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  • on the Congress and long-time assistant to Sam Rayburn, left a bequest to the LBJ Foundation to further the study of the national legis­ lature. Since that time, the Foundation has awarded the D. B. Hardeman Prize for books on a congressional topic to twelve
  • Speaker Rayburn's library. he was there, and he was another one of my beloved friends. Well, If there ever was anybody that I admired from head to foot, it was Mr. Sam Rayburn. Of course, he was in Congress when I was one of the hirelings up there. F
  • Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961
  • reservations about LBJ's heath as running mate; first civil rights act; LBJ's accessibility; a "democratic" man; LBJ's 1960 campaign visit to Mississippi; visit to LBJ at the ranch in 1960; friendship with Sam Rayburn; contacts with JFK; 1964 visit with LBJ
  • that for a long time Speaker Sam Rayburn did think he was good enough to be and did hope that he would be. And the same about John Connally. Although John would get mighty put out with him when he, John, though Lyndon was right up within shooting distance
  • Waldron -- I -- 22 G: Really. Well, I've gotten two differerit theories on this. One, that Sam Rayburn was in favor of it to begin with, the idea that he felt anyone whose name had been placed in nomination before the convention for president had
  • on there? Now, we have on tape already the effort to hold the Texas delegati on and the Shivers versus Rayburn-Johnson fight. But Johnson was kind of a dark, dark horse there. P: Yes, he was, though he had won the May delegati on ffght to go to the national
  • LBJ-Rayburn-Price Daniel relationship; details of the 1960 convention in Los Angeles, especially concerning the Texas delegation; poor accommodations for the delegation; the JFK organization in 1960; Texas delegation reacts to LBJ nomination
  • : Sam Rayburn was quoted as saying one time that he was glad that LBJ got the Ranch because now he could talk about something besides politics. Did this become a favorite subject with him? J: Oh, absolutely. He wanted everybody he knew to come see
  • that was, carrying by one vote. I understand that President Johnson was the floor leader on that, working with Speaker [Sam] Rayburn. 3 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID
  • at that time who is now deceased. But President Johnson and Speaker Sam Rayburn got together with some of the other people in the back room and with Shivers, and he promised to support the Democratic nominee, regardless. But he worded a proposition that didn't
  • and it would have been where it would do the most good. I don't know. G: You don't recall any contact then with Sam Rayburn or--? LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID
  • routine and lunch at the Senate Dining Room. That was my beat. We had a dinner at our house with Speaker [Sam] Rayburn and Wesley West and Sid Richardson, and Jesse Kellam, and Herman and George Brown, who brought Olga Weiss. And John Connally. 2 LBJ
  • television and, later, color television; Sam Houston Johnson and alcoholism.
  • was not popular; O'Brien's and JFK's relationships with Bryce Harlow and Dwight Eisenhower; congressmen using the navy or air force for travel and Sam Rayburn's opposition to these junkets; providing transportation to bring members of Congress back to Washington D
  • to criticize in Washington today, especially the state of polit­ ical discourse. Mr. Ford recalled that when he first came to the House in 1949, Speaker Sam Rayburn gathered all the freshmen representatives for a talk. One of the things he said, and which Mr
  • died, why, then Lyndon was a member of Congress, then it didn't--I mean it was kind of a downstep. He was closer to Roosevelt than Rayburn was. was closer to Truman than Lyndon was and so forth. wanted from President Truman. Now, Rayburn But he got
  • See all online interviews with Sam Houston Johnson
  • Johnson, Sam Houston
  • Oral history transcript, Sam Houston Johnson, interview 8 (VIII), 10/1/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
  • Sam Houston Johnson
  • Education and Labor Committee? G: Yes. Sam Rayburn was the speaker of the House, and education really has always been I think my first love. [Inaudible]. K: That was one of your platforms in your election campaign? G: Yes, I talked quite a little bit
  • Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961
  • Biographical information; teaching career; candidacy for Congress; support of JFK; Wayne Morse; impression of LBJ as a Senator; education legislation; federal aid to education; opinion of Sam Rayburn; parochial school question; Adam Clayton Powell
  • did call himself a Republican, but he--go ahead. B: Do you recall that he and Sam Rayburn fell out over this issue, that Sam Rayburn thought he had gotten a promise from Shivers that he would support the Democratic nominee, whoever the Democratic
  • Texas tideland issues in the 1950s; cross-filing, which allowed Democrats to support Dwight Eisenhower in the 1952 presidential election; Allan Shivers' support for Republicans; LBJ's and Sam Rayburn's devotion to the Democratic Party; John Tower's
  • D with Walter 9:00a 9:15a 9:30a 9:45a 10:00a 10:15a 10:30a 10:45a 11:00a 11:15a Arrived Carswell AFB Ft. Worth Left Carswell in Air Force K.C.-135 w/ Speaker Rayburn and Walter 11:30a 11:45a 12:00n 12:15p 12:30p 12:45p 1:00 1:45p 2:00p 2:15p
  • -38 (Ashton can fill in telephone calls) DATE Monday November 30, 1959 10:45a Left Andrews AFB KG-135 with Mrs. J, Rayburn, Fulbright, WJ 11:00a 11:15a 11:30a " 11:45a Stopped briefly in Little Rock to discharge Fulbright 1:00p 1:15p 1:30p l:45p
  • that took place I think at the Biltmore Hotel or some place the day before the balloting. P: All the meetings were in the Biltmore. G: You were there and Speaker Rayburn was there and Representative John McCormack was there. Mr. O'Neill and Mr
  • , Manager of the North by Mr. . Texas Milk Producers Assoc. Rayburn) ~Ker~Nortb Te-J£a-S--Milk ~~ . Prodtteer& A.ssoe. ( W ~ . . B •.· E •. Stallones, Manager of the So. Texas Milk producers Assoc. .. ·• ·:· Mil-ch 17, 1954 People the Senator talked
  • ~ Senator J ohns on h-k . R..___ Yh ... ~ q Q0 Skeeter Johns on tal ked to on the phone : ···1- Lt.l-Q..tl-.. . · . Sen:itor McClelland . Speaker Rayburn ( .. ( _./
  • opening came, Mr. Johnson went and asked for the position. Others feel that it came either through Rayburn or Garner or somebody who was looking for the right man. Do you know anything about this? LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL
  • would come up and come out to see us, or we'd go down to his hotel. Miss Lou's [Rayburn] visit sparked an unusually rich round of gatherings this year. Everybody I know had a party for her. We had a dinner at our house for a small group: the Speaker
  • ; socializing in Washington, D.C. with friends such as the Clark Cliffords, Stuart Symingtons, Tom Corcorans, and Walter Hornadays; escalation of the war in Korea; Sam Rayburn's birthday party with the children; LBJ's election as minority whip in 1951 and his
  • http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Johnson -- XVIII -- 3 Mrs. [Sam] Johnson also came to visit us
  • together, and if I could have Speaker Rayburn it was always just real special, as I frequently did. And Bill Douglas--I remember one time Bill and Mildred were there, and Mr. Sam brought his date, the attractive woman Mrs. Davis, a widow. He kind
  • ; the Johnsons' desire to have a son; James Forrestal; the 1901 Dillman Street house in Austin and its residents; a trip through South Texas with John and Nellie Connally; visiting Jim West's garage; Mr. and Mrs. Sam Fore; measuring support for a 1948 Senate
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 22 that way. He didn't do it just for the fun of it; he would launch out on his own. F: Did you ever go to any of those Board of Education meetings? S: No, no, not much. F: That Sam Rayburn held? S: No, no, I didn't
  • that sparked it was more Sam Rayburn than LBJ. But I believe that was one of those things that was done just to make it very clear that the Democratic leadership was independent of Eisenhower. You know, what LBJ had really done was--I've already explained
  • Persons as his liaison with the Hill. So you take a general and put him in that job, he doesn't know the sticks and the carrots of his office, where Lyndon Johnson and Sam Rayburn had been on the Hill for twenty or more years each. They knew what
  • on and passed it with the help of Mr. [Sam] Rayburn. He had a close friend and Mr. Rayburn just loved Johnson. D: Did they have any kind of falling out because of the 1940 campaign? You know--well, as you told me, you were at the center of that--in 1940
  • and people in the oil industry; LBJ's campaigns against Hardy Hollers and Buck Taylor; the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947; how LBJ was offered a position on the House Naval Affairs Committee; attending the funeral for LBJ's father, Sam Ealy Johnson, Jr.; Billie Sol
  • . The only one that had guts enough to come was Sam Rayburn, you know. During that Shivers stall, when Shivers were there, he'd come out for Eisenhower and everything else, and we just didn't have a damn show. We couldn't win a county convention. If we did
  • him as he was going to show up here and there and yonder. Once more as it had been in 1937, the people would talk to their counterparts. Mr. [Sam] Fore would talk to the newspapermen, and some rancher friends from the Fourteenth District would talk
  • was plowing the land and that they were finding Indian arrowheads out there, he was always telling us something about the Ranch, Mr. [Sam] Rayburn nudged me and said, "I sure am glad Lyndon has got something else to talk about besides politics." (Laughter
  • deserved it, why, it was all right. G: Do you know anything about Sam Rayburn's effort to get the congressmen home who were in uniform? R: Well, logically it would be Mr. Rayburn who would take the lead to do that. I just remember talk, though
  • 4 against the bill; the opponents of Alaskan statehood would vote against the bill--thereby strengthening the opposition. You'd be combining double opposition. So our governor, John A. Burns, discussed this matter with Speaker Rayburn and Lyndon
  • [For interviews 1 and 2] Biographical information; first meeting LBJ and Sam Rayburn at the 1956 Democratic convention in Chicago; made an honorary Texan; LBJ and statehood for Hawaii; LBJ and the Center for Cultural and Technical Interchange
  • . The reason was depletion. While Johnson had never been an out- front leader of the oil and gas people, he also knew of their financial resources and their power to destroy. As long as Rayburn and Johnson were in Washington they never touched depletion
  • by asking you about rumors during the campaign that Sam Rayburn was actually supporting or at least favored Coke Stevenson. J: I don't think we ever believed any such thing. There were some rumors, but I'm pretty sure nobody close to President Johnson
  • and had only come to Washington about twice, and in the middle of the dinner Senator Johnson and Sam Rayburn shml/ed up. live got a picture at home of me between them, which is a choice thing to keep. S: Yes, indeed. Pretty hot romancing. for--? D
  • Biographical information; Stevenson campaign; Pat Brown campaign; Washington in 1959-1960; Statler Hotel party to impress Dutton; LBJ, Rayburn Bobby Baker all for California votes; Brown on “Meet the Press” in 1959 said LBJ was too conservative
  • who were opposed to this, as I learned subsequently. B: That would have been people like John Connally? V: John Connally and Price Daniel and, indeed, Sam Rayburn. The President tells very amusing stories about Bob Kerr, how much he was opposed
  • that question, he wrote back to me that he had run because Sam Rayburn had said that if he didn't run, Dick Nixon would become president of the United States, and Dick ~ixon was the man who had called Harry Truman a traitor and the Democratic party the party
  • president. I had covered the 1960 Democratic convention so I knew something about the negotiations that went on between Sam Rayburn and Bobby [Kennedy] for Johnson to go on the ticket. G: Tell me your insights there. D: Well, as I said, I didn't know