Common Ground with Coolidge
Coolidge’s 1926 Warning Still Echoes Nearly a Century Later
As America prepares to celebrate its 250th anniversary next year, one of the nation’s most powerful reflections on the Declaration of Independence is receiving renewed attention nearly a century after it was delivered.
On July 5, 1926, President Calvin Coolidge stood in Philadelphia during the nation’s sesquicentennial celebration, the 150th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, and delivered what many historians consider one of the greatest speeches ever given about America’s founding principles.
At the center of Coolidge’s speech was a simple but forceful argument: the truths declared in 1776 were not temporary political ideas open to revision by changing generations. They were enduring principles.
“If all men are created equal, that is final,” Coolidge declared. “If they are endowed with inalienable rights, that is final. If governments derive their just power from the consent of the governed, that is final.”
Coolidge argued that the Declaration was not merely a historical document marking separation from Britain, but the moral foundation of American self-government itself.
“No advance, no progress can be made beyond those propositions,” he said.
The speech came during a period of enormous social and political change in America. The country was modernizing rapidly. Industrialization, urban growth, immigration, cultural tensions and political division were reshaping national life.
Yet Coolidge warned against abandoning the country’s foundational principles in the name of change.
“If anyone wishes to deny their truth and their soundness,” he continued, “the only direction in which he can proceed historically is not forward, but backward toward the time when there was no equality, no rights of the individual, no rule of the people.”
The remarks remain striking nearly 100 years later because they do not fit neatly into modern political categories.
Coolidge was defending individual liberty, constitutional government, equality under law, and democratic self-rule while also cautioning against political extremism and ideological movements that sought to discard America’s founding framework entirely.
Historians often note that Coolidge viewed the Declaration of Independence as something close to a civic covenant, a statement of moral truths that could guide future generations even as society changed around them.
Unlike some leaders who viewed the founding documents as flawed compromises to move beyond, Coolidge argued that America’s challenge was to more fully live up to its founding ideals, not replace them.
“The principles which went into the Declaration of Independence are found in the sermons of the early colonial clergy,” Coolidge said elsewhere in the speech. “They are found in the text of the Bible.”
That view reflected Coolidge’s broader political philosophy: restrained government, personal responsibility, moral character, and civic unity grounded in shared constitutional principles.
Nearly a century later, with Americans once again deeply divided politically and culturally, portions of the speech continue circulating widely online, especially around Independence Day celebrations.
For many readers today, the enduring power of the speech may rest in its reminder that America’s founding ideals were intended not merely as historical slogans but as permanent standards against which the nation should continue to measure itself.
As the country approaches its 250th birthday, Coolidge’s message from Philadelphia still raises the same question he posed in 1926:
Can Americans disagree passionately while still remaining united around the principles that created the nation in the first place?
Editor’s Note: The Royal Examiner will soon launch a new recurring feature connecting the words and principles of President Calvin Coolidge to modern civic life. The column is written by Lake Frederick resident and Coolidge family member Cal Coolidge, an eighth cousin of the president and former trustee of the Calvin Coolidge Presidential Foundation, with a focus on civility, constitutional principles, and finding common ground.







