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760 results
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 8 (VIII), 8/17/1983, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- 1945 12/26/45 LBJ (Lyndon Johnson) goes to Austin intending to spend only ten days, part of which he spends in Dallas with Speaker Rayburn. January 1/8 Stag party honoring Sam Rayburn is scheduled at summer cabin on the shores of Lake Texoma. LBJ
- , and there was one congressman, I know, and there was a man from Georgia. "We want to stop Kennedy." And I just said, "Well, what do you suggest?" F: What do I do, huh? G: He said, "Well, we want you to get us in to see Sam Rayburn." me as awfully strange
Oral history transcript, Sam Houston Johnson, interview 9 (IX), 11/18/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , 1976 INTERVIEWEE: SAM HOUSTON JOHNSON INTERV IEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: The Alamo Hotel, Austin, Texas Tape 1 of 2 J: Well, here's what happened on that. G: This is a speech that he made on July 6, 1946. J: Yes. You'd have to go back
- See all online interviews with Sam Houston Johnson
- Johnson, Sam Houston
- Oral history transcript, Sam Houston Johnson, interview 9 (IX), 11/18/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
- Sam Houston Johnson
Oral history transcript, Anna Rosenberg Hoffman, interview 2 (II), 2/17/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- working, determined to get things done, very much under the guidance of Sam Rayburn. G: Did you ever see them together? H: Oh, yes. Yes. Mr. Sam really felt like [he had] a son-father rela- tionship with Lyndon Johnson. listen to him a great deal
- : When did you begin to have some idea that someone named Lyndon Johnson was in the world? M: In my book--did you read my book? F: Yes. M: I said he was going to be President. Oh, I knew Lyndon and Mrs. Johnson-- as I said before, Sam Rayburn
- on tho day you mentioned. · ,>
- think of any finer career than to have the kind of a career that Sam Rayburn had--to devote your life to it. And I would have loved to have been so fortunate, but the voters decided otherwise. You can't have a successful career in the Congress
- of Sam Rayburn and politicians in general; Quigley's work on the House Judiciary Committee; how Quigley became a member of a subcommittee investigating the Civil Aeronautics Board and Federal Communications Commission; the Texas table in the House Dining
- : Not at that time, no. Senator Wirtz was from Seguin, but he was not a factor in my life at that time. In the latter part of 1935 or 1936 I was in the University, and through Mr. Sam Fore, who was the publisher of the Floresville Chronicle-Journal, I applied
- : Only in the most pleasant way. I saw the Congressman and Mrs. Johnson many times while I was there. Indeed, they were very kind. And, of course, you know the close relationship that existed between Speaker Sam Rayburn and-- M: Yes. 3 LBJ
- . (Interruption) G: [Do you want to] talk about the Texas delegation? J: Yes. It was a very strong, cohesive delegation that Lyndon worked with. The Speaker [Sam Rayburn] was always the head man. I'm not sure; I think he was already speaker by 5 LBJ
- Johnson's time spent sight-seeing and attending events at the Congressional Club or the 75th Club; visiting Bill White in New York City; Sam Rayburn, Wright Patman, Nat Patton, and other Texans in Washington, D.C.; visits with Aunt Effie Pattillo; summer
- : That's right. Sam Houston [Johnson] has a pretty full report on that in his book--of that meeting. I was not at the meeting. G: But can you collaborate what he said? M: Yes, I think that's the way it happened all right. I did see Shivers at some
- Code Proc. Pay Raises- Civillian and Military Pollution Phillilpines Prayer Breakfast Presidential Scholars Presidential Unit Citations Prisoner Rehabilitation Act Proclamations Radio & TV Correspondence Ratification 25th Amendment Rayburn, Sam
- sponsors were in Texas, they'd get on my back rather than Aubrey's, when they learned of the dismissal." I w ant you to go up," he said, "to see Sam Rayburn on Monday morning. Ask him what we ought to do in Texas." I said, "Yes, sir." LBJ Presidential
- , and I don't recall the incident, but there was some occasion that I had to go over and talk to him about something. We met and I liked him very much. F: Did you get to know Mr. Sam [Rayburn] pretty well? P: Yes. 2 LBJ Presidential Library http
- Pucinski's political career; Pucinski's relationship with Sam Rayburn; LBJ's support for Pucinski in a 1972 Senate race against Charles Percy; allegations of misconduct against Charles Robb in Vietnam; a trip to Chicago with Vice President Johnson
- Sam Rayburn, who was a very able fellow, figured that the best solution was [having Johnson on the ticket], and he, being respected by everybody, was in a position to do it. I think he worked out the agreement as a sure-fire way to bring
Oral history transcript, Margaret Mayer Ward, interview 1 (I), 3/10/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- Lyndon Johnson and Sam Rayburn at these gatherings? You mentioned the dinner before. W: Father and son. Father and a son of whom he was very proud, who might have given him some trouble from time to time, but basically he was very proud of him. G
- Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961
- 1946 campaign; 1948 Senate campaign and the Fort Worth Democratic Convention; LBJ's relationship with Sam Rayburn; social gatherings at the Johnsons' Washington home; LBJ and the press; 1954 Senate campaign
- reporters with us. They knew that Adlai was going to be with Senator Johnson and Speaker Rayburn. It looked like Eisenhower was very, very seriously ill, and it was a matter of great importance that the three leading Democrats were going to be together. F
- , not related to the state senator, who went on to become Speaker Sam Rayburn's private secretary and confidante; Alex Louis, who left us to join the Joe Belden public opinion sampling poll in Texas and then became an independent in that field; Bill Gardner
- was the relationship between Mr. [Sam] Rayburn in the House and Senator Johnson? R: That was virtually a father and son relationship--an extremely close relation ship; and during the years that I have known Senator Johnson, I would say he had more respect--in fact
- Once, I especially remember, when I was speaker of the House he came down with Speaker Sam Rayburn when Mr. Rayburn made a speech to the House. I guess that's the first time I really did get to visit very much with thenCongressman Johnson. F
- , because they had to protect their flank back in Texas. The 27.5 per cent depletion, Rayburn and Johnson, by their selection of people to be on the committees, nobody ever touched depletion as long as Lyndon Johnson and Sam Rayburn were in the Congress. I
- anybody else--name Sam Rayburn, name Barkley, name Jimmy Byrnes, name McNutt, name Jesse Jones, or anyone. There are any number of outstanding men in the party that I urged him to nominate. And I told him that in my judgment Wallace was a mystic, and I
Oral history transcript, W. Sherman Birdwell, Jr., interview 2 (II), 10/21/1970, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- . Birdwell, I believe the Birdwell acquaintance with the Johnsons goes back before the days, even of Lyndon Johnson on this earth, or Sherman Birdwell . B: That's right . F: How did that come about? B: Mr . Sam Johnson, who was Lyndon Johnson's father
- and under its bright beam with nighttime lights. Early on. I bumped into Mr. Sam Rayburn one evening who said: "Isn't it the most beautiful sight in the world?" When Pearl Harbor came, the lights brieny went out. I knew then that when they came on again
- the Hill the next year. practice has been more or less abandoned. But even that [We] might have a congress- man two successive years--somebody off the Hill. There's no real pattern now. F: I see. Did Mr. Sam [Rayburn] entertain much? OM: No, I
- Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961
- Biographical information; how they came to Washington; meeting the Johnsons; Dick Kleberg; Texas State Society; Sam Rayburn; LBJ’s early influence in Washington; gaining support for LBJ in Dallas; 1960 convention; women’s tea party tours
Oral history transcript, William Hunter McLean, interview 1 (I), 5/11/1971, by David G. McComb
(Item)
- , but . . . Yes, you've also mentioned Sam Rayburn and apparently Rayburn and Johnson worked closely together. Have you ever had occasion to see them working together on political matters? HM: Well, in election matters here in the state, not on matters
- Connally has not helped me in politics because, sure, it has Helped me, and I'll admit this. As did Lyndon Johnson's friendship with Franklin Roosevelt help him in his first campaign; as did Lyndon Johnson's friendship with Sam Rayburn help him get
Oral history transcript, Lady Bird Johnson, interview 12 (XII), 8/19/1979, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- to one of the most glittering things, up to that time, that I had experienced in Washington. It was a big dinner given in honor of the Speaker and Miss Lou [Rayburn's sister] at the home of a hostess with a capital H, a Mrs. Denegra [?], who had a house
- II; attending a dinner honoring Sam Rayburn and his sister, Miss Lou; the State of the Union address in 1941; listening to Franklin Roosevelt's Fireside Chats; LBJ's exposure to culture and music by the Marshes; LBJ's desire
- to me about things to do. First and foremost, keep up with the Texas delegation, pay calls on them, ask their advice, and at the head of the list, always in capital letters, the Speaker, Mr. Sam Rayburn. This I did with great pleasure every now
- the installation; efforts to get an abattoir in Austin; Lady Bird Johnson visiting the British Embassy and Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes on behalf of constituents; visiting Sam Rayburn for advice; living arrangements while LBJ was away during the war; Lady
Oral history transcript, Walter Jenkins, interview 12 (XII), 4/25/1984, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- not talk about. One is that the Shivers faction apparently was considering whether or not to allow Sam Rayburn to go to the convention as a delegate. J: Do you recall that? Yes. 4 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org More on LBJ
- had been circulating that only three or four of the Texas congressmen were going to vote for it. Senator Johnson thought it would be a reflection on the Speaker--Speaker Sam Rayburn~~and it would be a reflection on him, if Texas did not support
- under dis cussion, Connally brought up Caro ·s charge from his earlier book, 1he Path to Power, that Johnson "betrayed" Speaker Sam Rayburn by refusing to join Rayburn ·sand the Texas delegation's support of John Nance Garner's bid for the presiden cy
- , it was straight Democrat. Too, Alger and Sam Rayburn didn't get along. As a matter of fact, Mr. Sam despised Bruce, and so they just didn't get along. And they were friendly enough to me when I first came there. They were apparently willing to look me over anyway
- to it. One of the things I always looked forward to most was going to dinner at Speaker Sam Rayburn's. His bachelor apartment was in the Anchorage, about the third floor up and one ascended in a tiny elevator, or walked. It was very simple, somewhat spartan
- Visiting the home of Evalyn Walsh McLean and socializing in 1941; Lady Bird's participation in a 75th Club luncheon honoring Eleanor Roosevelt; riding in Sam Rayburn's car; diversity in the 10th District; Lady Bird Johnson using her movie camera
- esoteric areas and my academic background stood me in very good stead. As a matter of fact, Speaker Rayburn and some of the leaders used me more as a staff man rather than a freshman Congressman. F: Staff man who can vote. B: That's right. Mr. Sam
- Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961
- Biographical information; House Banking and Currency Commission; Sam Rayburn; Inter-American Bank; International Development Association; Hoover Commission; campaigns for Congress; Kennedy appointment to the Treasury; Chairman of the FDIC; May 1965
- in fact set up a separate, almost an ad hoc Congressional Campaign Committee, and we went downtown and took offices in the Munsey Building, and raised our own money. D: Now, raised your own money, wasn't a lot of that money raised by Sam Rayburn? C
- describe Hr. Johnson's relationship with Hr. Rayburn during this period? F: I know that only by hearsay and casual observations, but the combined image of the two was that they had a very close relationship and that the President still consulted Mr
- Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961
- Biographical information; first association with LBJ; LBJ-Sam Rayburn relationship; 1960 convention; LBJ’s acceptance of VP nomination; Lady Bird campaigning in North Carolina; civil rights legislation; religious issue; Senate luncheon; LBJ’s trips