Discover Our Collections
Limit your search
Tag- Digital item (1424)
- new2024-June (74)
- new2024-July (34)
- new2024-Dec (24)
- new2024-Mar (21)
- new2023-Oct (18)
- President Johnson's secretarial staff (124)
- Rostow, W. W. (Walt Whitman), 1916-2003 (119)
- Johnson, Lady Bird, 1912-2007 (54)
- Friends of the LBJ Library (50)
- Mrs. Johnson's secretarial staff (39)
- Bundy, McGeorge, 1919-1996 (36)
- Reedy, George E. (George Edward), 1917-1999 (22)
- Johnson, W. Thomas, 1941- (21)
- McPherson, Harry C. (Harry Cummings), 1929- (12)
- Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973 (11)
- O'Brien, Lawrence F. (Lawrence Francis), 1917-1990 (11)
- Jones, James R. (10)
- Johnson, Sam Houston (9)
- Califano, Joseph A., 1931- (8)
- Christian, George E. (George Eastland), 1927-2002 (8)
- 1967-11-xx (14)
- 1965-xx-xx (12)
- 1964-xx-xx (11)
- 1967-07-xx (9)
- 1961-xx-xx (8)
- 1967-10-xx (8)
- 1966-xx-xx (7)
- 1968-02-xx (7)
- 1965-07-xx (6)
- 1967-03-xx (6)
- 1967-06-xx (6)
- 1967-08-xx (6)
- 1968-03-xx (6)
- 1968-05-xx (6)
- 1968-11-14 (6)
- Vietnam (210)
- Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973 (152)
- Assassinations (61)
- LBJ Library (58)
- Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961 (40)
- 1960 campaign (33)
- JFK Assassination (25)
- Outer Space (24)
- Kennedy, Robert F., 1925-1968 (23)
- Lady Bird Johnson personal (22)
- Press relations (22)
- Diplomacy (20)
- 1964 Campaign (19)
- Tet Offensive, 1968 (19)
- Beautification (17)
- Text (1424)
- Audio (29)
- Still image (1)
- LBJ Library Oral Histories (766)
- National Security Files (213)
- President's Daily Diary (129)
- Reference File (83)
- Lady Bird Johnson's White House Diary (39)
- Meeting Notes Files (22)
- White House Central Files (20)
- Papers of Tom Johnson (19)
- Vice President Papers of Lyndon B. Johnson (18)
- Administrative Histories (12)
- Records of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence (Eisenhower Commission) (12)
- Legislative Background and Domestic Crises File (11)
- Papers of Charles E. Marsh (11)
- Pre-Presidential Daily Diary (10)
- White House Social Files (6)
- Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (753)
- Memos to the President (144)
- President's Daily Diary (124)
- Meeting Notes (41)
- Annotated Transcripts of Lady Bird Johnson's Diary (29)
- Sound Recordings of Lady Bird Johnson's Diary (29)
- National Security Council Histories Files (17)
- Vice Presidential Security File (14)
- Transcripts of Oral Histories Given to the Lyndon B. Johnson Library (13)
- Files of Charles E. Johnson (11)
- Papers of Charles E. Marsh (11)
- Subject Files (11)
- Lady Bird Johnson's Daily Diary (10)
- 44. Research File [TASK FORCE VI - Firearms] (9)
- Transportation Department Files (8)
- Oral history (766)
- Folder (404)
- Daily Diary (143)
- Newsletter (50)
- Meeting notes (47)
- Personal diary (37)
- Histories (18)
- Chronology (17)
- Report (12)
- Folder listed on subject guide (10)
- Manuscript (4)
- Record copy (3)
- Speech (3)
- Correspondence (2)
- Memorandum (2)
1424 results
- •uTHE SECURITY AND FREEDOM OF BERLIN, A COMMITMENT WHICH WAS DEMONSTRATED IN 19481 WHICH · ~AS BEEN REITERATED BY PRESIDENTS EISENHOWER AND KENNEDY AND WHICH ' IS AS ' FIRM AND EXPLICIT TODAY AS rr WAS WHEN IT " WAS MADE· . TH SHOULD BE KNOWN IN BERLIN
- that this is a bipartisan operation, and I wil.l point out that Roosevelt appointed Levi Deike, and Eisenhower kept Levi reike, and we all honor Levi reike this morning. He's come a long way since he and I played baseball out here in his back yard. At that time we bad
- recall who kept the reports. He had someone on his staff who was active in the campaign for him who did it. F: Then you became a commissioner for the Interstate Commerce commission in 1955 under President Eisenhower? H: Yes, I was appointed
Oral history transcript, William J. Jorden, interview 1 (I), 3/22/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- and South; and that the effort to take over the country and to bring it under the control of the government in Hanoi should not succeed. the basic objective has ever.changed since~ I don't think indeed, since Eisenhower. You know, Eisenhower made some
- a small business agency under President Truman. When President Eisenhower came in he established, in 1953, the first independent small business agency, called the Small Business Administration. agency also as a lawyer. I was with that I spent
Oral history transcript, Virginia Wilke English, interview 2 (II), 3/18/1981, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- [For interviews 1 and 2] Wartime service in the Red Cross; seeing LBJ during his visit to Paris on a mission; the mission committee; activities during visit; impressions of Eisenhower; flight back to Texas with LBJ; conditions in Europe; LBJ's
- , Jim Abercrombie was one of them that he was very, very fond of and J. R. Parten certainly he was very fond of. At one time the Eisenhower Administration was toying with the idea of the Treasury revoking the tax exemption of the funds for the Republic
- thing that I do remember--I don't know whether you've interviewed Charlie Herring or not. G: He's on my list. H: Charlie was U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Texas when Eisenhower was elected. It is customary when a new administration
Oral history transcript, James H. Rowe, Jr., interview 5 (V), 5/10/1983, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- that I would be able to do that. At that particular time there were a number of different personnel units. One was a vestige of the Eisenhower Administration which had never been entirely eliminated, and there were two or three people still occupying
- [For interviews 1 and 2] Brief contacts with Senator Johnson during the Truman and Eisenhower administrations; Democratic Advisory Council establishment and opposition by LBJ and Sam Rayburn; Paul Butler; LBJ’s effectiveness as Senate majority
- during this period of the fifties about, one, his strategy toward the Eisenhower Administration and his unwillingness to--? P: Not in great depth or detail. I think that in our infrequent, casual, social meetings, he would discuss the issues because
- of this was pretty much of an uphill battle. In the first place, I think it goes very easily without saying that at the time, the beginning years in the Eisenhower Administration, there was not a great push for government to get active in things. I would refer
- that no politics is maybe the When they changed the Administration to the Eisenhower Administration, I had a lot of Republicans--One Republican called me up and said, "I want you to come by here and get this check for $2,000. I see where they might try to remove
- in Amarillo did when it chose to certify a ballot that would list Eisenhower and Nixon as the nominees of the, I think they called it, the Texas Democrats. That, I thought, was a subterfuge and the mis- leading thing to do. I opposed it, unsuccessfully
Oral history transcript, Clement J. Zablocki, interview 1 (I), 1/16/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- president should. He did not. His interests were mostly domestic. M: Did he generally go along with President Eisenhower pretty well? Z: I think, yes, on most issues--and for that reason, I believe that when President Johnson, then-Senate leader
Oral history transcript, Ivan L. Bennett, Jr., interview 1 (I), 12/11/1968, by David G. McComb
(Item)
- . Having decided that this would be a worthwhile thing to undertake I then obtained permission from the president of Johns Hopkins, who at that time was Milton Eisenhower and who was rather enthusiastic about my taking such a responsibility in the Federal
- in the Eisenhower Administration. M: Had they made a strong effort in the Eisenhower Administration? B: Yes, they had. They had made a strong effort with the Administration; they had never been up on the Hill. I think they would have gotten--I've always felt
- to be comfortable knowing that you are working for me, that you are not working for Eisenhower or Nixon or Bobby Kennedy down the line." And I assured him that he had my total and absolute loyalty and dedication . For what that was worth I gave him that assurance
Oral history transcript, William M. Blackburn, interview 1 (I), 5/21/1969, by David G. McComb
(Item)
- . It was the type of operation that was instituted under Kennedy by Larry O'Brien, although I understand that President Eisenhower had something simi lar to that, but it was not as effective because of the fact that he had a Democratic Congress . � � � � � LBJ
- children. A: I noticed a memo in the file one time that described Johnson directing that an Eisenhower letter be sent to his mother for safekeeping, and then later we did in fact find an Eisenhower letter in her papers. Do you know if Johnson did things
- ; and I think it's probably one of the more significant innovations in terms of governmental organization of the Johnson years. Now if it existed in this kind of degree before that, I hadn't heard about it. I'm sure there had been some in the Eisenhower
- time. Earlier. he notes, LBJ was instrumental during the Eisenhower administration in the framing and passage of the National Defense Education Act, and the Education Professions Development Act. Rulon traces Johnson's youth, his education at Southwest
- Bill Moyers gives briefing on LBJ's health; Lady Bird sends telegram for President Eisenhower's birthday; Johnsons spend few hours in quiet, sunny room overlooking countryside; press were allowed to take photographs; Lady Bird goes to Great Falls
- Meeting to discuss upcoming speeches; Lady Bird's space trip to Huntsville, AL; office work; LBJ's press conference in East Room, with critique by Lady Bird; press conference questions; Eisenhower comment about press conferences; family dinner
- Republican,^ during the Eisenhow er era, took out so m e insurance by giving a b y -p a rtisa n tinge to w hatever would now e m e rg e . And then, fo r the d ista ff side of the hou s e, came the big event o f the day, a fiv e o 'c lo c k reception fo r
- . They are trying to give Fort Bliss to Oklahoma. And today the Republican Secretary of the Interior is in Texas to dedicate our Big Bend Park. I hope some of our Eisenhower Democrats are out there to keep him from giving it away to Old Mexico. Personally, I think
- is as difficult as it is urgent, so we should like to let you know that it is our wish and our purpose to offer our help to you. The enclosed letter to Dr. Milton Eisenhower is self-explanatory, and we hope that it will give you some notion of our work and our
- See all scanned items from Records of the NCCPV (Eisenhower Commission) Series 11 Box 4
- Folder, "IDA (Institute for Defense Analysis)," Records of the NCCPV (Eisenhower Commission), Series 11, Box 4
- Records of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence (Eisenhower Commission)
Oral history transcript, Walter Jenkins, interview 14 (XIV), 7/19/1984, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- a fine old lady. G: Anything else on his recovery that you recall that's significant, his recuperation? J: I don't think so. He had his ups and downs. G: Now, Eisenhower had a heart attack that fall, a serious one. Do you recall LBJ's
- John Connally and LBJ visit Connally's ranch near Mexico; LBJ sad about President Eisenhower's illness; Lady Bird works on mail and makes phone calls; Lady Bird walks 3 miles along Pedernales River; she describes the flora, fauna, animals
- , th e Presiden t wa s hear d t o tel l Secy McNamara _ o b e sur e an d hav e someon e writ e a letter t o Presiden t Eisenhowe r tomorro w tellin g m o f today's happenings . ) - - note : i t wa s late r decide d t o have Amb . Thompso n personally g
- : 1956? What did that fight involve? M: Shivers had apparently taken the state Democratic Party to the support of Eisenhower in 1952, and he was proposing to do the same thing in 1956. Apparently there was a political struggle within the state
Oral history transcript, Maxwell D. Taylor, interview 1a (I), 1/9/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- President Eisenhower. Presi- dent Kennedy recalled you to active duty in 1961, and you served as the military representative to the President. From '62 to '64, you were Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; from 1964 to 1965, Ambassador to Vietnam
- in that way. Johnson seemed Generally with politicians the public and the private, you know, what you'd see on television and what you'd see face to face is more or less the same. I mean, Kennedy, Eisenhower and the rest that I've known were what you
Oral history transcript, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, interview 1 (I), 1/11/1974, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- . One thing Prime Minister MacMillan of England had said to Jack about President Eisenhower and Vice President Nixon, that Eisenhower never let Nixon on the place, impressed Jack a lot . Every time there was a state � � � � LBJ Presidential Library
- envisioned it and it turned out I didn't. I never did fail to get a rule that I asked for, even the first time I went up. Judge [Howard] Smith accused me of endorsing the British dole system, you know. Eisenhower had asked for a federal 13 LBJ Presidential
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 18 (XVIII), 6/12/1985, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- -- 17 up this committee to make it independent of the president but still a committee which would feed advice into the president and have some influence on him. And Eisenhower decided he did not want that committee to be under anybody else
- , for an historic meeting with President Eisenhower in the fall of 1957. At that time, the federal courts had ordered integration of a high school in Little Rock, called Central High School, and nine black children had been selected as the first of their race
- was ever very critical of Eisenhower, even though there had been some bad blood between them. And I don't recall that Eisenhower was ever publicly very critical of either Kennedy or Johnson. F: I've always had the feeling probably too that Goldwater