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  1. Warren G. Harding explains his unwillingness to have the U.S. join the League of Nations Harding made it clear when he appointed Hughes as Secretary of State that the former justice would run foreign policy, a change from Wilson's hands-on management of international affairs. [ 121 ]

  2. Oct 29, 2009 · The 29th U.S. president, Warren Harding (1865-1923) served in office from 1921 to 1923 before dying of an apparent heart attack. Harding’s presidency was overshadowed by the criminal...

  3. Sep 12, 2024 · Warren G. Harding was the 29th U.S. president (1921–23), whose brief administration accomplished little of lasting value. His ill-advised cabinet appointments, including Albert Fall as secretary of the interior, led to the Teapot Dome Scandal, which earned his administration a reputation for corruption.

  4. Apr 2, 2014 · Warren G. Harding was a politician and the 29th president of the United States. Harding's campaign for the presidency promised a "return to normalcy." He was elected president...

  5. Warren G. Harding, an Ohio Republican, was the 29th President of the United States (1921-1923). Though his term in office was fraught with scandal, including Teapot Dome,...

  6. General election. Harding's home in Marion, Ohio, from which he conducted his 1920 "front porch" campaign. (c.1918–1921) Harding's opponent in the 1920 election was Ohio governor and newspaperman James M. Cox, who had won the Democratic nomination in a 44-ballot convention battle.

  7. In a 1921 speech, U.S. President Warren G. Harding argued for economic, political, and educational equality between white and Black Americans. What did this mean then, and what does it mean now?

  8. The Life and Presidency of Warren G. Harding. The White House Christmas Ornament 2014 Historical Essay. William Bushong. The son of a farmer-doctor, Warren Gamaliel Harding was born in 1865 in Corsica (now Blooming Grove), Ohio. As a boy Harding worked as a printer's assistant on a local newspaper, a job that made a profound impression on him.

  9. Warren G. Harding Before his nomination, Warren G. Harding declared, “America’s present need is not heroics, but healing; not nostrums, but normalcy; not revolution, but restoration; not agitation, but adjustment; not surgery, but serenity; not the dramatic, but the dispassionate; not the experiment, but equipoise; not submergence in ...

  10. Warren G. Harding facilitated the nation’s passage through a painful transition between the First World War and peacetime. Although he stabilized a disintegrating executive system, he was easily manipulated by others and is often seen by historians as a mediocre president.