A Note on My Harding Research

The information I posted during 2020 mostly covered Warren Harding's front-porch campaign from his home on Mt. Vernon Avenue in Marion, Ohio. The campaign officially started on July 31, 1920, and ended on September 25. The plan was to post daily on events that occurred exactly 100 years ago that day, but I shared other information as well. You'll have to read bottom-to-top if you want to follow the campaign from Day 1.

I used the open web for some of my research but also information accessible by using my library card or my subscription to www.newspapers.com. The most useful resource was the Marion Star, which was owned by the Hardings at the time of the campaign. I also browsed online copies of other newspapers like the New York Times, the Washington Star, and the Dayton Daily News, which, in 1920, was owned by Harding's Democratic opponent, Governor James M. Cox. I also posted information from other newspapers that covered Harding's trips away from Marion during the campaign.

Another great resource I used was Dale E. Cottrill's The Conciliator, a 1969 biography of the president that expanded an earlier bibliography of Harding's speeches. An online version is available at the Internet Archive, but I used a hard copy borrowed from the State Library of Ohio.

Readers should not construe anything posted here as a political statement on my part. I just like Harding as a historical topic.

9/16/2020

Thursday, September 16, 1920

Senator Harding is working on his speeches for Friday and Saturday. In the morning, he is visited by James R. Garfield, son of the former president. Later, the campaign announces that Harding's next trip outside Ohio, his second, will take him to Baltimore, Maryland (September 27), Wheeling, West Virginia (September 28), and Ashland, Kentucky (September 29). If he travels west, it will be no farther than Denver, Colorado.

Sources:
  • "James R. Garfield, Here Today, Talks of Loaded-Dice Play of Democrats." Marion Star. 16 September 1920.
  • "Three Speeches Away From Front Porch." Marion Star. 16 September 1920.

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