Description:

Hoover Herbert

Herbert Hoover TLS on his Republican Party Presidential Nomination!

 

1p TLS signed by Republican Party presidential nominee Herbert Hoover (1874-1964) as "Herbert Hoover" near bottom. Written in Washington, D.C. on June 16, 1928. The watermarked cream bifold stationery paper has "Secretary of Commerce / Washington" letterhead. Expected light paper folds, else near fine. 7.5" x 10.5". Accompanied by a matching envelope postmarked from Washington, D.C. on June 17, 1928, and bearing a canceled carmine George Washington 2 cent stamp. Letter-opened at top and lightly weathered, else near fine.

 

The day following his Republican Party presidential nomination, Herbert Hoover wrote this thank you note to one of his former mining associates, William J. Loring (ca. 1869-1952).

 

He wrote in part: "Many thanks for your telegram of congratulations. I greatly appreciate the fine note of friendship it conveys."

 

The Republican National Convention had taken place at Convention Hall in Kansas City, Missouri between June 12-15, 1928. Some 14 candidates' names were floated before and during the convention, ranging from sitting President Coolidge and Vice President Dawes, to governors, senators, and other government officials from Massachusetts, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, West Virginia, Kansas, Nebraska, Idaho, and Oregon. After Coolidge dropped out of the race, acting Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover became the party front-runner. Hoover easily won the nomination on the first ballot with 837 votes. Hoover would eventually run on the same ticket as one of his Republican Party opponents, Kansas Senator Charles Curtis (1860-1936), and the two would win the November 1928 general election.

 

Before his political career, Hoover had made his fortune as a mining engineer, consultant, administrator, and investor. Both Hoover and Loring had worked for the London-based mining concern Bewick, Moreing & Co. (BMC) The two met in the Australian bush in the early 1900s while both were on assignment.

 

William J. Loring was one of twentieth-century America's most successful mining industrialists. He entered the trade at age 12, and by his early 30s had become BMC's superintendent of the Sons of Gwalia Mine in Australia. When he left the company's employ in 1908, Hoover sold his BMC shares (amounting to 33 1/3% of the entire corporation) to Loring. He and Hoover were initially friendly, but relations became strained after Hoover violated a non-competition agreement. Following a 1917 lawsuit, and especially after Loring's Western U.S. investments failed in the late 1920s, he deeply resented and even hated Hoover. This puts Hoover's characterization of Loring's friendship in quite another light.

 

Hoover gained his first political experience as Director of the U.S. Food Administration and, between 1921-1928, U.S. Secretary of Commerce. Hoover was blamed for mismanaging Depression recovery efforts; many viewed his 1932 presidential loss to 32nd U.S. President Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt as a referendum. Both Presidents Truman and Eisenhower appointed Hoover to head post-World War II fact-finding and aid-giving commissions. This later political involvement rehabilitated Hoover’s image.

 


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