Discover Our Collections
Limit your search
Tag- Digital item (5487)
- new2024-June (226)
- new2023-Oct (99)
- new2024-Mar (86)
- new2024-Dec (69)
- new2024-July (69)
- President Johnson's secretarial staff (997)
- Mrs. Johnson's secretarial staff (764)
- Johnson, Lady Bird, 1912-2007 (686)
- Rostow, W. W. (Walt Whitman), 1916-2003 (268)
- Vice President Johnson's secretarial staff (135)
- Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973 (123)
- Johnson, W. Thomas, 1941- (116)
- Senator Johnson's secretarial staff (94)
- Friends of the LBJ Library (93)
- Bundy, McGeorge, 1919-1996 (61)
- Califano, Joseph A., 1931- (60)
- Federal Bureau of Investigation (41)
- O'Brien, Lawrence F. (Lawrence Francis), 1917-1990 (32)
- Reedy, George E. (George Edward), 1917-1999 (30)
- Christian, George E. (George Eastland), 1927-2002 (24)
- 1965-xx-xx (32)
- 1965-07-xx (24)
- 1966-xx-xx (24)
- 1967-xx-xx (23)
- 1964-08-xx (19)
- 1964-xx-xx (19)
- 1968-02-xx (16)
- 1967-10-xx (15)
- 1967-11-xx (15)
- 1961-xx-xx (14)
- 1941-xx-xx (13)
- 1968-05-xx (13)
- 1967-06-05 (12)
- 1967-09-xx (12)
- 1968-03-xx (12)
- Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973 (1260)
- Vietnam (619)
- Lady Bird Johnson personal (368)
- Johnson, Lady Bird, 1912-2007 (339)
- Johnson family (322)
- Press relations (230)
- Lady Bird Johnson speeches and statements (202)
- Social events (184)
- LBJ Library (168)
- Beautification (156)
- Humor and mimicry (149)
- LBJ speeches and statements (136)
- Arts (134)
- Assassinations (125)
- Ceremonies (114)
- Text (5487)
- Audio (450)
- Still image (8)
- LBJ Library Oral Histories (1625)
- President's Daily Diary (1010)
- Lady Bird Johnson's White House Diary (764)
- National Security Files (747)
- Reference File (264)
- Pre-Presidential Daily Diary (229)
- White House Central Files (117)
- Papers of Tom Johnson (112)
- Meeting Notes Files (85)
- Personal Papers of Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson (65)
- Papers of Charles E. Marsh (62)
- Vice President Papers of Lyndon B. Johnson (61)
- Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission) (51)
- White House Social Files (35)
- Statements Files (30)
- Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (1585)
- President's Daily Diary (997)
- Annotated Transcripts of Lady Bird Johnson's Diary (450)
- Sound Recordings of Lady Bird Johnson's Diary (450)
- Lady Bird Johnson's Daily Diary (314)
- Memos to the President (286)
- Meeting Notes (197)
- Vice-Presidential Daily Diary (134)
- National Security Action Memorandums (97)
- Country Files (77)
- Senate Daily Diary (73)
- National Security Council Histories Files (63)
- Papers of Charles E. Marsh (62)
- National Security Council Meetings Files (60)
- Post-Courtship Letters (58)
- Oral history (1625)
- Daily Diary (1518)
- Folder (1482)
- Personal diary (459)
- Meeting notes (262)
- Speech (131)
- Newsletter (93)
- Correspondence (66)
- Report (54)
- Histories (49)
- Memorandum (27)
- Chronology (26)
- Appointment book (22)
- Folder listed on subject guide (20)
- Telephone conversation (15)
5487 results
- into Dallas that morning. We got off our plane I was nrJ impressed and pleased with fhe crowds. 4 first and then shook hands with the Kennedys when they got off their plane. We started on our way. I was very impre·sed and pleased with the crowds. Then I
Oral history transcript, Richard Morehead, interview 1 (I), 6/26/1987, by Christie L. Bourgeois
(Item)
- came down here, and I worked for the Dallas News as a kind of part-time employee in Austin and worked for United Press on the same basis. I graduated in 1935. United Press made me a correspondent. Then I went to Dallas News in 1942 and worked for them
- declining health; Morehead's relationship with Elliott Roosevelt; Coke Stevenson's relationship with the press; O'Daniel's relationship with the press and his political experience; controversies surrounding LBJ's 1941 and 1948 elections; the Dallas Morning
Oral history transcript, Ashton Gonella, interview 3 (III), 11/21/1985, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- there were eighteen new Democratic senators and he [LBJ] had looked in the paper and none of us had realized it, but at breakfast Sunday morning he announced that twelve of them were Catholics and that he wanted to find out something about the Catholic
- 6 Black Chefs (and 1 Inventor) Who Changed the History of Food - The New York nmes I may have heard Carver's name associated with peanuts (boy, did he love them). Contrary to pular belief, Carver did not invent peanut butter. But he did develop
- 6 Black Chefs (and 1 Inventor) Who Changed the History of Food - The New York nmes I may have heard Carver's name associated with peanuts (boy, did he love them). Contrary to pular belief, Carver did not invent peanut butter. But he did develop
Oral history transcript, Lawrence F. O'Brien, interview 7 (VII), 2/12/1986, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- at Lyndon Johnson individually.But it did create a great deal of feeling. I had occasion to go to Dallas, not for quite a while after, and I also remember when I went down there for the ground-breaking ceremony for the new arena. The mayor and some of his
- How John F. Kennedy's (JFK) assassination affected the reputation of Dallas and Texas; the emotional toll of JFK's and Robert Kennedy's (RFK) deaths on O'Brien; being asked to identify the missal that was used when Lyndon Johnson (LBJ) took his oath
- in Dallas early in the morning because Secretary Symington was in Dallas, and Congressman Johnson had to make his final arrangements with Secretary Symington about this matter. on to Dallas. So that was the reason we had to go And I guess you are right, we
- reporter many years ago. When I was in Swathmore, Pennsylvania, I worked for the Philadelphia papers part time, but I drifted into political reporting when I was here in Washington. F: By the time the New Deal came on, you were established as a syndicated
- news; suppression of news; RFK never broke with McCarthy; characterization of McCarthy; LBJ as VP; LBJ’s effectiveness as an ambassador; JFK assassination; dinner with the Johnsons; press disenchantment with LBJ; press secretaries; RFK; oil interests
- of this deal of telling my boss that I could go out there and really get a good story, maybe even an interview, was pretty big stuff for me. radio we had morning newscasts and noon newscast. new~casts Well, the noon news was approaching the Majority Leader
- with the 1941 campaign was four or five days after the election and when the Texas Election Bureau made another late return. F: It looked as if he had won, didn't it? K: It looked that way long enough that, as I remember, the Dallas [Morning] News
- papers unless you use the radio station owned by one of the papers . In other words , if I make a speech over station WFAA the Dallas News will then quote a great p,.rt of the story in the paper . The Dallas News, however , will print little or nothing
- had an opportunity to ride with him up to Hyannis Port. So I got on the plane. He had a man from Georgetown and he had [Allen] Duckworth from the Dallas [Morning] News. Most of the agencies preferred to have their people at the various points to make
- ; the Brazos River Authority; LBJ makes a last visit to Temple, Texas; at the Dallas Trade Mart with Storey Stemmons during the JFK assassination; LBJ is faithful to his friends; investigating the M-16 rifle; observing the Tet Offensive; Ted Connell; the press
- on Erwin\ nght are Henry row/er and Lew Wasserman. Library Names New Chief Archivist Christina Lawson John Wickman, D,recwr of the Dwight D. Eisenhower Library in Abilene, Kansas, spoke at th Library tn May lO a University of Texas group, joined together
- brother was going to school with me because he cried every morning when I left, and the teacher said let him come along. But that was before Lady Bird's brothers came home, and it was my first memory of Miss Minnie. Later, at the end of the school term
- Minnie Lee Pattillo Taylor, Lady Bird Johnson's mother; Mrs. Taylor's appearance and personality; the Brick House; Lady Bird Johnson's Aunt Effie; Lady Bird attending St. Mary's College in Dallas; the Taylor family when Lady Bird was very young; Mr
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh May 23, 1969 M: Let me identify the tape, first of all. F. Billings. This is an interview with Mr. William I am in his offices in Dallas, Texas in the Fidelity Union Tower. The date is May 23, 1969 and it's 1 0 : 1 0
- in the ladies ready-to-wear department at Goldstein-Migel Company. After that I decided I wanted to travel, so I picked up a dress line out of Dallas, which was Justin McCarthy line of dresses and did some traveling there. M: What did you do, travel all over
- No, maybe [to] some brokers Anyway, my God, there it was in the New York Times the next morning, where else could a minister's son be a candidate, he was going to cut out the waste. President. G: It's there. P: It's there. I remember writing a letter
- Wilhelmina Delco The Panelists T. Louis Au5tin. Jr.. prcs1den1and chief executive officer, Brown and Root. Inc. Scott Bennett. management consultant and columnist for the Dallas Morning News. Norman Bonner, Austin attorney. William Broyles, Jr .. writer
Oral history transcript, Clifton C. Carter, interview 1 (I), 10/1/1968, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- was still strictly on a volunteer basis; this was a part of the campaign organization. Then he won the Democratic nomination and went on"to win the election as United States Senator in November, 1948. And on June 8, 1949, he called me one morning--8
Oral history transcript, Roy L. McWilliams, interview 1 (I), 8/15/1979, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- which for all intents and purposes was a legal holiday but still he said, "You be at your desk at eight o'clock in the morning." That was after working beyond micnight on New Year's Eve. Well, two guys--and I rememQer one of them but I don't remember
- for clipping the political news in the Texas papers? We should like to have some one take the papers from the leading Texas cities early each morning and clip out all the news bearing on the election, attaching some kind of identification as to the name
- of Senator George. A Dallas Morning News article
- Jewis h Wa r Veteran s • of U . S . o f America 12:19am Presiden 12:24pm t e White . 27 , 1968 W . Wm . Bento n in hi s offic e b. 1 New Yor k City . N Y Re: delegate s t o UNESC O ( 3 vacancies) ~ Also relativ e t o Mrs. Henr y Luc e wh o wishes t
- was just awful. So I don't I was able to get one guy, one man, John Hicks from KRLD in Dallas, and he and I really did almost everything. G: Did you replace the salesmen, get some new salesmen? W: Yes, sure did. G: What was Jesse Kellam's role
- . And when he chose LO address the country on the energy cri is, he deliberately picked the format of the fireside chat. In the 1980 campaign, even Ronald Reagan quoted from FDR to such an extent in his acceptance addre. s that the New York Times titled its
- in the Washington Star or the Washington Post or the New York Times, or in those days the New York Herald Tribune, the story hadn't been published with LBJ. I should add one other paper, the Austin-Statesman, or, you know, the Dallas News or the Dallas Times-Herald
- and President Kennedy; Presidential scholar ceremony invitee list; Laitin losing his code name; LBJ not wanting people to know who he was taking to Camp David; how the press manipulate the people who release the news; LBJ’s relationship with the press; the focus
- electric test train, the DOT Office of High-Speed Ground Transportation has scheduled a news media run Wednesday morning, May 24, on the 21-mile test track between Trenton and New Brunswick, New Jersey. This train, which is equipped with research test
- Folder, "Volume I, Documentary Supplements, News Releases," Department of Transportation Administrative History, Box 3
Oral history transcript, Elizabeth (Liz) Carpenter, interview 1 (I), 12/3/1968, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- stood in all of those doors that read Look Magazine and New York Herald Tribune and a lot of publications that I was too intimidated to even go in. bureau for twenty-six dailies in Michigan. She had a news For twenty-five dollars a week I could
- . I am attaching a ~tory which appeared in the Dallas Morning News with a Washington date line~ 12. I umerstand. that on re&ding this story Allred placed a call to Corcoran. On the following dq Corcoran had a rather detailed conversation
- your sentiments. W: Oh, yes, Walter did that night. F: Did you see the new nominee the next day at all? W: No, we left early the next morning. . , We went on up and we watched his acceptance on TV, I believe, but we didn't stay for that. We
- , former defense secretary who left the government on 10/8, but said this decision might be “reconsidered” in view of Wilson’s statements to a New York Herald Tribune reporter on 12/30 disclaiming responsibility for holding down military spending. Wilson
Oral history transcript, W. Marvin Watson, interview 1 (I), 11/22/1968, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- . Is this background information all correct? W: It is all correct. It is true that I was executive assistant to the President of Lone Star Steel, but I officed in Dallas although our home was in Daingerfield. P: When did you first meet Lyndon Johnson and what were
- . It was not merely tha PM's circulation doubled. A new comic and a few new writers might have done that. how people reacted to PM's news when they got it. It was The 45,000 effective protests to the Attorney-General about Social Justice was the first indication
- the Research Institute of America, again, one of these news services for big business executives like the Kiplinger Washington Letter. Toward the end of World War II, I went out to the Far East as a war correspondent for Reuters, the British news agency, and I
- The Ubral'J o Paper• 17 Eaat 80th St New Yom, Ne RKH:cc Pre■ldeatlal 10021 ., Mr. Jt••llfO• DDa are 988 nftb.I t . . ~T..tt -' ..,y~ i:>.ar Mr. Donnaa: l appncla-te JOU I.a. of Oclolan 11 . . . ,_.. ~ • a,ala adchu• .._ Gna4 Cc:&dl of CehmWa Aa
- and had brought all of these extra delegations to be heard in Dallas . So just as we were ready to present my name, this was early in the morning, we were ready to present my name to the convention for a vote, some man broke into the hall and ran down
- greatly appreciated. r might add I campaigned for him for re-election in 1946. F: He needed you in that. S: ~-and F: You were in Dallas in 1948 v/hen he had his kidney stones. also in 1948 when he ran for the Senate. Cochran flew in. th.e
- O'Connor --to be the Democratic candidate for Governor of New York Sen. Herman Talmadge Sen. Joh n Stennis Sen Stennis called MM to request appt, saying that he and Sen Talmadge would like to see the President 4-5 minutes any day this week regarding
Oral history transcript, James H. Blundell, interview 1 (I), 10/29/1974, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- of Texas . Realizing that Congressman Johnson was not known very widely outside of the Tenth Congressional District, we made a pretty good campaign . In fact, on the morning after the election, the Dalla s Morni ng Nevus had a headline, "Congressman
- Biographical information; John Connally; 1941 Senate race; war years; 1960 presidential campaign; advancing; campaign trips; New York City; convention; Nixon; Texas politics; Alvin Wirtz; Johnson personality; Mrs. Johnson
- Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 3 If he was in an area where the paper had--say we were in East Texas--why Dawson Duncan of the Dallas News or Allen Duckworth or Dick Morehead were along, he would be sure