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| image = {{#invoke:InfoboxImage|InfoboxImage|image=Grace Coolidge 1924.jpg|size=|sizedefault=frameless|upright=1|alt=A portrait of Coolidge|suppressplaceholder=yes}} | image2 = {{#invoke:InfoboxImage|InfoboxImage|image=|size=|sizedefault=frameless|upright=1|alt=|suppressplaceholder=yes}} | image3 = {{#invoke:InfoboxImage|InfoboxImage|image=|sizedefault=frameless|upright=1|alt=|suppressplaceholder=yes}} | captionstyle = line-height:normal;padding-top:0.2em; | caption{{#if:|3|{{#if:|2}}}} = Coolidge in 1924

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}}{{#if:|{{#ifeq:{{#ifeq:|no|yes}}|yes||}} }}{{#if:|{{#ifeq:{{#ifeq:|no|yes}}|yes||}} }}{{#if:|{{#if:||{{#ifeq:{{#ifeq:|no|yes}}|yes||}}}} }}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:Infobox officeholder with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| regexp1 = 1blankname[%d]* | regexp2 = 1namedata[%d]* | regexp3 = 2blankname[%d]* | regexp4 = 2namedata[%d]* | regexp5 = 3blankname[%d]* | regexp6 = 3namedata[%d]* | regexp7 = 4blankname[%d]* | regexp8 = 4namedata[%d]* | regexp9 = 5blankname[%d]* | regexp10 = 5namedata[%d]* | allegiance | alma_mater | regexp11 = alongside[%d]* | alt | regexp12 = ambassador_from[%d]* | regexp13 = appointed[%d]* | regexp14 = appointer[%d]* | regexp15 = assembly[%d]* | awards | battles | battles_label | birth_date | birth_name | birth_place | birthname | regexp16 = blank[%d]* | bodyclass | branch | branch_label | cabinet | candidate | caption | categories | regexp17 = chancellor[%d]* | children | citizenship | regexp18 = co%-leader[%d]* | commands | committees | regexp19 = constituency[%d]* | regexp20 = constituency_AM[%d]* | regexp21 = constituency_MP[%d]* | regexp22 = convocation[%d]* | regexp23 = country[%d]* | regexp24 = data[%d]* | date | death_cause | death_date | death_manner | death_place | demo | regexp25 = deputy[%d]* | regexp26 = district[%d]* | education | election_date | embed | father | regexp28 = firstminister[%d]* | footnotes | regexp29 = governor[%d]* | regexp30 = governor_general[%d]* | regexp31 = governor%-general[%d]* | height | honorific_prefix | honorific-prefix | honorific_suffix | honorific-suffix | image | image name | image_name_alt | image_size | imagesize | image_upright | incumbent | regexp32 = jr/sr[%d]* | regexp33 = jr/sr and state[%d]* | known_for | regexp34 = leader[%d]* | regexp35 = legislature[%d]* | regexp36 = lieutenant[%d]* | regexp37 = lieutenant_governor[%d]* | mainwidth | regexp38 = majority[%d]* | regexp39 = majority_floor_leader[%d]* | regexp40 = majority_leader[%d]* | regexp41 = majorityleader[%d]* | mawards | regexp42 = military_blank[%d]* | regexp43 = military_data[%d]* | regexp44 = minister[%d]* | regexp45 = minister_from[%d]* | regexp46 = minority_floor_leader[%d]* | regexp47 = minority_leader[%d]* | regexp48 = minorityleader[%d]* | regexp49 = module[%d]* | regexp50 = monarch[%d]* | mother | name | nationality | native_name | native_name_lang | nickname | nocat | regexp51 = nominator[%d]* | nominee | occupation | regexp52 = office[%d]* | opponent | regexp53 = order[%d]* | otherparty | parents | regexp54 = parliament[%d]* | regexp55 = parliamentarygroup[%d]* | partner | party | party_election | portfolio | regexp56 = preceded[%d]* | regexp57 = preceding[%d]* | regexp58 = predecessor[%d]* | regexp59 = premier[%d]* | regexp60 = president[%d]* | regexp61 = primeminister[%d]* | regexp62 = prior_term[%d]* | profession | pronunciation | rank | rank_label | relations | relatives | residence | resting_place | resting_place_coordinates | restingplace | restingplacecoordinates | regexp63 = riding[%d]* | runningmate | salary | serviceyears | serviceyears_label | signature | signature_alt | signature_size | smallimage | smallimage_alt | source | speaker | speaker_office | spouse | spouses | regexp64 = state[%d]* | regexp65 = state_assembly[%d]* | regexp66 = state_delegate[%d]* | regexp67 = state_house[%d]* | regexp68 = state_legislature[%d]* | regexp69 = state_senate[%d]* | regexp70 = status[%d]* | regexp71 = suboffice[%d]* | regexp72 = subterm[%d]* | regexp73 = succeeded[%d]* | regexp74 = succeeding[%d]* | regexp75 = successor[%d]* | regexp76 = taoiseach[%d]* | regexp77 = term[%d]* | regexp78 = term_end[%d]* | regexp79 = term_label[%d]* | regexp80 = term_start[%d]* | regexp81 = termend[%d]* | regexp82 = termlabel[%d]* | regexp83 = termstart[%d]* | regexp84 = title[%d]* | unit | unit_label | regexp85 = vicegovernor[%d]* | regexp86 = vicepremier[%d]* | regexp87 = vicepresident[%d]* | regexp88 = viceprimeminister[%d]* | regexp89 = assuming[%d]* | website | width | year }} Grace Anna Coolidge (née Goodhue; January 3, 1879 – July 8, 1957) was first lady of the United States from 1923 to 1929 as the wife of the 30th president of the United States, Calvin Coolidge. She was previously the second lady of the United States from 1921 to 1923 and the first lady of Massachusetts from 1919 to 1921.

Coolidge was raised in Burlington, Vermont, and attended the University of Vermont where she co-founded the school's chapter of Pi Beta Phi. She moved to Northampton, Massachusetts, to teach at Clarke School for the Deaf. She met Calvin Coolidge in Northampton, and they married in 1905, having two sons. She stayed in Northampton to raise their children while her husband's political career progressed in Boston. The family moved to Washington, D.C. when her husband was elected vice president in 1921, and into the White House after the death of Warren G. Harding made him president in 1923.

Coolidge was active as first lady, hosting thousands of guests each year, and she made regular public appearances in the President's stead. She was a highly popular first lady and highly regarded for her ability to charm visitors. Her fashion choices were influential among American women as she wore a variety of hats and chose modest versions of contemporary designs. Coolidge distanced herself from the politically active first ladies who preceded her, though she quietly took interest in helping women's groups and the deaf. She felt restricted by the role of first lady; she believed that it took priority over her own interests, and she was subject to many rules imposed on her by her husband. She was especially affected by the death of her younger son in 1924, though she interrupted her duties as White House hostess for only a few weeks. In the final year of her tenure, Coolidge was afflicted with kidney disease which left her temporarily debilitated.

The Coolidges returned to Northampton in 1929, where Coolidge began publishing poetry and autobiographical essays. Following her husband's death in 1933, she became more independent and began traveling. Coolidge was an advocate of American involvement in World War II, and she lent her house to WAVES after the U.S. entered the war. She remained active on the board of Clarke School and in programs for the deaf until her death in 1957.

Early lifeEdit

ChildhoodEdit

Grace Anna Goodhue was born in Burlington, Vermont, on January 3, 1879, as the only child of Andrew Issachar Goodhue and Lemira Barrett Goodhue.Template:Sfn She was part of the family that was descended from the 1635 colonist William GoodhueTemplate:Sfn and congressman Benjamin Goodhue.Template:Sfn Each summer, she joined a family reunion in Hancock, New Hampshire, until 1899 when the last of the Goodhue grandparents died. She also visited her maternal grandfather in the summers where she listened to his stories of the Civil War.Template:Sfn Goodhue was close to her mother as a child, following her where she went and taking up the same household chores like sewing.Template:Sfn

Goodhue's father was a milling engineer, and the family rented a house from his employer. In the early 1880s, her father built them a new home near the mill at 123 Maple Street,Template:Sfn installing several desirable features: a bathtub of tin and wood, a furnace that heated the entire home, and electric lights.Template:Sfn With the exception of a spinal problem that was treated through exercise, Goodhue faced little adversity during her childhood.Template:Sfn When her father was injured in a work accident in 1886, she stayed with their neighbors, the Yale family.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Here she bonded with their adult daughter, June Yale.Template:Sfn June began teaching at the Clarke School for the Deaf in Northampton, Massachusetts, and sometimes brought students to Vermont in the summers.Template:Sfn By her teenage years, Goodhue was helping June care for them.Template:Sfn

Goodhue's father left the mill after his accident and co-founded a machine shop.Template:Sfn He was a Democrat, and with this experience he was appointed by Democratic President Grover Cleveland as a steamboat inspector later in 1886.Template:Sfn This brought money and status to the family in their small town.Template:Sfn Goodhue had a deeply religious upbringing, raised on Puritan values and spending most of the family's social outings at church events. The family was Methodist until she was a teenager, when she convinced them to convert to Congregationalism.Template:Sfn Her father built a new home for the family at 312 Maple Street in 1899.Template:Sfn

EducationEdit

Goodhue attended Burlington High School, where she studied Latin and French.Template:Sfn She also received private lessons in piano, speech, and singing.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn She spoke at her school's commencement in 1897, delivering a speech she titled "Tramp Instinct".Template:Sfn She enrolled at the University of Vermont in 1897, then dropped out that November because of an eye condition and returned the following year.Template:Sfn She took little interest in her studies.Template:Sfn Instead, Goodhue was involved with several activities in and out of the university, including dance, skating, tobogganing, sleighing, theater, Bible class, Christian Endeavor, and poetry.Template:Sfn She also joined the glee club where she performed as a contralto,Template:Sfn and she became her class's vice president in her second year.Template:Sfn Goodhue gained a reputation for being likeable and outgoing,Template:Sfn and she was courted by several men over the course of her schooling.Template:Sfn Her most serious relationship was with a man named Frank Joyner. Despite her family's reservations about Joyner, the two had an informal agreement that they would wed.Template:Sfn Although the prevailing opinion at the time that rotundness was an attractive trait, Goodhue was insecure about her weight and restricted her diet.Template:Sfn

Noticing a lonely-looking woman on the University of Vermont campus, Goodhue befriended Ivah Gale.Template:Sfn Gale eventually moved into the Goodhue home where she shared a bedroom with Goodhue, and they were among those who co-founded the university's chapter of Pi Beta Phi, a women's fraternity.Template:Sfn The group held its meetings in Goodhue's home.Template:Sfn In 1901, Goodhue traveled to Syracuse, New York, to attend the fraternity's national convention.Template:Sfn She graduated from the University of Vermont in 1902,Template:Sfn and decided to teach at Clarke School for the Deaf. She wrote to the school's principal, June Yale's aunt Caroline Yale, about training as an instructor for the deaf. Goodhue moved to Northampton where she taught at the school for three years, first instructing the primary school children before working with middle school students. Her mother opposed the decision, wishing that she would be a teacher at a local school.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Clarke School's policy was to teach lip reading rather than sign language, which Goodhue agreed was beneficial for the students as it allowed them to participate in society.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Marriage and familyEdit

Goodhue met Calvin Coolidge in her second year at Northampton.Template:Sfn While watering flowers outside of the dormitory, she first saw the young man through a window across from the school, where he was shaving wearing only long underwear and a derby hat.Template:Sfn He heard her laugh, and he subsequently asked his landlord, the school's steward Robert Weir, to introduce them.Template:Sfn Weir set them up to both appear at a mutual friend's house. Joking about her suitor's reserved nature, he commented that if Goodhue could teach the deaf to hear, then she could perhaps teach the mute to speak.Template:Sfn They began a relationship;Template:Sfn while Goodhue had kept in touch with her previous suitor, Frank Joyner, but she had ended the relationship with him.Template:Sfn

Calvin Coolidge was active in politics and took her to a Republican Party event at city hall for their first date. From then on, he could be found accompanying her to all of her picnics and dances, though he did not participate.Template:Sfn He attempted to ice skate with her once and decided they would go home when he was unsuccessful.Template:Sfn To those around them, their relationship was defined by their contrasting personalities, as he was quiet and reserved as opposed to her more outgoing demeanor.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Despite this, they bonded over several shared qualities: their background as college-educated Vermonters, mischievous senses of humor,Template:Sfn work ethic,Template:Sfn religious sensibilities, and feelings of idealism and public service.Template:Sfn The two frequently exchanged playful remarks targeting one another, often focused on her cooking and his quietude, respectively.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He welcomed her nasally impression of him.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn She got along well with his family and had their approval.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Although Goodhue had been raised as a Democrat, she switched to the Republican Party.Template:Sfn She also had her friend Ivah Gale take a three-hour buggy ride with him, so she could form her own opinion on the man. He said nothing during the trip, but Gale wanted the couple to stay together and said she had got along well with him.Template:Sfn

The first time Goodhue's parents met their daughter's suitor, he asked permission to marry her.Template:Sfn He proposed to Goodhue in 1905 by telling her "I am going to be married to you".Template:Sfn Goodhue's mother was not fond of him and sought to delay the wedding, but he insisted on a date no later than October.Template:Sfn The couple married in the parlor of the Goodhue family's home on October 4, 1905, with fifteen guests in attendance.Template:Sfn Calvin and Grace Coolidge took a short honeymoon in Montreal, but time was limited as he had to return to Northampton to run as a candidate for the school board—he was not elected.Template:Sfn They first lived in the Norwood Hotel for three weeks before staying in a home owned by a professor at Smith College.Template:Sfn They moved to their long-term home at 21 Massasoit Street in 1906.Template:Sfn The Coolidges had very little money in these early years of their marriage, but she was often the recipient of desirable clothes and hats as gifts from her husband.Template:Sfn She otherwise made her own clothes.Template:Sfn When the Norwood Hotel closed, they purchased some of its branded linen and silverware for their own use.Template:Sfn

The couple had two sons: John Coolidge on September 7, 1906, and Calvin Coolidge Jr. on April 13, 1908.Template:Sfn It took them a long time to name their younger son, and they initially called him Bunny because he was born around Easter.Template:Sfn Calvin Coolidge was elected to the Massachusetts legislature shortly after their first son was born, so he spent much of his time in the state capital, Boston. They felt it was important not to let his career be a burden on the children, so the rest of the family stayed in Northampton and he returned home on the weekends.Template:Sfn Even when he was home, he had his wife address the needs of their children. She engaged in activities with them, teaching them baseball and constructing wooden cars for them to ride in. She came to love baseball and was a fan of the sport for the rest of her life.Template:Sfn She had little involvement in his professional life and made no attempt to be present for it after one instance when he asked her not to attend a speech he gave at their church.Template:Sfn

Coolidge's husband left the state legislature in 1909 and became mayor of Northampton the following year, giving him a job that let him return to his family each night. He was elected to the state legislature again in 1911 and went back to Boston.Template:Sfn Coolidge was a regular participant in church activities while her husband was away and attended card parties with her friends, where she sewed while the others played. She visited Washington, D.C. for the first time in 1912 when she chaperoned a trip for students of Northampton High School.Template:Sfn She is quoted as saying that she would one day return to the White House to play its piano, after a guard rebutted her attempt to do so.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Her younger son was diagnosed with emphysema the following year, necessitating an operation.Template:Sfn

Entering political lifeEdit

Coolidge ascended in her own political career within the ranks of Pi Beta Phi. She became president of the Western Massachusetts Alumnae Club in 1910, vice president of the fraternity's Alpha Province covering the entire East Coast in 1912, and president of the Alpha Province in 1915.Template:Sfn She went on a tour of California for Pi Beta Phi that year, but her trip ended early when she received a telegram informing her that her husband was a candidate to be lieutenant governor of Massachusetts.Template:Sfn Her return home was delayed when her mother fell ill and Coolidge went to see her in Burlington.Template:Sfn

Coolidge's husband was inaugurated as lieutenant governor on January 6, 1916. That same year, the couple joined his political ally Frank Stearns and his wife Emily Clark Stearns on a trip to Washington D.C.Template:Sfn The Coolidges took on a housekeeper, Alice Reckahn, who stayed with them for decades.Template:Sfn When World War I began, Coolidge worked with the other women in the community to conduct bond drives and support Red Cross,Template:Sfn where she became co-chair of the Women's War Committee of Northampton.Template:Sfn

After three years as lieutenant governor, Coolidge's husband was elected governor of Massachusetts in 1918.Template:Sfn She led the march at his inaugural ball.Template:Sfn Despite being the governor's wife, Coolidge refused to move to Boston full time, choosing to stay with her sons in Northampton, which caused some displeasure in the state.Template:Sfn She instead made periodic trips to the city.Template:Sfn While staying in Boston, Coolidge joined her husband in his cramped room at the Adams House Hotel on Washington Street, which was expanded to two rooms so she could host guests.Template:Sfn She was responsible for entertaining in the capital at times and became popular among guests despite her lack of experience as a hostess.Template:Sfn Coolidge's husband had little time for her while he was governor, rarely visiting her in Northampton and sometimes having a staff member accompany her on his behalf during her visits to Boston.Template:Sfn

Coolidge supported her husband's decision to accept the Republican Party's nomination to be vice president of the United States in 1920 as the running mate of Warren G. Harding,Template:Sfn though she also felt that he should accept nothing short of the presidential nomination.Template:Sfn The Republican ticket won, and Calvin Coolidge became vice president in 1921. Coolidge moved to Washington D.C. with him and enrolled their sons in boarding school at Mercersburg Academy.Template:Sfn They moved into a suite on the top floor of the Willard Hotel.Template:Sfn

Second lady of the United StatesEdit

Being second lady of the United States brought Coolidge a larger national profile. She appeared at ceremonial events with her husband, and her entertaining duties became much greater than they had been when she was the wife of a governor.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Coolidge received guests at her home each week, sometimes in numbers well beyond her capacity to address them all. She also made weekly calls to the wives of many important figures in Washington.Template:Sfn To alleviate her responsibilities, she hired a part-time secretary, and her husband made a point of setting deadlines for their attendance at events so they could end their day early.Template:Sfn

Lois Irene Marshall and Emily Clark Stearns, the previous second lady and the wife of her husband's political ally, respectively, both became mentors for Coolidge as she acclimated to her new role.Template:Sfn On her first night as second lady, Coolidge dined with the celebrated general John J. Pershing and the two bonded over their experiences as parents.Template:Sfn Coolidge was president of the Senate Wives Club as second lady, and through this she continued her activity supporting the Red Cross.Template:Sfn She also took dancing classes, though her husband asked that she not be seen dancing in public and risk controversy.Template:Sfn Her attendance at the dedication of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier left an impression on her in 1921.Template:Sfn

The Hardings were not fond of the Coolidges.Template:Sfn The first lady, Florence Harding, resented Grace Coolidge's youth and popularity.Template:Sfn Coolidge became responsible for Florence's hosting duties for a period of time in late 1922, after the first lady fell ill with life-threatening nephritis.Template:Sfn The Coolidges were at the vice president's family home in Vermont when they received news that President Harding had died suddenly.Template:Sfn Coolidge wept upon hearing the news and then prayed alongside her husband.Template:Sfn She became first lady of the United States on August 2, 1923.Template:Sfn

First lady of the United StatesEdit

White House hostessEdit

File:Grace Coolidge.jpg
Grace Coolidge in 1923

The Coolidges were one of the most socially active families in the White House's history, entertaining many guests each day.Template:Sfn Her public receptions brought a total of 20,000 to 25,000 people to the White House annually.Template:Sfn In addition to her normal hosting duties, she held exclusive high teas in the Red Room that replaced the brief one-on-one meetings Florence Harding had with guests—Coolidge felt that these meetings excluded too many people.Template:Sfn She believed that as first lady, she should invite as many guests as possible so everyone had an opportunity to meet with her.Template:Sfn Coolidge was responsible for a large staff, including eighteen servants, a valet, a maid, and other cleaning staff.Template:Sfn They affectionately referred to her as "Sunshine".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Besides hosting, Coolidge's only daily responsibility was to arrange flowers for her bedroom and the West Sitting Hall. Coolidge's husband insisted on organizing White House events and catering, freeing her from a job that was typically expected of the first lady.Template:Sfn

Coolidge preferred meeting common people over holding formal events.Template:Sfn She especially found joy in her opportunities to work with children, including the White House egg rolling on Easter and on May Day celebrations.Template:Sfn For Christmas 1923, she had the First Congregational Church choir and the Marine Band perform Christmas carols, and a new White House tradition was created when she invited spectators to come onto the lawn.Template:Sfn She also held small musical events during Lent.Template:Sfn She complied with prohibition and refrained from serving alcohol at the White House, though she was unhappy that it caused societal disregard for the law.Template:Sfn

Coolidge wrote and received many letters, corresponding with her friends and the public.Template:Sfn When she received gifts, she briefly kept them in her bedroom so she could send a truthful reply saying she enjoyed them.Template:Sfn She replied to much of her mail personally, though she was assisted by her secretary.Template:Sfn Coolidge first worked with the Hardings' secretary Laura Harlan, but she gave the role to White House staff member Mary Randolph after Harlan's departure in 1925.Template:Sfn When she fired her housekeeper Elizabeth Jaffray and replaced her with Ellen A. Riley, Jaffray retaliated by publishing a tell all, Secrets of the White House, which gave an unkind depiction of the Coolidges and made misleading claims.Template:Sfn

Washington society welcomed Coolidge's unpretentious approach to her role as first lady,Template:Sfn and she acted as a comforting presence for guests at receptions.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn She often saved face for her husband and his curt social behavior by making jokes about it.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Coolidge became first lady amid the Jazz Age and mingled with early celebrities.Template:Sfn Her love for music meant that popular musicians were a common sight at the White House, which helped with the public image of the administration.Template:Sfn Many of these musicians participated in the president's 1924 reelection campaign.Template:Sfn The pianist Sergei Rachmaninoff played for the White House many timesTemplate:Sfn and when Al Jolson appeared at the White House, she sang alongside him.Template:Sfn She also hosted popular actors like Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford.Template:Sfn

Among Coolidge's more difficult guests was Queen Marie of Romania in October 1926. Known for her overpowering personality and love of media attention, the queen had to be constantly managed. Coolidge bonded with her over their shared experiences as mothers. She took to the queen's son Nicholas, who felt out of place at the event until she had him sit with her at dinner.Template:Sfn This contrasted with an enjoyable visit from John D. Rockefeller Jr. the next February, where Coolidge customized their menu and had high quality dishware brought in.Template:Sfn

Public imageEdit

File:Grace Coolidge with Rob Roy 1 (cropped).jpg
Grace Coolidge and her dog Rob Roy in 1924

Coolidge took on much of the social responsibilities of the president, which her husband saw as a distraction from his work, and she made regular appearances at public events and charity programs.Template:Sfn She typically allowed her photo to be taken, leading to frequent appearances in the newspapers.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn These photos allowed her a level of control over her public image and what she chose to share.Template:Sfn On her husband's request, she refused any interviews that were asked of her,Template:Sfn and she once responded to a request by making her comments in sign language.Template:Sfn She was careful not to speak over radio, despite the attempts of radio technicians to discreetly capture her voice whenever she stood near a microphone at a public event.Template:Sfn When they were with company, Coolidge addressed her husband as "Mr. President".Template:Sfn The dynamic of Coolidge as lively and her husband as reserved became embedded in the public's image of the couple.Template:Sfn

The public primarily learned about the first lady through second-hand stories of her sociable demeanor.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn She was seen as a domestic figure, defined as a mother and a homemaker.Template:Sfn Anecdotes like her fascination with the 1925 solar eclipse and the Graf Zeppelin helped the public relate to her.Template:Sfn She was willing to greet anyone who noticed her in public as she took her walks or went shopping around Washington.Template:Sfn When meeting with the public or political figures, she was aided by her ability to remember people's names and facts about their lives.Template:Sfn Coolidge became known for her love of sports, and her support for the Washington Senators and the Boston Red Sox earned her the moniker "First Lady of Baseball",Template:Sfn and she was devoted to the baseball player Babe Ruth.Template:Sfn Her interest in gardening also became known, and the "Mrs. Coolidge rose" was named after her.Template:Sfn She was recognized as an avid churchgoer, which helped build an image of her as pious.Template:Sfn

Coolidge's visibility as a college-educated woman made her into a symbol for women's opportunities in universities.Template:Sfn She was the first of the first ladies to the hold a bachelor's degree.Template:Sfn She then became the first of the first ladies to receive an honorary degree;Template:Sfn she received an honorary LL.D. from Boston University in 1924.Template:Sfn She then received an honorary degree from George Washington University alongside her husband in 1929.Template:Sfn

While she was first lady, Coolidge was plagued by false rumors, including that she intended to get a divorce or that she was pregnant. The former caused the couple to make more frequent appearances together in public, while the latter prompted many gifts in the form of baby clothes.Template:Sfn The Coolidges refused to openly respond to the lies.Template:Sfn There were also rumors that Coolidge had become romantically involved with her Secret Service guard Jim Haley or that her husband was jealous of the time they spent together.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Years after leaving the White House, she determined that she had successfully avoided doing anything that might be publicly embarrassing.Template:Sfn

Personal lifeEdit

Coolidge was delighted when she became first lady of the United States,Template:Sfn but she soon felt constrained by her role and the expectations that came with it.Template:Sfn She described a divide between her true self and her job, saying that her "personal likes and dislikes must be subordinated" to the first ladyship.Template:Sfn When she was not tending to her responsibilities, Coolidge spent her days shopping and taking miles-long walks.Template:Sfn She kept with her sewing and knitting, crafting some of her own dresses.Template:Sfn She enjoyed the large residential quarters in the White House and decorated it to her liking.Template:Sfn

To limit anything potentially controversial, Coolidge's husband strictly controlled her activities. After she received press coverage for going out horse-riding, he instructed her to "not try anything new", and her personal projects were limited to the traditional role of the first lady to work with the Girl Scouts.Template:Sfn He also asked her not to smoke in public, a rule which he had also imposed on himself.Template:Sfn New constraints on her time also burdened her.Template:Sfn She often did not know her own schedule, being told shortly beforehand whether she was to accompany her husband to an event or that he had scheduled an appearance for her.Template:Sfn She once complained about not knowing their schedule, but the president rebutted that that he cannot "give out that information promiscuously".Template:Sfn Adding to her stress, the weather in Washington caused problems with her sinuses.Template:Sfn

Coolidge had a penchant for animals and used her time in the White House to gather numerous pets, including several dogs and birds.Template:Sfn The family's white collies, Rob Roy and Prudence Prim, were the most popular among the public.Template:Sfn For her closer friends, she left calling cards on behalf of her dog in addition to her own.Template:Sfn Coolidge received several wild animals as gifts and had them sent to live in the zoo, but she kept a raccoon, Rebecca. Despite the Coolidges' adoration for the raccoon, Rebecca wreaked havoc on the White House and scared the staff, and she too was sent to live at the zoo.Template:Sfn

The Coolidges always dined with guests or people staying at the White House during afternoon and evening meals, but each morning they ate breakfast privately in their bedroom.Template:Sfn Through her role, she became friends with figures like Alice Roosevelt Longworth and William Howard Taft. When Longworth discovered she was pregnant, Coolidge was the first person she told outside of her family.Template:Sfn The Coolidges spent many of their weekends on the presidential yacht and vacationed in Massachusetts, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wisconsin.Template:Sfn They also made occasional trips to attend events in New York City.Template:Sfn In 1925, they established a Summer White House in Swampscott, Massachusetts. She chose the location, then regretted it when her husband was not happy.Template:Sfn Coolidge enjoyed attending film and theater events, and was a common sight at the National Theatre.Template:Sfn In some cases, she sat among the audience instead of in a box.Template:Sfn Coolidge was also the first of the first ladies to listen to the radio in the White House.Template:Sfn In early 1924, her younger son taught her how to swim.Template:Sfn According to Ike Hoover, the White House Chief Usher, Coolidge was the first first lady to try a cigarette.Template:Sfn

The Coolidges were devastated by the sudden death of their younger son at age 16 on July 7, 1924. He developed a blister on his foot while playing tennis a few days before, which caused lethal blood poisoning.Template:Sfn Coolidge stopped hosting at the White House for several weeks while she grieved.Template:Sfn She became emotionally distant with her husband as neither were comfortable expressing their grief.Template:Sfn To ease her pain, she took up poetry and looked to religion.Template:Sfn She made a point not to express grief publicly.Template:Sfn Each day, she placed one rose in a vase beside his photograph and one on his bed.Template:Sfn She invited people they knew to comfort them at the White House, including her father-in-law as well as Alice Roosevelt Longworth with her infant child.Template:Sfn

Coolidge attended the farewell party for C. Bascom Slemp, her husband's presidential secretary, at the onset of her husband's second term; Slemp requested her presence specifically at the event where there were otherwise no women.Template:Sfn She maintained her close relationship with her father-in-law until his death in March 1926, and her letters about the family's goings on brought him comfort toward the end of his life.Template:Sfn Her son became quite popular and frequently received invitations to parties by early 1927 when he was out of school for the winter, but she restricted his activities knowing that these events could go until 5:00Template:Nbspa.m.Template:Sfn

Political activityEdit

Coolidge kept away from politics and is not seen as having influenced her husband's political positions.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn She followed his request that she not express opinions publicly or speak to the press.Template:Sfn Her silence on political issues put the public at ease as she followed the more active first ladies Florence Harding, Edith Wilson, and Helen Herron Taft.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn She wrote only one formal publication during her tenure—an article on knitting for which the Home for Needy Confederate Women received a donation of $250.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Although Coolidge's popularity benefited her husband's reelection campaign, she had minimal participation leading up to the 1924 presidential election as she was still grieving the death of her son. Her only solo campaign appearance was at the Montgomery County Maryland Women's Republic Club, where she sat in the audience on September 19.Template:Sfn She filled in her absentee ballot in front of the press on the White House lawn to encourage women to vote.Template:Sfn

Despite her silence around politics, Coolidge subtly paid attention to current events by sitting in on budget meetings and attending Senate hearings regarding the Teapot Dome scandal.Template:Sfn She took interest in the government's involvement in the arts and got to know the chairman of the Commission of Fine Arts, Charles Moore. When General Pershing brought a design for a war memorial to the president, she informed the general that it looked too much like a guillotine and that it should be returned to the architect for a different design. She also took interest in the passing of the Public Buildings Act of 1926.Template:Sfn Coolidge once used her position to influence the Veterans' Bureau; when she discovered that her maid's son had breathing problems from a gas attack in World War I, she had the bureau relocate him to the Western United States where clearer air would help his recovery.Template:Sfn

Coolidge was most active in children's welfare and support for the deaf. She often invited deaf people, including students from Clarke School, to visit the White House.Template:Sfn Helen Keller was a frequent guest.Template:Sfn The Coolidges did not engage in any outward advocacy for the cause of deaf children to avoid the appearance of favoring it, especially since both held board positions for groups supporting the deaf.Template:Sfn The financial editor Clarence W. Barron encouraged the couple to hold a fundraiser for Clark School in 1928.Template:Sfn Without fanfare, Coolidge raised the most funds any first lady ever had for a cause, over $2 million, for the school.Template:Sfn Coolidge similarly invited women's groups to the White House as she privately supported women's causes,Template:Sfn and she ensured that the wives of cabinet-members were seated as a distinct group during her husband's first address to Congress.Template:Sfn She privately supported the idea of a working woman, even if she preferred domestic life for herself. She opposed the more radical aspects of the contemporary feminist movement such as the actions of Alice Paul.Template:Sfn Publicly, Coolidge was more likely to speak about religion, believing that it was an essential part of American society.Template:Sfn She was also an advocate for Red Cross.Template:Sfn

Renovation and vacationEdit

To acquire new furniture for the White House, Coolidge had Congress approve a call for citizens to donate period pieces in 1925.Template:Sfn She received only one piece of furniture.Template:Sfn When the press discovered that she was to try again the following year, her husband put an end to the idea.Template:Sfn She acquired other historical pieces from the White House storerooms.Template:Sfn

The White House underwent a significant period of restoration in 1927, so the Coolidges temporarily stayed at Dupont Circle.Template:Sfn Coolidge was involved in directing the process,Template:Sfn and after the demolition began in March, Coolidge made frequent appearances at the White House to see the construction.Template:Sfn While changes to the design of architect Charles Follen McKim would have caused backlash, the replacement of the roof gave Coolidge an opportunity to modify the attic and upper floors, which were separate from McKim's work.Template:Sfn Among the changes was a sunroom installed for her use.Template:Sfn In her contribution to the refurbishing, she crocheted a bed cover for the Lincoln Bedroom.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Separately, she was involved in expanding the White House gardens. In addition to a Vermont spruce tree she planted in her son's memory, she had a birch tree and a lily pond added to the garden.Template:Sfn

While at Dupont Circle, the Coolidges hosted Charles Lindbergh after his celebrated Spirit of St. Louis trans-Atlantic flight. Coolidge declined his offer to fly in a plane with him, as one of her husband's rules was that she was not to fly.Template:Sfn Lindbergh's visit was a massive event with crowds gathered around the house to see him.Template:Sfn

The Coolidges left Dupont Circle in June.Template:Sfn From there, they visited the Black Hills in South Dakota. Here Coolidge and her Secret Service guard Jim Haley got lost on one of her walks when they misjudged the terrain. The president had Haley transferred away, depriving his wife of a rare walking partner who could keep up with her and causing rumors that he was acting out of jealousy.Template:Sfn This was the only time that Coolidge faced serious public embarrassment as first lady.Template:Sfn Instead, Coolidge was assigned to Edmund W. Starling, and she was forbidden from leaving their cabin when Starling went fishing with the president.Template:Sfn She stayed in contact with Haley and his wife without her husband's knowledge.Template:Sfn The Coolidges returned to Washington in September.Template:Sfn

Coolidge did not know about the president's announcement in 1927 that he would not run for another term until after he made it.Template:Sfn It is unclear whether she knew of his intention not to run.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn While she had been unaware of the announcement, she was glad to hear the news.Template:Sfn The president's decision was strongly influenced by the emotional divide that had grown between the Coolidges over the previous years and his desire to mend it.Template:Sfn The Coolidges took a trip to Cuba in January 1928 to attend the Pan-American Conference, and met with President Gerardo Machado.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This made Coolidge the third first lady to leave the United States during her tenure, following Ida Saxton McKinley and Edith Wilson.Template:Sfn

Illness and departureEdit

Coolidge was afflicted with kidney disease in February 1928, which became apparent when she collapsed after an especially strenuous reception.Template:Sfn She was secretly taken to the National Naval Medical Center to receive x-rays and a cystoscopy, which revealed that her right kidney was enlarged, infected, obstructed, and out of place. Coolidge spent the following weeks in considerable pain.Template:Sfn At its worst, her husband feared that the illness would kill her.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Coolidge stayed in her sky parlor as she slowly recovered, resenting the boredom and the rules imposed upon her by the doctors.Template:Sfn Calvin Coolidge's own health declined with a weak heart and severe asthma and she watched over his activity to keep his health problems a secret from the press, advocating for him to have a lighter schedule.Template:Sfn The Coolidges relocated to Brule, Wisconsin, for the summer to recuperate,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and stayed until September.Template:Sfn Coolidge also had to go to her mother, who was at the end of her life.Template:Sfn

In the final months of her husband's presidency, the Coolidges spent their time on Sapelo Island and in Mountain Lake, Florida.Template:Sfn The Coolidges left the White House on March 4, 1929.Template:Sfn After years of declining to speak over the radio, Coolidge finally took the microphone after her husband broadcast his farewell address to deliver her own brief message: "Good-bye, folks".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Later life and deathEdit

Return to private lifeEdit

The Coolidges initially returned to their Northampton home after her husband's presidency, but they moved to a new home just outside of the city, The Beeches, for privacy the following year.Template:Sfn The Beeches was larger than their previous home, allowing Coolidge to keep a work room instead of working out of the dining room.Template:Sfn They also had a new house constructed near her husband's childhood home where they could spend their summers.Template:Sfn Coolidge kept in touch with her successors Lou Henry Hoover and Eleanor Roosevelt.Template:Sfn

Coolidge approved of her daughter-in-law Florence Trumbull, the daughter of Connecticut governor John H. Trumbull, after the highly publicized wedding of her son to Trumbull in 1929.Template:Sfn The Coolidges traveled across the United States in 1930, visiting Mount Dora, Florida, and then New Orleans before going to California. They stayed at Hearst Castle with William Randolph Hearst, where Coolidge was at one point trapped in an elevator.Template:Sfn Her husband refused her request to visit Europe, as he feared possible foreign policy implications of international travel by a former president.Template:Sfn

Coolidge regretted how little writing was left by previous first ladies,Template:Sfn and she began writing poetry and descriptions of her time in Washington, publishing them in magazines.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This included an article about her husband, "The Real Calvin Coolidge".Template:Sfn She wrote a poem about her late son titled "The Open Door" on the fifth anniversary of his death, which was published in Good Housekeeping for $250 (Template:Inflation) and positively received.Template:Sfn Her husband encouraged her literary activity and helped get her works published.Template:Sfn She also appeared in a promotional film for the Christmas seals drive, in which she rang the bell of the Northampton Memorial Hall and recited a sentence for the camera.Template:Sfn Coolidge received honorary degrees from Smith College in June 1929 and the University of Vermont in June 1930.Template:Sfn She received a medal from the National Institute of Social Sciences in 1931, and Clarke School's art building was named for her upon its completion in 1933.Template:Sfn She was president of the Northampton Republican Women's Club, but this was an honorary position and she did not engage in any political activity with the group.Template:Sfn

WidowhoodEdit

Calvin Coolidge died on January 5, 1933, and Coolidge was discomforted by her sudden independence. She took her husband's place as trustee of Mercersburg Academy, Clarke School, and another local school.Template:Sfn She inherited his estate of about $700,000 (Template:Inflation).Template:Sfn Coolidge became a grandmother with the birth of Cynthia Coolidge later that year; she feared becoming an imposing mother-in-law and tried to limit her involvement in the child's upbringing.Template:Sfn She closely followed the events of the Lindbergh kidnapping, especially during the trial of Richard Hauptmann in 1934.Template:Sfn With her husband's death, Coolidge started breaking some of the rules he had set for her throughout their lives.Template:Sfn This was accelerated when she befriended the feminist Florence Adams, who encouraged this new lifestyle.Template:Sfn Coolidge bobbed her hair, and she began wearing hiking shortsTemplate:Sfn and trousers.Template:Sfn She learned how to drive a car, and in 1936 she flew in a plane with Governor Trumbull.Template:Sfn

Coolidge became more politically active later in life.Template:Sfn She helped campaign for the reelection of President Herbert Hoover in the 1932 election.Template:Sfn She was not entirely opposed to Franklin D. Roosevelt during his presidency, though she did not speak publicly on the matter.Template:Sfn She avoided involvement in biographies about her husband so as not to look like she was influencing them, though she provided several interviews for biographer Claude Fuess in the years following his presidency.Template:Sfn She became board president of Clarke School in 1935; she worked directly with classrooms and kept up with research related to hearing aids.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn A false rumor spread that she was to marry Congressman Everett Sanders.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Coolidge spent much of her time at Adams' vacation home in North Carolina, where the pair found peace from public scrutiny.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn She made her final visit to Washington in December 1934, where she and Adams saw the Works Projects Administration constructing new government buildings and visited the first ladies' gowns collection in the Smithsonian Institution.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Wearing horn-rimmed glasses to alter her appearance, she was recognized by only a single traffic officer who had once served on the presidential yacht, the USS Mayflower.Template:Sfn In 1936, Coolidge went with Adams on a six-month tour of Europe where they drove across ten countries.Template:Sfn When they returned, she sold The Beeches and had Road Forks, a house in Northampton, built for her.Template:Sfn The pair regularly listened to baseball games over the radio, and on occasion they drove to Boston with their friend Joseph D. Collins to watch a game.Template:Sfn Coolidge took up reading more heavily around this time and kept up with popular novels.Template:Sfn Her second granddaughter, Lydia Coolidge, was born in 1939.Template:Sfn

Coolidge supported American involvement in World War II, and she began raising funds for child refugees from Germany in 1939.Template:Sfn When the U.S. entered the war, she offered support to Red Cross and WAVES.Template:Sfn She lent Road Forks to WAVES' Captain Herbert W. Underwood as the organization was operating out of the nearby Smith College.Template:Sfn In the meantime, she lived in the home of Adams and their other friend Julia Warner Snow across the street.Template:Sfn Coolidge also volunteered as a civil defense watcher where each week she spent three hours as a look out for a possible German bombing of the United States, though none ever occurred.Template:Sfn Wishing to avoid publicity, she chose not to become head of the Massachusetts Women's Defense Corps.Template:Sfn

Ivah Gale, Coolidge's long-time friend, lived with her off-and-on at Road Forks beginning in 1946.Template:Sfn They were later accompanied by the Coolidge family chauffeur John Bukosky and another friend Lilian Carver.Template:Sfn Coolidge's tenure as board president of Clarke School ended in 1952,Template:Sfn but she remained as a board member for the remainder of her life.Template:Sfn She supported Dwight D. Eisenhower in the 1952 presidential election even before he was nominated as a candidate.Template:Sfn Coolidge was afflicted by heart problems later in life. Her heart did not fully recover after an illness in 1952, and an elevator was put into Road Forks for her.Template:Sfn Her health declined significantly in 1954,Template:Sfn and she was hospitalized at one point in 1955. She went out less frequently as she feared the spectacle of dying in public.Template:Sfn Though she was no longer healthy enough to visit Clarke School in her final years, its president and its principal continued working with her to develop school programs.Template:Sfn Coolidge died of kyphoscoliosis-induced heart disease on July 8, 1957.Template:Sfn

LegacyEdit

Contemporary imageEdit

Coolidge's legacy as first lady is most associated with her charm and cheerfulness.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn By the time she was second lady, Coolidge had already become one of the most popular social figures in Washington D.C. This was unusual for what was typically a less important role in Washington society.Template:Sfn Her relative youth, photogenic appearance, and fashion sense brought a revitalization to the role of the first lady, although she kept a reserved demeanor at her husband's request.Template:Sfn Journalists characterized her as "the college type of woman".Template:Sfn Her popularity invited comparisons to former first ladies Frances ClevelandTemplate:Sfn and Dolley Madison.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Clarke School principal George T. Pratt saw her work with deaf children as legitimizing the profession.Template:Sfn

Positive appraisals were made by the press, with laudatory profiles in The New Yorker and Good Housekeeping among other publications.Template:Sfn The New York Times described her as being among the "most photographed persons on earth outside of movieland" in 1928.Template:Sfn After meeting Coolidge, the humorist Will Rogers said she was "Public Female Favorite No. 1".Template:Sfn She was generally seen as a more domestic figure in contrast to the active feminist movement of the day.Template:Sfn

Coolidge's fashion influenced popular trends in the 1920s, especially in her choice of headwear, and she tried to present a modest approach to the styles of the time.Template:Sfn When knee-length skirts were common apparel, Coolidge wore longer skirts and gowns that were at most 10.5Template:Nbspinches from the ground.Template:Sfn First lady biographer Betty Boyd Caroli said that Coolidge "epitomized current flapper style",Template:Sfn though she was not herself a flapper.Template:Sfn Her husband admired her appearance and took an interest in her wardrobe. He often helped her pick dresses to wear during events and went clothes shopping with her. The otherwise frugal man imposed no budget for her clothes. Despite her husband's preference for picture hats, Coolidge eventually adopted the style of short, close-fitting hats of the 1920s.Template:Sfn Each dress she wore as first lady was scrutinized by the press.Template:Sfn The attention on her clothing influenced the importance of fashion for future first ladies and their role in setting fashion trends.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Howard Chandler Christy painted Coolidge's portrait in 1924, depicting her in a red dress alongside her white collie Rob Roy. This was done on the initiative of Pi Beta Phi, which had funded the project to accompany the president's official painting. The painting hung in the China Room until it was moved to the Red Room by first lady Jacqueline Kennedy in 1961.Template:Sfn The red dress in the painting reinforced an association of Coolidge with the color.Template:Sfn Another painting of Coolidge was done by Christy depicting her in white.Template:Sfn

Many people close to the Coolidges felt that Coolidge benefited her husband.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The suffragette Florence Jaffray Harriman considered her "the administration's greatest success".Template:Sfn Vera Bloom, the daughter of Congressman Sol Bloom, said that Coolidge was worth one million dollars a year for the Republican Party.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Her husband's political backer Stearns credited Coolidge's ability to quickly make friends and her decision to "not meddle with" her husband's political activity as assets.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Secretary of Labor James J. Davis compared her management of the public to be on par with a campaign manager.Template:Sfn Her involvement in child welfare, and her practice of traveling with the president, set precedents for succeeding first ladies.Template:Sfn Coolidge's popularity pushed the first ladyship into a more public-facing role, adding a new facet to the job that persisted through future generations of first ladies.Template:Sfn

Historical studyEdit

Historians have debated how much Coolidge affected her husband's political career.Template:Sfn Biographers Robert Hugh Ferrell and Kristie Miller attribute her presence as a reason for his success, describing her personality as a necessary balance to his reservedness that may have otherwise lost him support.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Contemporary observers, such as Gamaliel Bradford and William Allen White, commented that the president had an emotional dependence on his wife, which he himself acknowledged.Template:Sfn Multiple people who knew the Coolidges attested to his devotion to Coolidge, with one friend saying that he "worshiped" her.Template:Sfn At the same time, she believed that he looked down on her intellectually.Template:Sfn

Ferrell cited Coolidge's ability to provide her husband a calm home-life without arguments or marital problems as an asset.Template:Sfn He was quick to anger, and she was often the one tasked with de-escalating him.Template:Sfn This typically did not bother her, but during periods of frustration she distracted herself with knitting.Template:Sfn Historians have given varied accounts regarding how happy she was in the relationship, and its exact nature remains disputed.Template:Sfn He imposed a number of rules on her about how she was to dress and act in public, and she needed his permission to visit her parents or travel to events.Template:Sfn Her biographer Ishbel Ross emphasized their devotion to one another and their shared sense of humor, though she also cast doubt on Coolidge's happy acceptance of the rules her husband imposed on her. Biographers Paul Boller, Betty Boyd Caroli, and Carl Sferrazza Anthony expressed similar concerns,Template:Sfn though Boller also considered her periods of unhappiness to be rare.Template:Sfn

Coolidge's place in the public consciousness faded after her tenure, and she became one of the more obscure first ladies.Template:Sfn Her lack of political involvement and her adherence to traditional expectations meant that she had no well-known accomplishments to keep her in the public's memory.Template:Sfn Her effort to collect antique furniture from the public was revitalized more successfully by first lady Jacqueline Kennedy.Template:Sfn

Correspondences and other papers from Coolidge's life have been kept by the Calvin Coolidge Presidential Library, the Coolidge Foundation, and the Vermont Historical Society. Lawrence E. Wikander and Robert Hugh Ferrell published a collection of her papers and autobiographical writings titled Grace Coolidge: An Autobiography in 1992. The first major biography about her was Grace Coolidge and Her Era: The Story of a President's Wife written by Ishbel Ross and published in 1962.Template:Sfn The book was written in part using direct accounts from Coolidge's son John Coolidge, her daughter-in-law Florence Coolidge, and her friends Florence Adams and Ivah Gale.Template:Sfn Cynthia Bittinger of the Calvin Coolidge Memorial Foundation released Grace Coolidge: Sudden Star in 2005, and Robert Hugh Ferrell released Grace Coolidge: The People's Lady in Silent Cal's White House in 2008.Template:Sfn Although Coolidge was more active later in her life, this has received relatively little scholarly attention.Template:Sfn

Since 1982, Siena College Research Institute has periodically conducted surveys asking historians to assess American first ladies, where Coolidge ranked 17th of 42 in 1982, 19th of 37 in 1993, 17th of 38 in 2003, 17th of 38 in 2008,Template:Sfn 21st of 39 in 2014,Template:Sfn and 25th of 40 in 2020.Template:Sfn

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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