“Truman” by David McCullough, 1992.
I miss Harry Truman, an honest, forthright, plain speaking, hardworking
self-made man. Ironically, he is also the least educated modern president and
the poorest president ever. The
adversities he faced in life would have made many give up, but he always
believed in himself and his country. You
do not find anyone who did not like or respect him- even if they disagreed with
him. Opponents, press, foreign leaders, and critics admired and respected him
personally. While history does not
revere him as the most innovative, accomplished, or inspirational of
presidents, if you google “character of presidents”, his name is at the top of
the list. Of all the presidents I have
studied, he is the one I truly wish was president today.
Harry Truman’s parents were farmers and his father traded
livestock. The oldest child, he had very
poor vision and was not that physically strong.
Harry was a mama’s boy who liked to help in the kitchen more than the
farm. But his mama was one tough mother
and made him into a kind, honest man. Harry excelled at playing the piano, having
dreams of becoming a concert pianist. He
was sort of a bookish, nerdy kid but everyone liked him because he was so
friendly and helpful. College was not affordable and West Point rejected him
due to his poor vision. So after
graduating high school in Independence , MO he went to work at a bank in Kansas
City. Harry progressed very well at the bank and continued to study the
piano. But 5 years later, he father’s
trading business failed and forced the family to return to farming on his
mother’s family farm near Grandview, MO. Harry returned to farming the 600
acres and for the next 10 years worked hard to scrape a living for the family.
This was plowing with mules, sun up to sun down in a house without running
water or electricity. But Harry never complained and after his father died,
assumed the role taking care of his grandmother, mother and sister.
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| Harry, Mom and sister on family farm |
The bright spot of Harry’s time on the farm was his frequent
drives to Independence to visit Bess Wallace.
They had gone to school
together and friendship blossomed very slowly (7
or 8 years) into
![]() |
| See if you can spot Harry and Bess |
When WW1 erupted, Harry memorized the eye chart so he could
pass the physical exam and joined the army at the age of 33. He was promoted to captain of an artillery
unit and adored by his men. His troop became life long friends. After the war, he and Bess
married and he
needed to find employment that allowed him to live in Independence with cranky
Mrs. Wallace. The farm was now mostly run
by his mom and sister, but he still helped out as much as he could. He started a men’s clothing store in Kansas
City with an army buddy- a natural business for Harry who was always a sharp dressed
man. However, as the economy soured in the 1920’s, the store failed. Harry refused to take bankruptcy and spent
many years to pay it off. ![]() |
| Harry and Tom Pendergast |
Needing a job, Harry approached the Kansas City democratic party boss, Tom Pendergast, to gain his support for a run as a county
judge. (This judge position is actually
more like a county commissioner, overseeing roads, construction, county
functions etc) Pendergast supported him so Harry won. But when Harry was
awarding road contracts, he was shocked to find Pendergast cronies stealing
from the county. He had to ignore the
theft of 10K$ of highway funds in order to get funding and support for a new
courthouse and six-million-dollar road package.
This is the one time Harry let Pendergast pull one over on him and it
always bothered him. But Pendergast knew in the future he could only count on
Harry’s support for honest contracts so their relationship continued. As a county judge, Harry was instrumental in the building of the Nelson Art Museum, city auditorium and Power and Light building in KC, all iconic structures in KC today.
Bess hated living in Washington and for years just spent most of her time in Independence with her mother and Margaret. They also struggled financially as Harry was
probably the only senator to actually live on his salary and refused any sort
of graft. Harry finally made a name for
himself by investigating the corruption of defense contractors during the war,
saving untold millions during WW2. This
committee got his name in the newspapers a lot.
Harry’s squeaky-clean image and the fact that everyone liked him, lead
FDR’s team to pick him to be the VP for Roosevelt’s fourth term. Truman did not really want the job but wanted
Roosevelt and the democrats to win, so he agreed. Truman barely knew FDR and due to FDR’s poor
health, Truman did the majority of campaigning for them. The few images of them
together show how healthy and robust Truman was compared to FDR. In fact, Truman was worried that FDR was
dying.
After the election, Roosevelt’s cabinet pretty much excluded
Truman from anything, he wasn’t even allowed to know about the Manhattan Project. In fact, FDR and Truman only met twice in
person after the election. When
Roosevelt died in April after only 82 days of his fourth term, Truman took
office and had to get up to speed on the war, the development of the bomb and
foreign affairs. Slowly Truman would
replace most of Roosevelt's cabinet
members. After the victory in Europe in May,
Truman participated with Churchill and Stalin in the Potsdam conference. Ironically,
he kind of liked Stalin on a personal level and found Churchill too slow moving
in decisions- a big contrast to Truman’s decisive nature.
While he was at Potsdam, Truman made the decision to drop
the atomic bombs on the Japanese. History
has often second guessed this choice, but Truman never wavered in defending
this choice. He saw it as the fastest
way to end the war with the least loss of life- both American and
Japanese.
After the war, Truman had to deal with the shortage of
housing and jobs for returning soldiers.
This stress caused strikes in the rail and steel industries. Once again Truman was decisive and planned to
draft all railway workers into the army so he could order them back to
work. This tactic led to a quick
settlement. He also racially integrated the military and federal work force.
Foreign affairs
became a real strength for Truman. Rebuilding Europe after the war was a giant
task, and Truman selected a giant of a man for the job- General George Marshall,
former army Chief of staff. He became
Truman’s secretary of state and developed the Marshall Plan. The formation of Israel
was a very tense, controversial move
but Truman made the US the first to
recognize the new nation. Truman also confronted the Soviet’s blockade of
Berlin by instituting the Berlin Airlift. Truman’s tough stance against the
Russian’s was very popular.
In 1948, Truman decided to run again. No one thought he could win and all the polls
showed him losing to republican, Thomas Dewey.
Even the democratic party offered minimal support. Southern democrats
were upset with his progress on civil rights and put forth their own candidate,
Strom Thurmond. So Truman decided to
appeal to the people. His massive,
exhausting whistle stop train campaign was wildly popular. Truman was never a dynamic speaker but when
he
Truman’s next term was dominated by
the involvement of the US in the Korean War.
He struggled with the prima donna General MacArthur, who so blatantly
disrespected and disregarded Truman
and his policies, that Truman was forced to
fire him--- a very unpopular move. This war would end in basically a stalemate
at the 38th parallel, but not until Eisenhower’s term. The unpopularity of a lengthy war led to the
end of Truman’s political career, just as Vietnam did to Johnson’s.
Other foreign policy successes of
this term involved the careful approach to the Chinese communist revolution and
the
establishment of the NATO treaties.
The continued suppression of eastern European countries by the Russians,
led to the development of the cold war and hysteria about communism. While
Truman insisted on a “loyalty program” for federal workers (something he later
called “a terrible mistake”), he was disgusted by the tactics of
McCarthyism. Truman’s secretary of state
was now Dean Acheson, a great diplomat who would become Truman’s closest,
lifelong friend.
Truman chose not to run for re-election
in 1952- a wise choice since the wildly popular republican Eisenhower won in a
landslide. Harry and Bess headed home to move back into his mother in-laws
house that they had now inherited. Harry
refused to take any money or gifts from donors, accept speaking fees or work as
a lobbyist. He made a small amount of
money writing his memoirs but really needed the presidential pension of $25,000 per year which was passed in 1957. Harry worked very hard fundraising for and
organizing the Truman Presidential Library, keeping an office
there until his
death. When President Johnson signed the
bill for Medicare in 1965, he did so in Independence at the Truman Library as a tribute to Harry who had first proposed the idea of healthcare for all. Harry and Bess received the first two
Medicare cards. He died in 1972 and Bess died ten years later. They are both buried at the Truman Library.
Harry Truman could be impulsive,
quick tempered and stubborn. But he was
always honest with the press, people, politicians and other leaders. He always
accepted responsibility for his mistakes- “the buck stops here”. His humility
also led him to credit much of his achievements to Marshall and others. He
worked 12 hours a day 6 and a half days a week as president. His lack of a college education made him
determined to study every issue more than any other
president. He was completely faithful to Bess his whole
life- never the slightest whiff of scandal. His enduring popularity and respect
have always placed him among the greats. Because Harry Truman was always just
completely himself, the best of American men.














