On the Great Need of American Citizenship

President Coolidge, half-length portrait, standing, facing slightly left, speaking at graduation exercises at Howard University 6-6-1924

“We are not all permitted the privilege of a university training. We can not all enter the professions. What is the great need of American citizenship? To my mind it is this, that each should take up the burden where he is. ‘Do the day’s work,’ I have said, and it should be done in the remembrance that all work is dignified. Your race is entitled to great praise for the contribution it makes in doing the work of the world.

“There will be other crises in the national history which will make other demands for the fullest and most unselfish contribution to the national interest. No generation will be denied its opportunity, will be spared its duty, to put forth its best efforts. We devoutly hope that these contributions will not be demanded upon the field of battle. But they will be just as truly needed, just as urgently summoned, in the activities of peace, the efforts of industry, the performance of all the obligations of citizenship. We can not go out from this place and occasion without refreshment of faith and renewal of confidence that in every exigency our Negro fellow citizens will render the best and fullest measure of service whereof they are capable…” — President Calvin Coolidge, June 6, 1924.

Snapshots from Howard University in the 1920s and some of the graduating class of 1924, whom Coolidge addressed.

At Tuskegee the previous year…

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Gathering at the dedication of the hospital for veterans at Tuskegee, 1923. Then-Vice President Coolidge stands center above the flag to the right, to his left is Dr. Robert R. Moton, President of Tuskegee. Photo courtesy of Dan T. Williams, Archivist at Tuskegee University.

“Those who stir up animosities, those who create any kind of hatred and enmity are not ministering to the public welfare. We have come out of the war with a desire and a determination to live at peace with all the world. Out of a common suffering and a common sacrifice there came a new meaning to our common citizenship. Our greatest need is to live in harmony, in friendship, and in good-will, not seeking an advantage over each other but all trying to serve each other. In that spirit let us dedicate this hospital and dedicate ourselves to the service of our country.” — Vice President Coolidge, February 12, 1923, at the dedication ceremonies of the Veterans’ Hospital, Tuskegee.

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Tuskegee President, Dr. Robert Russa Moton

The dedication came at the high tide of a conflict between local, state and federal officials – black and white – over who would staff the Hospital. Some wanted the positions held for whites, others fought for keeping the staff entirely operated and provided for by black doctors, nurses, and support staff. It was a sharply contentious question and the Harding-Coolidge administration prevailed on the side of Dr. Moton making U.S. Veteran’s Hospital No. 91 the first institution staffed entirely by black personnel serving black veterans still dealing with combat injuries from the First World War. For Coolidge, this was no benign appearance on his part. He was walking into a lion’s den. It was an incendiary situation and he took full advantage of the opportunity to drive home the point of our shared obligation to one another.

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Photo credit: Calvin Coolidge: From a Green Mountain Farm to the White House by M. E. Hennessy, 1924.

Here is the old Tuskegee chapel designed by MIT-trained architect Robert R. Taylor, where the Hospital dedication ceremonies took place.

C-Span on First Lady Grace Coolidge

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Portrait of Grace Coolidge (and Rob Roy) by Howard Chandler Christy, 1924.

Taking place in the summer of 1999, soon after the first major symposium on Coolidge (Calvin Coolidge: Examining the Evidence) at the JFK Library the previous year, is this gem of a tribute to First Lady Mrs. Coolidge brought together by the Coolidge family, Clarke School, Smith College, Forbes Library, and the Coolidge Foundation.

It requires a practiced ear to hear what the Coolidge’s oldest son, John, recounts of his parents but this commemoration is well worth watching. Enjoy!

C-Span Panel: First Lady Grace Coolidge

On God’s Acre

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Arthur Whitcomb, Marine Corps bugler, played taps both for President Wilson’s funeral at the National Cathedral and for Calvin Coolidge, Jr., at Plymouth Notch, both in 1924.

Calvin Coolidge Jr., who died on July 7, 1924, was laid to rest in the family plot beside the places already selected for his parents and among his ancestors at Plymouth Notch.

His mother, Grace Coolidge, wrote to a friend shortly afterward:

“It is a beautiful spot and it was lovely the day we left little Calvin there…Before our train got to Ludlow there had been a thunderstorm shower which laid the dust and made everything green. As we stood beside the grave the sun was shining, throwing long slanting shadows and the birds were singing their sleepy songs. Truly, it seemed to me God’s Acre. There was a prayer, a few passages of scripture and two hymns, and the Mercersburg hymn which I have seen Calvin sing with the other boys at school and I could seem to hear and see him there. ‘Taps’ never sounded as it did there, echoing and reechoing from mountain to mountain. I came away with a ‘peace which passeth understanding,’ comforted and full of courage…”

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The Mercersburg Hymn, arranged by F. H. Foster, Jr.

High tower above us her pillars,

In majesty crowning the hill;

She has faced the wild storm waves of years,

And bravely she faces them still.

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Come, Mercersburg’s sons, and we’ll praise her;

The world will we tell of her fame,

Till down the long train of the ages,

Shall echo old Mercersburg’s name.

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This world sweeping mightily onward,

Will whiten our heads with its years;

But ever we’ll meet Alma Mater,

With full hearts and loud swelling cheers.

 

Requiescat in pace, dear Calvin!

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