On September 23, 1929, John married Florence Trumbull, the daughter of the Governor of Connecticut. John was an executive with the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad until 1941, when he became the president of a printing company in Hartford, Connecticut. When he retied, he settled in Farmington, Connecticut.
John Coolidge defended his father's administration, maintaining that historians have not fairly evaluated the Coolidge Presidency. He wrote, "I do not believe they have thoroughly researched the administration's accomplishments in the context of time." He also said that he regrets that President Coolidge's "philosophy of thrift and the role of government are no longer in vogue." But after the election of Ronald Reagan, he hoped that "perhaps they will become more so in the Reagan administration." John believes that his father would view today's world "dimly and sorrowfully," and believes that his father would not run for President today, and if he did, he would probably be defeated.
Calvin Coolidge, Jr. was born on April 13, 1908 in Northampton, Massachusetts. He also attended Mercersburg Academy in Pennsylvania. When his father became President, Calvin, Jr. was working at a job picking tobacco during his summer vacation. When he and John came home to the White House during the summer, Calvin, Jr. developed a blister on his toe (one source says it was his heel) playing tennis without wearing socks on the White House tennis courts. The blister became infected, and the infection became blood poisoning. This was in the days before modern antibiotics, and he died from the blood poisoning on July 7, 1924. He was sixteen years old. The President and Mrs. Coolidge were devastated, but had to continue their duties, and the election campaign.
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