Truman (188 page)

Read Truman Online

Authors: David McCullough

Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Presidents & Heads of State, #Political, #Historical

BOOK: Truman
3.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“I’m just Mr. Truman”:
The New York Times,
January 21, 1953.

“Crowd at Harper’s Ferry”: HST Diary, January 20, 1953,
Off the Record,
288.

Part Six

18. Citizen Truman

“Been going over”: HST to Dean Acheson, April 18, 1953, HSTL.

“Who knows”: HST to EW, May 23, 1911,
Dear Bess,
36.

“I tried never to forget”: Miller,
Plain Speaking,
10.

“Rumors have it”: Independence
Examiner,
January 22, 1953.

Burrus had picked out house: Rufus Burrus, author’s interview.

exploit or “commercialize”: Associated Press, January 23, 1953.

a Miami real estate developer: Samuel Q. Goldman to HST, October 7, 1952, HSTL.

Toyota offer: HST to Paul Butler, March 3, 1959, HSTL.

“I still don’t feel”: Quoted in Ferrell,
Harry S. Truman and the Modern American Presidency,
153.

“where everybody seemed”: HST to Dean Acheson, February 7, 1953, HSTL.

“take the grips up”: Ray Scherer, author’s interview.

HST set off for Grandview: Tubby Diary, February 5, 1953; Independence
Examiner,
January 23, 1953.

That was good land: George Elsey, Oral History, HSTL; author’s interview.

“A cold wind whipping”: Tubby Diary, February 5, 1953.

“More than any other single”: Harry S. Truman,
Mr. Citizen,
25.

“He was utterly lost”: Osborne, “Happy Days for Harry,”
Life,
July 7, 1958.

“Diamond Head”: HST Diary, April 1953, in Ferrell, ed.,
Off the Record,
290.

“This morning at 7
A.M.
”: HST Diary, May 20, 1953, Ibid., 292.

“A shovel (automatic)”: Ibid.

“a real tryout”: Truman, 64.

“Everything went well”: HST to Vic H. Housholder, November 29, 1953,
Off the Record
, 298.

“I admitted the charge”: Ibid.

“There goes our incognito”: Truman, 65.

“You’re a sight for sore eyes”:
The New York Times,
June 22, 1953.

“like a dream”: Truman, 67.

“If you’d go again”:
The New York Times,
June 29, 1953.

“He was very nice”: St. Louis
Post-Dispatch,
July 6, 1953.

“The book is doing fine”: HST to Acheson, November 5, 1953, HSTL.

Paul Douglas observation: Quoted in Manchester,
The Glory and the Dream,
663.

“As for the United States”: July 27, 1953.

“The war is over”: Manchester, 663.

“Of course I’m happy”: HST to Bela Kornitzer, August 7, 1953, HSTL.

“I’m not a writer!”: Francis Heller, author’s interview.

Hillman and Noyes: Miller, 20.

Promising to “protect” HST: Heller, author’s interview.

recording machine: Heller, “The Writing of the Truman Memoirs,”
Presidential Studies Quarterly,
Winter 1983.

Royce highly disorganized: Heller, author’s interview.

HST annoyed: Heller, “The Writing of the Truman Memoirs.”

“lively” and “honest”: Elston,
The World of Time Inc.,
299.

“The cream of the White House”: Williams, “I Was Truman’s Ghost,”
Presidential Studies Quarterly,
Spring 1982.

“His approval or criticism”: Ibid.

HST begins his day: Erskine, “Truman in Retirement,”
Collier’s,
February 4, 1955.

“She had golden curls”:
Memoirs,
Vol. 1, 116.

“I always try to be”: HST Diary, July 8, 1953,
Off the Record,
293.

“After I’d passed”: Ibid.

“When we moved”: Memoirs, Vol. 1, 115.

“In the fall of 1892”: Ibid., 116.

How could father be called failure: Steinberg,
The Man from Missouri,
15.

“I have been working on”: HST to Acheson, January 28, 1954, HSTL.

“Our tribal instinct”: HST to Acheson, St. Patrick’s Day, 1954, HSTL.

“I used to say”: Osborne, “Happy Days for Harry.”

auction at the Armory: Independence
Examiner,
November 19, 1954.

“I’m worried about our world”: HST to Acheson, May 28, 1954, HSTL.

Truman stricken at
Call Me Madam
: Kansas City
Star,
June 19, 1954.

gall bladder operation:
The New York Times,
June 21, 1954.

“a hell of a time”: HST to Acheson, October 14, 1954, HSTL.

“When the papers tell us”: Acheson to HST, June 21, 1954, HSTL.

“When you get acquainted”: Ibid.

“It is touching”: Acheson to EWT, June 30, 1954, HSTL.

“going great guns”: HST to Acheson, January 11, 1955, HSTL.

“The material is more interesting”: Acheson to HST, June 21, 1955, HSTL.

“Page 114, line 3”: Ibid.

“She was his true”: Ken McCormick, author’s interview.

“We’d left home”: HST Diary, June 24, 1955,
Off the Record,
317.

“I never really appreciated”: Elston, 299.

“I expect to use, probably”: HST to Samuel S. Vaughan, October 22, 1955, HSTL.

“when we see him”: Samuel S. Vaughan, author’s interview.

“I had no idea”: Ibid.

“There, that one’s all slicked up”: Paul Horgan, author’s interview.

“I will autograph”: HST to Ken McCormick, July 1, 1955,
Off the Record,
319.

only as “my history”: Heller, author’s interview.

“Altogether, it well”:
The New York Times Book Review,
November 6, 1955.

called Margaret “skinny”: HST to Acheson, January 11, 1955, HSTL.

“When I hear”: HST to Acheson, January 25, 1955, HSTL.

“Margie has put one over”: HST to Acheson, March 26, 1956, HSTL.

“He strikes me as a very nice”: HST to Acheson, March 26, 1956, HSTL.

“Consolation is just what”: Acheson to HST, March 27, 1956, HSTL.

“rain, rain, rain”: HST Diary, June 21 (?), 1956,
Off the Record,
336.

“I was so afraid”: HST to Acheson, July 20, 1956, HSTL.

welcome in Rome:
Time
, May 28, 1956.

Henry Luce tour:
The New York Times,
May 20, 1956.

Paul Schultheiss: Independence
Examiner,
May 19, 1956.

“He is considered the greatest”: HST Diary, May 27–29, 1956,
Off the Record,
329.

“[Harry] Truman and his wife lunched”: Berenson,
Sunset and Twilight,
436.

“I found that it was somewhat”: HST Diary, June 4, 1956,
Off the Record,
332.

“squeezed” from the people: HST Diary, June 1956, ibid., 333.

“We crossed the Channel”: HST Diary, June 21 (?), 1956, ibid., 336.

“Never, never in my life”: Kansas City
Times,
June 20, 1956.

“Truest of allies”:
The New York Times,
June 21, 1956.

“Mr. Truman is very popular”: Kansas City
Times,
June 20, 1956.

“Every person born”: Ibid., June 21, 1956.

“Give ’em, hell, Harricum!”: Ibid.

“I think we in this room”:
The New York Times,
June 22, 1956.

“A good many of the difficulties”:
The Times
(London), June 22, 1956.

“And—not least of all”: Ibid.

visit to London: HST Diary, June 21 (?), 1956,
Off the Record,
336.

“England is prosperous”: Ibid., 337.

“It was all over too soon”: HST Diary, June 24, 1956, ibid., 338.

“He told me that he could do”: Ibid.

“Too bad he’s not campaigning”: Kansas City
Times,
June 29, 1956.

“Never [said the United Press]”: Independence
Examiner,
June 28, 1956.

“lacks the kind of fighting spirit”: McKeever, Adlai Stevenson, 376.

“Harry S. Truman had the Democratic”:
The New York Times,
August 12, 1956.

“When I arrived in Chicago”: HST to Acheson, August 29, 1956, HSTL.

“I have never wanted to pose”: HST to LBJ, December 11, 1956, LBJL.

“Dad sat there for a long time”: Truman,
Harry S. Truman,
621.

“I expect to be knee deep”: HST to Acheson, June 7, 1957, HSTL.

“Mr. Truman, who has abiding”:
The New York Times,
July 7, 1957.

labor union contributions: “Contributions of Labor Unions to Harry S. Truman Library, Inc.,” HSTL.

“Hey there, farmer!” HST telephone conversation with Sam Rayburn, July 15, 1958,
Off the Record
, 364.

net profit: Kirkendall, ed.,
The Harry S. Truman Encyclopedia,
129.

“Had it not been”: HST to John W. McCormack, January 10, 1957,
Off the Record,
346.

“As you know, we passed”: Ibid.

“I would be proud”: HST to Acheson, October 15, 1952, HSTL.

“Mr. Truman is deeply”: Acheson to Thomas Bergin, July 12, 1954, HSTL.

HST and Yale librarian: Chester Kerr, author’s interview.

“I have never had a better time”: HST to Acheson, April 16, 1958, HSTL.

“Yale still rings”: HST to Acheson, May 15, 1958, HSTL.

“He’s so damn happy”: Osborne, “Happy Days for Harry.”

getting a bigger kick: Phillips, “Truman at 75,”
The New York Times Magazine,
May 3, 1959.

“a man overflowing with life”: Ibid.

“She says I am just like”: St. Louis
Post-Dispatch,
May 10, 1959.

“You know this five day week”: HST to Acheson, April 10, 1968, HSTL.

“where he can sit”: Unidentified article, February 3, 1960, Vertical Files, HSTL.

“Mr. Truman was one of the most thoughtful”: Essay by Phillip C. Brooks, February 16, 1971, HSTL.

HST and Benton’s drinking: Kansas City
Star,
March 14, 1989.

“Well, what the hell”: Benton,
An Artist in America,
351.

“When a good politician”: Kansas City
Star,
April 27, 1959.

“I like being a nose buster”: HST to Acheson, April 20, 1955, HSTL.

“She and I spent”: HST to Acheson, February 19, 1959, HSTL.

“Do you suppose any President”: HST to Acheson, November 24, 1959, HSTL.

“It’s not the pope”: Miller Tapes, LBJL.

Kennedy’s notes: “Interview with Truman,” Dictated to Mrs. Evelyn Lincoln, 12:00 Noon, January 10, 1959, HSTL.

“Just tell him it was Harry Truman”: John Zentay, author’s interview.

“stub his toe”: Acheson to HST, April 14, 1960, HSTL.

“I hate to say this”: Ibid.

“without doubt”: Kansas City
Star,
May 13, 1960.

Acheson letter: Acheson to HST, June 27, 1960, HSTL.

“You’ll never know”: HST to Acheson, July 9, 1960, HSTL.

“I am going to Los Angeles”: HST to Agnes E. Meyer, June 25, 1960,
Off the Record,
386.

“Your coming here is considered”: Memorandum from Hillman and Noyes to HST, undated, Post-Presidential Files, HSTL.

“rigged—or you will be charged”: Ibid.

HST press conference:
The New York Times,
July 3, 1961.

“I listened to your press”: Acheson to HST, July 17, 1960, HSTL.

“He could not have been”: Notes from Conversation of United Press Newsman with JFK, undated, HSTL.

“blue as indigo”: HST to Acheson, August 26, 1960, unsent,
Off the Record,
390.

“Don’t get discouraged”: HST to Samuel Rosenman, August 22, 1960, HSTL.

“Now you are in for it”: Acheson to HST, August 12, 1960, HSTL.

“A nap after lunch”: “Memo on Mr. Truman’s Trips,” David Stowe Papers, HSTL.

“Although he moves into and through”: “Notes on Truman Trips During 1960 Presidential Campaign,” David Stowe Papers, HSTL.

“The campaign is ended”: HST to Acheson, November 21, 1960, HSTL.

“I’ve had a lot of fun”: HSTL research staff phone conversation with Paul Hume, December 21, 1979, HSTL.

“See, I told you”: Ibid.

“You know, she remembered”: Peggy Scott, author’s interview.

“You are making a contribution”: HST to Acheson, July 7, 1961,
Off the Record,
395.

“Needless to say”: Ibid.

“I had thought he was not”: Merle Miller, author’s interview.

“Don’t try to make a play actor”: Aurthur, “The Wit and Sass of Harry S. Truman,”
Esquire
, August 1971.

“I think there were people”: Miller, author’s interview.

inclined to exaggerate: Miller, 13.

“Goddamn an eyewitness”: Miller Tapes, LBJL.

“He had something like Bryan”: Ibid.

“I haven’t seen him”: Ibid.

“He was a good man”: Ibid.

“came back rich with detail”: Aurthur, “Harry Truman Chuckles Dryly,”
Esquire,
September 1971.

“Because if while I’m talking”: Ibid.

“My God, he’s not old”: Miller, author’s interview.

hated long hair: Byron Stewart, Jr., author’s interview; Miller, 456.

“People in Independence”: Miller Tapes, LBJL.

“There were times”: Miller, author’s interview.

HST appalled by Bay of Pigs: HST to Acheson, May 3, 1961, HSTL.

“This is a terrible weakness”: Acheson to HST, July 14, 1961, HSTL.

“Keep writing”: HST to Acheson, July 18, 1961, HSTL.

“You must remember”: HST to Acheson, September 25, 1961,
Off the Record,
397.

“If and when that happens”: HST to Acheson, December 20, 1962, HSTL.

“I just don’t like”: Schlesinger,
Robert Kennedy and His Times
, 230.

“Matt Connelly has been”: HST to RFK, January 24, 1962, HSTL.

HST sends letter of gratitude: HST to JFK, December 3, 1962, HSTL.

“That old lady”: HST to Acheson, May 14, 1963,
Off the Record,
407.

“Having come so close”: Truman,
Bess W. Truman,
418.

HST put to bed at Blair House: Wilroy and Prinz,
Inside Blair House
, 117.

Secret Service protection: Robert Lockwood, author’s interview.

“Thank you very much”:
Remarks by Former President Harry S. Truman, Being the Occasion of Mr. Truman’s 80th Birthday,
May 8, 1964, 88th Congress, 2nd Sess., Sen. Doc. No. 88.

Other books

Dead Silent by Neil White
Magenta Mine: An Invertary Novella by janet elizabeth henderson
The Bathory Curse by Renee Lake
Reckless by R.M. Martinez
Memories of Midnight by Sidney Sheldon
Four Horses For Tishtry by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro
Guarding a Notorious Lady by Olivia Parker
Take What You Want by Ann Lister
An Improper Holiday by K.A. Mitchell