Skip to main content
-
Tag >
Digital item
(remove)
-
Type >
Text
(remove)
-
Subject >
LBJ Ranch
(remove)
-
Collection >
LBJ Library Oral Histories
(remove)
Limit your search
Tag
Contributor
-
Baskin, Robert E.
(1)
-
Corcoran, Thomas G., 1900-1981
(1)
-
Donnelley, Dixon
(1)
-
Goldstein, E. Ernest, 1918-
(1)
-
Joseph, Edward
(1)
-
Shoumatoff, Elizabeth
(1)
-
Weaver, Robert Clifton, 1907-1997
(1)
Date
Subject
Type
Collection
Series
Specific Item Type
Time Period
7 results
- , 1978
INTERVIEWEE:
EDWARD JOSEPH
INTERVIEWER:
MICHAEL L. GILLETTE
PLACE:
Mr. Joseph's office, Austin, Texas
Tape 1 of 1
G:
That's a point that I'd like to get on tape.
We're talking about Sam
Houston Johnson, the President's brother.
J:
I've
- See all online interviews with Edward Joseph
- oh-josephe-19780223-2-81-3
- Joseph, Edward
- Oral history transcript, Edward Joseph, interview 2 (II), 2/23/1978, by Michael L. Gillette
- Edward Joseph
- Go to Interviewee bio page
- -of-a-bitch, because I was a Catholic
for Johnson, as I told you, the issue of Look came out that day. Did I tell you about this?
F:
No.
C:
The issue of Look came on the convention, and there were four places across an open
page: Clark Clifford
- would logically come out of the White House at that
particular time.
And you may have read that this system came "a cropper"
because on one day at the ranch, Joseph Laitin then an assistant press
LBJ Presidential Library
http://www.lbjlibrary.org
- Biographical information; first association with LBJ; Estes Kefauver; Douglas Dillon; Pierce Salinger; Joseph Laitin; Horace Busby; George Reedy; Henry Fowler; Bill Moyers; Bob McCloskey; Frederick Deming; George Christian; relations with the White
- it was
finished it was considered good, so they kept it for the White House.
That was the beginning.
Then, shortly, well, anyway, the whole
project regarding President and Mrs. Johnson's portrait started that
fall.
I was contacted by Mr. Clark Clifford and we
- and locations of sittings, comparison of FDR’s and LBJ’s behavior during sittings; visits to LBJ Ranch; Clark Clifford’s involvement in Mrs. Johnson’s portrait; how Shoumatoff found out that a portrait she painted would be used for a stamp.
- .
This, then,
called us to the attention of many of the groups that were working in this
field, including some that were close to Secretary Ickes, who had set up a
racial advisory office under Clark Foreman--a white Georgian but had worked
with the Roosevelt-F
- came back to Austin after clerking for Justice Clark.
I didn't
have much to do with him when he was working for the governor, although I
used to do things like write civil rights speeches for the governor, but that
was another-B