Dear Harry: Letters to President Truman

الغلاف الأمامي
Rowman & Littlefield, 01‏/08‏/2019 - 544 من الصفحات
Americans are not shy about letting politicians know what’s on their minds, and, in Harry Truman, they believed that they had a president they could level with. He even sometimes responded personally to them—especially on subjects he felt strongly about.
Today, it seems remarkable that a man who described the presidency as “the most awesome job in the world” would take the time to read and respond to White House mail.Truman, however, had an unquenchable thirst for what his “everyday Americans” were thinking, yet distrusted opinion polls. For him, the daily stack of mail provided the next best poll after the voting booth.

Authors Giangreco and Moore include a robust cross section of the thousands of messages sent to Truman. Juxtaposed with informative background essays, these letters provide an undiluted account of the greatest challenges confronting the U.S. during Truman’s administration, including civil rights, the Marshall Plan, the formation of Israel, the atomic bomb, the McCarthy hearings, the Korean War, and the General McArthur’s dismissal, which alone solicited more than 90,000 missives. While the majority of the letters are from private citizens, others come from correspondents, the occasional bombastic senator, and a few from the world figures.

من داخل الكتاب

المحتوى

TRUMAN HIS STAFF EVERYDAY AMERICANS
1
CIVIL RIGHTS 1948 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
32
WORLD WAR II POTSDAM CONFERENCE DEMOBILIZATION OF THE ARMED FORCES CESSATION OF HOSTILITIES OCCUPATION O...
80
AID TO GREECE AND TURKEY PALESTINE AND THE BIRTH OF ISRAEL CHURCHILL CORRESPONDENCE THE MARSHALL PLAN TH...
130
PERSONAL QUESTIONS SUGGESTIONS LOOKALIKES NUT MAIL
174
THE MACARTHUR FIRING
231
THE ATOM BOMB
279
KOREA
327
JOE MCCARTHY MARINE CORPS PROPAGANDA MACHINE ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT THE HUME AFFAIR
360
THREATS FRIENDS ATOM BOMB LEAVING OFFICE
426
NOTES
483
CORRESPONDENCE INDEX
490
INDEX
501
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة

نبذة عن المؤلف (2019)

Award-winning author D. M. Giangreco is an editor for the U. S. Army’s professional journal, Military Review, and the author of numerous military history books. His most recent award was the Moncado Prize by the Society of Military History for his article, “Casualty Projections for the U.S. Invasions of Japan, 1945: Planning and Policy Implications.”

Kathryn Moore, formerly a historical interpreter at Colonial Williamsburg, teaches and has written on the Thomas Jefferson DNA findings in The Washington Times. Dear Harry is her first book and she is currently working on First Lady of Monticello, a biography of Martha Jefferson.

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