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Leadership

Page 65

by Doris Kearns Goodwin


  national recognition in, 143

  as N.Y. police commissioner, 51, 133, 136–43

  in N.Y. State Assembly, 21–24, 34–38, 55, 124–26

  onset of, 22–24, 33–38

  pledge of independence in, 34–35

  political style of, 35–37, 255–56, 288

  in post-presidency attempt to re-enter politics, 353–55

  Progressive reform agenda of, 29, 33, 36, 126, 133–43, 153, 155, 244–45, 354

  in subordinate position, 143–48

  as vice president, 51, 64, 157–59, 206–7, 244

  Roosevelt, Theodore, presidency, 55, 279

  aftermath of, 345–46, 353–57

  assumed after McKinley’s assassination, xvi, 52, 159, 207, 243, 252, 307, 353

  cabinet of, 243

  defining leadership issues of, see Great Coal Strike (1902)

  first run for, 23, 353

  increased executive power in, 265–67, 271–72

  onset of, 243–44

  progressive agenda of, 244–45, 272, 292

  public support cultivated by, 255–56

  trolley crash injury and convalescence of, 256–58, 260, 263–64, 269, 270

  trust-busting in, 253–56, 272

  Roosevelt, Theodore, Sr. “Thee,” 22, 35, 131, 134, 251

  Civil War service avoided by, 148–49

  death of, 29–31, 125

  as devoted father, 24–25, 27, 31, 47, 49

  idolized by TR, 28–30, 32–33, 36

  Root, Elihu, 35, 70, 259, 265, 267–69

  Rosenman, Sam, 47, 67, 166, 176, 178–79, 281, 296, 360

  Rough Riders, 150–54, 302, 355

  Rowe, Elizabeth, 94

  Rowe, Jim, 93–94, 200

  Ruby, Jack, 306

  Rural Electrification Administration (REA), 91–92

  Russell, Richard, 194–96, 203, 321–22, 325–26, 335, 347

  Rutledge, Ann, 100

  Sagamore Hill, 145, 252, 353

  saloons, saloonkeepers:

  N.Y. Sunday closing law for, 140–42

  political influence of, 34

  Sam Houston High School, 77–80, 83, 165, 182, 185, 189, 336

  San Antonio, Tex., 82, 150, 291, 350

  Sanchez, Manuel, 76

  Sangamon County, 13–14, 19, 102, 367

  Sangamon River, 10, 12, 108

  San Juan Hill, 152–53

  Sargent, Frank, 259, 270

  Schlesinger, Arthur, 206, 283, 297

  Schofield, John M., 266

  school desegregation, 203

  secession, 110, 211–12

  secrecy, 330

  in LBJ’s Vietnam policy, 341–42

  Securities and Exchange Act, 304

  Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), 303–4

  Selma, Ala., civil rights march from, 332–35

  Senate, U.S., 29, 58, 63

  AL’s loss of election to, 116–18, 121, 123

  banking bill passed by, 303

  civil rights bill (1957) debated and passed in, 203–5

  civil rights bill (1964) debated and passed in, 322–26

  Committee on Rules and Administration of, 196

  Finance Committee of, 308, 313

  “golden age of,” 193

  LBJ’s appeal to young and old in, 196

  LBJ’s dynamics of power in, 193–97

  LBJ’s election to and tenure in, 191–99, 202–5

  LBJ’s loss of election to, xv, 182–86

  LBJ’s tax bill passed in, 316

  use of filibuster in, 202, 203, 313, 322–3225

  whip and leader roles in, 195–204, 206

  Sewall, Bill, 32, 125, 128, 148, 272

  Seward, Fred, 231

  Seward, William Henry, 104, 119–22, 193, 212, 217, 220, 222, 223–24, 231

  Shakespeare, William, plays of, 229

  Sheehan, “Blue-Eyed” Billy, 58–59, 63

  Shenandoah, Pa., strike violence in, 242–53

  Sheppard, Morris, 183

  Sherman Antitrust Act, 253–54, 261

  Sherwood, Robert, 274, 304, 362

  slavery:

  abolition of, see Emancipation Proclamation

  AL’s evolving opposition to, xvi, xviii, 17, 103–4, 110–23, 213–16

  AL’s leadership defined by, xvi, xviii, 116, 211–42

  containment of, 114–15, 120

  diverse sentiments in AL’s cabinet on, 213–22

  elemental components of, 112

  legislation upholding, 120

  opposition to, see abolitionism, abolitionists; emancipation

  in territories, 103–4, 110–11, 120

  violence and, 19

  Smathers, George, 313

  Smith, Al:

  gubernatorial run of, 165

  presidential nominations of, 169–71, 174–75

  Smith, Caleb, 217, 219, 222, 224

  Smith, Howard, 318–20, 324

  Snell, Bertrand, 286

  Social Security, 201

  Soldier’s Home, as AL’s refuge, 215, 220, 236, 250

  Sorenson, Theodore, 312–13

  South:

  AL’s outreach to, 120

  antebellum, 26

  civil rights opposition in, 194, 203, 332–34

  economic stagnation in, 203

  segregation entrenched in, 21, 311, 317–18, 325, 326, 332–35

  South America, TR’s trip to, 354, 356

  Southwest Texas State Teachers College, San Marcos, 73–74, 79, 84

  Souvestre, Marie, 54

  Spanish-American War, 295

  TR’s Army service in, 148–54, 251, 355

  TR’s naval preparation for, 132, 143, 145–48

  Speed, Joshua, 99–101, 112, 241

  Spotsylvania, battle of, 238

  Springer, Elizabeth, 315–16

  Springfield, Ill., 15, 100, 112, 122, 235

  Square Deal, xviii, 245, 255, 272

  Stalin, Joseph, 361

  stamp collecting, 46–48, 81

  Stanton, Edwin, 217–19, 221, 223, 226, 365, 367

  State Department, U.S., 212, 223

  state troops, 265, 333

  Steagall, Henry, 286

  Steffens, Lincoln, 137–38, 141

  Stennis, John, 317

  Stevenson, Adlai, 202, 205

  Stevenson, Coke, 192–93

  stock market, 36, 40–41, 169, 246, 259

  government vs., 253–55

  indefinite suspension of, 276

  1929 crash of, 177

  plunges of, 156, 243–44

  regulation of, 302–3

  reopening of, 291

  Stoddard, William, 17

  Stone, William A., 265, 267

  storytelling:

  AL’s skills in, 6–7, 9, 11, 13–15, 72, 103, 108, 113, 116, 117–18, 188, 316, 368

  of Depression era projects, 298–99, 301

  FDR’s skills in, 92, 179, 316

  LBJ’s skills in, 72–73, 78, 92, 94, 198, 316–18, 347

  in leadership, 39

  in release of tension, 221

  TR’s skills in, 26, 32, 51, 72

  Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 232

  Strong, George Templeton, 213, 227, 230, 239

  Strong, William, 136, 138, 141

  Stuart, John, 15

  subordinacy, managing power in positions of, 143–48

  Suckley, Margaret, 359

  Sullivan, “Big Tim,” 59

  Sullivan, Mark, 244

  Sumner, Charles, l20

  Sunday closing law, 140–42

  Supreme Court, U.S., 120, 203, 254, 279, 310

  Swett, Leonard, 224, 239

  Taft, William Howard, 158, 353

  Tammany Hall, 35, 58–59, 136–37, 141

  tax bill, LBJ’s passage of, 308, 311–16, 337

  Taylor, Claudia “Lady Bird,” see Johnson, Lady Bird

  Taylor, Zachary, 103–5, 109

  team building:

  by AL, 121, 211–42

 
; creating unity from diversity in, 211–42, 296–99, 304

  in crisis management, 258–60, 268–71

  by FDR, 66–67, 164–69, 175–77, 279–84, 296–99

  by LBJ, 80, 84–87, 190, 197, 307

  by TR, 150–52, 258–60, 265, 268–71

  television, 190, 307–8, 332–33, 342–43

  tenements, 38, 54, 140

  Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), 91, 302

  Tennyson, Alfred Lord, 72

  Tet offensive, 342

  Texas:

  political corruption in, 185–86, 193

  state politics in, 76–77, 192

  Thayer, William Roscoe, 271–72

  Thomas, Jesse, AL’s “skinning” of, 16–17

  Thomas, Robert, 97

  Thoreau, Henry David, 278

  Toombs, Robert, 110

  transactional leadership, 234–36, 240

  transformational leadership:

  of AL, 211–42

  defined, 234–36

  Tremont Temple, Boston, 104, 232

  Truman, Harry, 308–9, 336, 346, 361

  Trumbull, Lyman, 117, 121

  trust-busting, 253–56, 272

  Truth in Securities Act, 302–3

  Tugwell, Rexford, 176–77

  Tully, Grace, 46, 297

  turnaround leadership, of FDR, 273–305

  unemployment:

  in Depression era, 273, 275

  New Deal programs for, 294–97

  unemployment insurance, 178–79, 356

  United Mine Workers strike, see Great Coal Strike (1902)

  United Nations, founding of, 361–62

  United Steelworkers of America, 319

  U.S. Steel, 253

  Valenti, Jack, 308

  Vietnam War:

  LBJ’s lack of coherent policy for, 328, 330, 338–43

  LBJ’s presidency derailed by, 330, 338–43, 346–47

  opposition to, xvii, 341

  violence:

  in civil rights movement, 322, 332–35

  federal troops in, 252–53, 261

  in labor strikes, 252–53, 258, 261, 263

  proslavery, 19

  visionary leadership, of LBJ, 306–43

  voting rights:

  for African Americans, 202–4, 331–37, 341

  for women, 59, 169, 356

  Voting Rights Act, signing ceremony for, 336–37

  voting rights bill, 331–37

  Wallace, George, 333

  Wallace, Henry, 282

  Walsh, Thomas, 282

  Ward, Artemus, 221

  Warm Springs, Ga., FDR’s health resort at, 164, 171–74, 181, 188, 274, 362

  Warm Springs Foundation, 282

  war powers, presidential, 215–19, 265

  Warren, Earl, 350

  Washington, George, xviii, 144, 353

  Washington Senators, quorum call during game of, 323

  wealth:

  consolidation of, 244, 251, 256, 272

  of FDR’s family, xiv, 40, 41, 43–48, 50, 54, 58

  LBJ backed by, 185

  LBJ’s accumulation of, 190–91

  of TR’s family, xiv, 22–23, 25–27, 31–33, 37–38, 251

  Webster, Daniel, 193

  Weed, Thurlow, 235

  Weems, Parson, 7

  Welles, Gideon, 217, 219, 221–24, 226

  “We Shall Overcome,” 332, 334

  Westbrook, Theodore, 36, 58

  Whig Party, 11–12, 14, 15–16, 98, 102, 103, 105, 109, 117, 122, 212, 219

  White House Fellowship, author’s, xvii

  Whitney, Henry Clay, 9, 107, 109, 121

  Whitney, Richard, 276

  Wilkins, Roy, 318, 319, 324, 350

  Williams, Alec “Clubber,” 138

  Williams, Aubrey, 85–86

  Williams, Gene, 317, 326

  Williams, Helen, 317

  Williams, John, 325

  Wilmot, David, 103–4

  Wilmot Proviso, 103–4

  Wilson, Woodrow, 58–60, 64, 65, 180, 292, 354, 355

  Winning of the West, The (T. Roosevelt), 127

  Wirtz, Alvin, 87–88, 90, 185

  women’s suffrage, 59, 169, 356

  Wood, Leonard, 148–51

  Woodin, William, 282, 285

  Woods, Randall, 190

  Wordsworth, William, 170

  work-hours legislation, 37, 59, 70, 166, 271, 356

  workman’s compensation, 59

  Works Progress Administration (WPA), 297, 299, 302

  World, 171

  World War I, 48, 64, 81, 180, 355

  World War II, 190, 296, 302

  FDR’s leadership in, xvii, 46, 48, 63, 188, 304–5, 345, 359–63

  Wright, Carroll D., 248–50, 254, 259, 266, 270

  Wright, Zephyr, 317

  Wright Report, 248–50, 254–55, 266, 271

  Yalta Conference, 361

  Young, Valentine, 34

  Young, Whitney, 318

  ILLUSTRATION CREDITS

  Chapter One

  Abraham Lincoln at 48, Courtesy of the Chicago History Museum

  Chapter Two

  Theodore Roosevelt at 23, Courtesy of the Library of Congress

  Chapter Three

  Franklin Roosevelt at 28, Courtesy of the Library of Congress

  Chapter Four

  Lyndon Johnson at 23, Courtesy of the University Archives, Texas State

  Chapter Five

  The Fourth Great Lincoln-Douglas Debate, Courtesy of Heather Hayes, Illinois Secretary of State’s Office

  Chapter Six

  Theodore Roosevelt in the Badlands, Courtesy of the Library of Congress

  Chapter Seven

  Franklin Roosevelt swimming at Warm Springs, Courtesy of the FDR Presidential Library and Museum

  Chapter Eight

  Rally opening Lyndon B. Johnson’s 1941 U.S. Senate Campaign, Courtesy of the LBJ Presidential Library and Museum

  Chapter Nine

  A reading of the Emancipation Proclamation, Courtesy of the Library of Congress

  Chapter Ten

  Strike Arbitration Commission appointed by President Theodore Roosevelt, Courtesy of the Library of Congress

  Chapter Eleven

  Irate customers at the closed doors of the Bank of United States, New York, Courtesy of the Associated Press

  Chapter Twelve

  The march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, Courtesy of the Library of Congress

  Epilogue

  Abraham Lincoln, 1865, Courtesy of the Library of Congress

  Theodore Roosevelt, 1918, Courtesy of the Library of Congress

  Franklin Roosevelt, 1945, Courtesy of the FDR Presidential Library and Museum

  Lyndon B. Johnson, 1972, Courtesy of the LBJ Presidential Library and Museum

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  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.

  ISBN 978-1-4767-9592-8

  ISBN 978-1-4767-9594-2 (eboo
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