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Houston was born in Monroe, North Carolina, on February 17, 1866. He was the son of William Henry Houston, a horse dealer and grocer, and his wife, the former Pamela Ann Stevens. He graduated from the University of South Carolina in 1887, with honors,[2] and completed his graduate work at Harvard University, where he received a M.A. in political science in 1892.[3] Houston married Helen Beall on December 11, 1895.[2] They had five children: David Franklin, Jr., Duval, Elizabeth, Helen and Lawrence Reid Houston.[4]
He became the Secretary of the Treasury from 1920 to 1921 shortly following the First World War.[7] His brief tenure was marked by stormy controversies over federal monetary policies. As ex officioChairman of the Federal Reserve Board, he issued severe warnings and, increased rediscount rates in order to prevent the inflation that the European allies were experiencing. Houston predicted a fall in U.S. prices, particularly of farm products, after the optimism of the Armistice wore off. He pushed for easier credit for farmers and urged them to produce less.
But when prices fell more dramatically than expected in 1920, farm spokesmen unfairly accused Houston of deliberately wrecking agrarian prosperity. Abroad, England and France were pushing to cancel their war debts. Houston, the U.S. Congress and the President, against cancellation, converted the short-term debts to long-term loans. Houston resigned at the end of President Wilson's term, after only a year in office.
During his time in government Houston advocated other progressive measures such as the provision of a proper system of personal credit unions, aiding land settlement, the encouragement of farm ownership,[8] and improvements in rural health and sanitation. In regards to the latter, Houston stated that “To what extent the further projection of effort is a matter for state or local action remains to be determined, but it seems clear that there should be no cessation of activity until there has been completed, in every community of the Union, an effective sanitary survey and, through the provision of adequate machinery, steps taken to control and eliminate the sources of disease and to provide the necessary modern medical and dental facilities easily accessible to the mass of the people.”[9] Houston also argued that "The farmer, as well as the industrial worker, is entitled to a living wage and to a reasonable profit on his investment."[10] He also argued that "We are all in sympathy with rational proposals for the improvement of the masses of the less fortunate people of the Nation and of the world, but this improvement must come by orderly processes. And we must recognize that, after all, the real progress of humanity is slow."[11]
Houston published A Critical Study of Nullification in South Carolina (1896) to establish his place in academia. He later published a two-volume memoir of his experiences as a cabinet member, Eight Years with Wilson's Cabinet.[3]
^"David Franklin Houston". The Christian Science Monitor. February 3, 1920. Archived from the original on November 6, 2012. Retrieved April 7, 2011. The promotion, for such it must be regarded, of David Franklin Houston, for almost seven years Secretary of Agriculture in the Cabinet of President Wilson, ...
^Remarks of D. F. Houston, Secretary of Agriculture: At Conference of Editors of Agricultural Journals, Washington, D. C., November 20, 1918, P.14-15. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
^Remarks of D. F. Houston, Secretary of Agriculture: At Conference of Editors of Agricultural Journals, Washington, D. C., November 20, 1918, P.18. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
^Address of D. F. Houston, secretary of agriculture, before the Association ... and experiment stations, Auditorium hotel, Chicago, Ill., November 12, 1919, P.7
^Address of D. F. Houston, secretary of agriculture, before the Association ... and experiment stations, Auditorium hotel, Chicago, Ill., November 12, 1919, P.12