“do nothing but good”: Ibid.
HST and Churchill on eagle’s head: Ross Diary, March 9, 1946, HSTL.
“Iron curtain” speech: Quoted in Gilbert, 198.
HST denies knowing what Churchill would say: Wallace, 558.
HST pleads “no comment”: PP, HST, March 8, 1946, 145.
“the Long Telegram”: Donovan, 187–88.
“here and now”: Matt Connelly Papers, HSTL.
“He was in his study”: Ross Diary, March 23, 1946, HSTL.
Mary Jane’s reaction to HST press conference: Mary Jane Truman, Oral History, HSTL.
492Life article: Busch, “A Year of Truman,” April 8, 1946.
“Here is to be seen”: The New York Times Magazine, April 7, 1946.
494Time article: May 6, 1946.
“I can hold a Cabinet meeting”: PP, HST, May 2, 1946, 227.
“Big money has too much”: HST to MET and MJT, January 23, 1946, HSTL.
“I’m going to give you the gun”: Quoted in Daniels, 325.
“We have a society”: The New York Times, May 22, 1946.
“That’s the way he is”: Ibid., May 26, 1946.
a “complicated”: J. C. Truman, author’s interview.
“This was the fifth day”: Ayers Diary, May 23, 1946, HSTL.
HST meeting with veterans: Washington Star, May 24, 1946.
“There were poignant scenes”: Newsweek, June 3, 1946.
Telegrams flooding the White House: White House Correspondence File, HSTL.
“At home those of us”: HST speech draft, undelivered, Clifford Papers, HSTL.
“In the manner of Lincoln”: Phillips, 115.
“I’d never been in the White House”: Clark Clifford, author’s interview.
“Alone of all the Truman entourage”: Quoted in Allen and Shannon, The Truman Merry-Go-Round, 61.
“The President is intelligent”: Clifford, with Holbrooke, Counsel to the President, 274.
“I come before the American people”: PP, HST, May 24, 1946, 274.
“He said they had verbally agreed”: Clifford interview, Daniels notes, HSTL.
“For the past two days”: PP, HST, May 25, 1946, 277.
“Spotlights ablaze”: New Republic, June 3, 1946.
“he could be tough”: The New York Times, May 26, 1946.
“Draft men who strike”: New Republic, June 3, 1946.
“I was the servant”: Film Collection, HSTL.
“Nothing about the Wallace affair”: George Elsey, author’s interview.
“If Mr. Slaughter is right”: PP, HST, July 18, 1946, 350.
HST’s health: Ross Diary, July 20, 1946, HSTL.
“Had the most awful day”: HST to MET and MJT, July 31, 1946, HSTL.
“She’s on the way out”: HST to EWT, August 9, 1946, Dear Bess, 530.
“Be good and be tough”: MT [Margaret Truman] to HST, June 14, 1946, Truman, Letters from Father, 142.
“I still have a number of bills”: HST to EWT, August 10, 1946, Dear Bess, 530.
“It’s just wonderful”: MacDonald, “President Truman’s Yacht,” Naval History, Winter 1990.
“See, he had no airs”: Clifford, author’s interview.
“He always plays a close hand”: Ted Marks, Oral History, HSTL.
“The Williamsburg”: MacDonald, “President Truman’s Yacht.”
“This is a paradise”: HST to MT, August 23, 1946, Truman, Letters from Father, 69.
“did all sorts of antics”: Truman, Harry S. Truman, 366.
“The furniture was taking headers”: HST to EWT, September 2, 1946, Dear Bess, 534.
“Night before last”: HST to EWT, September 9, 1946, ibid., 535.
disliked living there: HST to EWT, September 3, 1946, ibid., 534.
“You better lock your door”: Truman, Letters from Father, 144.
“I’m in the middle”: HST to EWT, September 10, 1946, Dear Bess, 536.
HST press conference: PP, HST, September 12, 1946, 426–29.
“If the President”: Ross Diary, September 21, 1946, HSTL.
Wallace account: Wallace, 612–13.
tried to skim through it: HST Diary, September 17, 1946, Off the Record, 94.
Reston column: The New York Times, September 13, 1946.
“The criticism continued to mount”: Ross Diary, September 21, 1946, HSTL.
“I’m still having Henry Wallace trouble”: HST to MET and MJT, September 18, 1946, HSTL.
“Henry told me”: HST to EWT, September 20, 1946, Dear Bess, 539.
“Everything’s lovely”: Quoted in Acheson, 192.
“Henry is the most peculiar fellow”: HST to MET and MJT, September 20, 1946, HSTL.
“He wants to disband”: Quoted in Donovan, 227.
Byrnes telegram: Byrnes, Speaking Frankly, 241–42.
“so nice about it”: HST to EWT, September 21, 1946, Dear Bess, 539.
“I would rather be anything”: HST to MET and MJT, September 20, 1946, HSTL.
“No man in his right mind”: HST to MT, September 9, 1946, Truman, Letters from Father, 71.
“a liar, double-crosser”: HST to MT, September 17, 1946, ibid., 75.
“Sept. 26, 1918”: HST Diary, September 26, 1946, Off the Record, 98.
Ickes called him “stupid”: Time, September 30, 1946.
32 percent poll results: Gallup, The Gallup Poll: Public Opinion 1935–1971, 604.
“Nothing on meat”: PP, HST, October 10, 1946, 447.
Truman continues electronic surveillance: Gentry, J. Edgar Hoover, 344.
“The shrill pitch of abuse”: Time, October 28, 1946.
he alone was formally dressed: Ibid.
“Here was a man”: Kilgore quoted in Steinberg, The Man from Missouri, 288.
“never seemed to have a problem”: Fields, My 21 Years in the White House, 187.
“We went to the Waldorf: HST to MT, October 26; 1946, Truman, Letters from Father,81.
Jefferson City stop: Time, November 11, 1946.
“Probably no President”: Phillips, 161.
12. Turning Point
“This is a serious course”: PP, HST, March 12, 1947, 179.
Lippmann on HST: Steel, Walter Lippmann and the American Century, 455.
“My dear Harry”: WC to HST, May 12, 1947, quoted in Gilbert, Winston S. Churchill. Never Despair, 326.
Acheson alone…was waiting: Acheson, Present at the Creation, 200.
“The captain with the mighty heart”: Ibid., dedication page.
“so fast they were falling all over”: Clark Clifford, author’s interview.
Lilienthal in rain: Lilienthal Journals, Vol. I, 54.
“the kind of grim gaiety”: Ibid., 118.
“Oh, God, it was the chance”: Clifford, author’s interview.
“now a free man”: Quoted in Time, April 7, 1947.
“I’m doing as I damn please”: HST to EWT, November 18, 1946, Dear Bess, 540.
“How can there be immunity”: Goldman, The Crucial Decade—And After, 29.
“He told me that he would”: HST Diary, January 1, 1947, in Ferrell, ed, Off the Record, 107.
“Bob is not austere”: Time, January 20, 1947.
HST walks to Union Station: Ayers Diary, January 6, 1947, HSTL.
“your appointment as Secretary of State”: Mosley, Marshall: Hero for Our Times, 390.
“I thought that the continuing harping”: Cray, General of the Army, 17.
Marshall did not possess the intellectual brilliance: Halle, The Cold War as History, 113.
“It was a striking and commanding force”: Acheson, 140–41.
exit office backwards: Paul Horgan, author’s interview.
“He never made any speeches”: Miller, Plain Speaking, 251.
“Sometimes he would sit”: Memoirs, Vol. II, 112.
“He was a man you could count on”: Quoted in Miller, 250.
“On the one hand”: Pogue, George C. Marshall. Statesman, 141–42.<
br />
“He gave a sense of purpose”: Bohlen, Witness to History, 259.
“Gentlemen, don’t fight”: Quoted in Pogue, 148.
Acheson found working with the general: Lilienthal, Journals, Vol. II, 159.
“The more I see and talk”: HST appointment sheet, February 18, 1947, Off the Record, 109.
“Marshall is a tower”: HST Diary, May 7, 1948, ibid., 134.
“I am surely lucky”: HST appointment sheet, February 18, 1947, ibid., 109.
“He no longer moans”: Gaddis, The United States and the Origins of the Cold War,1941–1947, 347.
“His eye is clear”: Quoted in Time, January 27, 1947.
48 percent poll rating: Time, February 10, 1947.
“They brought back all the pageantry”: West, with Kotz, Upstairs at the White House, 91.
“The papers say today”: HST to MET and MJT, February 9, 1947, Off the Record, 108.
“I was somewhat nervous”: HST to MET and MJT, February 13, 1947, HSTL.
“despite all the denying”: West, 91.
Lilienthal nomination hearings: Lilienthal, Journals, Vol. II, 141–42.
“far from anger or temper”: Ibid., 141.
“I believe in”: Ibid., Appendix B, 646–48.
HST supports Lilienthal: Ibid., 144.
Taft opposes nomination: Time, February 24, 1947.
“Courage: What is it?”: Lilienthal, Journals, Vol. II, 160.
“Now Mary, don’t you work too hard”: HST to MET and MJT, February 27, 1947, HSTL.
Lincoln McVeigh reported rumors: Memoirs, Vol. II, 99.
Greece a “ripe plum”: Ibid.
“little hope of independent survival”: Quoted in Donovan, Conflict and Crisis, 277.
“the only one in Government”: Gaddis, 346, note.
“It is not alarmist”: Quoted in Pogue, 164.
“The Soviet Union was playing”: Acheson, 219.
Vandenberg told the President: Ibid.
“and I expressed my emphatic”: Memoirs, Vol. II, 103.
Mexico City visit: Newsweek, March 17, 1947.
Clifford memo: appears in full in Krock, Memoirs, Appendix, 419–82.
“The impact of having it all”: George Elsey, Oral History, HSTL.
“If we go in”: Matt Connelly Papers, HSTL.
most important of his career: Ayers Diary, March 8, 1947, HSTL.
“I believe it must be”: Clifford, Counsel to the President, 136.
“too much rhetoric”: Bohlen, 261.
“If you take his advice”: Lilienthal, Journals, Vol. II, 163.
“I want no hedging”: Memoirs, Vol. II, 105.
Truman Doctrine speech: PP, HST, March 12, 1947, 176–80.
“Well, I told my wife”: Time, March 24, 1947.
“A vague global policy”: Quoted in Steel, 438–39.
a “universal pattern”: Hartmann, Truman and the 80th Congress, 61.
would “of course” act: Acheson, 225.
“I guess the do-gooders”: Newsweek, March 24, 1947.
“If Mr. L is a communist”: HST, draft unreleased statement, March 1947, Off the Record, 113.
“no part of a communist”: Vandenberg, ed., The Private Papers of Senator Vandenberg, 355.
“the most important thing”: Lilienthal, Journals, Vol. II, 166.
“[He is] very strongly anti-FBI”: Clark Clifford Papers, HSTL.
“The long tenure”: Martin, My First Fifty Years in Politics, 163.
“I am not worried”: PP, HST, April 3, 1947, 190.
“It was a political problem”: Bernstein, Loyalties, 195–98.
“The Republicans are now taking”: Frank McNaughton Papers, March 28, 1948, HSTL.
“If I can prevent”: HST to EW, September 27, 1947, Dear Bess, 550.
“Yes, it was terrible”: Joseph Rauh quoted in Bernstein, 196.
“I think it’s one of the proudest”: Clifford, author’s interview.
“There was much to be done”: Memoirs, Vol. II, 104.
“You don’t sit down”: Elsey, Oral History, HSTL.
Kennan leaves the room: Kennan, Memoirs, 328, note.
meeting with newspaper editors: PP, HST, April 7, 1947, 207–10.
“He was…an extremely thoughtful”: Elsey, Oral History, HSTL.
“When he went to lunch”: Quoted in Heller, The Truman White House, 46.
“Lots of times I would be”: Clifford, author’s interview.
“He spent virtually every waking”: Quoted in Heller, 119.
HST would like to have been history teacher: Ayers Diary, April 26, 1947, HSTL.
Clifford insists HST not be FDR: Markel, “Truman As the Crucial Third Year Opens.”
“In many ways President Truman”: Quoted in Heller, 120.
“It just has to be said”: Elsey, author’s interview.
“There is nothing in life”: Quoted in Farrar, Reluctant Servant, 195.
“priceless gift of vitality”: Acheson, 730.
the nation “again has leaders”: Hardeman and Bacon, Rayburn: A Biography, 328.
Marshall’s return of April 26, 1947: Memoirs, Vol. II, 112; Bohlen, 262–63; Kennan, 325.
The Soviets, it seemed: Marshall quoted in Pogue, 196.
“The patient is sinking”: Ibid., 200.
“Avoid trivia”: Kennan, 326.
Clayton memo: Pogue, 206.
Marshall speech: Mosley, 404–05.
“We grabbed the lifeline”: Quoted in Pogue, 217.
“play it straight”: Bohlen, 264.
part played by Acheson: Clark Clifford address, American Ditchley Foundation, April 5, 1984.
“anything that is sent up”: Clifford, author’s interview.
Halle’s comments on staff: Halle, 115–16.
“And you and I have both lived”: Quoted in Miller, 264.
“While he was responding”: Truman, Harry S. Truman, 383.
“If she wants to be a warbler”: HST to MET and MJT, January 30, 1947, HSTL.
“She’s one nice girl”: HST to MET and MJT, February 19, 1947, HSTL.
Mrs. Thomas J. Strickler: Kansas City Star, April 18, 1946.
“Margaret went to New York”: HST to MET and MJT, January 30, 1947, HSTL. ’
“Here’s a little dough”: HST to MT, February 28, 1947, Truman, Letters from Father, 89.
Margaret Truman’s radio debut: Kansas City Star, March 7, 8, 9, and 17, 1947.
“Perhaps, sheer naivete”: Truman, Souvenir, 162.
“Wish I could go along”: HST to MT, May 14, 1947, Truman, Letters from Father, 92.
“Whenever she wakes up”: Time, June 2, 1947.
“When I say all Americans”: PP, HST, June 29, 1947, 311–13.
“I did not believe”: White, A Man Called White, 348.
“Almost without exception”: White, How Far the Promised Land, 74.
he meant “every word of it”: White, A Man Called White, 348.
“But I believe what I say”: HST to MJT, June 28, 1947, HSTL.
reminiscing to Bess: HST to EWT, July 26, 1947, Dear Bess, 549.
“Goodbye, Harry”: HST Diary, November 24, 1952, Off the Record, 275.
“Well, now she won’t have to suffer”: Steinberg, The Man from Missouri, 295.
“Everything had changed”: Truman, Souvenir, 174.
“I couldn’t hold a press conference”: PP, HST, August 5, 1948, 365.
“Someday you’ll be an orphan”: HST to MT, August 1, 1947, Truman, Letters from Father, 96.
“You should call your mamma”: HST to MT, December 3, 1947, Truman, Harry S. Truman, 404–05.
“I called up Daddy”: Truman, Souvenir, 191.
a hit as a vaudeville team: Daniels, “The Lady from Independence,” McCall’s, April 1949.
She would laugh so hard: Parks and Leighton, My Thirty Years Backstage at the White House, 28.
“She’s the only lady I know”: Randall Jessee quoted in the Dallas Morning News, February 9
, 1976.
“Mrs. Truman came with great apologies”: Marquis Childs, author’s interview.
“the white gloves type”: Reathel Odum, author’s interview.
“They both had the gift”: Nixon, In the Arena, 231.
“one of the finest women”: Robert Lovett, Oral History, HSTL.
HST’s reliance on Bess: Quoted in Means, “What Three Presidents Say About Their Wives,” Good Housekeeping, August 1963.
Bess laughs at pretensions: Daniels, “The Lady from Independence.”
“And then…the minute the doors”: Lindy Boggs, author’s interview.
“Propriety was a much stronger influence”: Alice Acheson, author’s interview.
“Just keep on smiling”: Truman, Bess W. Truman, 265.
“She didn’t want to discuss”: Margaret Truman Daniel, author’s interview.
Bess Truman questionnaire: Time, November 10, 1947.
“She seems to think Harry”: Asbury, “Meet Harry’s Boss, Bess,” Collier’s, February 2, 1949.
Bess interested in Monroe administration: Daniels, “The Lady from Independence.”
“Mrs, Truman was no fussier”: West, 83.
“might as well have been in Independence”: J. B. West, author’s interview.
“And he listened to her”: Ibid.
Bess’s emotional separation: Truman, Bess W. Truman, 272.
“Suppose Miss Lizzie”: HST to EN, June 22, 1949, Off the Record, 157.
“Marshall and Lovett”: HST to EWT, September 23, 1947, Dear Bess, 549–50.
“Yesterday was one of the most hectic”: HST to EW, September 30, 1947, ibid., 550–51.
“Twenty-nine years!”: HST to EWT, June 28, 1948, Dear Bess, 554.
Greta Kempton portrait: Greta Kempton, author’s interview; Kempton letter to the author, June 20, 1984; Kempton, “Painting the Truman Family,” Missouri Historical ’ Review, April 1973; “An Interview with Greta Kempton,” Whistlestop, Vol. 15, no. 2, 1987.
a handwritten note from Churchill: Gilbert, Winston Churchill. Never Despair, 351.
“In all the history of the world”: HST speech draft, undelivered, April 1948, Off the Record, 133.
13. The Heat in the Kitchen
Eisenhower again declined: Donovan, Conflict and Crisis, 338.
“Mr. Truman was a realist”: Quoted in Phillips, The Truman Presidency, 197, note.
“give everything”: Ayers Diary, January 19, 1948, HSTL.
“Aside from the impossible”: HST to MET and MJT, November 14, 1947, HSTL.
“President Truman did not want to run”: Quoted in Donovan, 338.
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