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The Presidency of Herbert C. Hoover
 
 
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The Presidency of Herbert C. Hoover [Hardcover]

Martin L. Fausold (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0700602593 978-0700602599 January 1985
Few presidents have been subjected to such a wide range of interpretation as has Herbert Hoover, from hero to villain, from genius to naïf. Fausold meets the daunting challenge of assessing the Hoover presidency by focusing on the to most basic questions: first, whether the Hoover presidency advanced the country toward the goals outlined in his Inaugural Address--justice, ordered liberty, equality of opportunity, individual initiative, freedom of opinion, integrity in government, peace, growth of religious spirit, and strengthening of the home--and, second, whether Hoover attacked the causes of the depression--international, cyclical, sectoral, fiscal, and monetary.

Making use of extensive primary sources beyond the Hoover Library, Fausold argues that Herbert Hoover was what Walter Lippmann said a president should be, "a custodian of a nation's ideals," and that Hoover fought the causes of the depression with vigor and imagination. Nevertheless, on election day in 1932, Hoover was turned out of office in a landslide, carrying only six eastern states.

From his defeat of Alfred E. Smith in 1928 to his trouncing by FDR four years later, Hoover's presidential years are detailed here: the stock-market crash, which happened eight months after Hoover took office; the ever-deepening depression; tariff legislation; Hoover's farm policy and foreign policy; and his pursuit of the twin goals of prosperity and freedom. This volume discusses in detail the relationship of the Hoover presidency to capital and labor, showing that Hoover's farm policies provide the best illustration of his corporatist formulas. Fausold reverses simplistic conclusions about the Stimson Doctrine, arguing that Hoover's Quaker pacifism, the Great Depression, and the forcefulness of Secretary of State Henry L. Stimson affected Hoover's foreign policy far less than has been presumed. Finally, Fausold details the disastrous events of the 1932 reelection campaign, punctuated by the march of the Bonus Army on Washington and culminating in Hoover's decisive defeat.

Fausold views the Hoover presidency as the logical transition from progressivism to the New Deal, calling it both the last of the old and the first of the new presidencies. The important question about Hoover, Fausold argues, is not why the people refused to reelect him, but why the reversal of his nation's image of him was so overwhelming and has been so long-lasting. Despite three arguments in defense of the administration--that its goals and antidepression efforts were in many respects without precedent; that it was surely as much a failure of American capital as of presidential leadership; and that probably no American elected in 1928 could have survived the nation's greatest depression--Fausold points to two factors that were paramount in spelling the misfortunes of Hoover's presidency: his unalterable commitment to ordered freedom as a canopy for solutions to the depression, and his firm rejection of any kind of an accommodation with the New Deal.

This book is part of the American Presidency Series.



Editorial Reviews

Review

"A clear, concise account of the Hoover years-and a balanced view of a troubled and difficult period in American history." -- Wisconsin Magazine of History

"An important book for both general and academic readers." -- Choice

"The most important work on the subject yet published, likely to rank as the standard source on the Hoover presidency..." -- American Historical Review

From the Back Cover

"This book shows conclusively that the negative and simplistic images once attached to Herbert Hoover's policies and programs need rethinking. A major scholarly achievement."--Ellis W. Hawley, author of The Great War and the Search for a Modern Order

"This analysis of the Hoover policies is informed and authoritative."--Frank Freidel, author of the four-volume Franklin D. Roosevelt


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: University Press of Kansas (January 1985)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0700602593
  • ISBN-13: 978-0700602599
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #856,830 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Good Look at Hoover and His Tenure, February 18, 2004
By 
Part of what makes the University Press of Kansas' American Presidency Series anything remotely of interest or importance is their adherence to the topic at hand: the presidency. Herbert Hoover has a long and storied pre-White House career and that story has some relevance and bearing on his four years in Washington but it is a topic of focus for a different book.

Martin Fausold points out that Hoover's four years as president speak volumes about the future course of the United States after March 1933 when Franklin Roosevelt took office. Hoover did not inherit the United States when it was on the verge of collapse nor was it at a peak. Black Tuesday, as Fausold illuminates, was a major turning point in the course of many levels of American movement: economic; social; cultural, and more. Most of this book is a detailed chronicle of the efforts Hoover used to extinguish the conflagration started by the October 1929 crash. Readers will note how small it seems to discuss a stock market crash caused by a drop of 375 or so points when in 2003, we have seen drops of two hundred points in a single day without much fervor or panic. Nonetheless, Fausold explains that the crash wa snot simply a one day event but a series of events throughout various sectors of the market that led to a mass sell off of stocks on Black Tuesday.

Most interestlingly, however, Fausold explains that FDR, as early as 1929, made efforts to have his contentions known and demanded an audience with Hoover and policy officials. Fausold also destroys other authors' criticism of Hoover as a silent critic of the Federal Reserve system that practically fathered the stock market crash by pointing out that Hoover moved behind the scenes to inch toward reform because he did not want to destroy public confidence in the banking system. Revelations such as these make this work essential for anyone studying the Hoover presidency or with even a remote interest in any issue relating to Hoover, including the stock market crash.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Actually, a fair account of Herbert Hoover, April 26, 2011
I've read many books about the Great Depression and it's causes and this book did a fair job of describing Hoover's involvement in the genesis. It seems to be a matter of timing versus the policies that Hoover enacted in the very beginning of his presidency. This book fairly explains that Hoover certainly didn't do a lot to crawl out of the depression either. After reading this book you get a good assessment of Hoover's personality and he seems to be a very decent man. He's just the wrong man for the times, hence Roosevelt's meteoric rise in popularity. In summary, I enjoyed this book and any history buff would appreciate this author's work.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Sympathetic and fairly dry, August 12, 2009
By 
Peter (Melbourne Australia) - See all my reviews
If you are looking for a book along the lines of what Bob Woodward writes, don't look at this book.

It is not a riveting read and it is not gossip, it is very solid and very pro-Hoover, or at worst, it is even-handed in its look at Hoover and his successor Roosevelt.

I must admit that my knowledge of Hoover is very limited, all I knew was that the Great Depression commenced while he was in office. The book gave me a bit of a look at Hoover as President although it did very little to give me a look at Hoover as a man.

Hoover as President was misunderstood and blamed for the effects of the depression. This may not be fully accurate if you believe this book but from the sounds of what was written, I don't think any President could have saved their nation and the world from the effects of the Great Depression.

Hoover lost his office to Franklin D Roosevelt through a combination of the depression, Hoover's lack of warmth to the press and Roosevelt's charisma and positivity.

Not a bad book to read if you want a feel of the life of the president at the time, although the book is quite dry and not a very easy read.
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First Sentence:
Life is essentially a mixture of religion, family, education, and vocation. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
antidepression efforts, corporatist balance, farm board, debt commission, flexibility provision, ordered freedom, executive reorganization
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, New York, White House, Herbert Hoover, World War, Franklin Roosevelt, Federal Reserve System, Commerce Department, Ogden Mills, Federal Reserve Board, Theodore Roosevelt, William Allen White, League of Nations, George Norris, Eighteenth Amendment, Supreme Court, Bernard Baruch, Walter Lippmann, Inaugural Address, Justice Department, Felix Frankfurter, Latin America, Recent Economic Changes, Charles Evans Hughes, Philippine Islands
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