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  • with Nixon because it would help him [Johnson]. F: He'd be in a position when he called the White House that he could go on over and talk about it. G: That's right. F: Did you have any relationship with Sam Rayburn? LBJ Presidential Library http
  • about him in those days? H: I don't recall anything special. You have to realize that he had two fellow Texans who occupied very prominent positions there. was John Nance Garner and the other was Sam Rayburn. One Naturally they would overshadow
  • : When we did get the headquarters opened, Lyndon B. Johnson for President, Harris County Headquarters, 1501 Texas Avenue, by this time Speaker [Sam] Rayburn and Governor [Price] Daniel had agreed to serve as Texas' honorary co-chairmen and the two Harris
  • room for unveiling of Sam Rayburn commemorative stamp. Meets with Mr. Kappel, Lloyd Miller’s boss. 5 p.m., goes to WH for off-the-record NSC meeting on disarmament. 7/31 WH leadership breakfast meeting. LBJ opens Senate, has an appt. with McGeorge
  • Speaker Rayburn’s 66th birthday. He receives a standing ovation from the House during a tribute speech by Congressman Halleck of Indiana. President Truman is an unannounced guest at a private luncheon at the Capitol honoring Rayburn. 1/7 Truman delivers
  • . G: But wasn't he elected again later on? J: I don't think so. G: Is that right? J: I don't think so. second daddy. to me." problem~ how did he keep getting elected? Now Lyndon always talked about Sam Rayburn being a Lyndon \'lOuld talk
  • Sam Ealy Johnson; political campaigns; LBJ Ranch; LBJ and Catholicism; TV station KTBC
  • histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh -8recommend the veto." He got on the phone and he got hold of Mr. Rayburn; and he said, "Sam, you heard what your fellows are trying to do to this AID Bill?" I don't think Mr. Rayburn had heard about
  • funny thing. I was standing near Sam Rayburn on the floor. When the voice vote was over, Collins) the permanent chairman; hesitated. He was standing there and he hesitated to call the vote. The reason why he could legitimately hesitate
  • if you'll just tell Ine. you're her sister. And he said, "I I won't tell anybody that 11 I said, "But I'm not. II F: I see. He was on the trail of something. N: And, of course, I think a lot of the Congressmen would meet with Speaker Rayburn
  • Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961
  • LBJ’s teaching days in Cotulla; office in Johnson City; Mrs. Nichols’ marriage; Pat Moreland; Russell Brown; Phil Nichols; answering of correspondence; LCRA electricity project; FDR and LBJ; Sam Rayburn’s “Board of Education;” Hardy Hollers campaign
  • in Congress, got very angry with him and stayed angry until he died, as a matter of fact. B: On what basis? M: He just wouldn't support any of the legislation the NAACP was after. Walter White chalked it up to his great admiration for Sam Rayburn. He
  • Congresses, beginning in 1957. Can you talk about what that was like for you? M: Well it seemed to me that, in terms of the political situation, that [Dwight] Eisenhower and Sam Rayburn, the speaker of the house, and Lyndon Johnson, the majority leader
  • would arise that involved the Justice Department. I was used as a general utility man. It seems to me that I remember at one stage in those early months that either President Johnson said it himself or he may have quoted Mr. Sam Rayburn that "you should
  • Johnson as I would any important Congressman or Senator, as I got to know Sam Rayburn and other people who were important and interested in various things . On the Civil Aeronautics Board, I met him a few times, but he had very little direct interest
  • /exhibits/show/loh/oh Territo -- I -- 14 file. T: Yes, absolutely. A: So that's how some of those files go back to 1937. T: Like the copy of the--well, there's a letter from Lyndon Johnson to Sam Rayburn remembering when he walked him down the aisle
  • not heed my words about waiting for the release until he contacted them, because I remember one of them, quote, "was out hunting." I'm pretty sure it was Lyndon Johnson; I don't think it would have been Sam Rayburn. But anyway, it was put out
  • and Sam Rayburn both. You see, the issue really was not worth all the fighting, that was the trouble with it. This was one of those symbolic issues in which it really didn't matter how it went one way or the other. In terms of substantive results
  • the Austin phone book and divide it up four ways"--he may have cut Sam Houston in on it; I don't know--"and just sit at the phone all day and ask everybody to go to the polls." And that was a gargantuan job, but remember, it was a very much smaller phone book
  • an apartment for John and Nellie Connally in preparation for their arrival; Connally's work as LBJ's executive assistant; Truman's 1949 State of the Union Message; children's birthday party for Sam Rayburn; Felix Longoria; the University of Texas purchasing
  • when I remember telling him socially, even after the program was over, about lunch and who Lyndon brought to meet me as his guest. G: Who was that, may I ask? K: Well, Sam Rayburn was one, and a couple of younger men. any fuss about it. He didn't
  • the LBJ Foundation that Hard man, \\ ho died December 3, 1981, and was a long-time aide to the late House Speaker Sam Rayburn and long-time friend of the J ohnsons, h d made provision in his will for acer tain percentage of his estate to go
  • /show/loh/prepres/sen Box No. Envelope or Folder Title Scope and content Subseries 415 Public Power File Office Files...1951‐55 415 Public Relations – 1955 Office Files...1951‐55 415 RayburnSam Office Files...1951‐55 415 Reciprocal Trade
  • was--through [minority] leader to majority leader, and see that whole process unfold. Fortunately with Mr. Rayburn, the two of them were in the two top legislative offices, and of course, not that I was privy to a lot of their conversations, but just because
  • and Ben Cohen were frequently there, [Fred] Vinson of Kentucky, who later became chief justice, and Roberta, several members of the Texas delegation, Wright Patman especially, an occasional newspaper man. G: You say Speaker Rayburn was a natural host
  • ; Joseph Davies' home, Tregaron; Vice President Alben Barkley; Speaker Sam Rayburn hosting evenings in his home; socializing with Senate friends, such as Lister Hill and Millard Tydings; LBJ's business dealings with Mrs. Johnson's father; attending
  • 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh COOK -- I -- 5 patron and the other being the protégé really wasn't much involved. B: Was the relationship between Mr. Johnson and Speaker Sam Rayburn also obvious
  • . to Fish Room —to talk with West Wing secretarial Staff and have picture made the girls that were there for all the things that they had done for him —said they were instruments that made thp Presidency move fffcox*?4'yy smonothly --told a Sam Rayburn
  • and attended all the Policy Committee meetings. If you'll take the record of Johnson and you'll take the record of another great Texan, Sam Rayburn, they generally felt like supporting the president to the extent that 2 LBJ Presidential Library http
  • of Ganson Purcell, who was getting ready to resign. Purcell died about a year ago. The initial pressure on this was coming from Ganson Purcell's sponsor, really, who was Mr. Sam [Rayburn]. Purcell had worked for the Speaker earlier, and they wanted a good
  • First meeting with LBJ in March, 1946; Ganson Purcell; James Rowe; Sam Rayburn; W. Averell Harriman; Truman’s anti-inflation program; General Counsel for AEC; Herbert Marks; Kenneth D. McKellar; Dr. Edward U. Condon; General McArthur; Richard
  • Interviewer: Thomas H. Baker Secretary Smith's Office, Department of Commerce, October 24, 1968 B: Do you recall when you first met Mr. Johnson? S: I don't remember the date; I don't even remember the year. Sam Rayburn was a friend of mine; I knew him
  • He studied, and even way back then Sam Rayburn and a lot of these old boys were advising him on the side. run into that several times. Now I I remember I went with LBJ down to Brownwood one time, Abilene one time. Then those newspaper owners
  • the rail on the House floor. F: Did you develop a fairly close relationship in that time? M: I thought we had a very close relationship, yes. F: I presume that Sam Rayburn sort of acted as, to use the expression, midwife in this in a way. M: We were
  • e r Sam Rayburn; and sometimes S t e w a r t Symington would be there and sometimes Herbert Hoover, but there would generally be no more than six or eight of us. Kerr was there quite often. Bob I don't know why we wound up over there so regularly
  • and published in the pa. t two years. The award was named for D. B. Hardeman of San Antomo, aid to the late House Speaker Sam Rayburn, in acknowledgment of r. Hardeman' gift t th Library of ver I 0,000 books on Congress. It covers the entire span of merican
  • boo· on the Congre'>s published in the two-year period. The award, carrying a prize of $ 1500, is '1amcd ior the late D. B. Hardeman, ong-lime aide to Speaker Sam Rayburn and then House Majority Whip Hale Boggs, v.ho Sundquist gave his entire
  • for the competition. The wmner will be announced at the LBJ Library April 1, 1986. The prize, funded by a grant from the LBJ Foundation, is named in honor of the late D. B. Hardeman. aide to Speaker Sam Rayburn and noted authority on the U.S. Congress. The original
  • to the Foundation. amounted to S83.000. Mrs. Roberts· is the second bequest to come to the Library under the terms ot a will in recent year~. The first was from D. B. Hardeman. who died in 1982. having served as aide to both Speaker Sam Rayburn and Congressman Hale
  • University Press. The prize is awarded every second year for the best book on the Con­ gress published during that period. It is named for the late aide to Speaker Sam Rayburn. Mr. Harde­ man left his extensive coflection of books on the Congress
  • leaking problems but I just think it was pure turf. They were afraid they'd be under the Civil Rights Division. G: It's interesting that two of the Senate opponents were Sam Ervin and Jacob Javits. C: Can I just mention something here
  • you describe the time when you and Speaker [Sam] Rayburn were present at the White House to issue a joint statement? J: Yes, they had the Democratic convention in Waco, and we discussed how best to avoid a big split in the Democratic Party. We
  • ] Peace Corps Polls, LBJ Polls, Other Population Explosion [empty folder] Prosperity [U.S.S.] Pueblo R and D Rayburn, Sam 11/13/79 7/20/2000 1/2/90 1/3/90 7/20/2000 14 14 Reports, Federal Agencies Reports, Federal Employment 7/20/2000 3/28/2007 Box 7
  • , Texas Address, Sam Houston State Teachers College, Huntsville, Texas Speech, Senate Floor Concerning Supreme Court Ruling on Segregation Speech on Senate Floor Concerning Resolution to Shut Down
  • , in certain areas. I think basically the question was that Sam Rayburn and Lyndon Johnson, too, took the more traditional view of what the role of Congress should be--that it should react to a presidential program, but the executive really had