this speech, which was broadcast nationally from the White House study, Coolidge eulogized his predecessor, Warren G. Harding, who had died the previous August. rosevelt was a not so good brodcasrter