Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Herbert Hoover (born August 10, 1874, West Branch, Iowa, U.S.—died October 20, 1964, New York, New York) was the 31st president of the United States (1929–33). Hoover’s reputation as a humanitarian—earned during and after World War I as he rescued millions of Europeans from starvation —faded from public consciousness when his ...

    • Lou Hoover

      Lou Hoover (born March 29, 1874, Waterloo, Iowa, U.S.—died...

    • Theodore Jesse Hoover

      Theodore Jesse Hoover was an American mining engineer,...

    • Alvin York

      Alvin York was a celebrated American hero of World War I,...

    • Overview
    • The early life of Herbert Hoover
    • The presidency of Herbert Hoover
    • Hoover and the Great Depression
    • What do you think?

    When Herbert Hoover took office in 1929, he had no idea that the Great Depression was imminent.

    Herbert Clark Hoover was born in 1874 in Iowa, and was the first US president to have been born west of the Mississippi River. He worked as a mining engineer and an independent mining consultant, traveling the world and building a sizable personal fortune.1‍  When World War I broke out, Hoover became active in humanitarian work, and chaired the Commission for Relief in Belgium, which provided relief to that country as it faced a food crisis brought on by the German invasion in 1914.2‍  He also served as the director of the American Relief Administration, which was formed in 1919 and supplied relief to war-torn Europe and Russia.3‍ 

    During the First World War, President Woodrow Wilson appointed Hoover head of the US Food Administration, which sought to reduce consumption and avoid wartime food rationing. Hoover went on to serve as Secretary of Commerce in the administration of Warren G. Harding.

    Hoover won the Republican nomination in the 1928 presidential election after Republican President Calvin Coolidge announced that he would not be running for reelection. Hoover campaigned on Coolidge’s legacy of economic prosperity, pledging to support business, improve the quality of life of the nation’s farmers, and conduct a relatively isolationist foreign policy. Hoover was ambivalent about Prohibition, referring to it as a “great social and economic experiment,” but failing to back it wholeheartedly.4‍  Hoover won the election in a landslide against his Democratic opponent.

    Once in office, Hoover sought to reform the nation’s regulatory system. He was not an advocate of a laissez-faire economy, but instead encouraged the voluntary cooperation of the federal government and big business. At Hoover’s direction, the Internal Revenue Service and the Justice Department prosecuted gangsters, including Al Capone, for tax evasion. Hoover considered himself a progressive, and this was reflected in some of his administration’s policies, including the reorganization of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the organization of the Federal Bureau of Prisons, the closing of tax loopholes for the wealthiest Americans, the expansion of national park lands, and the strengthening of protections for labor.

    In 1929, the stock market crash catalyzed the onset of the Great Depression.5‍  Though Hoover has gained a reputation for dithering in the face of economic peril, his administration actually pursued measures that helped lay the basis for Roosevelt’s New Deal. Hoover launched a massive public works program, part of which included funding for construction of the Hoover Dam on the Colorado River. His administration implemented stronger protections for labor and substantially increased federal subsidies for agriculture.6‍  Hoover also played a key role in passing the Glass-Steagall Act of 1932, which limited the activities of commercial banks in an attempt to stabilize the banking sector.

    However, many of these policies were not immediately effective, and some of the administration’s actions actually worsened the effects of the depression. The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act, for instance, which Hoover signed reluctantly, raised tariffs on thousands of imported goods and initiated a trade war between the United States and Europe, thereby exacerbating the global economic downturn.7‍ 

    Did Hoover’s early career effectively prepare him for the presidency? Why or why not?

    What were Hoover’s greatest accomplishments as president? What were his most consequential shortcomings?

    How would you characterize the Hoover administration’s response to the Great Depression?

    [Notes and attributions]

  2. Herbert Hoover: Life in Brief. Upon accepting the Republican nomination for President in 1928, Herbert Hoover predicted that "We in America today are nearer to the final triumph over poverty than ever before in the history of any land. The poorhouse is vanishing from among us." Hoover won the presidency that year, but his time in office belied ...

  3. v. t. e. Herbert Hoover 's tenure as the 31st president of the United States began on his inauguration on March 4, 1929, and ended on March 4, 1933. Hoover, a Republican, took office after a landslide victory in the 1928 presidential election over Democrat Al Smith of New York. His presidency ended following his defeat in the 1932 presidential ...

  4. President Herbert Hoover, Bureau of Reclamation. During the time in the early 1920s when legislation was being crafted to authorize a dam on the Colorado River, Herbert Hoover served as Secretary ...

  5. Herbert C. Hoover. Thirty-First President, 1929-1933. Campaign: Running on a progressive platform, Herbert C. Hoover was enormously popular. His economic acuity was especially respected as he had established his capable good judgment during his tenure as secretary of commerce for both Harding and Coolidge. Challenges:

  6. People also ask

  7. Jun 10, 2016 · A former mining engineer who had worked all over the world, Herbert Hoover had never held elective office before his run for the presidency. Business success, prominent public roles during World War One, and a long tenure as secretary of commerce in the Harding and Coolidge administrations, however, made him the leading candidate for the 1928 Republican presidential nomination.

  1. People also search for