
Others have blamed him in part for the depression because he did nothing to avert it and pursued policies that made it inevitable. Some critics have argued he decided not to do so because he saw what was coming. Coolidge was entitled to stand for a second term of office in 1928. He served one term in his own right from 1924 to 1928, and departed the stage before the Wall Street Crash of October 1929 and concomitant depression. The man who achieved this back-handed compliment took over as president on the death of Warren Harding, in 1923.

‘Calvin Coolidge believed the least government was the best government he aspired to become the least president the country had ever had he attained that desire’ (Irving Stone).
