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760 results
- in the morning because he couldn't go to them. He noted with regret the tendency for pro gress and unrest to go together. Perhaps earlier the poor had been too weak to rise up and rebel. This led him into Sam Rayburn's story about not wanting defense plants
- Removed: Zapata Co Falcon Dam Commr. Minutes (Notes by M. B. Bravo, Co. Judge) [No Folder Title] [Land Lease Information – Hidalgo and Zapata Counties] Partido Viejo Receipts, 1952 Miscellaneous In[surance] Agent Lic[ensing] Questionaire Sam Rayburn
- Hannegan, Arthur Bagby, Ed Clark, Albert Jackson, William Kittrell, Arch Underwood, Sam Rayburn, Representatives Pickett, Combs and Lyle., 1/23 LBJ went to see Grace Tully to tell her that the Federal Judge in Austin had died and to remind her of Alvin
- : Senator Wadsworth? s: Yes. They were close, Rayburn and Wadsworth. Sam. He was one hell of a man. I'm going to have to leave you now. I was devoted to Mr. If you want to come back rid be glad to talk with you some more. F: All right. s: F: I I
- between him and the President--President Roosevelt. We also noticed--in answer to your first question--that there was a close relationship between Mr. Johnson and Sam Rayburn. There is always a wonderful esprit de corps between the Texans who
- no great trouble in Chicago that year, in going along then with the nominees? W: No, not at all. Of course, Lyndon Johnson was the leader of the delegation; Sam Rayburn was its grand vizier. They worked together, LBJ Presidential Library http
- The 1948 campaign; elected to Congress in 1954; first meeting LBJ in 1947; LBJ and the McCarthy censure; LBJ and the Texas delegation; LBJ, Rayburn, and the Civil Rights Bill of 1957; helping LBJ with legislation in the House; Vice President LBJ
- , "[Orville] Freeman or [Stuart] Symington," but that neither one could carry any southern state. Rayburn told me the night before that he had heard they were going to ask me to run on the ticket. He said, "Don't get caught in that one." I said I had no plans
- It ,.;ras more a. foot-dragging I knew that even when we met with the President, it ev~d2~t where he stood. B: Did this actt.ally affect the state of-the control program? D: I think it did. At that time we had Sam Rayburn as Speaker. wasn't very
- Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961
- Biographical information; Senator McFarland; Sam Rayburn; relationship between Truman and Senator Johnson; Paul Butler; 1956, 1960 and 1964 conventions and campaigns; JFK; Jim Rowe; Hubert Humphrey; Abe Ribicoff; RFK; LBJ as Vice President; DNC; 3
Oral history transcript, John Henry Faulk, interview 1 (I), 12/15/1989, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- of them, and J. Frank Dobie and all of them were furious at Lyndon Johnson and Sam Rayburn for trafficking with, trading out with the enemy as it were. I guess that's the year that Miss [Frankie] Randolph got it, wasn't it? G: Yes. F: You see my
- and arranging to work for him in Texas; Faulk’s activities during the McCarthy period; Faulk emceeing Washington D.C. events; Sam Rayburn; Richard Nixon; O.P. “Bob” Bobbitt; a supposed lawsuit against Texas Broadcasting Corporation; dispute with LBJ regarding
- wool suit with fur collar. 9:59 Left White House with Bess Abell H.G. in White House Vicky and Simon McHugh not dictated 1. 10:12 Arrived Rayburn Office Building to see portrait of Speaker Rayburn, 10:15 Left Rayburn Building 10:25 Arrived National
- G: Did you go with him in the fall of 1955 when he made that speech at Whitney, Texas? H: No. G: He also attended something at Fort Worth for Sam Rayburn. I am just wondering if you saw any of these maiden political--? H: No. Those of us
- with Stuart Symington, Richard Russell, and Hubert Humphrey; meeting and marrying LBJ's brother, Sam Houston Johnson; LBJ's 1955 heart attack; efforts to lift LBJ's spirits following his heart attack; Haselton's and Sam Houston Johnson's work for LBJ during
Oral history transcript, Daniel K. Inouye, interview 1 (I), 4/18/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- was then being considered, as he has been in many other conventions, for high national office. I made it a point to see Mr. Johnson out of pure curiousity as I did also of Speaker Sam Rayburn. During the war we [442 RCT] spent much time with the 36th Division
- [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
Oral history transcript, E. Ross Adair, interview 1 (I), 3/12/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- to the Senate--and at the time when Sam Rayburn was Speaker. Do you recall what you knew or had heard of Lyndon Johnson when you first came into Congress? A: Yes. I did not know him, of course, but I knew of him. I knew of him by reputation and having read
- Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961
- Biographical information; early impressions of LBJ; LBJ's relationship with Sam Rayburn; LBJ and foreign policy in the Eisenhower Administration; LBJ as majority leader; the 1960 election; the JFK legislative program; Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
- . That doesn't include military construction and some other items. But Lyndon Johnson was totally absorbed in poli~ics. Other, people liked to talk about their bridge games, their golf games, this, that or the other, but people like Lyndon Johnson and Sam
- Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961
- How he met LBJ in 1935; LBJ’s ambitions and absorption with politics; LBJ as a new Congressman and loss of the Appropriations Committee appointment to Albert Thomas; Sam Rayburn and the Board of Education; rural electrification; Civil Rights Act
- in the next ensuing primary but fortunately made it all right. I did what I thought was right and largely my fears were allayed as to my own political security as a result of my conversation with Lyndon Johnson and Speaker Sam Rayburn. B: You were re
- of the Senate, myself; and the Majority Leader of the House, and Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the House. He said, 'rvTell, I understand there's some objection to my sending Dr. Jessup's name up. I don't like it." Then he turned and looked at me, and he says
- told him that the Boss will get behind him if Sam gives him the green l i ght , and he is going to talk to 88Jll. Myron also will talk to Sam. If you have an opportunity , I think you can be Tery helpful with Sam by pointing out that he i s not expected
- that I wasn't to shift off of Mr . Johnson any more and I was to stay exclusively on his campaign . F: You don't know why the change? B: Later I found out that he felt my stories were more objective toward his endeavors than were those of Sam Kinch
- Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961
- with Sam Rayburn in the House. V: Is that true? Well, he did. Sam Rayburn was of course the speaker. Not when Lyndon Johnson was first elected, though, I think Bankhead was still speaker then, but by 1940, by the early forties, he had been succeeded
- First meeting LBJ; impressions of LBJ as a Congressman and Senator; LBJ's relationship with FDR and Rayburn; rural electrification; defeated in 1946 Senate race against Nixon; Cooperative League; meeting Lady Bird; assessment of LBJ's performance
- looking ahead like he was going to be there forever. I'm told, and the way he used to tell it, when he first came back in February, 1912--[Sam] Rayburn came in March of 1913. Remind me to tell you a story about 4 LBJ Presidential Library http
- relationship with LBJ; Hayden's support for foreign aid; how committee assignments were made; concerns that Sam Rayburn's death would interfere with an Arizona fund raiser for Hayden with JFK and LBJ in attendance; LBJ's and Richard Russell's presence
- -nine year old congressmen are not experts in very much, Joe, and it was a very interesting time in that Sam Rayburn was very friendly to me and very helpful to me, very kind F: Had you known Mr . Sam earlier? B: No . F: You met him when you got
- Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961
Oral history transcript, William R. (Bob) Poage, interview 2 (II), 6/20/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- was really happening when Lyndon went to the Senate was Lyndon had come--I don't like to say under the influence of, but just a&. he was c~r.Je u~der the influence of Mr. Roosevelt when he . to Congress, he was under the influence of Mr. Rayburn when he
- Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961
- LBJ’s association with President Roosevelt; LBJ as a New Dealer compared to Maury Maverick as a populist; LBJ turning to Sam Rayburn for advice and support; LBJ urging Poage to run against O’Daniel for a Senate seat; the 1948 election; Poage’s
- . Former Speaker of the Hom1cCarl Albert The discussions of the 1950s, led by D. B. Hardeman (left) and Ralph Huitt, revolved around Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson and Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn, who dominated national politics in that period
Oral history transcript, L.T. (Tex) Easley, interview 1 (I), 5/4/1979, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- story though. E: Oh, well, it's the truth. G: Anything else on LBJ and his associations with the other members of the Texas delegation, Sam Rayburn for example? E: Well, my impression is that they developed a lot over the years. I don't think
- Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961
- /oh Pickle -- VII -- 2 red." And so they did. And one of the first few friends--I say first friends out there, among the first--must have been, Sam Rayburn. I visited that Hornaday ranch in the 1960s--1961, 1962. When I was on the Texas Employment
- , Richard Ray, Sam Rayburn, Junior Bill Reed, Ann Richards, Dan Rostenkowski, Darrell Royal, Frank Royal, Bill Sarpalius, Jim Scheuer, Peter Seur, Bob and Helen Sikes, Mark Siljander, Mabel Smith, Charles Sparenberg, Russell Sparenberg, Richard Start
- over east, middle, and west Tennessee and the chances .are even. Jl!ISSISSIPPI: Former Jl;dge Clayton and present Circuit County Judge Jabits will both run against Rankin. No opposition in fight to Jim Eastland for Senate. Sam Lumkin, the present
- of Congress of Hardeman Book Collection By Michael L. Gillette D. B. Hardeman, a former aide to Speaker Sam Rayburn in lhe 1950s, has given his 9,000 volume book collection to the LBJ Library. Considered one of the most extensive private collections
Oral history transcript, Joseph L. Rauh, Jr., interview 1 (I), 7/30/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- on that? R: Johnson, with his usual political genius, always said that Rayburn was tops, as he proved the opposite. "Anythi ng for Mr. Sam. He was always the boss. II But that wasn't in fact true, and we might as well come to that right now. Take
- Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961
- His work on the Johnson-Stevenson case; Leland Olds; the way LBJ became Majority Leader; the Filibuster Rule; Johnson’s and Sam Rayburn’s relationship; the Civil Rights Acts and LBJ’s involvement with them; LBJ’s role in the McCarthy period; Rauh’s
- " the National Youth Administration? F: That's right. And he ran in a special election to succeed Congress- man [James P.] Buchanan. P: Yes. I must have met him before that, but thereafter-- F: Were you fairly close to Sam Rayburn in those days who
- Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961
- Interaction with LBJ, Sam Rayburn, and other politicians; LBJ’s senate race and maneuver to get on Texas ballot; conflict with oil industry because LBJ did not support mandatory oil increase; supporting Kennedy; Nixon’s Supreme Court argument; LBJ’s
- think he had been there about one term before, I'm not sure which. Does it show here? G: He was elected in 1937. C: Oh, then he had been there several years. G: Did you regard him as a protégé of Sam Rayburn at that point? C: I think
- : Juanita Roberts, the Pres i dent's secretary, has suggested that I try to run down among the President's old friends this matter: It is her opinion that the stories are all wrong which state that Sam Rayburn was a kind of political father
- Met LBJ as a student at a political meeting in Blanco, TX; Hopkins campaigned for Democratic party nomination to the Senate from 19th District, TX; Sam Johnson as a friend and supporter; Alvin Wirtz; Richard Kleberg's election to Congress, 1931; LBJ
- to the Interior Department have been abandoned. The transfer had been recommended by the Hoover Commission on Reorganization of the Executive Branch. 4/25 Mrs. Bob Bartley hosts a tea for Miss Lou Rayburn. Fagan Dickson, executive director of the Loyal Democrats
- that. FDR had promised somebody that held name another person, and I believe Sam Rayburn turned that around and got the job for LBJ. G: Is that the way LBJ told the story? I mean, did he accredit Rayburn with the appointment? W: I don't know that I ever
- Mr. Johnson as a protégé of some of the older hands in the House like Carl Vinson and Sam Rayburn. Was that apparent in those days? H: Of course, that carried over, you know. Hell, after he went over to the Senate we used to have those meetings
Oral history transcript, Anna Rosenberg Hoffman, interview 1 (I), 11/2/1973, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- : No, he didn't like Adlai. F: I know. H: Oh, Adlai just wasn't his kind of man. Did he ever express to you why? I was at the convention sitting among the delegates. I was very friendly with Sam Rayburn who was really Lyndon's mentor and almost
Oral history transcript, George A. Smathers, interview 1 (I), 2/14/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- have a one or two [seat] majority. In any event, we had a big majority after the 1956 election. So Johnson really controlled the Congress. Every afternoon at five o'clock he would go over and have a drink with Sam Rayburn and make me or somebody go
- LBJ's 1955 heart attack at George Brown's home and his health before the heart attack; LBJ's recovery from the heart attack; why LBJ was an effective Senate majority leader; LBJ's relationships with President Dwight Eisenhower and Sam Rayburn
- was booming and going. G: One of the issues that came up soon after the election was the extension of the Selective Service Act. Any recollections of Sam Rayburn's role and Lyndon Johnson's role in getting that--? 2 LBJ Presidential Library http
- ; Colonel Sam Anderson; author Robert Caro's writings about LBJ; Sam Rayburn's campaign to call congressmen who were serving in the military back to Congress; LBJ's schedule after returning from war and his work on the House Naval Affairs Committee; Weber's
Oral history transcript, Virginia Wilke English, interview 1 (I), 3/3/1981, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , but there was a dinner party going to be [held the next night]. Mr. Sam [Rayburn] was coming that night and Willard I think was living there then, wasn't he? G: Yes. E: He was back from the war and he was living at the house. G: This is Bill Deason? LBJ
- first meet Lyndon Johnson? To When did you first come to know him? Y: As best as I can recall, I first met him when I was a member of the United States Congress. That was between 1950 and 1954. Of course Sam Rayburn of Texas took quite a liking
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 20 (XX), 9/25/1986, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- it, but there I raised so much hell he finally let me alone. When Sam [Rayburn] was dying--the reason why I'll never forget it is I just got a glimpse of Rayburn through the door when Johnson went in to see him. And it was a horrible sight. I did not recognize
- of management skills; LBJ visiting Sam Rayburn before his death and Reedy's involvement in LBJ's statement following Rayburn's death; high regard for Rayburn throughout Washington, D.C.; LBJ arranging for Mexican comedian Cantinflas to visit the San Antonio