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Each volume in the new American Presidents Reference Series is
organized around an individual presidency and gathers a host of
biographical, analytical, and primary source historical material
that will analyze the presidency and bring the president, his
administration, and his times to life. The series focuses on key
moments in U.S. political history as seen through the eyes of the
most influential presidents to take the oath of office. Unique
headnotes provide the context to data, tables and excerpted primary
source documents. Harry Truman was born on May 8, 1884. He served
with distinction during World War I as a commander of an artillery
battery, and he ultimately attained the rank of major. In 1922,
with the support of political boss Tom Pendergast, Truman was
elected as a county judge. He lost reelection, but then won again
as presiding judge in 1926 and 1930. In 1934 Truman was elected to
the U.S. Senate, where he supported President Franklin Roosevelt's
New Deal policies and entry into World War II. When Vice President
Henry Wallace alienated Democratic Party leaders, Truman was
nominated for vice president. On April 12, 1945, eighty-two days
into Truman's vice presidency, Roosevelt died in Warm Springs,
Georgia. At the age of sixty-one, Truman was sworn in as the
thirty-third president of the United States. Key events during the
Truman presidency include victory in World War II and Truman's
decision to drop atomic bombs on Japan, the start of the cold war
with the Soviet Union and its eastern European satellites, the
Marshall Plan, the Berlin airlift, the Fair Deal, price-control
legislation, and the McCarthy hearings. In March 1952 Truman
announced that he would not seek reelection. Harry S. Truman died
on December 26, 1972. This new volume on the presidency of Harry S.
Truman will cover campaigns, elections, and the Pendergast
connection, Senator Truman, particularly his chairmanship of the
Special Committee to Investigate the National Defense Program, FDR,
World War II, and the atomic bomb decision, Joseph McCarthy, the
cold war, and the police action in Korea, civil rights.
When Grace Anna Goodhue wed Calvin Coolidge in 1905, she thought
then that marriage "has seldom united two people of more vastly
different temperaments and tastes." Warm and vivacious to her
husband's dour and taciturn, Grace was to be a contrast to Calvin
for years to come. But as Robert Ferrell shows, their marriage
ensured her husband's rise to high office.
Ferrell focuses on Grace Coolidge's years in the White House,
1923-1929. Although the president did his best to rein her in--even
forbidding her to speak on public issues--Grace quickly became one
of the most popular and stylish of first ladies. Among the
best-dressed women of her time (famously in red), she became the
nation's fashion leader. She also opened the White House to the
public, sponsored musicales within its walls, and worked on behalf
of the deaf and disabled--all despite a less than supportive
spouse. Ferrell recounts how she accomplished all of this, finding
strength through the years in her Burlington background, her
family, and her faith.
In this lively book Ferrell provides a perceptive and often
moving account of Grace Coolidge. From his insightful portrait of
her Vermont roots to a frank assessment of the Coolidges and their
sons, he offers a fresh perspective on a much-admired woman who was
perhaps her husband's greatest political asset.
Ferrell also takes readers inside Grace's strained marriage to
the famously taciturn president who kept his wife in the dark about
his plans, both political and personal. He offers a much more
subtle look at the Coolidges and their relationship in the public
eye than we've had, shedding new light on how she managed to deal
with his irascible temper-and how the marriage ultimately triumphed
over difficulties that Calvin could not have handled alone.
Alternately charming and analytic, Ferrell's narrative will
leave readers with the real sense of Grace Coolidge as a human
being and a contributor to the historical legacy of presidential
wives. For she did more than simply enliven a quiet White
House--she set the tone for a nation and for first ladies to
come.
After World War I, private peace groups proliferated and rapidly
became a significant force in American politics. These groups'
activities were regarded by the Harding and Coolidge
administrations as a bungling interference with the regular conduct
of diplomacy. Ultimately, however, President Coolidge yielded to
domestic pressure and the efforts of French foreign minister
Aristide Briand to conclude a peace treaty. A protracted series of
negotiations between the United States and France resulted in the
multilateral Kellogg-Briand Pact, the treaty to "outlaw war." The
Kellogg-Briand Pact, Mr. Ferrell writes, was the peculiar result of
some very shrewd diplomacy and some very unsophisticated popular
enthusiasm for peace. In analyzing the forces that produced the
treaty, Peace in Their Time reveals significant aspects of American
foreign policy in the interwar period.
"Here we are on the banks of the Nueces in the grand camp of the
army of occupation." So wrote Lt. Napoleon Jackson Tecumseh Dana
when in 1845, not many months before the outbreak of the Mexican
War, he joined the white-tented encampment of General Zachary
Taylor in Texas. And so he continued writing during the uncertain
life of camp and campaign for the better part of the next two
years. In these letters to his wife, published here for the first
time, Dana provides a detailed, firsthand view of the United
States' war with Mexico -- fighting off the Mexicans from within
Fort Brown during the initial attack; hearing the distant thunder
of artillery as Taylor's army marched to the rescue of the
beleaguered Seventh Infantry; occupying Matamoros; taking
Monterrey, street by street with the defenders firing from the
housetops. After Monterrey, Dana was at the siege of Veracruz and
on the march to Cerro Gordo. Badly wounded in the attack on
Telegraph Hill at Cerro Gordo, he was left on the field for dead,
but was rescued by a burial party a day and a half later. Following
the Mexican War, Dana went on to become a major general during the
Civil War and later to have an illustrious career as a railroad
executive. Nearly one hundred of his letters about the Mexican War
survived and are now in the archives at West Point. From them
Robert Ferrell has edited this vivid, eyewitness narrative.
In his books the memoir of the Second World War, the two large
volumes on the presidency, the incomplete autobiography written
near the end of his life Eisenhower related the course of events
over the years, with descriptive detail and frequently with humor,
but he usually stayed away from analysis. In his many private
letters to friends and acquaintances, some of which have been
published, he was more frank, but he still held back. And the
public record of his military career and of his presidency does not
reflect many open, frank statements, proofs that the
soldier-president thought long and deeply about issues, personal or
public; it has given substance to the speculation by many of his
contemporaries and by some later students of Eisenhower that he was
essentially a public relations man and that his life was all
outward an expression of assent and agreement or at least of
forebearance, of a man who never had an idea or, if he did, would
quickly chase it out of sight."
American fighting men had never seen the likes of it before. The
great battle of the Meuse-Argonne was the costliest conflict in
American history, with 26,000 men killed and tens of thousands
wounded. Involving 1.2 million American troops over 47 days, it
ended on November 11-what we now know as Armistice Day-and brought
an end to World War I, but at a great price. Distinguished
historian Robert Ferrell now looks back at this monumental struggle
to create the definitive study of the battle-and to determine just
what made it so deadly. Ferrell re-examines factors in the war that
many historians have chosen to disregard. He points first to the
failure of the Wilson administration to mobilise the country for
war. American industry had not been prepared to produce the
weaponry or transport ships needed by our military, and the War
Department-with outmoded concepts of battle shaped by the
Spanish-American War-shared equal blame in failing to train
American soldiers for a radically new type of warfare. Once in
France, under trained American doughboys were forced to learn how
to conduct mobile warfare through bloody experience. Ferrell
assesses the soldiers' lack of skill in the use of artillery, the
absence of tactics for taking on enemy machine gun nests, and the
reluctance of American officers to use poison gas-even though by
1918 it had become a staple of warfare. In all of these areas, the
German army held the upper hand. Ferrell relates how, during the
last days of the Meuse-Argonne, the American divisions had finally
learned up-to-date tactics, and their final attack on November 1 is
now seen as a triumph of military art. Yet even as the armistice
was being negotiated, some American officers-many of whom had never
before commanded men in battle-continued to spur their troops on,
wasting more lives in an attempt to take new ground mere hours
before the settlement. Besides the U.S. shortcomings in
mobilisation and tactics, Ferrell points to the greatest failure of
all: the failure to learn from the experience, as after the
armistice the U.S. Army retreated to its prewar mindset. Enhanced
by more than four dozen maps and photographs, America's Deadliest
Battle is a riveting revisit to the forests of France that reminds
us of the costs of World War I-and of the shadow that it cast on
the twentieth century. This book is part of the Modern War Studies
series.
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