A hundred years ago, Coolidge told the intellectuals they had missed the point of their own country. He was right.

A hundred years ago, Coolidge told the intellectuals they had missed the point of their own country. He was right.


George Will has called it “one of the half-dozen best speeches ever given by an American president.” Calvin Coolidge gave it in Philadelphia on a Monday, to a crowd of 35,000, in a voice one reporter described as “as unemotional as Fate.”

Calvin Coolidge holds a unique distinction. He is the only U.S. president born on the Fourth of July. But the year in question, his birthday landed on a Sunday — and for Coolidge, a Calvinist, that meant church came first. He and his family attended services at Washington’s First Congregational Church, then spent the evening at home over a quiet dinner. The big Philadelphia commemoration would simply have to wait until Monday.

‘About the Declaration, there is a finality that is exceedingly restful.’

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