The city of Anchorage thanked him for his work by presenting him the golden spike. He sent it back from Seattle for the ...
This image provided by Christie's Images shows a golden spike driven by President Warren G. Harding in Nenana, Alaska, just days before he died in office, which marked the completion of the Alaska ...
In this July 1923 image provided by the Alaska Railroad Collection, Anchorage Museum, President Warren G. Harding stands with others on the Alaska Railroad platform at Curry Hotel station in ...
"Dumbifying" Ohio's world class college and universities with anti-intellectual rules is not the way to improve higher ed. It will stifle it.
Two such occasions followed the deaths of presidents. When Warren G. Harding, the 29th president, died of an illness in San Francisco on Aug. 2, 1923, Vice President Calvin Coolidge was on ...
Calvin Coolidge, in his 1929 autobiography, also claims he didn’t use his family Bible when he was sworn in at his family’s Vermont home in the wake of Warren G. Harding’s death.
From historic Bibles to the leading role of the country's chief justice, Inauguration Day has been filled with traditions.
Two such occasions followed the deaths of presidents. When Warren G. Harding, the 29th president, died of an illness in San Francisco on Aug. 2, 1923, Vice President Calvin Coolidge was on ...
President-elect Donald Trump's will be sworn in under the Capitol Rotunda, rather than outside. But he's not the only president inaugurated in an unusual location.
After President Warren G. Harding's unexpected August 1923 death ... was held on a bitterly cold day and he delivered the longest speech to date — and he died one month later of pneumonia.
14, 1901 at the Ansley Wilcox residence in Buffalo. After President Warren G. Harding's unexpected August 1923 death following an apparent heart attack, President Calvin Coolidge was sworn in at the ...
The backstory: According to the White House Historical Association, Calvin Coolidge’s inauguration and subsequent speech was the ... election between Warren G. Harding and James Cox.