Authors: David McCullough
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Presidents & Heads of State, #Political, #Historical
“if he gets only two votes”: Quoted in Helm, 126.
reelection announcement: St. Louis
Post-Dispatch,
February 5, 1940.
opposed to FDR third term: Ibid.
“There is no indispensable man”: Hassett, “The President Was My Boss,”
Saturday Evening Post,
November 28, 1953.
“We borrowed clerks”: John Snyder, Oral History, HSTL.
“A United States Senator…sleeping”: Quoted in Miller, 166.
“At sixteen”: Quoted in Truman,
Harry S. Truman,
139.
“While the President is unreliable”: HST to EWT, September 24, 1939,
Dear Bess,
420.
Bernard Baruch contribution: Byrnes,
All in One Lifetime,
101.
America “ought to sell”: Miscamble, “Evolution of an Internationalist.”
Tom Evans, who was twelve years: Evans, Oral History, HSTL.
“Cut your speech”: Quoted in Daniels, 202.
“I just wanted to come down”: Ibid.
“I believe in”: HST quoted in Helm, 137.
“When we are honest enough”: Speech before National Colored Democratic Association Convention, July 14, 1940, HSTL.
St. Louis
Post-Dispatch
cartoon: March 29, 1940.
“enough errors to give me”: Quoted in Daniels, 205
“The decent, honest”: St. Louis
Globe-Democrat
(undated), Messall Scrapbooks, HSTL.
Truman urged to release letter: Daniels, 205.
Stark’s chauffeur: Truman,
Harry S. Truman,
141.
“Lloyd’s ambitions”: Ibid., 132–33.
foreclosure on farm: Kansas City
Star,
July 17, 1940, Messall Scrapbooks, HSTL.
thought he was having a heart attack: HST to EWT, November 15, 1941,
Dear Bess,
468.
the shame she would feel: HST to EWT, August 13, 1940, ibid., 442.
“I’m thinking August 6”: HST to EWT, June 23, 1940, ibid., 440.
“Will call you from Sedalia”: Ibid.
“Anyway we found out”: HST to EWT, August 9, 1940, ibid., 441.
“He finally ended up”: Daniels, 209.
Bob Hannegan: St. Louis
Post-Dispatch,
July 24, 1944.
“Well…I guess”: Hinde, Oral History, HSTL.
it was Bess who answered: Truman,
Harry S. Truman,
145.
“the machine vote”: Lloyd C. Stark to FDR, August 9, 1940, FDRL.
“I thought Wheeler and Jim Byrnes”: HST to EWT, August 10, 1940,
Dear Bess,
441.
“Has my certification of election”: Edwin A. Halsey, telegram to HST, December 13, 1940, HSTL.
“War has many faces”: Sevareid,
Not So Wild a Dream,
164.
“Locksley Hall” poem in wallet: Hillman, ed.,
Mr. President,
206.
“As I watched those white fires”: Quoted in Flower and Reeves, eds.,
The Taste of Courage,
135.
“We have everything to lose”: Kansas City
Times,
May 2, 1941.
Clark was destroying himself: HST to EWT, October 3, 1941,
Dear Bess,
466.
“My relief of mind”: Pogue,
George C. Marshall: Ordeal and Hope,
59.
Marshall told him he was too old: HST “Autobiographical Sketch,” HSTL.
Washington a different city: Green,
Washington,
466–73; Brinkley,
Washington Goes to War.
“a little investigation”:
Memoirs,
Vol. I, 165.
automobile odysseys: Ibid.
“getting ruined…And there were men”: Quoted in Miller,
Plain Speaking,
175.
“There’s too much that is wrong”: Helm,
Harry Truman,
151.
“It is a considerable sin”: Schlesinger and Bruns,
Congress Investigates. A Documented History,
1792–1974, 3121.
it “must be assumed that”: Pogue, 108.
Nye Committee: Baruch,
Public Years,
269.
“The thing to do”:
Time,
March 8, 1943.
Byrnes $10,000 committee funding:
Memoirs,
Vol. I, 166.
“Looks like I’ll get something”: HST to EWT, March 19, 1941,
Dear Bess,
456.
“The political situation”: HST to EWT, August 1, 1939, ibid., 416.
Hugh Fulton:
Memoirs,
Vol. I, 167.
departure of Messall: Tom Evans, Oral History, HSTL.
“What are you fishing for?” Executive Session, June 8, 1942,
Special Committee to Investigate the National Defense Program,
United States Senate, NA.
“You give a good leader”:
Papers of George C. Marshall,
Vol. 2, 483.
“There was no attempt”:
Memoirs,
Vol. I, 171.
saved the government $250 million: Riddle,
The Truman Committee,
147.
gallbladder attack: U.S. Army Medical Records, 1941, HSTL; Truman,
Bess W. Truman,
200–01.
“My standing in the Senate”: HST to EWT, June 19, 1941,
Dear Bess,
457.
“If we see that Germany”:
The New York Times,
June 24, 1941.
“Last year he ran”: U.S. Army Medical Records, 1941, HSTL.
pressed by Vandenberg: Schlesinger and Bruns, 3127.
“Well I spent yesterday”: HST to EWT, August 21, 1941,
Dear Bess,
461–62.
“studious avoidance of dramatics”: Salter, ed.,
Public Men In and Out of Office,
12.
“’Slightly built, bespectacled”:
Tri-County News,
Long City, Missouri (undated), Messall Scrapbooks, HSTL.
“Mr. Lewis, you are not seriously”: John L. Lewis testimony, March 26, 1943,
Special Committee to Investigate the National Defense Program,
United States Senate, NA, 55.
“Standard Oil” and I. G. Farben: HST Broadcast, “Rubber in America,” Blue Network, June 15, 1942, printed copy, HSTL.
“First of all”: Truman before Senate, October 29.
Congressional Record,
77th Congress, 1st Sess., 1941, Vol. XXCVII, 8303.
The record of the OPM: January 15, 1942,
Special Committee to Investigate the National Defense Program,
United States Senate, 77th Congress, 2nd Sess., 6.
Lilienthal on war with Japan: Lilienthal,
Journals,
Vol. I, 408.
“No matter what happens”: Boardman,
From Harding to Hiroshima,
250.
“We have fought to get you”: Schlesinger and Bruns, 3131.
“Well at last I am sitting”: HST to EN, December 14, 1941, HSTL.
“Harry Truman was one of the”: Riedel,
Halls of the Mighty,
173–75.
it would “impair our activity”: Gosnell,
Truman’s Crises,
161.
unanimous reports: McCune and Beal, “The Job That Made Truman President,”
Harper’s,
June 1945.
“so close that a chorus girl”: Sevareid, 213.
“the return of Ceres”: HST to EWT, April 26, 1942,
Dear Bess,
473.
Still he couldn’t sleep: HST to EWT, April 30, 1942, ibid., 474.
he called for a second front: Miscamble, “Evolution of an Internationalist,”
Australian Journal of Politics and History,
August 1977.
“If I were the executive”: Closed Hearing on Wright Aeronautical Corporation, May 24, 1943,
Special Committee to Investigate the National Defense Program,
United States Senate, NA, 13.
Glenn Martin Company:
Memoirs,
184.
Carnegie-Illinois Steel hearing: March 23, 1943,
Special Committee to Investigate the National Defense Program,
United States Senate, NA, 820.
Stewart testimony: Ibid., 817.
“He cheated more than he was supposed”: Ibid., 833.
McGarrity testimony: Ibid., 837.
Irwin Works investigation: Ibid., 843–74.
“I don’t know anything about”: Ibid., 886.
Benjamin Fairless testimony: Ibid., 896–97.
asked by a reporter for his personal comment: Washington Post, March 24, 1943.
Canol Project: Testimony of General Brehon Somervell, December 20, 1943,
Special Committee to Investigate the National Defense Program,
United States Senate, NA.
“The committee damns it up and down”: Drury,
A Senate Journal,
29.
“all the desperate assertions”: Ibid.
reading Shakespeare and Plutarch: HST to EWT, June 18, 1942,
Dear Bess,
477.
as if he had just stepped: Margaret Truman Daniel, author’s interview.
“One day in a typical”: Riedel, 174.
“I went up to the front desk”:
The New Yorker,
November 23, 1987.
“I am more surprised every day”: HST to EWT, August 21, 1942,
Dear Bess,
487.
“The man from Missouri”: Pepper, with Gorey,
Pepper,
129.
never heard him even try: Margaret Truman Daniel, author’s interview.
“One time, one Christmas”: Ardis Haukenberry, author’s interview.
“You have a good mind”: HST to MT, March 13, 1942, Truman,
Letters from Father,
40.
“Tell my baby”: HST to EWT, July 22, 1942,
Dear Bess,
480–81.
to “only just drop in”: HST to EWT, April 30, 1942, ibid., 474.
“Well this is
the day
”: HST to EWT, June 28, 1942, ibid., 480.
“one of the most useful”: Helm, 228.
Truman and his committee known nationwide: Washington
Star
(undated), HSTL.
that “often a threat”:
Business Week,
June 26, 1943.
The whole country was greatly indebted: The Nation, January 24, 1942.
“objectivity at the total expense”: Krock,
Memoirs,
220.
286
Look
poll: May 16, 1944.
He spoke at a huge rally: Chicago
Daily News,
April 15, 1943.
“hotels, filling stations”: HST to EWT, December 21, 1939,
Dear Bess,
436.
merely talking about the Four Freedoms: Chicago
Daily News,
April 15, 1943.
Summer 1943 speaking tour: Miscamble, “The Evolution of an Internationalist.”
“History has bestowed”: Ibid.,
“We want aluminum”: Schlesinger and Bruns, 3129.
saved…as much as $15 billion:
Memoirs,
Vol. I, 186.
“He seems to be a generally”: Drury, 29.
“There are a number of times”: Ibid, 106.
“Now that’s a matter”: Telephone conversation between HST and Stimson, June 17, 1943, HSTL
“I know something about”: HST to Lewis Schwellenbach, July 15, 1943, HSTL.
“In my humble opinion”: Memorandum to Mildred Dryden, December 3, 1943, HST Senate Papers, HSTL.
“I have sent an investigator”: HST to Senator Thomas, November 30, 1943, HST Senate Papers, HSTL.
“
COLONEL MATHIAS
”: Fred Canfil to HST, December 7, 1943, HSTL.
“Whenever he finds out”: HST to EWT, October 25, 1942,
Dear Bess,
491.
“The United States was engaged”: Martin,
My First Fifty Years in Politics,
100–01.
“He threatened me with dire consequences”: Stimson Diary, Yale University.
being talked of as candidate: HST to EW, May 7, 1943, HSTL.
“Leadership is what we Americans”: Truman, “We Can Lose the War,”
American Magazine,
November 1942.
key man in the “conspiracy”: Quoted in HST memorandum to Jonathan Daniels, HSTL.
Flynn admires Wallace:
The New Yorker,
September 8, 1945.
First meeting with FDR: Flynn,
You’re the Boss; Allen, Presidents Who Have Known Me.
“I felt that he would never”: Flynn, 179.
Secretly, he was under: Bishop,
FDR’s Last Year,
94.
Hannegan on Wallace: Brown,
James F. Byrnes of South Carolina, A Remembrance
(manuscript), 255–56.
Byrnes influence on FDR: Ibid., 259.
“I did conclude”: Quoted in Byrnes,
All in One Lifetime,
221.
“Now, partner”: Quoted in Brown, 258.
somebody else “we have got”: Quoted in Daniels,
The Man from Missouri,
243.
Loss of New York: Flynn, 180.
“The Negro has not only”: Quoted in Brown, 264–66.
When they went through the list: Flynn, 181.
“His record as head”: Ibid.
FDR asked a favor: Anna Rosenberg, author’s interview.
smuggle in jars of caviar: Ibid.
“I don’t want to be”: Quoted in Helm,
Harry Truman,
220.
the word from “informed sources”: Drury,
A Senate Journal,
215–16.
“The Madam doesn’t want”: Max Lowenthal, Oral History, HSTL.
“It is funny”: HST to MT, July 9, 1944, Margaret Truman,
Letters from Father,
55.
“opened up on politics”: Wallace,
The Price of Vision,
361.
“Mr. President, if you can find”: Ibid., 362.
“Think of the catcalls”: Ibid.
“It was as though”: Drury, 216.
“Jimmy Byrnes”: Quoted in Brown, 269.
the decisive meeting: Allen, 128–29.
“I gathered that he felt”: Ickes Diary, July 16, 1944, LC.
“the only one who had”: Wallace, 366.
a new Gallup Poll: Allen, 130.
“Well, I am looking”: Wallace, 367.
“Look at the expressions”: Quoted in Brown, 276.
“Mr. President, all I have heard”: Ibid.
“You are the best qualified”: Quoted in Byrnes, 222.
“I don’t understand it”: Ibid., 223.
“I told them so”: Ibid, 224–25.
“We have to be”: Ibid.
Byrnes went directly down: Ibid.
Truman accepted at once: Ibid., 226.
Truman to nominate Barkley: Barkley,
That Reminds Me,
189.
As Alben Barkley would write: Ibid., 190.
Arthur Krock:
The New York Times,
July 16, 1944.
“Roosevelt could, of course”: Allen, 130.
“The train stood”: Tully,
F.D.R., My Boss,
276.