Read When the Cheering Stopped Online
Authors: Gene; Smith
88
â“If you say I must cancel the trip”: quoted by Daniels,
The Life of Woodrow Wilson
, p. 388.
89
âDescription of the reporters' discussions: David Lawrence to author.
90
âStarling's conversation with the President: Starling, p. 153.
91
âHe has lost his mind. This was a recurring theme from the moment the announcement was made that the tour was to be ended. The action of the President in raising his hat can be explained as a kind of reflex action not unexpected from a man who had been getting off trains and greeting crowds for weeks past.
91
âHoover thought â¦: Hoover, p. 100.
91
âDifferent from the careful and methodical man: Jaffray, p. 69. It is of interest to know that a common symptom in a person suffering a thrombosis or stroke is loss of attention to personal appearance.
91
âWant to go to a church service: Grayson, p. 100.
92
âGhastly headaches ⦠drifting from the study at one end of the hall: Wilson, p. 286.
92
âMooing cow: O'Neill.
92
âPlayed some billiards: Grayson, p. 100.
92
âBright and cheerful:
ibid.
, p. 100.
92
,
93
âThe incident of the watch: Wilson, p. 287.
93
âDetails of the collapse:
ibid.
, pp. 287â88.
93
â“My God, the President is paralyzed”: quoted by Hoover, p. 101.
94
âThe cuts on the President's temple and nose are described in Hoover, p. 102. Mrs. Wilson, in her book published some years after Hoover's, says (p. 288) the latter's “rather remarkable account” is wrong; that there were no cuts.
95
â“We must all pray”: quoted by Daniels in his diary, Daniels Papers.
95
â“Scared literally to death”: quoted by Houston, Vol. II, p. 36.
95
âIn the White House diary: the diary (or perhaps one should say diaries, for there are several volumes) are in the Hoover Papers.
95
â“Poor, humble prayers”: Tumulty's note is in the Wilson Papers.
95
âIt hurt too much: quoted by R. S. Baker, Baker Papers.
95
,
96
âHouston's talks with Tumulty and the Vice President: Houston, Vol. II, pp. 36â37.
96
,
97
âLansing's talk with Tumulty. Tumulty, pp. 443â44.
97
,
98
âDetails of the Cabinet meeting are from Houston, Vol. II, pp. 38â39, and Bender, pp. 59â60, on the basis of an interview with Secretary of the Interior Lane.
98
âNo off-the-record information: Blum, p. 215.
98
âJoseph Wilson's letter to Tumulty has found its way into the Wilson Papers. It is possible Tumulty sent the letter up to Mrs. Wilson upon receiving it. Joseph Wilson, ten years younger than the President, was not close to him. He was a newspaperman for most of his working life, but was with the U.S. Fidelity and Guaranty Company, Baltimore, at the time he sent the letter to Tumulty.
99
-
102
âDetails on Marshall are summed up from Thomas.
99n
.âThe conversation with the UP official is described in Bailie, p. 64. Bailie was the head of the Washington bureau.
99
âBest scene as a country grocery store: W. G. McAdoo, p. 269.
101
âTwo seats in a coach: Lansing Papers. Marshall wrote a rather plaintive letter to Secretary of State Lansing complaining about his accommodations.
101
,
102
âThe Essary meeting with Marshall: Clapper, p. 53.
CHAPTER SEVEN
102
,
103
âMedical details are from an article by Dr. Walter Alvarez in
Geriatrics
for May-June 1946.
104
âWandered from office to office picking up papers and putting them down: Ira Smith,
p
. 104.
104
âLetters simply vanished:
ibid.
, p. 104.
104
â“See what we can do”: quoted by Smith,
ibid.
, p. 105.
105
âThe struggle between Tumulty and Swem: Smith,
ibid.
, pp. 105â06.
105
,
106
âDetails of the prostatic obstruction: Wilson, pp. 291â92.
106
âTen minutes a day: Hatch, p. 226.
107
âTumulty, not the President, wrote the Presidential statement: Blum, p. 219.
108
âToo weak to attend to natural functions: Hoover, p. 103.
108
âConversation between Daniels and Grayson: Daniels,
The Wilson Era
, p. 512.
108
,
109
âThe limerick and the pun:
ibid.
, pp. 108â09.
109
âSteadied and pointed it: Hoover, p. 104.
109
âSenator Moses addressed as “Doc”: Daniels,
The Wilson Era
, p. 511.
110
â“Mrs. Wilson is President!”: quoted by Daniels,
ibid.
, p. 513.
110
â“Too much Jekyll and Hyde”: Long Papers.
110
,
111
âThe visit of the Belgians: Wilson, pp. 292â95.
110
âThe President's white beard: the King of the Belgians told Secretary Daniels it was full and white: Jonathan Daniels, p. 293.
111
âHitchcock visit: Hitchcock papers.
112
,
114
âThe details on the Prince's visit: Wilson, pp. 295â96. (That the King and Queen of the Belgians and the Prince of Wales were among the first visitors to see the President brought down a storm of criticism upon Mrs. Wilson. She was already suspected of too great a devotion to European royalties. It was remembered that she did not appear unhappy when, during the trip to Europe, the English called Miss Benham, her secretary, a lady in waiting.)
112
â“Very charming young lady”: quoted by Wilson, p. 295.
112
â“Thisâisâtheâbed”: quoted by Jaffray, p. 73.
112
â“This window, sir?” quoted by Wilson, p. 296.
113
,
114
âThe Lord Grey and Craufurd-Stuart matter is described by Jonathan Daniels, pp. 294â98. The State Department files in the National Archives contain letters sent to, and letters from, Lord Grey on the matter.
113
âA crazy man: Mrs. Harriman to author.
114
âHouse viewed all this with apprehension: New York
Times
, July 26, 1934. The Colonel, upon the occasion of Lord Grey's arrival, wrote the President: “I hope you will give him the warmest possible welcome”: Wilson Papers.
114
,
115
âHouse's letters: Wilson Papers. It is by no means certain that the President ever saw the letters. Mrs. Wilson, who disliked Houseâher book shows this all too clearlyâmay well have decided not to bother her husband with House's suggestions.
115
âWatson-Lodge conversations: Watson, p. 200.
116
âEverything would turn out all right: Tom Connally heard a Democratic Senator say at the time, “If only President Wilson had not been a college prof and didn't
know how to write so well this issue would come out all right”: Connally, p. 100.
116
âBonsal's attempt to bring about an agreement: Bonsal, pp. 271â76.
117
â“Awful thing settled”: “Dishonorable compromise”: Wilson, p. 297.
117
âThinking to himself: Hitchcock Papers.
118
â“I must get well”: quoted in Wilson, p. 297.
CHAPTER EIGHT
118
âFirst breath of fresh air: Hatch, p. 235.
118
âDetails on the wheel chair: Hoover, p. 104.
118
âUnable to dictate for more than five minutes at a time: quoted by Blum, p. 312.
119f
.âLetters upon which Mrs. Wilson scrawled her messages will be indicated below.
119
â“My husband and his health”: quoted by Tumulty, p. 438.
119
,
120
âDaniels' problems with the discharged midshipmen are detailed in his letters to the White House which are now in the Wilson Papers.
120
âNever had his resignation accepted: Herbert Hoover,
Memoirs
, Vol. II, p. 15.
120
âCosta Rican recognition: Letters on this are in the Wilson Papers.
120
âThe appointment forms are in the Wilson Papers.
121
â“Keeping me from the President”: quoted by David Lawrence to the author. It should be emphasized that Tumulty made the remark to Lawrence, not in Lawrence's capacity as a reporter, but in his capacity as a friend of ten years' standing. To the outside world Tumulty maintained that no difficulties between himself and the First Lady existed.
121
â“Almost a suspension of Government”: quoted by Nevins,
Henry White
, p. 485.
122
â“Our Government has gone out of business”: Baker,
American Chronicle
, p. 480.
122
âTwo years of schooling: She attended Virginia finishing schools.
122
â“Unable to attend to public business ⦠so confused that no one could interpret them”; Lansing made his remarks to Charles Sumner Hamlin and is quoted in the Hamlin Papers.
123
âIn response to such requests: Hatch, p. 226. Mr. Hatch believes today that the First Lady went to her death without ever realizing the extent to which she personally wielded the power of the Presidency. Mr. Hatch had many long talks with Mrs. Wilson while preparing his “authorized” biography of her and was left with the strong impression that Mrs. Wilson had over the years convinced herself that her role was quite minimal. Perhaps this was because Mrs. Wilson first met the President when he was a famed world figure. Had she, like Ellen Wilson, known him as a young man and a junior member of college faculties, she might have been better able to understand that he, like all men, was capable of human error. Her picture of him from the start of their relationship, however, was of a more-than-lifelike figure. Mr. Hatch told the author, “When I brought up the subject of her power after the President fell ill, her attitude was âHow could
I
âhow could
anyone
âact as President when that job was held by the one and only Woodrow Wilson?'”
123
âHouston said: His remarks, made to Charles Sumner Hamlin, are quoted in the Hamlin Papers.
123
âLodge wrote: quoted in Baruch, p. 140.
124
âTumulty for weeks sent nothing at all: Blum, p. 236.
124
,
125
âTumulty's letter is in the Wilson Papers.
125
âThe attempt by Phillips to get the Netherlands appointment is described by Breckinridge Long in his diary: Long Papers.
126
,
127
âThe Marshall visit to the White House and his conversation with Thistlethwaite: Thomas, pp. 211, 226.
128
,
129
âThe Atlanta incident is described in the Raymond Clapper Papers.
128
â“You know how the Chief writes”: quoted by Walworth, Vol. 11, p. 378.
129
âDetails of the motion by Fall to send a committee to call upon the President are found in the Hitchcock Papers.
130
âThe “dress rehearsal”: Woolley Papers.
130
â
132
âThe Fall visit is described in Wilson, pp. 298â99. Houston (on the basis of the President's later discussion of it), Vol. II, pp. 190â91, and in the Albert Burleson Papers (on the basis of a conversation Burleson had with Grayson).
CHAPTER NINE
132
â
137
âThe White House routine in the fall of 1919 is described by Hoover, pp. 102â06, and by Robert Bender in
Collier's
for March 6, 1920.
132
âThe weak voice would drift away so that they sat silently: Charles Swem, quoted by Walworth, Vol. II, p. 375.
133
âMargaret would often come in: Miss Wilson to R. S. Baker, Baker Papers.
132
â
134
âThe description of the White House during the period covered is from Shackleton, pp. 43â48. Although the ordinary visitors' tours were all canceled, Shackleton, a writer of travel books, was allowed to go through.
133
âReporters played cards: David Lawrence to author.
133
âTumulty's carefully chosen words: “I was warned by Dr. Grayson and Mrs. Wilson not to alarm him unduly by bringing pessimistic reports ⦠I sought in the most delicate and tactful way I could to bring the atmosphere of the Hill to him”: Tumulty, p. 454.
133
,
134
âMidst of a passage with no emotional significance he would begin to cry: Stockton Axson to R. S. Baker, Baker Papers.
134
,
135
âRobert E. Long wrote of his experiences in showing films to the President in a series of newspaper articles published in September 1925. R. S. Baker clipped the series from the Chicago
Daily News
and the clippings are in the Baker Papers.
134
âTry to smile, his face twisting: Parks, p. 157. Mrs. Parks's mother, who, like Mrs. Parks, was a White House employee, “suffered agonies” when she saw the President's condition.
136
âVice President Marshall: Thomas, p. 186.
136
â“A great number of them”: quoted by Grayson, p. 109.
136
â“I don't know how much more criticism I can take”: quoted in Parks, p. 155. (The remark was made to Mrs. Parks's mother.)
136n
.âLord Grey was warned that Jimmy Roosevelt had measles: Jonathan Daniels, p. 299.
137
â“An Indian”:
ibid.
, p. 155.
137
âSecretary Houston's disbelief that the President wrote the letter: Houston, Vol. II, p. 47.