Warren Harding
The Life of Warren Harding
Teapot Dome. Those two words seem to represent the lasting legacy of the nation’s 29th President, Warren Harding, and they connote a legacy of scandal. And while there was some malfeasance in and around the Harding administration, there was so much more to this man’s life and political career. Warren Harding won a landslide victory to become his nation’s leader in 1920. The American people widely embraced his “Return to Normalcy” campaign as an antidote to the visionary efforts yet ultimate failures of his predecessor, Woodrow Wilson. Harding remained popular throughout his 2½ years in office, persevering through challenging economic times before the U.S. economy began to soar. His international disarmament conference yielded landmark agreements among the major powers of the earth, earning high praise for the American executive. Harding died unexpectedly while on a goodwill tour of the American West. As the nation mourned, many assumed that Harding would be fondly remembered by posterity. That would not be the case.
There was an undercurrent of corruption that ran through Washington, D.C. during Harding’s tenure in office. Those rumors became front-page news in the immediate aftermath of Harding’s death with a series of highly publicized congressional hearings and court cases. Flamboyant characters took the witness stand offering wild tales of pervasive graft that reached into the President’s Cabinet. Charges were levied against members of the so-called “Ohio Gang,” which primarily consisted of Harding cronies who weren’t government officials but were portrayed as coming to Washington to peddle influence to anyone with sufficient cash. While some truth could be found in these troubling tales, much of the damning testimony was exaggerated, some was outright fabricated, and none directly implicated Harding in any corrupt act. Nevertheless, the sensational accounts found the headlines and into the psyche of the American people.
And then there were the affairs. Harding had two long-term extramarital dalliances that also became very public after his death. One was the subject of a highly detailed tell-all memoir from Nan Britton, the young woman who claimed to be the father of Harding’s only child. … Over the ensuing decades, more details would emerge, including the often lurid letters Harding had written to the other object of his affections, one Carrie Phillips. Those letters were finally released to the public in 2015, around the same time that DNA evidence pointed directly to Harding as the father of Nan Britton’s child. Warren Harding has been dead for 100 years, but had rarely rested in peace. …
The goodwill that Warren Harding generated through a lifetime of good works, including some noteworthy accomplishments as his nation’s President, quickly got washed out of his story in favor of the scandals. The full story is certainly more nuanced than that, and deserves to be told.
Volume VI: Progressivism and Prosperity
Full Volume
The sixth volume of Presidential Chronicles tells the life stories of the following four American Presidents who shepherded their country through a dynamic period of change and growth:
William Taft
Woodrow Wilson
Warren Harding
Calvin Coolidge
As Theodore Roosevelt passed the torch to his successors, the dynamic spirit of progressivism continued to reign supreme, bringing increased reforms that sought to utilize the authority of the Federal government to directly enhance the lives of the American people. These changes corresponded to a rise in international prominence that eventually witnessed the impact of American might in helping to conclude the devastation of World War I. In the wake of that victory, many Americans turned inward, rejecting participation in Woodrow Wilson’s vision of a League of Nations that they viewed as an infringement on American sovereignty. Instead, they embraced Warren Harding’s pitch for a “Return to Normalcy,” that was dominated by an “America First” agenda. Harding and his successor Calvin Coolidge cut taxes, reduced spending, paid down the debt, curtailed immigration, and pursued policies that led to the greatest decade of prosperity in American history. As told in Progressivism and Prosperity, the Twenties did indeed “Roar” for the American people, before giving way to an unprecedented economic crash as these Presidents passed the torch to the next batch of American leaders.
The Life of Warren Harding
Video
The following Harding videos have been released (10 of 10)
Harding #1: A Young Man Buys a Newspaper (1865-1895)
Harding #2: From the Paper to Politics (1895-1914)
Harding #3: Senator Harding (1912-1920)
Harding #4: Dark Horse from Ohio (1919-1920)
Harding #5: Return to Normalcy (1920-1921)
Harding #6: Disarmament (1921-1922)
Harding #7: Second Year Challenges (1922)
Harding #8: Alaska and Untimely Death (1923)
Harding #9: Teapot Dome (1921-1931)
Harding #10: Mistresses (1905-1923)