Discover Our Collections


  • Tag > Digital item (remove)
  • Collection > LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)

Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

400 results

  • didn't quite kiss it. You know that custom, how they do that. Several others I met like that. The King of Sweden I met. Who else? I've forgotten them now. G: Did Mr. Johnson elaborate on why he did not plan to run again in 1968 either when you were
  • goodbye to him. P: He left about seven o'clock, and I had fixed us some supper, and my son Larry was all intrigued over this flying and he just thought Harold Teague was, you know, a king in a flying machine. T: He took off a little earlier than
  • in and take on the city of Houston. T: No, it didn't scare me. You know we weren't too large a city at that time in 1925. F: How did you make your contacts after you got here, as far as people to sell to? T: Mr. Roberts had told Mr. King, Jesse Jones
  • of the king. one of our items. This was I did not know at the time, nor did other people know--and I would have thought that the pipelines of the Rockefeller group were as good as any there--of the great interest of Mrs. Johnson in this operation, nor
  • of the King Ranch people, the Klebergs. That was where the primary impetus came from. Now again, it was a very, very complicated issue, like so many issues, that it was not presented properly to the public and I don't think it could have been. But one
  • peasant being touched by the king for scrofula. And you weren't going to keep him out of crowds like that. Poor Secret Service. I felt sorry for them. I remember one other thing out of the campaign. That was the business of landing in Phoenix, deliberately
  • wonder if you recall any of those discus sions or if your work involv ed any of · · that postwa r plannin g? JONES: As I rememb er [Benito ] Musso lini was arreste~ and [Pietro ] Badogl io formed a new govern ment in the autumn of 1943. The King
  • of in context as it affected the Middle East crisis--the continuing Middle East crisis. K: The issue with Libya as long as King Idris was in charge was much more our holding onto Wheelus [Air Force] Base and protecting our oil and gas, which were growing
  • you; he had so much to do with things like this. He was actually running the Russell headquarters. I was helping him. G: In ta 1 king to delegates how important was it that Russe 11 was a south­ erner? Did this keep delegates fr001 other parts
  • he could satisfy all of that wide range of philosophies, bind them together, make a team that could do a good job out of those forty-seven highly individual, "every man's a king" senators. Somebody told him--I wouldn't be surprised if it were Russell
  • . One of the most devastating articles about Johnson in this era was written in Harper's magazine by Larry King. Larry and I got to be friends during this period, and some of what Larry says is entirely too bitter and too biting, but a lot
  • administrative aide to Fleet 4 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Bullion -- I -- 5 Admiral [Ernest] King. M: I have heard that during
  • , That's one of the reasons I wrote You see, Rayburn went for Garner for president. See, Roy Miller, the lobbyist for Andrew Mellon, the Texas Gulf Sulphur Company and all that, he used to work for the King Ranch. him, the most powerful man in Texas
  • of November when Richard M. K1eberg, of King Ranch fame, was elected to the 14th Congressional District, and the Chief became his secretary. As might be expected, he was influential in the selection of his successor at Sam Houston, a former fellow student
  • is what it amounted to. G: Anything else on that episode that you remember or feel is important? Any details? D: No. No. mind. I'm sorry I don't. I don't know why that one popped in my You said did I ever go down there. I never went to the King
  • them the story the way we were walking around in the garment district, and the crowd was there, and they saw us, and I was wal king with him. He overheard, he sai d, some people asking one another, "Who is that tall man walking with Dubinsky?" M
  • , high level foriegn diplomats, presidents, kings, whatever, Okie was always the third person in the room and, in many cases, the only person in the room. It was never asked of me. I never had that entree. If I had gone in, I think I would probably
  • and I knew Arthur Perry, and I knew who Lyndon Johnson was because he had been teaching school in South Texas and had worked for the Kings and the Klebergs for a year or so on different matters. He was very much interested in the campaign of Dick
  • things that a friend of her sister's, her oldest sister, could do for anybody. Because to Bird she'd always been my little sister. I think I talked about Mr. King and about his taking us horseback riding, and about when he was in Washington later
  • at that time about Dr. King's warning of race riots, if Washington, D.C. didn't LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http
  • commission. G: Do you recall his defense of Walter Winchell in the Naval Affairs Committee when Admiral [Ernest J.] King and Admiral [Randall] Jacobs were trying to silence Winchell? M: Both Lyndon and I came to his defense. to Mr. Winchell. It was sort
  • in 1964. F: Kind of like waiting for the King of Sweden to pass on. M: Well, yes. I was heavily involved with defense spending, all the missiles programs and so forth, and I enjoyed my work tremendously as the head man of this committee handling all
  • because they're colleagues from the same state. If it was a bill, for instance, that was out of the Ways and Means Committee, you'd have Mr. Mills there and Congressman King. Of course Mr. ranking member on Ways and Means. ~oggs, the majority whip
  • to a lot of the state P: Yes, I was. G: One for Princess Margaret. P: The first one was for Princess Margaret and Snowden, yes. G: Anything about these state dinners that you recall? I ~~ 14 dinners~ Tal king to the President? P: I never
  • , and during that time I spent some time in Washington and I knew Dick Kleberg of King Ranch reasonably well. And that's where I first met Lyndon Johnson. F: He was his administrative aide or secretary at that time? P: That's right. I think he had
  • there was the Mineral King problem, and they clashed on that. I would say toward the end their relationships were deteriorating, but initially they were very good in this field and they cooperated very well. Mc Was this Treaty of the Potomac an agreement to cooperate
  • , and I remember we drove from San Benito to San Antonio our wedding day, and drove through the King Ranch, and I made a prediction, which my wife has quoted many times, that Lyndon Johnson would be president. G: Is that a fact? B: That's a fact. It's
  • . -- -,','ho, if I ."' t 1he - bova _ Lis, 41>1d oa tlae V1.40r, I !-UlOW h;.: i,aas oiten xp in offlee t-al,king -:vita Sm about our progrann im-portant throughout thij peric.),d 7 z"~e wia a m,_~.mber of the Advi3ory Council, -wag lie not'? Yes
  • Chiefs of Staff. So even at 6:30 at night we were still worried about power failure and preparedness. Governor [John] Reed of Maine, Governor [John] Dempsey of Connecticut, Governor [Phillip] Hoff of Vermont, Governor [John] King--I guess the President
  • , a handsome étagère or something from her house, because gradually, gradually I was wanting to make home a more beautiful place. One of the fantastic dinners at the White House they had us to was the King and Queen of Nepal with unpronounceable names
  • /show/loh/oh Johnson -- VI -- 19 G: Really? J: And she's sweet as can be to me. She's more sociably inclined; she wanted to go to New York to see the King of Spain when he came over, you know. More social life. up with that. And when I lived
  • to Texas on a few weeks' visit in 1928. These events that we're tal king about i.n my contacts with Lyndon in California were in 1925. I am sure that I saw him in 1928. I think he was then in college maybe, wasn't he, or do you know? G: Well, part
  • my wife and me to come to Washington to a State dinner for the King and Queen of Nepal. This was about the first of November, if I remember right, of last year, 1967, and I assumed quite rightly that this was the first way of giving me an excuse
  • to a helicopter before. I guess I had in the service. But anyway, it was arranged that he would land here. You know where we had lunch today, at the Americana? G: Yes. D: Only now they call it the King's Inn. Where the highways come together over the overpass