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1872

July 4

John Calvin Coolidge is born in Plymouth Notch, Vermont.

1875

April 15

Calvin's sister, Abbie, is born.

1877

September

Calvin starts school.

1885

March 14

Victoria Josephine Moor Coolidge, Calvin's mother, dies at age 39.

1890

March 6

Abigail G. Coolidge, Calvin's sister, dies at age 14.

May 23

Graduates from Black River Academy, Ludlow, Vermont. Secretary of Class. Gives speech entitled "Oratory in History."

1891

August 19

Attends centennial celebration of Vermont's statehood featuring dedication of the Bennington Battle Monument; hears President Benjamin Harrison deliver an address.

September 9

Col. John Coolidge marries Carrie Brown Coolidge. Prepares at St. Johnsbury Prep School.

September 17

Calvin begins Amherst College,Amherst, Massachusetts.

1895

June 26

Graduates cum laude from Amherst College. Classmates vote for Calvin to give the "Grove Oration," a humorous address. Calvin Coolidge drops 'John' from his name (although he continues to sign letters to his father 'J. Calvin Coolidge' as late as January 10, 1896) In his Senior year, Calvin entered an essay contest sponsored by The Sons of the American Revolution, it was open to all seniors of all the colleges of the nation. He won the first prize — a gold medal worth about one hundred and fifty dollars.

September 23

Begins to read law with the firm of Hammond and Field in Northampton, Massachusetts.

December 13

Coolidge wins gold medal from Sons of the American Revolution in a National Essay Competition for "The Principles Fought For in the American Revolution."

1895 – 1897

 

Studies Law in Northampton, Massachusetts.

1897

July 2

Gains entrance to the bar in Northampton, and later is appointed Republican City Committee from Ward 2.

1898

 

Opens his law office.

December 6

Appointed City Councilman from Ward 2.

1900

January 18

Elected (by City Council) City Solicitor.

October 14

The father of Calvin, John C. Coolidge, is commissioned Aide-de-camp on the staff of Vermont Governor William W. Stickney with the rank of Col.

1901

January 17

Reelected City Solicitor.

1902

January 16

Defeated for City Solicitor by Theobald M. Connor.

1903

June 4

Appointed Clerk of Courts of Hampshire County.

1904

 

Chairman, Republican City Committee, Northampton. Meets Grace Anna Goodhue.

1905

October 4

Marries Grace Anne Goodhue at Burlington, Vermont.

December 5

Defeated for School Committeeman by John J. Kennedy.

1906

August

Rents half of the double house at 21 Massasoit Street, Northampton, MA.

September 7

Birth of John Coolidge, first child.

November 6

Elected Representative to the Massachusetts General Court.

1907

November 5

Reelected Representative.

1908

April 13

Birth of Calvin Coolidge, Jr., second child

1909

December 7

Elected mayor of Northampton, beginning a continuous course of public service to March 4, 1929.

1910

December 6

Reelected Mayor.

1911

November 7

Elected State Senator.

1912

November 5

Reelected State Senator.

1913

November 4

Reelected State Senator, and subsequently elected President of the Senate by the Senators. First Senate President Acceptance Speech

1914

January 7

Delivers "Have Faith in Massachusetts" Address to the Massachusetts Senate.

November 3

Reelected State Senator and President of the Senate.

1915

May 12

Sixty-five Amherst alumni meet at the Algonquin Club in Boston, Massachusetts for a dinner organized by Frank Waterman Stearns honoring fellow alumnus, Senator Calvin Coolidge.

November 2

Elected Lieutenant-Governor of Massachusetts.

1916

November 7

Reelected Lieutenant-Governor.

1917

November 6

 Reelected Lieutenant-Governor.

1918

August 7

Coolidge on World War I

September 14

Coolidge on World War I

November 2

Coolidge on World War I

November 4

Coolidge on World War I

November 5

Elected Governor of Massachusetts at the age of 47.

1919

January 2

First Inaugural Speech as Governor of Massachusetts: reflections on W.W.I.

September 9-11

Boston Police Strike. Governor Coolidge comes to national attention because of his stand for law and order. In a telegram to Samuel Gompers, President of the American Federation of Labor, he declares: "There is no right to strike against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, anytime."

November 4

Reelected Governor.

1920

January 8

Address to the General Court beginning the 2nd year as Governor of Massachusetts.

June 12

Nominated for Vice-president by the Republican National Convention meeting in Chicago. Warren G. Harding, US Senator from Ohio, is the Republican candidate for the Presidency.

November 2

Elected Vice-president of the United States.

1921

March 4

Warren G. Harding inaugurated as President, Calvin Coolidge as Vice-president, of the United States. Inaugural Address

May 28

Elected life trustee of Amherst College Tuskeegee dedication.

1923

August 3

Upon news of President Harding's death in San Francisco at 7:30p.m. on August 2 Calvin Coolidge is sworn in as President by his father, a notary public, in the homestead at Plymouth, Vermont at 2:47 a.m.

December 6

Legislation proposals in address to Congress.

1924

 

Coolidge appoints special legal council to investigate scandals such as the "Teapot Dome."

June 2

Coolidge signs bill making Indians citizens of the United States.

June 12

Nominated for President by Marion L. Burton, former President of Smith College at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland. Charles G. Dawes, of Illinois, nominated for Vice-president

July 7

Calvin Coolidge, Jr., second son, dies at Walter Reed Hospital from blood poisoning.

November 4

Elected President of the United States in his own right. Coolidge and the KKK

1925

March 4

Inauguration as President. Foreign policy and his relationship with the press

1926

March 18

Colonel John Coolidge dies.

December 7

Fourth annual message to Congress

1927

 

Farm policy

June 11

Meets with Lindbergh and awards Distinguished Flying Cross.

August 2

From summer White House at Rapid City, South Dakota, issues statement, "I do not choose to run for President in nineteen twenty-eight."

August 10

Dedicates work on Mt. Rushmore.

1928

January 16

Gives address at Sixth Annual International Conference of American States in Havana, Cuba. (This, and 1905 October honeymoon in Montreal are the only times Calvin Coolidge leaves the United States.)

August 27

Signs the Pact of Paris, the Kellogg-Briand Pact, considered at the time a significant forward step in international relations. Under it 62 nations renounce war as a means of international policy. The pact is ratified by the US Senate and signed by President Coolidge January 17, 1929. Legacy

1929

March 4

After attending the Inauguration of Herbert Hoover as President, Mr. and Mrs. Coolidge return to live at 21 Massasoit Street, Northampton, MA.

May

The Autobiography of Calvin Coolidge is published.

1930

March 4

Ex-President Coolidge dedicates Coolidge Dam, near Globe, Arizona.

May 17

The Coolidges move to The Beeches on Hampton Terrace, Northampton, MA.

1933

January 5

Calvin Coolidge dies at age 60 in Northampton home from a coronary thrombosis.

1936

April 17

The Northampton City Council appropriates funds to purchase exhibit and book cases, establishing at Forbes Library the first memorial to Calvin Coolidge.

1939

October 12

Calvin Coolidge Memorial Bridge, linking Northampton, MA and Hadley, MA is dedicated. US Senator David I. Walsh gives the principal address and Governor Leverett Saltonstall is the ranking Commonwealth official.

1956

June 16

Mr. and Mrs. John Coolidge give Coolidge Homestead in Plymouth, Vermont, to State of Vermont as a state shrine. It opens to the public in July 1957.

1957

July 8

Mrs. Calvin Coolidge dies in Northampton, MA at age 78. Born, Burlington, Vermont, January 3, 1879

1960

 

The Calvin Coolidge Memorial Foundation is established.

1968

August

Coolidge birthplace, general store and post office at Plymouth, Vermont, is acquired by State of Vermont to be restored.

1971

August

Ground broken for Coolidge Memorial Reception Center and Museum, Plymouth, Vermont.

1972

July 4

Centennial of Coolidge's birth celebrated in Plymouth, Vermont.

1996

 

John Coolidge turns 90, makes his part time residence in Plymouth, Vermont his full time residence.

1998

July 30-31

Two-day conference "Calvin Coolidge: Examining the Evidence" at the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Presidential Library in Boston, Massachusetts.

August 2-3

75th Homestead Inaugural reenactment and celebration at Plymouth Notch, Vermont.

2000

May 31

John Coolidge, son of Calvin and Grace Coolidge, dies at age 93

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