Truman

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by David McCullough

“a new tenseness”: Forrestal Diaries, 387.

  “lifted me right out”: Smith, Lucius D. Clay, 466–67.

  to move atomic bombs: Lilienthal, Journals, Vol. I, 302.

  “The Jewish pressure”: Memoirs, Vol. II, 160.

  Niles grew so emotional: Letter from Joseph Alsop to Martin Sommers, June 1, 1948, LC.

  either “give in”: Ibid.

  “So I called him ‘Cham’ ”: Film Collection, HSTL.

  They had met secretly: Memoirs, Vol. II, 161.

  “You can bank on us”: Daniels, The Man of Independence, 318.

  “I was extremely happy”: Weizmann, Trial and Error, 459.

  Kennan’s paper: Donovan, 370.

  “playing with fire”: Forrestal Diaries, 373.

  “the political situation”: Lash, Eleanor: The Years Alone, 127.

  no “bending”: Pogue, 361.

  “On five occasions”: Clark Clifford interview with Jonathan Daniels, October 26, 1949.

  “pro-Arab”: Loy Henderson, Oral History, HSTL.

  “I pointed out that the views”: Ibid.

  “Oh, hell, I’m leaving”: Ibid.

  Frank Goldman call to Jacobson: Kansas City Times, May 13, 1965.

  Connelly warned Jacobson: Adler, Roots in a Moving Stream, 210.

  “always had a brother’s interest”: Kansas City Times, May 13, 1965.

  HST suddenly tense: Ibid.

  “In all the years of our friendship”: “Two Presidents and a Haberdasher—1948,” American Jewish Archives, April 1968.

  “disrespectful and mean”: Ibid.

  “Harry, all your life”: Ibid.

  HST reaction to Jacobson: Ibid.

  Jacobson has drink: Kansas City Times, May 13, 1965.

  “It is the most serious situation”: HST to Eleanor Roosevelt, March 16, 1948, Off the Record, 126.

  “It was better to do that”: Ayers Diary, March 16, 1948, HSTL.

  Joint Session speech: PP, HST, March 17, 1948, 182–86.

  “And when he left my office”: Memoirs, Vol. II, 161.

  HST and Weizmann reached “understanding”: Ibid.

  “A land of milk and honey”: The New York Times, March 21, 1948.

  “whimsical and cynical action”: Letter from Tucson Jewish Community Council, undated, White House Correspondence File, HSTL.

  “vacillating”: Letter from Democratic Council, undated, Whittier, California, White House Correspondence File, HSTL.

  “This change can mean”: Judge P. Tinley to HST, March 25, 1948, HSTL.

  “Oh, how could you stoop”: Samuel A. Sloan to HST, March 19, 1948, HSTL.

  “Black Friday”: “Two Presidents and a Haberdasher—1948.”

  “There wasn’t one”: Ibid.

  Weizmann certain what HST had meant: Adler, 211.

  Jacobson must not forget: “Two Presidents and a Haberdasher—1948.”

  “This morning I find”: HST Diary, March 20, 1948, Off the Record, 127.

  “the striped pants boys”: HST to MJT, March 21, 1948, HSTL.

  “Truman was in his office”: Clark Clifford interview with Jonathan Daniels, October 26, 1949; Daniels interview notes, HSTL.

  “The President’s statement”: Ayers Diary, March 20, 1948, HSTL.

  “the wisest course”: The News York Times, March 21, 1948.

  “This gets us nowhere”: Quoted in Steinberg, The Man from Missouri, 307.

  “Send final draft”: Foreign Relations of the United States. Vol. V: The Far East, South Asia and Africa, 645.

  “striped pants conspirators”: HST to MJT, March 21, 1948, HSTL.

  “prejudice the character”: PP, HST, March 25, 1948, 190, 192.

  Eleanor Roosevelt resignation: Lash, 130.

  “The choice for our people”: Weizmann, 474.

  “very strongly”: “Two Presidents and a Haberdasher—1948.”

  “the President looked worn”: Lilienthal, Journals, Vol. II, 320.

  “It is a scream”: HST to MJT, April 8, 1948, HSTL.

  Gallup Poll: Gallup, The Gallup Poll: Public Opinion 1935–71, 727.

  “When he [Truman] vetoed”: The New York Times, April 4, 1948.

  “You will be addressing all of us”: Weisberger interview with Clifford.

  “I want you to know”: George C. Marshall to HST, May 8, 1948, HSTL.

  Marshall speech: As reported in Frank McNaughton Papers, December 18, 1948, HSTL.

  May 12, 1948, meeting: Clay, General of the Army, 658, 661.

  “As I talked”: Address by Clark Clifford, American Ditchley Foundation, April, 5, 1984; Clark Clifford, author’s interview.

  “This is just straight politics”: Ibid.

  “General, he is here”: Ibid.

  “I had really prepared!”: Clifford, author’s interview.

  “everything this country should represent”: Ibid.

  “Behold, I have set the land”: Clifford, letter to the author.

  “No matter what the State Department”: Clark Clifford interview with Jonathan Daniels, October 26, 1949, HSTL.

  “the sharpest rebuke ever”: Clifford, author’s interview.

  “the great one of the age”: HST appointment sheet, February 18, 1947, Off the Record, 109.

  “That brought the meeting”: Clifford, author’s interview.

  “righteous goddamn Baptist”: Clark Clifford interview with Jonathan Daniels, October 26, 1949, HSTL.

  “didn’t know his ass”: Ibid.

  “That was rough as a cob”: Clifford, author’s interview.

  “I will cross that bridge”: PP, HST, May 13, 1948, 253.

  “Marshall was the greatest asset”: Clifford, author’s interview.

  Lovett would have to persuade: Ibid.

  Marshall called HST: Ibid.

  “That is all we need”: Ibid.

  “This is very unusual”: Ibid.

  name of new country left blank: Ibid.

  reaction of American delegation: The New York Times, May 16, 1948.

  “temporary, unofficial ambassador”: Adler, 212.

  “There is a great deal to be said”: Washington Star, May 16, 1948.

  “The difficulty with many career”: Memoirs, Vol. II, 165.

  “God put you in your mother’s womb”: Quoted in Steinberg, 308.

  “In my opinion”: Henderson, Oral History, HSTL.

  Marshall never spoke to Clifford again: Pogue, 377.

  “I told him that it was”: Isaacson and Thomas, The Wise Men, 433,

  Crestline, Ohio: PP, HST, June 4, 1948, 284.

  Omaha stop: Ayers Diary, June 7, 1948, HSTL.

  “I don’t give a damn”: Edward McKim, Oral History, HSTL.

  “President Truman was at his best”: Omaha Morning World-Herald, June 8, 1948.

  “walled-in”: Krock, Memoirs, 242.

  “It almost overwhelms me”: PP, HST, June 6, 1948, 288.

  “My goodness!”: Ibid., June 8, 1948, 303.

  Butte, Montana, stop: Idaho Daily Statesman, June 9, 1948.

  “I am sorry I had gone to bed”: New York Sun, June 9, 1948.

  “down to Berkeley”: Donovan, 400.

  “They told me at a little town”: HST to MJT, June 8, 1948, HSTL.

  Carey Airport gaffe: Montana Standard, June 9, 1948.

  “I have been in politics”: PP, HST, June 8, 1948, 301.

  a many-versed song: Kansas City Star, March 23, 1969.

  “a spectacle of himself”: Steinberg, 312.

  Eugene, Oregon, stop: PP, HST, June 11, 1948, 329.

  “about two acres of people”: Ibid., June 14, 1948, 348.

  “You know, this Congress”: Ibid., June 10, 1948, 314.

  “blackguarding Congress”: Redding, Inside the Democratic Party, 178.

  telegrams to mayors: Ibid.

  Berkeley-commencement address: PP, HST, June 12, 1948, 336–40,

  “Our policy will continue”: Ibid., 340.

  “they clung to the roofs”: Los Ange
les Times, June 15, 1948.

  HST jabbed his forefinger: Donovan, 401.

  June 18 return to Washington: Time, June 28, 1948.

  a “gone goose”: Ibid.

  Dewey acceptance speech: Time, July 5, 1948.

  “We stay in Berlin”: Forrestal Diaries, 454–55.

  “We stay in Berlin”: Pogue, 301.

  “we were nose to nose”: Bradley and Blair, A General’s Life, 481.

  “had no direct role whatever”: George Elsey, Oral History, HSTL.

  “A ball game or two”: HST Diary, June 18, 1948, Off the Record, 140.

  “I am not a quitter”: Krock, 241.

  “You have the choice”: Ickes quoted in Donovan, 389.

  decided it was time for Eisenhower: Hartmann, Truman and the 80th Congress, 186.

  Eisenhower did not want nomination: Steinberg, 309–10.

  Jimmy Roosevelt wired: Goulden, The Best Years, 1945–1950, 381.

  “a hard and possibly losing fight”: Ross, 113.

  “I am simply aghast”: Lilienthal, Journals, Vol. II, 378–79.

  “All right, let him go”: Ayers Diary, July 6, 1948, HSTL.

  “double-crossers all”: HST Diary, July 6, 1948, Off the Record, 141.

  “I don’t think he would be a candidate”: HST to James W. Gerard, April 27, 1948, HSTL.

  Krock story: Krock, Memoirs, 242.

  Pepper proposing Eisenhower draft: Newsweek, July 19, 1948.

  “I wanted to tell you”: Krock, 243.

  “In a telephone conference”: Ibid.

  “final and complete”: Newsweek, July 19, 1948.

  “Truman, Harry Truman”: Goldman, The Crucial Decade—and After, 83.

  “no time for politics as usual”: Ross, 115.

  “None of us”: Phillips, 218.

  ’We got the wrong rigs”: The New York Times, July 12, 1948.

  “You could cut the gloom”: Barkley, That Reminds Me, 200.

  Douglas wished to stay on Court: HST Diary, July 12, 1948, Off the Record, 141.

  “I stuck my neck”: Ayers Diary, July 13, 1948, HSTL.

  “But if memory does not betray”: Redding, 188–89.

  If Barkley was what convention wanted: Newsweek, July 26, 1948.

  Barkley gone to bed: HST Diary, July 13, 1948, Off the Record, 142.

  Barkley never told HST he wanted to be VP: Ross, 119.

  “I don’t want it passed”: Truman, Harry S. Truman, 12.

  “Talking about the vice-presidency”: Ayers Diary, July 13, 1948, HSTL.

  “A Negro alternate from St. Louis”: HST Diary, July 13, 1948, Off the Record, 142.

  “sellout” to states’ rights: Ross, 121.

  “We were inherently stronger”: Douglas, In the Fullness of Time, 137.

  “Young man, that’s just what”: Goulden, 385.

  “There are those who say”: Ross, 125.

  southern “walkout” would destroy: Hardeman and Bacon, Rayburn: A Biography,337.

  as “crackpots”: HST Diary, July 14, 1948, Off the Record, 143.

  “No privacy sure enough”: Ibid.

  “Hard to hear”: Ibid.

  “a very agreeable visit”: Barkley, 203.

  “an interesting and instructive evening”: HST Diary, July 14, 1948, Off the Record, 143.

  “hot, horrible night”: Tom Evans, Oral History, HSTL.

  “They did what you do”: Elsey, author’s interview.

  “Harry Truman’s a goddamn liar”: Hardeman and Bacon, 338.

  “Senator Barkley and I”: PP, HST, July 15, 1948, 406.

  “Our task is to fill”: Smith, 500,

  “Now it is time for us”: PP, HST, July 15, 1948, 406.

  “Everybody knows that I recommended”: Ibid., 408.

  “He walked out there”: Clifford, author’s interview.

  “They sensed”: Lerner, Actions and Passions, 233.

  “Of course, it was politics”: Daniels, 356.

  “devilishly astute”: Martin, My First Fifty Years in Politics, 178.

  “Arrived in Washington”: HST Diary, July 15, 1948, Off the Record, 144.

  “to reduce us to the status”: Ross, 131.

  “the segregation of the races”: Ibid.

  “but Truman really means it”: Steinberg, 315.

  “on the basis of interest”: Ross, 158.

  “We stand against the kings”: Time, August 2, 1948.

  Forrestal and atomic bomb: HST to EWT, July 23, 1948, Dear Bess, 555.

  “It is hot and humid”: HST Diary, July 19, 1948, Off the Record, 145.

  “We’ll stay in Berlin”: Ibid.

  “If we wished to remain”: Memoirs, Vol. II, 124.

  a “very big operation”: Davidson, The Berlin Blockade, 105.

  “We were proud of our Air Force”: Quoted in Tusa, The Berlin Airlift, 167.

  “But every expert knows”: Quoted in Davidson, 125.

  “My muttonhead Secretary”: HST to EWT, July 23, 1948, Dear Bess, 555.

  “There is considerable political”: Memorandum by James H. Rowe, Jr., Miscellaneous Historical Documents, HSTL.

  “I am going through a terrible”: HST to WC, July 10, 1948, Truman, Letters from Father, 110.

  “The President greeted us rather solemnly”: Lilienthal, Journals, Vol. II, 388–89.

  “This is no time”: Ibid., 391.

  “If what worried the President”: Ibid.

  Truman held Forrestal: Forrestal Diaries, 461.

  seemed lately unable to “take hold”: Lilienthal, Journals, Vol. II, 386.

  “I went down the river”: HST to MJT, July 26, 1948, HSTL.

  “No, we’re not going to give”: Quoted in Donovan, 411.

  “They sure are in a stew”: HST to EWT, July 23, 1948, Dear Bess, 66.

  “For a number of years”: Phillips, 369.

  “a ‘red herring’ “: PP, HST, August 5, 1948, 433.

  “Entirely”: Ibid., August 12, 1948, 438.

  floor of Margaret’s room: HST to MJT, August 10, 1948, HSTL.

  “Can you imagine?”: Truman, Bess W. Truman, 329.

  “Margaret’s sitting room”: HST to MJT, August 10, 1948, HSTL.

  “old Abe’s bed”: Ibid.

  14. Fighting Chance

  “It will be the greatest”: HST to MJT, October 5, 1948, HSTL.

  “There were no deep-hid schemes”: Ross, “How Truman Did It,” Collier’s, December 24, 1948.

  “It’s going to be tough”: Ibid.

  “I have a terrible feeling”: HST Diary, September 13, 1948, in Ferrell, ed., Off the Record, 149.

  “Every grade crossing”: The New Yorker, October 9, 1948.

  “I’m going to give ’em hell”: Time, September 27, 1948.

  Gallup Poll: Gallup, The Gallup Poll: Public Opinion 1935–1971, 757.

  “My whole inclination”: Time, September 13, 1948.

  “Cadillac Square”: Matt Connelly, Oral History, HSTL.

  “You remember the big boom”: PP, HST, September 18, 1948, 504.

  plow the straightest furrows: Ibid., 506.

  “You stayed at home in 1946”: Ibid., 501.

  “Understand me, when I speak”: Ibid., September 20, 1948, 518.

  “Selfish men have always”: Ibid., September 21, 1948, 531.

  “sharp speeches”: Donovan, Conflict and Crisis, 425.

  These “little speeches”: Ross, “How Truman Did It.”

  “Oh, I wish my grandfather”: PP, HST, September 21, 1948, 531.

  “They tell me [he said at Mojave]”: Ibid., September 23, 1948, 554.

  “I’m here on a serious mission”: Ibid., September 22, 1948, 544.

  “In 1946, you know”: Ibid., September 20, 1948, 512, 514.

  “Give ’em hell”: Clark Clifford, author’s interview.

  “I never gave anybody hell”: The New York Times, December 27, 1972.

  “It will be a picture”: The New Yorker, October 9, 1948.

  Los Ang
eles speech: PP, HST, September 24, 1948, 559.

  “We are not quite holding our own”: Tusa, The Berlin Airlift, 235.

  “That’s good”: Ross, “How Truman Did It.”

  a “Research Division”: George Elsey, Oral History, HSTL.

  “He gives every appearance”: Clifford, author’s interview.

  the “evil forces”: Time, October 11, 1948.

  HST never mentioned Dewey: Clifford, author’s interview.

  “If you wanted anything”: The New Yorker, October 16, 1948.

  “sort of rube reputation”: Daniels, The Man of Independence, 358.

  Description of Dewey campaign: The New Yorker, October 16, 1948.

  “Tonight we enter upon a campaign”: Ross, The Loneliest Campaign, 193.

  “We cannot win without”: Quoted in Donovan, 420.

  “Smile, governor”: Smith, Thomas E. Dewey and His Times, 26.

  “You have to know Mr. Dewey well”: Ross, The Loneliest Campaign, 32.

  “like a man who has been”: The New Yorker, October 16, 1948.

  “It is written in the stars”: Smith, 17.

  carnal relations: Ibid., 34.

  “When you’re leading”: Ibid., 30.

  “We always asked them”: Ross, The Loneliest Campaign, 166.

  “How long is Dewey”: Life, October 25, 1948.

  “get down in the gutter”: Quoted in Smith, 515.

  “Isn’t it harder in politics?”: New Republic, November 1, 1948.

  “We resurrected the president’s”: Sullivan, The Bureau, 44.

  “The tragic fact is”: Time, October 4, 1948.

  “We’ll have no thought police”: Quoted in Smith, 508.

  “We hit Salt Lake City”: Quoted in Ross, The Loneliest Campaign, 207.

  “Then we went into Texas”: PP, HST, September 29, 1948, 629.

  “He is good on the back”: Quoted in Hardeman and Bacon, Rayburn: A Biography, 340.

  “they’d shoot Truman”: Quoted in Steinberg, 325.

  “an eloquence close to”: Daniels, 362.

  “Our government is made up”: PP, HST, September 26, 1948, 210.

  “I am going over to Bonham”: Ibid., September 27, 1948, 591.

  “So in making their speeches”: Ibid., 589.

  “Some things are worth fighting for”: Ibid., 593, 595.

  “They came in droves”: Truman, Souvenir, 231.

  “I know every man, woman, and child”: Hardeman and Bacon, 341.

  “Shut the door, Beauford”: Quoted in Truman, Harry S. Truman, 37.

  “A great many honors”: Baruch, The Public Years, 399.

  “one jump ahead of the sheriff’: Ross, “How Truman Did It.”

 

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