Showing posts sorted by relevance for query hoover. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query hoover. Sort by date Show all posts

Saturday, November 1, 2025

Redemption of Herbert Hoover

Herbert Hoover, 1918

Herbert Hoover didn’t leave the White House — so much as escape it.

 Critics said he’d wrecked America and sat on his hands while people starved. They built shantytowns called Hoovervilles, wrapped themselves in Hoover blankets, and cursed his name between bites of government cheese. No president before or since has been so thoroughly damned by public opinion — not even Nixon.

 

FDR came riding in like a smiling messiah with a cigarette holder and a jaw made for the newsreels, while Hoover looked like a disappointed banker in a dust storm. Roosevelt promised hope and handouts; Hoover believed in hard work and human decency. “Blessed are the children of the poor,” he said dryly, “for they shall inherit debt.” Not exactly a campaign jingle for a nation waiting on its next meal.

 

So Hoover went west — back to Palo Alto. The man who once fed Europe spent his evenings pacing the hills above Stanford, wondering how a nation he’d saved could turn on him so fast. He wrote his vengeance on a typewriter: The Challenge to Liberty. The Memoirs. The Problems of Lasting Peace. Books with titles so dry you could light cigars with them — but inside them burned fury. “The New Deal,” he said, “is an attempt to divide men by class and set them to fighting each other. You cannot build freedom out of envy.”

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Herbert Hoover During World War I

 


Before he was president, Herbert Hoover was a mining engineer. A numbers man. A logistics wizard who’d made a fortune digging minerals out of the ground on three continents. Then, in 1914, war exploded across Europe.

Thousands of Americans were stranded with no cash and no way home.

Hoover organized emergency loans. Chartered ships. Set up offices. Within weeks, he’d helped get tens of thousands of Americans out of Europe.

He became chairman of the Commission for Relief in Belgium after it had been overrun by Germany. Millions of civilians faced starvation. Britain’s navy blockaded food shipments. Germany occupied the land. Hoover negotiated with both sides to move grain across oceans and through battle lines.

Under his direction, ships crossed the Atlantic loaded with wheat and flour. Warehouses rose. Distribution networks spread across occupied territories. The commission fed millions of people every day.

When America entered the war in 1917, Woodrow Wilson made Hoover the U.S. Food Administrator, a post he held from 1917 to 1919.

Hoover didn’t want heavy-handed rationing laws. He believed in voluntary cooperation. So he made food patriotic.

Saturday, November 29, 2025

The Man Who Kept the Army Talking: Charles McKinley Saltzman

Charles McKinley Saltzman was born in Panora, Iowa, in 1871—skinny, serious, and wired like a man who already heard radio static no one else could pick up. He graduated from West Point just in time to catch the Spanish–American War, where the Army still fought like it was 1864. Saltzman rode with the 1st Cavalry, and earned two Silver Stars for keeping his head while everything around him smoked and rattled. Officers said he had “the calm of a telegraph pole in a lightning storm.”

While other men were polishing sabers, Saltzman was climbing poles in the Philippines, stringing wire across mountains and jungles, keeping messages alive in places where nothing stayed alive for long. A Manila paper said he “could coax a signal through a brick wall and across a typhoon.” He took the compliment and kept working.

In 1912, he was in London, sitting among diplomats and radio wizards at the International Radiotelegraph Convention. The world was trying to agree on how to talk through the air without stepping on each other’s transmissions, and Saltzman showed up like the one man in the room who actually understood how the equipment worked. One observer said he “handled radio law the way a pianist handles a keyboard—precise, patient, and deadly.”

Saturday, March 28, 2026

Hoovervilles The Ultimate Dig At Herbert Hoover

(colorized image of a photo published in The World's Work in 1920)

They called them Hoovervilles, and the name stuck. Not funny. Not clever. Just mean and dead-on. The country was broke, jobs gone, banks shuttered, and people were out there hammering together shacks from junk like it might hold the world together one more night.

They spread like a bad rumor on riverbanks, rail yards, and empty lots on the edge of town. No water. No heat. Breadlines curling around the block like a slow funeral. People standing there with hollow eyes, waiting for a handout that might run out three bodies ahead of them.