biography
| name: |
Harding, Warren G(amaliel)
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| sex:
| male
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| lived:
| (1865–1923)
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| biography:
| US statesman and 29th president (1921–3), born in Corsica (now Blooming Grove), Ohio, USA. After three years at Ohio Central College, he went to work for a Marion, OH newspaper, then bought the Marion Star (1884). As its editor he became prominent in the local Republican party, and served two terms in the state senate (1899–1903) and one term as lieutenant-governor (1903–5). Known mainly for his old-fashioned oratory and his genial compliance with the Republican machine, he was elected to a term in the US Senate (1915–21), where his record was distinguished only by his adherence to conservative Republican policies. Back-room politics, engineered by his longtime Ohio mentor, Harry M Daughtery, secured him the presidential nomination, and a confusing campaign gained him a victory in November 1920. Having promised war-weary Americans a ‘return to normalcy’, he proved as lax and shallow as his previous record indicated. Although not personally corrupt, he allowed corruption to permeate his administration, leaving most initiatives to Congress and his cabinet while he played poker with his ‘Ohio gang’ in the White House. As a Senate investigation into what proved to be the Teapot Dome scandal began, he went on a tour to Alaska, where he received a coded message informing him of the corruption about to be exposed. En route home, in San Francisco, he became mysteriously ill, allegedly from food poisoning, and suddenly died. The best that historians have been able to say of Harding as president is that he was a man who was in over his head. |
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