Authors: David McCullough
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Presidents & Heads of State, #Political, #Historical
“I really thought once I’d be”: HST to EW, May 23, 1911, ibid., 36.
“I am like Mark Twain”: HST to EW, May 17, 1911, ibid., 34.
“You know a man has to be”: HST to EW, July 12, 1911, ibid., 41.
“who knows, maybe I’ll be”: HST to EW, May 23, 1911, ibid., 36.
“Sucker! Sucker!”: HST to EW, October 22, 1911, ibid., 53.
three hundred bales of hay: HST to EW, August 12, 1912, ibid., 93.
“I have been working like Sam Hill”: HST to EW, September 30, 1913, ibid., 137.
father in a “terrible stew”: HST to EW, postmarked November 11, 1913, HSTL.
“Politics is all he ever advises me”: HST to EW, August 6, 1912,
Dear Bess,
92.
“I don’t think we would have traded him for anybody”: Slaughter, author’s interview.
“I never understood”: Ibid.
“Politics sure is the ruination”: HST to EW, postmark illegible,
Dear Bess,
132.
“I told him that was a very mild remark”: HST to EW, May 26, 1913, ibid., 126.
He was the one person: Noland, Oral History, HSTL.
another try in an Indian land lottery: HST to EW, September 30, 1913,
Dear Bess,
138.
“all puffed up”: HST to EW, November 4, 1913, ibid., 141–42.
“How does it feel to be engaged to a clodhopper”: HST to EW, November 10, 1913, ibid., 143.
“I know your last letter word for word”: HST to EW, November 19, 1913, ibid., 145.
“Oh please send me another like it”: Ibid.
“Mrs. Wallace wasn’t a bit in favor of Harry”: Ardis Haukenberry, author’s interview.
“We have moved around quite a bit”: HST to EW, February 16, 1911,
Dear Bess,
24.
“Yes, it is true that Mrs. Wallace did not think”: May Wallace, author’s interview.
mother’s operation for a hernia: HST to EW, March 20, 1914,
Dear Bess,
161.
“I hope she lives to be”: HST to EW, January 26, 1914, ibid., 157.
Mamma gave him the money for an automobile: HST to EW, May 12, 1914, ibid., 168.
“Harry didn’t like onions”: May Wallace, author’s interview.
“I started for Monegaw Springs”: HST to EW, no postmark.
Dear Bess,
183.
“Imagine working the roads”: HST to EW, August 8, 1914, ibid., 172.
“If anyone asks him how he’s feeling”: HST to EW, September 28, 1914, ibid., 176.
“good letters” helped “put that backbone into me”: HST to EW, September 17, 1914, ibid., 175.
his father, who refused to let the nurse: HST to EW, November 1914, ibid., 178.
“I remember the Sunday afternoon”: Slaughter,
History of a Missouri Farm Family,
71.
“I was with him”: Daniels, 74.
“Harry and I often got up”:
Parents Magazine
, March 1951.
“An Upright Citizen”: Independence
Examiner
, November 3, 1914.
“I have quite a job on my hands”: HST to EW, November 1914,
Dear Bess
, 178.
“quiet wheat-growing people”: Cather,
One of Ours
, 143.
“gave it everything he had”: Quoted in Miller, 90.
“I almost got done planting”: HST to EW, April 28, 1915,
Dear Bess
, 182.
“It’s right unhandy to chase”: HST to EW, Grandview, 1915, ibid., 181.
he traveled to Texas; HST to EW, February 16, 1916, ibid., 185.
“There’s no one wants to win”: HST to EW, February 19, 1916, ibid., 187.
“This place down here”: HST to EW, date illegible, ibid., 193.
“I don’t suppose”: HST to EW, June 3, 1916, ibid., 201.
“I can’t possibly lose forever”: HST to EW, April 24, 1916, ibid., 198.
“The mine has gone by the board”: HST to EW, May 19, 1916, ibid., 199.
He could “continue business”: HST to EW, May 23, 1916, ibid., 200.
“It’s about 111 degrees in the shade”: HST to EW, July 30, 1916, ibid., 206.
“Wish heavy for me to win”: HST to EW, July 28, 1916, ibid.
“Keep wishing me luck”: HST to EW, August 4, 1916, ibid., 207.
buying and selling oil leases: Steinberg, 39.
“signed also by Martha E. Truman”: Ibid, 39.
“came up every time with something else”: HST to EW, August 5, 1916,
Dear Bess
, 209.
“Truman was surrounded by people, people, people”: Daniels, 81.
“If this venture blows”: HST to EW, January 23, 1917,
Dear Bess
, 213.
“In the event this country”: Daniels, 83.
Teeter Pool discovered: Memoirs, Vol. I, 127.
He said $11,000 at the time: Truman,
Bess W. Truman
, 56.
If his part in his father’s debts: HST to EW, April 28, 1915,
Dear Bess
, 182.
he was never meant for a farmer: Noland, Oral History, HSTL.
“Riding one of these plows all day”: HST, “Autobiographical Sketch,” HSTL.
“It takes pride to run a farm”: HST to MET and MJT, September 18, 1946, in Ferrell, ed.,
Off the Record
, 96.
“It is the great adventure”: HST to EW, September 15, 1918,
Dear Bess
, 271.
“we got through”: Quoted in Miller,
Plain Speaking
, 93.
Some people thought her the best looking: Gaylon Babcock, Oral History, HSTL.
“It was quite a blow”: Steinberg,
The Man from Missouri
, 42.
She must not tie herself: HST to EW, July 14, 1917,
Dear Bess
, 225.
the reasons to go to war: HST to EW, January 18, 1918, HSTL.
there wasn’t a German bullet: HST to EW, February 1, 1918,
Dear Bess
, 242.
“Galahad after the Grail”:
Autobiography
, 41.
passes eye exam: U.S. Army Medical Records, August 9, 1917, HSTL.
On July 4, 1917, when Harry turned up: HST to EW, July 4, 1918, HSTL.
“It was sure enough cold”: HST to EW, October 9, 1917, HSTL.
“A tent fifty yards away”: HST to EW, October 18, 1917,
Dear Bess
, 231–32.
“all the Lillian Russells”: HST to EW, September 30, 1917, ibid., 228.
artillery terms: Lee,
The Artillery Man
, 326.
“I have been squads east”: HST to EW, February 3, 1918,
Dear Bess
, 242.
“I learned how to say Verdun”: HST to EW, October 27, 1918, HSTL.
“He made us feel”: HST to EW, January 27, 1918,
Dear Bess
, 241.
“one of our most effective officers”: Thomson,
Virgil Thomson
, 35.
“I have a Jew in charge”: HST to EW, October 28, 1917,
Dear Bess
, 233.
“Each day Harry would write a letter”: Mayerberg, “Edward Jacobson: President Truman’s Buddy,”
Liberal Judaism
, August 1945.
“I guess I should be very proud”: HST to EW, February 3, 1918,
Dear Bess
, 242.
“real good conversation”: HST to EW, February 23, 1918, ibid., 245–46.
“Jacobson says he’d go”: HST to EW, November 24, 1917, ibid., 238.
“I didn’t know how crazy”: HST to EW, January 10, 1918, ibid., 240.
Tiernan provides whiskey: HST to EW, October 23, 1917, ibid., 232.
“We elected Klemm”: Truman interview with Jonathan Daniels, November 12, 1949.
“He taught me more about handling men”:
Autobiography
, 44.
“You speak pretty good English”: Ted Marks, Oral History, HSTL.
“No man can be that good”:
Memoirs
, Vol. I, 128.
Berry would stalk up and down: Steinberg, 43.
“I suppose you will have to spend”: HST to EW, March 16, 1918, HSTL.
“I’d give anything in the world”: HST to EW, March 20, 1918,
Dear Bess
, 251.
“The phone’s yours”:
Memoirs
, Vol. I, 129.
“On leave in New York”: HST to EW, March 24 and March 26, 1918,
Dear Bess
, 252–53.
a “Kike town”: HST to EW, March 27, 1918, ibid, 254.
“Israelitist extraction”: HST to EN, ca. 1918, HSTL.
“I imagine his vision”: Harry Vaughan, Oral History, HSTL.
“There we were watching”:
Autobiography
, 45.
He ached for home: HST to EW, April, 1918,
Dear Bess
, 256.
arrival at Brest:
Autobiography
, 45.
At the hotel in Brest: HST to EW, April 14, 1918,
Dear Bess
, 257.
The whole surrounding countryside: HST to EW, April 23, 1918, ibid, 260.
“The people generally treat us fine”: HST to EW, April 12, 1918, ibid, 259.
“I’m for the French more and more”: HST to EW, June 27, 1918, ibid, 264.
They also knew how to build: HST to EW, May 19, 1918, ibid, 262.
“They are the most sentimental people”: HST to EW, June 2, 1918, HSTL.
“
Je ne comprends pas
”: HST to EW, April 17, 1918,
Dear Bess
, 259.
determined to drink France dry: HST to EW, April 14, 1918, ibid, 258.
“Wandering through dark streets”: Quoted in Freidel,
Over There
, p. 80.
“Personally, I think Harry”: Edgar Hinde, Oral History, HSTL.
“Wish I could step in”: HST to EW, April 17, 1918,
Dear Bess
, 259.
the first-class coach: HST to EN, May 17, 1918, HSTL
account of château: HST to EW, April 28, 1918,
Dear Bess
, 260.
“You’d never think that a war”: HST to EN, May 1, 1918, HSTL.
“and then the clock on the Hôtel de Ville”: HST to EW, April 28, 1918, HSTL.
“I’ve studied more and worked harder”: HST to EW, May 26, 1918, HSTL.
“We had a maneuver yesterday”: HST to EW, May 26, 1918, HSTL.
Sundays at church: HST to EW, April 28, 1918,
Dear Bess
, 261.
“and I’m for helping them”: HST to EW, May 5, 1918, ibid.
discovered volumes of music: HST to EW, May 19, 1918, HSTL.
“He had maps”: Arthur Wilson, Oral History, HSTL.
“I just barely slipped through”: HST to EW, June 14, 1918,
Dear Bess
, 263.
“old rube” from Missouri: HST to EW, June 27, 1918, ibid, 263.
value of a university education: HST to EW, July 22, 1918, ibid, 267.
“No I haven’t seen any girls”: HST to EW, June 27, 1918, ibid, 264.
“I look like Siam’s King”: HST to EW, June 19, 1918, HSTL.
“That was one of the things”: Cather,
One of Ours
, 319.
“Dear Harry, May this photograph”: EW inscribed photograph, HSTL.
“They were a pretty wild bunch”: Hinde, Oral History, HSTL.
“a sitting duck”: Eugene Donnelly quoted in Miller, 97.
“a stirring among the fellows”: Ibid, 96.
“a rather short fellow”: Vere Leigh, Oral History, HSTL.
“You could see that he was”: Edward McKim, Oral History, HSTL.
“I could just see my hide”:
Autobiography
, 46.
“Never on the front”: “Pickwick Papers,” HSTL.
Ridge recollection: Miller, 96.
“He was so badly scared”: “Pickwick Papers,” HSTL.
“And then we gave Captain Truman”: Leigh, Oral History, HSTL.
“He didn’t hesitate at all”: Ibid.
“I didn’t come over here”: Daniels,
The Man of Independence
, 95.
“Well, I would say”: Wilson, Oral History, HSTL.
“You soldier for me”: Ibid.
“soldier, soldier, all the time”: Lee, 33–34.
“Talk about your infantryman”: HST to EN, August 5, 1918, HSTL.
“You’ve no idea what an immense responsibility”: HST to EW, August 13, 1918, HSTL.
train passing close enough to Paris: War Diary of Captain Keith W. Dancy, Battery A, Liberty Memorial, Kansas City, Missouri.
“It was just a quiet sector”: Frederick J. Bowman, Oral History, HSTL.
“It was surely some steep hill”: HST to EW, November 23, 1918, HSTL.
“we were firing away”: Leigh, Oral History, HSTL.
“gasping like a catfish”: Columbus (Kansas)
Daily Advocate
, August 16, 1950.
“I led the parade!”: Walter Menefee, Oral History, HSTL.
“I got up and called them everything”: Daniels, 96.
“The men think I am not much”: HST to EW, September 8, 1918, HSTL.
“It was literally true”: Lee, 67.
Bennett Clark incident: Steinberg, 47.
“Well, I was scared green”: HST to EW, November 23, 1918, HSTL.
“September 10. Leave Coyviller”: HST War Diary, HSTL.
“Who can ever forget”: Lee, 75.
“So slow was our progress”: Ibid, 72.
“American drive begins”: HST War Diary, HSTL.
“The great adventure”: HST to EW, September 15, 1918,
Dear Bess
, 271.
“We were doing our best to finish”: HST to EW, September 15, 1918, HSTL.
“And there was an order out”: Floyd Ricketts, Oral History, HSTL.
“like a crazy man”: McKim, Oral History, HSTL.
Tiernan’s coat: Ibid.
“The Colonel insults me shamefully”: HST War Diary, HSTL.
“The weather was bad”: Ricketts, Oral History, HSTL.
“the history of the world”: Miller, 101.
“If all priests were like him: Ibid, 103.
“I stripped the battery for action”: HST to EW, November 23, 1918, HSTL.
“Everything was now in readiness”: Lee, 93.
“Just a word to you”: Toland,
No Man’s Land
, 403.
Captain Eddie Rickenbacker, who took off: Ibid, 432.
“That gun squad worked”: Harry E. Murphy, Oral History, HSTL.
“My guns were so hot”: HST to EW, November 23, 1918, HSTL.
“confusing in the extreme”: Marshall,
Memoirs of My Services in the World War
, 160.
At a crossroads near Cheppy: Truman, “The Military Career of a Missourian,” HSTL.
“Truman didn’t panic”: Leigh, Oral History, HSTL.
“Truman sent back the data”: McKim, Oral History, HSTL.
“You know…when you’re in the artillery”: Leigh, Oral History, HSTL.
“The artillery fire has been something”: Minder,
This Man’s War
, 328.
“Well, men,” Miles said: Lee, 167.
“The coolness, the steady courage”: Ibid., 168.