Discover Our Collections


  • Series > Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)
  • Time Period > Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-) (remove)

6 results

  • , "Well, why don't you get Norman Rockwell to do it?" White said, "Now , now, Peter." White said, "It's a great portrait, and I'm sure that you're going to like it." his statement. At this Mr. That was the gist of And the sculptress also did. Mrs
  • Recollections of weekend at President Johnson’s ranch when Peter Hurd presented a partially completed portrait of LBJ and LBJ’s response to the portrait; LBJ’s appreciation of a portrait done of him from by Norman Rockwell.
  • know if the photograph was used. This was by a very competent well known, greatly beloved American illustrator named Norman Rockwell. So I sa; d, "\
  • . Even at the back of the store--first time lid ever seen that except, I think, in Norman Rockwell pictures--there were men around a table sitting playing dominoes. G: Really? S: Yes. Dressed in overalls and really playing dominoes, which to me
  • , probably. F: Did you have much trouble with counter-demonstrations? C: No. As a matter of fact, there were very few counter-demonstrations. I'm trying to think. The American Nazi party that Lincoln Rockwell started, two or three times, I recall
  • of the Department of State. It was handled by a task force that was under the control of Luke Battle, the assistant secretary of State and directly, in an operational sense, under the deputy assistant secretary, Stuart Rockwell, now our ambassador to Morocco
  • either his own or Mr. Kleberg's car. As we started putting things in the car he realized it was the 4th of July and that we might have trouble getting a license on Independence Day even in Rockwell, [Rockville] Maryland. He called to fix this. and we