John Calvin Coolidge Sr. Explained

John Calvin Coolidge Sr.
Office1:Member of the Vermont Senate
from Windsor County
Term Start1:1910
Term End1:1912
Alongside1:
  • Edward A. Davis
  • Edward H. Edgerton
Predecessor1:
  • F. Thomas Kidder
  • Edward B. Flinn
  • Loyal E. Sherwin
Successor1:
  • Herbert H. Blanchard
  • David A. Elliott
  • Don C. Pollard
Office2:Member of the
Vermont House of Representatives
from Plymouth
Term Start2:1872
Term End2:1878
Predecessor2:Charles A. Scott
Successor2:Alonzo F. Hubbard
Office3:Justice of the Peace for Plymouth, Vermont
Term Start3:1880
Term End3:1900
Term Start4:1916
Term End4:1924
Office5:Member of the
Plymouth, Vermont Selectboard
Term Start5:1869
Term End5:1872
Allegiance:
Branch:Vermont Militia
Serviceyears:
  • 1860–1869
  • 1900–1902
Rank:Colonel
Commands:Company K, 10th Regiment
Birth Name:John Calvin Coolidge
Birth Date:31 March 1845
Birth Place:Plymouth, Vermont, U.S
Death Place:Plymouth, Vermont, U.S
Party:Republican
Spouses:
    Occupation:Businessman, Politician, Banker, Farmer
    Children:2, Including Calvin
    Relatives:John Coolidge (grandson)

    John Calvin Coolidge Sr. (March 31, 1845  - March 18, 1926) was an American politician and businessman from Vermont, and the father of Calvin Coolidge, the 30th president of the United States. The senior Coolidge administered the presidential oath of office to his son at their family homestead in the early morning hours of August 3, 1923, following the death of President Warren G. Harding.

    Born in Plymouth, Vermont, Coolidge was a farmer and store owner, and worked at a variety of other occupations, including banker and insurance broker. In addition, he was a veteran of the Vermont militia, and held the law enforcement posts of town constable and county deputy sheriff. A prominent local leader, he served in numerous Plymouth town offices, and was elected to terms in both the Vermont House of Representatives and Vermont Senate.

    Coolidge remained active in his farming and business interests until his death in Plymouth in 1926; he was buried in Plymouth Notch at a village cemetery where several generations of his family are also buried.

    Political and business career

    Coolidge was born in Plymouth, Vermont on March 31, 1845, the son of Calvin Galusha Coolidge and Sarah Coolidge. Calvin G. Coolidge was a farmer, and also served in the Vermont House of Representatives.[1] [2] [3] John Coolidge graduated from Black River Academy, and served in Vermont during the American Civil War as commander of the state militia's Company K, 10th Regiment with the rank of captain.

    Early in his life, Coolidge worked as a woodcutter and wheelwright. He was later active in several occupations; a partial list includes farmer, blacksmith, bricklayer, mason, carriage maker, harness maker, teacher, store owner, and insurance broker. In addition, he was a vice president of the Ludlow Savings Bank & Trust Company, and was appointed to its board of directors. Coolidge also served on the Black River Academy board of trustees.

    A Republican, Coolidge served in the Vermont House of Representatives from 1872 to 1878. He held local offices throughout his life, including town selectboard member, town meeting moderator, town agent, tax collector, road commissioner, school superintendent, justice of the peace, and notary public. For several years, he was Plymouth's assistant postmaster, with a long running joke in the town being that Coolidge held this position because he was the only person in Plymouth who knew how to complete the forms required when submitting the post office's annual report to the main office in Washington, DC. For nearly 40 years he was both a town constable and deputy sheriff of Windsor County.

    During the 1900 to 1902 governorship of William W. Stickney, who was related to the Coolidge family, John Coolidge served on his military staff as aide-de-camp with the rank of colonel.

    Coolidge served in the Vermont Senate from 1910 to 1912.[4] During his Senate term, Coolidge was chairman of the Committee on Land Taxes.

    Inaugurating his son

    See main article: First inauguration of Calvin Coolidge.

    Upon hearing the death of President Warren G. Harding the previous day, Coolidge, who was a Vermont justice of the peace and a notary public, administered the presidential oath of office to his son at the Coolidge Homestead in Plymouth Notch, Vermont, at about 2:30 a.m. on August 3, 1923.[5]

    Death

    John Calvin Coolidge Sr. died in Plymouth, Vermont on, thirteen days before his 81st birthday. He was buried at Plymouth Notch Cemetery.

    Family

    In 1868, Coolidge married Victoria Josephine Moor (born 1846). They were the parents of two children, son Calvin, and daughter Abigail (1875–1890). Victoria died in 1885, aged 39.

    Coolidge married Caroline Athelia Brown (1857 - 1920) on September 9, 1891.

    Sources

    Books

    . Claude Fuess . 1939 . Calvin Coolidge - The Man from Vermont . Andover, MA . Fuess Press . 6 . . 9781446549049 .

    Internet

    Newspapers

    Notes and References

    1. http://fairfieldfamily.com/records/census/xviiilxxx/html/jcvt.html Fairfield Family
    2. http://vermont-archives.org/notary/guide/pdf/NotaryGuide2011.pdf Vermont Notary Public
    3. http://vermonthistory.org/documents/findaid/coolidge.pdf Coolidge Family Papers 1802-1932-Vermont Historical Society
    4. https://web.archive.org/web/20110131195022/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,729059,00.html Death of Colonel John Coolidge, Time Magazine
    5. http://millercenter.org/academic/americanpresident/coolidge/essays/biography/2 Miller Center, American Presidents