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Presidency of Harry S. Truman

Harry S. Truman's tenure as the 33rd president of the United States began on April 12, 1945, upon the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt, and ended on January 20, 1953. He had been vice president for only 82 days. A Democrat from Missouri, he ran for and won a full four–year term in the 1948 election. Although exempted from the newly ratified Twenty-second Amendment, Truman did not run again in the 1952 election because of his low popularity. He was succeeded by Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1953.

Presidency of Harry S. Truman
April 12, 1945 – January 20, 1953
CabinetSee list
PartyDemocratic
Election1948
SeatWhite House

Seal of the President
(1945–1959)
Library website

Truman's presidency was a turning point in foreign affairs, as the United States engaged in an internationalist foreign policy and renounced isolationism. During his first year in office, Truman approved the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and subsequently accepted the surrender of Japan, which marked the end of World War II. In the aftermath of World War II, he helped establish the United Nations and other post-war institutions. Relations with the Soviet Union declined after 1945, and by 1947 the two countries had entered a long period of tension and war preparation known as the Cold War, during which a hot fighting war with Moscow was avoided. Truman broke with Roosevelt's Vice President Henry A. Wallace, who called for friendship with Moscow. Wallace was the third-party presidential candidate of the far left in 1948. In 1947, Truman promulgated the Truman Doctrine, which called for the United States to prevent the spread of Communism through foreign aid to Greece and Turkey. In 1948 the Republican-controlled Congress approved the Marshall Plan, a massive financial aid package designed to rebuild Western Europe. In 1949, the Truman administration designed and presided over the creation of NATO, a military alliance of Western countries designed to prevent the further westward expansion of Soviet power.

Truman proposed an ambitious domestic liberal agenda known as the Fair Deal. However nearly all his initiatives were blocked by the conservative coalition of Republicans and conservative Southern Democrats. Republicans took control of Congress in the 1946 elections after the strike wave of 1945–46. Truman suffered another major defeat by the conservative coalition when the 80th Congress passed the Taft–Hartley Act into law over his veto. It reversed some of the pro-labor union legislation that was central to the New Deal. When Robert A. Taft, the conservative Republican senator, unexpectedly supported the Housing Act of 1949, Truman achieved one new liberal program. Truman took a strong stance on civil rights, ordering equal rights in the military to the disgust of the white politicians in the Deep South. They supported a "Dixiecrat" third-party candidate, Strom Thurmond, in 1948. Truman later pushed for the integration of the military in the 1950s. During his presidency, fears of Soviet espionage led to a Red Scare; Truman denounced those who made unfounded accusations of Soviet sympathies, but also purged left-wing federal employees who refused to disavow Communism.

When Communist North Korea invaded South Korea in 1950, Truman sent U.S. troops to prevent the fall of South Korea. After initial successes, however, the war settled into a stalemate that lasted throughout the final years of Truman's presidency. Truman left office as one of the most unpopular presidents of the twentieth century, mainly due to the Korean War and his then controversial decision to dismiss General Douglas MacArthur, resulting in a huge loss of support. In the 1952 election Eisenhower successfully campaigned against what he denounced as Truman's failures: "Korea, Communism and Corruption". Nonetheless, Truman retained a strong reputation among scholars, and his public reputation eventually recovered in the 1960s. In polls of historians and political scientists, Truman is generally ranked as one of the ten greatest presidents.

Accession

While serving as a senator from Missouri, Truman rose to national prominence as the leader of the Truman Committee, which investigated wasteful and inefficient practices in wartime production during World War II.[1][2] As the war continued, President Franklin D. Roosevelt sought re-election in the 1944 presidential election. Roosevelt personally favored either incumbent Vice President Henry A. Wallace or James F. Byrnes as his running mate in 1944. However, Wallace was unpopular among conservatives in the Democratic Party. Byrnes, an ex-Catholic, was opposed by many liberals and Catholics. At the behest of party leaders, Roosevelt agreed to run with Truman, who was acceptable to all factions of the party, and Truman was nominated for vice president at the 1944 Democratic National Convention.[3]

Democrats retained control of Congress and the presidency in the 1944 elections, and Truman took office as vice president in January 1945. He had no major role in the administration and was not informed of key developments, such as the atomic bomb. On April 12, 1945, Truman was urgently summoned to the White House, where he was met by Eleanor Roosevelt, who informed him that the President was dead. Shocked, Truman asked Mrs. Roosevelt, "Is there anything I can do for you?", to which she replied: "Is there anything we can do for you? For you are the one in trouble now."[4] The day after assuming office Truman spoke to reporters: "Boys, if you ever pray, pray for me now. I don't know if you fellas ever had a load of hay fall on you, but when they told me what happened yesterday, I felt like the moon, the stars, and all the planets had fallen on me."[5] Bipartisan favorable opinion gave the new president a honeymoon.[6]

Administration

Truman delegated a great deal of authority to his cabinet officials, only insisting that he give the final formal approval to all decisions. After getting rid of the Roosevelt holdovers, the cabinet members were mostly old confidants. The White House was badly understaffed with no more than a dozen aides; they could barely keep up with the heavy work flow of a greatly expanded executive department. Truman acted as his own chief of staff, as well as his own liaison with Congress—a body he already knew very well. Less important matters he delegated to his Special Counsels, Samuel Rosenman in 1945–46, Clark Clifford in 1946 to 1950 and Charles S. Murphy in 1950 to 1953. He was not well prepared to deal with the press, and never achieved the jovial familiarity of FDR. Filled with latent anger about all the setbacks in his career, he bitterly mistrusted the journalists, seeing them as enemies laying in wait for his next careless miscue. Truman was very hard worker, often to the point of exhaustion, which left him testy, easily annoyed, and on the verge of appearing unpresidential or petty. In terms of major issues, he discussed them in depth with cabinet and other advisors, such as the atom bomb, the Truman Plan, the Korean war, or the dismissal of General MacArthur. He mastered the details of the federal budget as well as anyone. Truman's myopia made it hard to read a typescript, and he was poor at prepared addresses. However, his visible anger made him an effective stump speaker, denouncing his enemies as his supporters hollered back at him, “Give Em Hell, Harry!”[7][8]

 
Truman's Cabinet, 1949
The Truman cabinet
OfficeNameTerm
PresidentHarry S. Truman1945–1953
Vice Presidentnone1945–1949
Alben W. Barkley1949–1953
Secretary of StateEdward Stettinius Jr.1945
James F. Byrnes1945–1947
George C. Marshall1947–1949
Dean Acheson1949–1953
Secretary of the TreasuryHenry Morgenthau Jr.1945
Fred M. Vinson1945–1946
John Wesley Snyder1946–1953
Secretary of WarHenry L. Stimson1945
Robert P. Patterson1945–1947
Kenneth Claiborne Royall1947
Secretary of DefenseJames Forrestal1947–1949
Louis A. Johnson1949–1950
George C. Marshall1950–1951
Robert A. Lovett1951–1953
Attorney GeneralFrancis Biddle1945
Tom C. Clark1945–1949
J. Howard McGrath1949–1952
James P. McGranery1952–1953
Postmaster GeneralFrank C. Walker1945
Robert E. Hannegan1945–1947
Jesse M. Donaldson1947–1953
Secretary of the NavyJames Forrestal1945–1947
Secretary of the InteriorHarold L. Ickes1945–1946
Julius Albert Krug1946–1949
Oscar L. Chapman1949–1953
Secretary of AgricultureClaude R. Wickard1945
Clinton Anderson1945–1948
Charles F. Brannan1948–1953
Secretary of CommerceHenry A. Wallace1945–1946
W. Averell Harriman1946–1948
Charles W. Sawyer1948–1953
Secretary of LaborFrances Perkins1945
Lewis B. Schwellenbach1945–1948
Maurice J. Tobin1948–1953

At first Truman asked all the members of Roosevelt's cabinet to remain in place for the time being, but by the end of 1946 only one Roosevelt appointee, Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal, remained.[9] Fred M. Vinson succeeded Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau Jr. in July 1945. Truman appointed Vinson to the Supreme Court in 1946 and John Wesley Snyder was named as the Treasury Secretary.[10] Truman quickly replaced Secretary of State Edward Stettinius Jr. with James F. Byrnes, an old friend from Senate days. However Byrnes soon lost Truman's trust with his conciliatory policy towards Moscow in late 1945,[11] and he was replaced by former General George Marshall in January 1947. Undersecretary of State Dean Acheson was the main force in foreign affairs along with a group of advisers known as the "Wise Men," Marshall emerged as the face of Truman's foreign policy.[12]

In 1947, Forrestal became the first Secretary of Defense, overseeing all branches of the United States Armed Forces.[13] A mental breakdown sent him into retirement in 1949, and he was replaced successively by Louis A. Johnson, Marshall, and finally Robert A. Lovett.[14] Acheson was Secretary of State 1949–1953. Truman often appointed longtime personal friends, sometimes to positions well beyond their competence. Such friends included Vinson, Snyder, and military aide Harry H. Vaughan.[9][15] Outside of the cabinet, Clark Clifford and John R. Steelman were staffers who handled lesser matters while Truman acted as his own chief off staff on big issues.[16]

Vice presidency

The office of vice president remained vacant during Truman's first (3 years, 253 days partial) term, as the Constitution then had no provision for filling a vacancy prior to the 1967 ratification of the Twenty-fifth Amendment. Until the passage of the Presidential Succession Act of 1947, the Secretary of State was next in the presidential line of succession. After the passage of the act in July 1947, the Speaker of the House became the next-in-line. During different points of Truman's first term, Secretary of State Stettinius, Secretary of State Byrnes, Secretary of State Marshall, Speaker Joseph Martin, and Speaker Sam Rayburn would have succeeded to the presidency if Truman left office. Alben Barkley served as Truman's running mate in the 1948 election, and became vice president during Truman's second term. Truman included him in Cabinet deliberations.[17]

Judicial appointments

Truman made four appointments to the United States Supreme Court.[18] After the retirement of Owen Roberts in 1945, Truman appointed Republican Senator Harold Hitz Burton of Ohio to the Supreme Court. Roberts was the lone remaining justice on the Supreme Court who had not been appointed or elevated to the position of chief justice by Roosevelt, and Truman believed it was important to nominate a Republican to succeed Roberts. Chief Justice Harlan F. Stone died in 1946, and Truman appointed Secretary of the Treasury Fred M. Vinson as Stone's successor. Two vacancies arose in 1949 due to deaths of Frank Murphy and Wiley Blount Rutledge. Truman appointed Attorney General Tom C. Clark to succeed Murphy and federal appellate judge Sherman Minton to succeed Rutledge. Vinson served for just seven years before his death in 1953, while Minton resigned from the Supreme Court in 1956. Burton served until 1958, often joining the conservative bloc led by Felix Frankfurter. Clark served until 1967, emerging as an important swing vote on the Vinson Court and the Warren Court.[19] In addition to his Supreme Court appointments, Truman also appointed 27 judges to the courts of appeals and 101 judges to federal district courts.

End of World War II

By April 1945, the Allied Powers, led by the United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union, were close to defeating Germany, but Japan remained a formidable adversary in the Pacific War.[20] As vice president, Truman had been uninformed about major initiatives relating to the war, including the top-secret Manhattan Project, which was about to test the world's first atomic bomb.[21][22] Although Truman was told briefly on the afternoon of April 12 that the Allies had a new, highly destructive weapon, it was not until April 25 that Secretary of War Henry Stimson told him the details of the atomic bomb, which was almost ready.[23] Germany surrendered on May 8, 1945, ending the war in Europe. Truman's attention turned to the Pacific, where he hoped to end the war as quickly, and with as little expense in lives or government funds, as possible.[20]

 
Joseph Stalin, Harry S. Truman, and Winston Churchill in Potsdam, July 1945

With the end of the war drawing near, Truman flew to Berlin for the Potsdam Conference, to meet with Soviet leader Joseph Stalin and British leader Winston Churchill regarding the post-war order. Several major decisions were made at the Potsdam Conference: Germany would be divided into four occupation zones (among the three powers and France), Germany's border was to be shifted west to the Oder–Neisse line, a Soviet-backed group was recognized as the legitimate government of Poland, and Vietnam was to be partitioned at the 16th parallel.[24] The Soviet Union also agreed to launch an invasion of Japanese-held Manchuria.[25] While at the Potsdam Conference, Truman was informed that the Trinity test of the first atomic bomb on July 16 had been successful. He hinted to Stalin that the U.S. was about to use a new kind of weapon against the Japanese. Though this was the first time the Soviets had been officially given information about the atomic bomb, Stalin was already aware of the bomb project, having learned about it through espionage long before Truman did.[26]

 
Truman announces Japan's surrender. Washington, DC, August 14, 1945

In August 1945, the Japanese government ignored surrender demands as specified in the Potsdam Declaration. With the support of most of his aides, Truman approved the schedule of the military's plans to drop atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Hiroshima was bombed on August 6, and Nagasaki three days later, leaving approximately 135,000 dead; another 130,000 would die from radiation sickness and other bomb-related illnesses in the following five years.[27] After the Soviet Union invaded Manchuria, Japan agreed to surrender on August 10 on the sole condition that Emperor Hirohito would not be forced to abdicate; after some internal debate, the Truman administration accepted these terms of surrender.[28][page needed][29]

The decision to drop atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki provoked long-running debates.[30] Supporters of the bombings argue that, given the tenacious Japanese defense of the outlying islands, the bombings saved hundreds of thousands of lives that would have been lost invading mainland Japan.[31] After leaving office, Truman told a journalist that the atomic bombing "was done to save 125,000 youngsters on the American side and 125,000 on the Japanese side from getting killed and that is what it did. It probably also saved a half million youngsters on both sides from being maimed for life."[32] Truman was also motivated by a desire to end the war before the Soviet Union could invade Japanese-held territories and set up Communist governments.[33] Critics, such as Allied commander and Truman's successor Dwight D. Eisenhower, have argued that the use of nuclear weapons was unnecessary, given that conventional tactics such as firebombing and blockade might induce Japan's surrender without the need for such weapons.[34][35][page needed][36]

Foreign affairs

Postwar international order

United Nations

In his last years in office Roosevelt had promoted several major initiatives to reshape the postwar politics and economy, and avoid the mistakes of 1919.[37][20] Chief among those organizations was the United Nations, an intergovernmental organization similar to the League of Nations that was designed to help ensure international cooperation. When Truman took office, delegates were about to meet at the United Nations Conference on International Organization in San Francisco.[38] As a Wilsonian internationalist, Truman strongly supported the creation of the United Nations, and he signed the United Nations Charter at the San Francisco Conference. Truman did not repeat Woodrow Wilson's partisan attempt to ratify the Treaty of Versailles in 1919. Instead he cooperated closely with Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg and other Republican leaders to ensure ratification. Cooperation with Vandenberg, a leading figure on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, proved crucial for Truman's foreign policy, especially after Republicans gained control of Congress in the 1946 elections.[39][40] Construction of the United Nations headquarters in New York City was funded by the Rockefeller Foundation and completed in 1952.

Trade and low tariffs

In 1934, Congress had passed the Reciprocal Tariff Act, giving the president an unprecedented amount of authority in setting tariff rates. The act allowed for the creation of reciprocal agreements in which the U.S. and other countries mutually agreed to lower tariff rates.[41] Despite significant opposition from those who favored higher tariffs, Truman was able to win legislative extension of the reciprocity program, and his administration reached numerous bilateral agreements that lowered trade barriers.[42] The Truman administration also sought to further lower global tariff rates by engaging in multilateral trade negotiations, and the State Department proposed the establishment of the International Trade Organization (ITO). The ITO was designed to have broad powers to regulate trade among member countries, and its charter was approved by the United Nations in 1948. However, the ITO's broad powers engendered opposition in Congress, and Truman declined to send the charter to the Senate for ratification. In the course of creating the ITO, the U.S. and 22 other countries signed the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), a set of principles governing trade policy. Under the terms of the agreement, each country agreed to reduce overall tariff rates and to treat each co-signatory as a "most favoured nation," meaning that no non-signatory country could benefit from more advantageous tariff rates. Due to a combination of the Reciprocal Tariff Act, the GATT, and inflation, U.S. tariff rates fell dramatically between the passage of the Smoot–Hawley Tariff Act in 1930 and the end of the Truman administration in 1953.[41]

European refugees

World War II left millions of refugees displaced in Europe, especially former prisoners and forced laborers in Germany. Truman took a leadership role in meeting the challenge.[43] He backed the new International Refugee Organization (IRO), a temporary international organization that helped resettle refugees.[44] The United States also funded temporary camps and admitted large numbers of refugees as permanent residents. Truman obtained ample funding from Congress for the Displaced Persons Act of 1948, which allowed many of the displaced people of World War II to immigrate into the United States.[45] Of the approximately one million people resettled by the IRO, more than 400,000 settled in the United States. The most contentious issue facing the IRO was the resettlement of European Jews, many of whom, with the support of Truman, were allowed to immigrate to British-controlled Mandatory Palestine.[44] The administration also helped create a new category of refugee, the "escapee," at the 1951 Geneva Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees. The American Escapee Program began in 1952 to help the flight and relocation of political refugees from communism in Eastern Europe. The motivation for the refugee and escapee programs was twofold: humanitarianism, and use as a political weapon against inhumane communism.[46] Truman also set up a Presidential Displaced Person Commission, which people such as Harry N. Rosenfield and Walter Bierlinger served on.[47][48]

Atomic energy and nuclear weapons

In March 1946, at an optimistic moment for postwar cooperation, the administration released the Acheson-Lilienthal Report, which proposed that all nations voluntarily abstain from constructing nuclear weapons. As part of the proposal, the U.S. would dismantle its nuclear program once all other countries agreed not to develop or otherwise acquire nuclear weapons. Fearing that Congress would reject the proposal, Truman turned to the well-connected Bernard Baruch to represent the U.S. position to the United Nations. The Baruch Plan, largely based on the Acheson-Lilienthal Report, was not adopted due to opposition from Congress and the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union would develop its own nuclear arsenal, testing a nuclear weapon for the first time in August 1949.[49]

The United States Atomic Energy Commission, directed by David E. Lilienthal until 1950, was in charge of designing and building nuclear weapons under a policy of full civilian control. The U.S. had only 9 atomic bombs in 1946, but the stockpile grew to 650 by 1951.[50] Lilienthal wanted to give high priority to peaceful uses for nuclear technology, especially nuclear power plants, but coal was cheap and the power industry was largely uninterested in building nuclear power plants during the Truman administration. Construction of the first nuclear plant would not begin until 1954.[51]

The Soviet Union's successful test of an atomic bomb in 1949 triggered an intense debate over whether the United States should proceed with development of the much more powerful hydrogen bomb.[52] There was opposition to the idea from many in the scientific community and from some government officials, but Truman believed that the Soviet Union would likely develop the weapon itself and was unwilling to allow the Soviets to have such an advantage.[53] Thus in early 1950, Truman made the decision to go forward with the H-bomb.[52] The first test of thermonuclear weaponry was conducted by the United States in 1952; the Soviet Union would perform its own thermonuclear test in August 1953.[54]

Beginning of the Cold War, 1945–1949

Escalating tensions, 1945–1946

 
Following World War II, the United States, France, Britain, and the Soviet Union each took control of occupation zones in Germany and the German capital of Berlin

The Second World War dramatically upended the international system, as formerly-powerful nations like Germany, France, Japan, and even the USSR and Britain had been devastated. At the end of the war, only the United States and the Soviet Union had the ability to exercise influence, and a bipolar international power structure replaced the multipolar structure of the Interwar period.[55] On taking office, Truman privately viewed the Soviet Union as a "police government pure and simple," but he was initially reluctant to take a hard-line towards it, as he hoped to work with Stalin the aftermath of Second World War.[56] Truman's suspicions deepened as the Soviets consolidated their control in Eastern Europe throughout 1945, and the February 1946 announcement of the Soviet five-year plan further strained relations as it called for the continuing build-up of the Soviet military.[57] At the December 1945 Moscow Conference, Secretary of State Byrnes agreed to recognize the pro-Soviet governments in the Balkans, while the Soviet leadership accepted U.S. leadership in the occupation of Japan. U.S. concessions at the conference angered other members of the Truman administration, including Truman himself.[58] By the beginning of 1946, it had become clear to Truman that Britain and the United States would have little influence in Soviet-dominated Eastern Europe.[59]

Henry Wallace, Eleanor Roosevelt, and many other prominent New Dealers continued to hope for cooperative relations with the Soviet Union.[60] Some liberals, like Reinhold Niebuhr, distrusted the Soviet Union but believed that the United States should not try to counter Soviet influence in Eastern Europe, which the Soviets saw as their "strategic security belt."[61] Partly because of this sentiment, Truman was reluctant to fully break with the Soviet Union in early 1946,[60] but he took an increasingly hard line towards the Soviet Union throughout the year.[62] He privately approved of Winston Churchill's March 1946 "Iron Curtain" speech, which urged the United States to take the lead of an anti-Soviet alliance, though he did not publicly endorse it.[60]

Throughout 1946, tensions arose between the United States and the Soviet Union in places like Iran, which the Soviets had partly occupied during World War II. Pressure from the U.S. and the United Nations finally forced the withdrawal of Soviet soldiers.[63] Turkey also emerged as a point of contention, as the Soviet Union demanded joint control over the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus, key straits that controlled movement between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean Sea. The U.S. forcefully opposed this proposed alteration to the 1936 Montreux Convention, which had granted Turkey sole control over the straits, and Truman dispatched a fleet to the Eastern Mediterranean to show his administration's commitment to the region.[64] Moscow and Washington also argued over Germany, which had been divided into four occupation zones. In the September 1946 Stuttgart speech, Secretary of State Byrnes announced that the United States would no longer seek reparations from Germany and would support the establishment of a democratic state. The United States, France, and Britain agreed to combine their occupation zones, eventually forming West Germany.[65] In East Asia, Truman denied the Soviet request to reunify Korea, and refused to allow the Soviets (or any other country) a role in the post-war occupation of Japan.[66]

By September 1946, Truman was convinced that the Soviet Union sought world domination and that cooperation was futile.[67] He adopted a policy of containment, based on a 1946 cable by diplomat George F. Kennan.[68] Containment, a policy of preventing the further expansion of Soviet influence, represented a middle-ground position between friendly detente (as represented by Wallace), and aggressive rollback to regain territory already lost to Communism, as would be adopted in 1981 by Ronald Reagan.[69] Kennan's doctrine was based on the notion that the Soviet Union was led by an uncompromising totalitarian regime, and that the Soviets were primarily responsible for escalating tensions.[70] Wallace, who had been appointed Secretary of Commerce after the 1944 election, resigned from the cabinet in September 1946 due to Truman's hardening stance towards the Soviet Union.[71]

Truman Doctrine

In the first major step in implementing containment, Truman extended money to Greece and Turkey to prevent the spread of Soviet-aligned governments.[72] Prior to 1947, the U.S. had largely ignored Greece, which had an anti-communist government, because it was under British influence.[73] Since 1944, the British had assisted the Greek government against a left-wing insurgency, but in early 1947 the British informed the United States that they could no longer afford to intervene in Greece. At the urging of Acheson, who warned that the fall of Greece could lead to the expansion of Soviet influence throughout Europe, Truman requested that Congress grant an unprecedented $400 million aid package to Greece and Turkey. In a March 1947 speech before a joint session of Congress, Truman articulated the Truman Doctrine, which called for the United States to support "free people who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures." Overcoming those who opposed U.S. involvement in Greek affairs, as well those who feared that the aid would weaken post-war cooperation, Truman won bipartisan approval of the aid package.[74] The congressional vote represented a permanent break with the non-interventionism that had characterized U.S. foreign policy prior to World War II.[75]

The United States supported the government against the communists in the Greek Civil War, but did not send any military force. The insurgency was defeated in 1949. Stalin and Yugoslavian leader Josip Broz Tito both provided aid to the insurgents, but a dispute over the aid led to the start of a split in the Communist bloc.[76] American military and economic aid to Turkey also proved effective, and Turkey avoided a civil war.[77][78] The Truman administration also provided aid to the Italian government in advance of the 1948 general election. The aid package, combined with a covert CIA operation, anti-Communist mobilization by the Catholic Church, and pressure from prominent Italian-Americans, helped to ensure a Communist defeat in the election.[79] The initiatives of the Truman Doctrine solidified the post-war division between the United States and the Soviet Union, and the Soviet Union responded by tightening its control over Eastern Europe.[80] Countries aligned with the Soviet Union became known as the Eastern Bloc, while the U.S. and its allies became known as the Western Bloc.

Military reorganization and budgets

U.S. military spending[81]
Fiscal Year % GNP
1945 38%
1946 21%
1948 5.0%
1950 4.6%
1952 13%

Learning from wartime organizational problems, the Truman administration reorganized the military and intelligence establishment to provide for more centralized control and reduce rivalries.[13] The National Security Act of 1947 combined and reorganized all military forces by merging the Department of War and the Department of the Navy into the National Military Establishment (which was later renamed as the Department of Defense). The law also created the U.S. Air Force, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), and the National Security Council (NSC). The CIA and the NSC were designed to be non-military, advisory bodies that would increase U.S. preparation against foreign threats without assuming the domestic functions of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.[82] The National Security Act institutionalized the Joint Chiefs of Staff, which had been established on a temporary basis during World War II. The Joint Chiefs of Staff took charge of all military action, and the Secretary of Defense became the chief presidential adviser on military matter. In 1952, Truman secretly consolidated and empowered the cryptologic elements of the United States by creating the National Security Agency (NSA).[83] Truman and Marshall also sought to require one year of military service for all young men, but this proposal failed as it never won more than modest support among members of Congress.[84]

Truman had hoped that the National Security Act would minimize interservice rivalries, but each branch retained considerable autonomy and battles over the military budgets and other issues continued.[85] In 1949, Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson announced that he would cancel a so-called "supercarrier," which many in the navy saw as an important part of the service's future.[86] The cancellation sparked a crisis known as the "Revolt of the Admirals", when a number of retired and active-duty admirals publicly disagreed with the Truman administration's emphasis on less expensive strategic atomic bombs delivered by the air force. During congressional hearings, public opinion shifted strongly against the navy, which ultimately kept control of marine aviation but lost control over strategic bombing. Military budgets following the hearings prioritized the development of air force heavy bomber designs, and the United States accumulated a combat ready force of over 1,000 long-range strategic bombers capable of supporting nuclear mission scenarios.[87]

Following the end of World War II, Truman gave a low priority to defense budgets—he was interested in curtailing military expenditures and had priorities he wanted to address with domestic spending.[88] From the beginning, he assumed that the American monopoly on the atomic bomb was adequate protection against any and all external threats.[89] Military spending plunged from 39 percent of GNP in 1945 to only 5 percent in 1948,[90] but defense expenditures overall were still eight times higher in constant dollars than they had been before the war.[91] The number of military personnel fell from just over 3 million in 1946 to approximately 1.6 million in 1947, although again the number of military personnel was still nearly five times larger than that of U.S. military in 1939.[92] These jumps were considerably larger than had taken place before and after the Spanish–American War or before and after World War I, indicating that something fundamental had changed regarding American defense posture.[91] Paired with the aforementioned decision to go ahead with the H-bomb, Truman ordered a review of U.S. military policies as they related to foreign policy planning.[52] The National Security Council drafted NSC 68, which called for a major expansion of the U.S. defense budget, increased aid to U.S. allies, and a more aggressive posture in the Cold War. Despite increasing Cold War tensions, Truman dismissed the document, as he was unwilling to commit to higher defense spending.[93] The Korean War convinced Truman of the necessity for higher defense spending, and such spending would soar between 1949 and 1953.[94]

Marshall Plan

 
Marshall Plan expenditures by country

The United States had terminated the war-time Lend-Lease program in August 1945, but it continue a program of loans to Britain. Furthermore, the U.S. sent massive shipments of food to Europe in the years immediately following the end of the war.[95] With the goal of stemming the spread of Communism and increasing trade between the U.S. and Europe, the Truman administration devised the Marshall Plan, which sought to rejuvenate the devastated economies of Western Europe.[96] To fund the Marshall Plan, Truman asked Congress to approve an unprecedented, multi-year, $25 billion appropriation.[97]

Congress, under the control of conservative Republicans, agreed to fund the program for multiple reasons. The conservative isolationist wing of the Republican Party, led by Senator Kenneth S. Wherry, argued that the Marshall Plan would be "a wasteful 'operation rat-hole'". Wherry held that it made no sense to oppose communism by supporting the socialist governments in Western Europe and that American goods would reach Russia and increase its war potential. Wherry was outmaneuvered by the emerging internationalist wing in the Republican Party, led by Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg.[citation needed] With support from Republican Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., Vandenberg admitted there was no certainty that the plan would succeed, but said it would halt economic chaos, sustain Western civilization, and stop further Soviet expansion.[98] Both houses of Congress approved of the initial appropriation, known as the Foreign Assistance Act, by large majorities, and Truman signed the act into law in April 1948.[99] Congress would eventually allocate $12.4 billion in aid over the four years of the plan.[100]

In addition to aid, the Marshall Plan also focused on efficiency along the lines of American industry and removing tariffs and trade barriers. Though the United States allowed each recipient to develop its own plan for the aid, it set several rules and guidelines on the use of the funding. Governments were required to exclude Communists, socialist policies were discouraged, and balanced budgets were favored. Additionally, the United States conditioned aid to the French and British on their acceptance of the reindustrialization of Germany and support for European integration. To avoid exacerbating tensions, the U.S. invited the Soviet Union to become a recipient in the program, but set terms that Stalin was likely to reject.[101] The Soviet Union refused to consider joining the program and vetoed participation by its own satellites. The Soviets set up their own program for aid, the Molotov Plan, and the competing plans resulted in reduced trade between the Eastern bloc and the Western bloc.[102]

The Marshall Plan helped European economies recover in the late 1940s and early 1950s. By 1952, industrial productivity had increased by 35 percent compared to 1938 levels. The Marshall Plan also provided critical psychological reassurance to many Europeans, restoring optimism to a war-torn continent. Though European countries did not adopt American economic structures and ideas to the degree hoped for by some Americans, they remained firmly rooted in mixed economic systems. The European integration process led to the creation of the European Economic Community, which eventually formed the basis of the European Union.[103]

Berlin airlift

In reaction to Western moves aimed at reindustrializing their German occupation zones, Stalin ordered a blockade of the Western-held sectors of Berlin, which was deep in the Soviet occupation zone. Stalin hoped to prevent the creation of a western German state aligned with the U.S., or, failing that, to consolidate control over eastern Germany.[104] After the blockade began on June 24, 1948, the commander of the American occupation zone in Germany, General Lucius D. Clay, proposed sending a large armored column across the Soviet zone to West Berlin with instructions to defend itself if it were stopped or attacked. Truman believed this would entail an unacceptable risk of war, and instead approved Ernest Bevin's plan to supply the blockaded city by air. On June 25, the Allies initiated the Berlin Airlift, a campaign that delivered food and other supplies, such as coal, using military aircraft on a massive scale. Nothing like it had ever been attempted before, and no single nation had the capability, either logistically or materially, to accomplish it. The airlift worked, and ground access was again granted on May 11, 1949. The Berlin Airlift was one of Truman's great foreign policy successes, and it significantly aided his election campaign in 1948.[105]

NATO

 
Map of NATO and the Warsaw Pact (which was created in 1955). The original NATO members are shaded dark blue.

Rising tensions with the Soviets, along with the Soviet veto of numerous United Nations Resolutions, convinced Truman, Senator Vandenberg, and other American leaders of the necessity of creating a defensive alliance devoted to collective security.[106] In 1949, the United States, Canada, and several European countries signed the North Atlantic Treaty, creating a trans-Atlantic military alliance and committing the United States to its first permanent alliance since the 1778 Treaty of Alliance with France.[107] The treaty establishing NATO was widely popular and easily passed the Senate in 1949. NATO's goals were to contain Soviet expansion in Europe and to send a clear message to communist leaders that the world's democracies were willing and able to build new security structures in support of democratic ideals. The treaty also re-assured France that the United States would come to its defense, paving the way for continuing French cooperation in the re-establishment of an independent German state. The United States, United Kingdom, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Norway, Denmark, Portugal, Iceland, and Canada were the original treaty signatories.[108] Shortly after the creation of NATO, Truman convinced Congress to pass the Mutual Defense Assistance Act, which created a military aid program for European allies.[109]

Cold War tensions heightened following Soviet acquisition of nuclear weapons and the beginning of the Korean War. The United States increased its commitment to NATO, invited Greece and Turkey to join the alliance, and launched a second major foreign aid program with the enactment of the Mutual Security Act. Truman permanently stationed 180,000 in Europe, and European defense spending grew from 5 percent to 12 percent of gross national product. NATO established a unified command structure, and Truman appointed General Dwight D. Eisenhower as the first Supreme Commander of NATO. West Germany, which fell under the aegis of NATO, would eventually be incorporated into NATO in 1955.[110]

Latin America and Argentina

Cold War tensions and competition reached across the globe, affecting Europe, Asia, North America, Latin America, and Africa. The United States had historically focused its foreign policy on upholding the Monroe Doctrine in the Western Hemisphere, but new commitments in Europe and Asia diminished Washington's attentions there.[111] Partially in reaction to fears of expanding Soviet influence, the U.S. led efforts to create collective security pact in the Western Hemisphere. In 1947, the United States and most Latin American nations joined the Rio Pact, a defensive military alliance. The following year, the independent states of the Americas formed the Organization of American States (OAS), an intergovernmental organization designed to foster regional unity. Many Latin American nations, seeking favor with the United States, cut off relations with the Soviet Union.[112] Latin American countries also requested aid and investment similar to the Marshall Plan, but Truman believed that most U.S. foreign aid was best directed to Europe and other areas that could potentially fall under the influence of Communism.[113]

There was bad blood with Argentina. Washington detested dictator Juan Peron, who held fascist sympathies, tried to remain neutral in the Cold War and continued to harbor Nazi war criminals. Washington blocked funds from international agencies and restricted trade and investment opportunities.[114]

Asia

Recognition of Israel

 
President Truman in the Oval Office, receiving a Hanukkah Menorah from the Prime Minister of Israel, David Ben-Gurion (center). To the right is Abba Eban, Ambassador of Israel to the U.S.

Truman had long taken an interest in the history of the Middle East, and was sympathetic to Jews who sought a homeland in British-controlled Mandatory Palestine. In 1943, he had called for a homeland for those Jews who survived the Nazi regime. However, State Department officials were reluctant to offend the Arabs, who were opposed to the establishment of a Jewish state in the region.[115] Regarding policy in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East, Palestine was secondary to the goal of protecting the "Northern Tier" of Greece, Turkey, and Iran from communism.[116] In 1947, the United Nations approved the partition of Mandatory Palestine into a Jewish state (which would become known as Israel) and an Arab state. In the months leading up to the British withdrawal from the region, the Truman administration debated whether or not to recognize the fledgling state of Israel]. Overcoming initial objections from Marshall, Clark Clifford convinced Truman that non-recognition would lead Israel to tilt towards the Soviet Union in the Cold War.[117] Truman recognized the State of Israel on May 14, 1948, eleven minutes after it declared itself a nation.[118] Israel would secure its independence with a victory in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, but the Arab–Israeli conflict remains unresolved.[119]

China

In 1945 China descended into a civil war. The civil war baffled Washington, as both the Nationalists under Chiang Kai-shek and the Communists under Mao Zedong had American advocates.[120] Truman sent George Marshall to China in early 1946 to broker a compromise featuring a coalition government, but Marshall failed. He returned to Washington in December 1946, blaming extremist elements on both sides.[121] Though the Nationalists held a numerical advantage in the aftermath of the war, the Communists gained the upper hand in the civil war after 1947. Corruption, poor economic conditions, and poor military leadership eroded popular support for the Nationalist government, and the Communists won many peasants to their side. As the Nationalists collapsed in 1948, the Truman administration faced the question of whether to intervene on the side of the Nationalists or seek good relations with Mao. Chiang's strong support among sections of the American public, along with desire to assure other allies that the U.S. was committed to containment, convinced Truman to increase economic and military aid to the Nationalists. However, Truman held out little hope for a Nationalist victory, and he refused to send U.S. soldiers.[122]

Mao Zedong and his Communists took control of the mainland of China in 1949, driving the Nationalists to Taiwan. The United States had a new enemy in Asia, and Truman came under fire from conservatives for "losing" China.[123] Along with the Soviet detonation of a nuclear weapon, the Communist victory in the Chinese Civil War played a major role in escalating Cold War tensions and U.S. militarization during 1949.[124] Truman would have been willing to maintain some relationship between the U.S. and the Communist government, but Mao was unwilling.[125] Chiang established the Republic of China on Taiwan. Truman made sure it retained China's permanent seat on the UN Security Council.[126][127][a] In June 1950, after the outbreak of fighting in Korea, Truman ordered the Navy's Seventh Fleet into the Taiwan Strait to prevent further conflict between the communist government and the Republic of China.[128]

Japan

Under the leadership of General Douglas MacArthur, the U.S. occupied Japan after the latter's surrender in August 1945. MacArthur presided over extensive reforms of the Japanese government and society that in many ways resembled the New Deal.[129][130] He imposed a new constitution that established a parliamentary democracy and granted women the right to vote. He also democratized the Japanese educational system, enabled labor unions and oversaw major economic changes, although Japanese business leaders were able to resist the reforms to some degree. As the Cold War intensified in 1947, Washington officials took greater control over the occupation, ending Japanese reparations to the Allied Powers and prioritizing economic growth over long-term reform. The Japanese suffered from poor economic conditions until 1950 when heavy American spending on supplies to support the Korean War stimulated growth.[131] In 1951, the United States and Japan signed the Treaty of San Francisco, which restored Japanese sovereignty but allowed the United States to maintain bases in Japan.[132] Over the opposition of the Soviet Union and some other adversaries of Japan in World War II, the peace treaty did not contain punitive measures such as reparations, though Japan did lose control of the Kuril Islands and all its pre-war possessions.[133]

Southeast Asia

With the end of World War II, the United States fulfilled the commitment made by the 1934 Tydings–McDuffie Act and granted independence to the Philippines. The U.S. had encouraged decolonization throughout World War II, but the start of the Cold War changed priorities. The U.S. used the Marshall Plan to pressure the Dutch to grant independence to Indonesia under the leadership of the anti-Communist Sukarno, and the Dutch recognized Indonesia's independence in 1949. However, in French Indochina, the Truman administration recognized the French client state led by Emperor Bảo Đại. The U.S. feared alienating the French, who occupied a crucial position on the continent, and feared that the withdrawal of the French would allow the Communist faction of Ho Chi Minh to assume power.[134] Despite initial reluctance to become involved in Indochina, by 1952, the United States was heavily subsidizing the French suppression of Ho's Việt Minh in the First Indochina War.[94] The U.S. also established alliances in the region through the creation of the Mutual Defense Treaty with the Philippines and the ANZUS pact with Australia and New Zealand.[135]

Korean War

Outbreak of the war

 
President Truman signing a proclamation declaring a national emergency and authorizing U.S. entry into the Korean War

Following World War II, the United States and the Soviet Union occupied Korea, which had been a colony of the Japanese Empire. The 38th parallel was chosen as a line of partition between the occupying powers since it was approximately halfway between Korea's northernmost and southernmost regions, and was always intended to mark a temporary separation before the eventual reunification of Korea.[136] Nonetheless, the Soviet Union established the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea) in 1948, while the United States established the Republic of Korea (South Korea) that same year.[137] Hoping to avoid a long-term military commitment in the region, Truman withdrew U.S. soldiers from the Korean Peninsula in 1949. The Soviet Union also withdrew their soldiers from Korea in 1949, but continued to supply North Korea with military aid.[138]

On June 25, 1950, Kim Il-sung's Korean People's Army invaded South Korea, starting the Korean War. In the early weeks of the war, the North Koreans easily pushed back their southern counterparts.[139] The Soviet Union was not directly involved, though Kim did win Stalin's approval before launching the invasion.[140] Truman, meanwhile, did not view Korea itself as a vital region in the Cold War, but he believed that allowing a Western-aligned country to fall would embolden Communists around the world and damage his own standing at home.[141] The top officials of the Truman administration were heavily influenced by a desire to not repeat the "appeasement" of the 1930s; Truman stated to an aide, "there's no telling what they'll do, if we don't put up a fight right now."[142] Truman turned to the United Nations to condemn the invasion. With the Soviet Union boycotting the United Nations Security Council due to the UN's refusal to recognize the People's Republic of China, Truman won approval of Resolution 84. The resolution denounced North Korea's actions and empowered other nations to defend South Korea.[141]

North Korean forces experienced early successes, capturing the city of Seoul on June 28. Fearing the fall of the entire peninsula, General Douglas MacArthur, commander of U.S. forces in Asia, won Truman's approval to land U.S. troops on the peninsula. Rather than asking Congress for a declaration of war, Truman argued that the UN Resolution provided the presidency the constitutional power to deploy soldiers as a "police action" under the aegis of the UN.[141] The intervention in Korea was widely popular in the United States at the time, and Truman's July 1950 request for $10 billion was approved almost unanimously.[143] By August 1950, U.S. troops pouring into South Korea, along with American air strikes, stabilized the front around the Pusan Perimeter.[144] Responding to criticism over unreadiness, Truman fired Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson and replaced him with the former Secretary of State George Marshall. With UN approval, Truman decided on a "rollback" policy—conquest of North Korea.[145] UN forces launched a counterattack, scoring a stunning surprise victory with an amphibious landing at the Battle of Inchon that trapped most of the invaders. UN forces marched north, toward the Yalu River boundary with China, with the goal of reuniting Korea under UN auspices.[146]

Stalemate and dismissal of MacArthur

 
Territory often changed hands early in the Korean War, until the front stabilized in 1951.
 • North Korean, Chinese, and Soviet forces
 • South Korean, U.S., Commonwealth, and United Nations forces

As the UN forces approached the Yalu River, the CIA and General MacArthur both expected that the Chinese would remain out of the war. Defying those predictions, Chinese forces crossed the Yalu River in November 1950 and forced the overstretched UN soldiers to retreat.[147] Fearing that the escalation of the war could spark a global conflict with the Soviet Union, Truman refused MacArthur's request to bomb Chinese supply bases north of the Yalu River.[148] UN forces were pushed below the 38th parallel before the end of 1950, but, under the command of General Matthew Ridgway, the UN launched a counterattack that pushed Chinese forces back up to the 38th parallel.[149]

MacArthur made several public demands for an escalation of the war, leading to a break with Truman in late 1950 and early 1951.[150] On April 5, House Minority Leader Joseph Martin made public a letter from MacArthur that strongly criticized Truman's handling of the Korean War and called for an expansion of the conflict against China.[151] Truman believed that MacArthur's recommendations were wrong, but more importantly, he believed that MacArthur had overstepped his bounds in trying to make foreign and military policy, potentially endangering the civilian control of the military. After consulting with the Joint Chiefs of Staff and members of Congress, Truman decided to relieve MacArthur of his command.[152] The dismissal of General Douglas MacArthur ignited a firestorm of outrage against Truman and support for MacArthur. Fierce criticism from virtually all quarters accused Truman of refusing to shoulder the blame for a war gone sour and blaming his generals instead. Others, including Eleanor Roosevelt, supported and applauded Truman's decision. MacArthur meanwhile returned to the U.S. to a hero's welcome, and addressed a joint session of Congress.[153] In part due to the dismissal of MacArthur, Truman's approval mark in February 1952 stood at 22% according to Gallup polls, which was, until George W. Bush in 2008, the all-time lowest approval mark for an active American president.[154] Though the public generally favored MacArthur over Truman immediately after MacArthur's dismissal, congressional hearings and newspaper editorials helped turn public opinion against MacArthur's advocacy for escalation.[155]

The war remained a frustrating stalemate for two years.[156] UN and Chinese forces fought inconclusive conflicts like the Battle of Heartbreak Ridge and the Battle of Pork Chop Hill, but neither side was able to advance far past the 38th parallel.[157] Throughout late 1951, Truman sought a cease fire, but disputes over prisoner exchanges led to the collapse of negotiations.[156] Of the 116,000 Chinese and Korean prisoners-of-war held by the United States, only 83,000 were willing to return to their home countries, and Truman was unwilling to forcibly return the prisoners.[158] The Korean War ended with an armistice in 1953 after Truman left office, dividing North Korea and South Korea along a border close to the 38th parallel.[159] Over 30,000 Americans and approximately 3 million Koreans died in the conflict.[160] The United States maintained a permanent military presence in South Korea after the war.[161]

International trips

Truman made five international trips during his presidency.[162] His only trans-Atlantic trip was to participate in the 1945 Potsdam Conference with British Prime Ministers Churchill and Attlee and Soviet Premier Stalin. He also visited neighboring Bermuda, Canada and Mexico, plus Brazil in South America. Truman only left the continental United States on two other occasions (to Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, Cuba, February 20-March 5, 1948; and to Wake Island, October 11–18, 1950) during his nearly eight years in office.[163]

Dates Country Locations Details
1 July 15, 1945   Belgium Antwerp, Brussels Disembarked en route to Potsdam.
July 16 – August 2, 1945   Germany Potsdam Attended Potsdam Conference with British Prime Ministers Winston Churchill and Clement Attlee and USSR leader Joseph Stalin.
August 2, 1945   United Kingdom Plymouth Informal meeting with King George VI.
2 August 23–30, 1946   Bermuda Hamilton Informal visit. Met with Governor General Ralph Leatham and inspected U.S. military facilities.
3 March 3–6, 1947   Mexico Mexico, D.F. State visit. Met with President Miguel Alemán Valdés.
4 June 10–12, 1947   Canada Ottawa Official visit. Met with Governor General Harold Alexander and Prime Minister Mackenzie King and addressed Parliament.
5 September 1–7, 1947   Brazil Rio de Janeiro State visit. Addressed Inter-American Conference for the Maintenance of Continental Peace and Security and the Brazilian Congress.

Domestic affairs

Reconversion and labor strife

Federal finances and GDP during Truman's presidency[164]
Fiscal
Year
Receipts
$ Billion
Outlays
$ Billion
Surplus/
Deficit
GDP Debt as a %
of GDP[165]
1945 45.2 92.7 −47.6 226.4 103.9
1946 39.3 55.2 −15.9 228.0 106.1
1947 38.5 34.5 4.0 238.9 93.9
1948 41.6 29.8 11.8 261.9 82.6
1949 39.4 38.8 0.6 276.5 77.5
1950 39.4 42.6 −3.1 278.7 78.6
1951 51.6 45.5 6.1 327.1 65.5
1952 66.2 67.7 −1.5 357.1 60.1
1953 69.6 76.1 −6.5 382.1 57.2
Ref. [166] [167] [168]

Reconversion

Although foreign affairs dominated much of Truman's time in office, reconversion to a peacetime economy became his administration's central focus in late 1945. Truman faced several major challenges in presiding over the transition to a post-war economy, including a large national debt and persistent inflation. The United States had emerged from the Great Depression in part due to the war production that began in 1940. Most observers expected that the nation would sink into another decline with the end of the war spending. While the country had been unified in winning the war, there was no consensus on the best methods of post-war economic reconversion after the war, or the level of involvement that the federal government should have in economic affairs.[169] Truman faced a Congress that on domestic issues was dominated by the conservative coalition, an alliance of Republicans and conservative Southern Democrats. This group opposed many of Truman's domestic policies and did not welcome strong presidential leadership.[170] Truman asked Congress for a host of measures, including a bill that would make the Fair Employment Practice Committee a permanent institution, but his focus on foreign affairs during this period prevented him from effectively advocating for his programs with members of Congress.[171]

Truman was particularly concerned about keeping unemployment levels low; nearly 2 million people lost jobs within days of the Japanese surrender, and he feared that even more would lose their jobs in the following months.[172] Liberal New Dealers pushed for an explicit federal commitment to ensuring "full employment," but Congress instead passed the Employment Act of 1946. The act created the Council of Economic Advisers and mandated the federal government "to foster and promote free competitive enterprise and the general welfare... and to promote maximum employment, production, and purchasing power.[173]

The United States had instituted price controls and wage controls during the war in order to avoid large-scale inflation or deflation. Within the Truman administration, some advocated lifting these controls immediately in order to allow private industries to hire new workers, while others feared that immediately lifting the controls would lead to runaway inflation. Truman sought to find a middle course between the two camps; price controls on many nonessential items were lifted by the end of September 1945, but others remained in place by the end of 1945.[174] Increasingly concerned about inflation, Truman reimposed some price controls in December 1945, but the unpopularity of those controls led the administration to seek other ways to curb inflation, including cuts to federal spending.[175] In July 1946, after average prices rose at the unprecedented rate of 5.5 percent, Truman won passage of a bill that extended his authority to institute price controls on some items.[176] Though unemployment remained low, labor unrest, inflation, and other issues badly damaged Truman's popularity, which in turn contributed to a poor Democratic showing in the November 1946 mid-term elections.[177] After the Republican victory in those elections, Truman announced the end of all federal wage and price controls, with the exception of rent controls.[176]

Labor unrest

Conflict between management and labor presented one of the biggest challenges to the conversion of the economy to peacetime production. Organized labor had adhered to its pledge to refrain from striking during the war, but labor leaders were eager to share in the gains from a postwar economic resurgence. After several labor disputes broke out in September and October 1945, Truman convened a national conference between leaders of business and organized labor in November, at which he advocated collective bargaining in order to avoid labor-related economic disruptions. The conference failed to have a major impact; an unprecedented wave of major strikes affected the United States, and by February 1946 nearly 2 million workers were engaged in strikes or other labor disputes.[178] Many of the strikes were led by John L. Lewis of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO), who Truman despised.[179]

When a national rail strike threatened in May 1946, Truman seized the railroads to continue operations, but two key railway unions struck anyway. The entire national railroad system was shut down—24,000 freight trains and 175,000 passenger trains a day stopped moving.[180][better source needed] For two days public anger mounted among the general public and Truman himself, and the president drafted a message to Congress that called on veterans to form a lynch mob and destroy the union leaders.[181] After top aide Clark Clifford rewrote and toned down the speech, Truman delivered a speech calling for Congress to pass a new law to draft all the railroad strikers into the army. As he was concluding his speech he read a message just handed to him that the strike was settled on presidential terms; Truman nevertheless finished the speech, making clear his displeasure with the strike.[182][183] Truman's speech marked the end of the strike wave, as business and labor leaders both generally avoided subsequent actions that would provoke a strong response from the administration. The strikes damaged the political standing of unions, and the real wages of blue collar workers fell by over twelve percent in the year after the surrender of Japan.[184] At the same time, the CIO's efforts to expand massively into the South (a campaign known as "Operation Dixie") failed.[185]

G.I. Bill

The G.I. Bill had been passed in 1944 by a conservative coalition that wanted to restrict benefits to "deserving" wartime veterans, as opposed to the larger welfare program favored by the Roosevelt administration that would reach both veterans and non-veterans.[186] The most famous component of the G.I. Bill provided free collegiate, vocational, and high school education for veterans – not only free tuition, but also full housing and subsistence allowances for the veterans and their families. There was a remarkable transformation of higher education, as 2.2 million veterans crowded into hastily built classrooms.[187] Due in large part to the G.I. Bill, the number of college degrees awarded rose from just over 200,000 in 1940 to nearly 500,000 in 1950.[188]

In addition to education and housing benefits, the bill included aid to veterans who wanted to start a small business or farm, as well one year of unemployment compensation.[189][190][page needed] The G.I. Bill also guaranteed low cost loans for veterans, with very low down payments and low interest rates. In 1947 alone, 540,000 veterans bought a house at the average price of $7,300. Developers purchased empty land just outside the city, installed tract houses based on a handful of designs, and provided streets and utilities.[191] The most famous development was Levittown in Long Island; it offered a new house featuring three bedrooms and a landscaped lot of 75 by 100 feet for the total price of $10,000.[192][page needed] 15 million housing units were built between 1945 and 1955, and the home-ownership rate grew from 50 percent in 1945 to 60 percent in 1960. Together with the growth of the automobile industry, the G.I. Bill's housing benefits helped provide for a major expansion of suburbs in the United States.[193]

80th Congress and the Taft–Hartley Act

The 1946 mid-term election left Republicans in control of Congress for the first time since the early 1930s. Truman initially hoped to work with Republican leaders in Congress, focusing on the passage of housing programs and other potential areas of common ground.[194] Truman and the 80th Congress were able to agree on a balanced budget, albeit one that spent less on defense and some other programs that Truman favored. Congress also assented to the creation of the Hoover Commission, which proposed a series of reorganizations to the executive branch.[195] However, the 80th Congress proved strongly resistant to Truman's policies. One of its first major acts was to approve what would become the Twenty-second Amendment, which established presidential term limits in an implicit rebuke to Franklin Roosevelt, the only president who had ever served more than two terms.[194][b] Congress also passed bills designed to cut taxes, weaken the Interstate Commerce Commission, and reduce the number of employees covered by Social Security, but all were vetoed by Truman in 1947.[198] Upon returning to session in 1948, Congress passed the Revenue Act of 1948, another major tax cut; Truman again vetoed the bill, but this time his veto was overridden by Congress.[199]

In response to the labor unrest of 1945 and 1946, Congress passed the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947, also known as the Taft–Hartley Act, which amended the National Labor Relations Act of 1935. Truman vetoed the bill, denouncing it as "slave-labor bill," but Congress overrode the veto.[198] The Taft-Hartley Act added a list of prohibited union actions to the National Labor Relations Act of 1935 (also known as the Wagner Act), which had defined several types of employer actions as unfair labor practices. Taft-Hartley prohibited jurisdictional strikes, in which a union strikes in order to pressure an employer to assign particular work to the employees that union represents, and secondary boycotts and "common situs" picketing, in which unions picket, strike, or refuse to handle the goods of a business with which they have no primary dispute but which is associated with a targeted business.[c] The act also outlawed closed shops, which were contractual agreements that required an employer to hire only union members.[200] The Taft–Hartley Act also granted states power to pass "right-to-work laws," which ban union shop shops.[201] All union officials were required to sign an affidavit that they were not Communists or else the union would lose its federal bargaining powers guaranteed by the National Labor Relations Board.[200]

Despite his vocal opposition to the Taft–Hartley Act, Truman used its emergency provisions a number of times to halt strikes and lockouts. Repeated union efforts to repeal or modify it always failed, and it remains in effect today.[202] Historian James T. Patterson concludes that:

By the 1950s most observers agreed that Taft-Hartley was no more disastrous for workers than the Wagner Act had been for employers. What ordinarily mattered most in labor relations was not government laws such as Taft-Hartley, but the relative power of unions and management in the economic marketplace. Where unions were strong they usually managed all right; when they were weak, new laws did them little additional harm.[203]

Fair Deal

In his first major address to Congress after taking office, Truman articulated a liberal domestic program, but his early domestic policy was dominated by post-war reconversion.[204] As he readied for the 1948 election, Truman made clear his identity as a Democrat in the New Deal tradition, advocating a national health care system, repeal of the Taft–Hartley Act, federal aid to education, expanded public housing programs, a higher minimum wage, more public power projects like the Tennessee Valley Authority, and a more progressive tax structure.[205] The administration also put forth the Brannan Plan, which would have removed the government's production controls and price supports in agriculture in favor of direct payments to farmers.[206] Taken together, Truman's proposals constituted a broad legislative agenda that came to be known as the "Fair Deal."[205] A major difference between the New Deal and the Fair Deal was that the latter included an aggressive civil rights program, which Truman termed a moral priority. Truman's proposals were not well received by Congress, even with renewed Democratic majorities in Congress after 1948.[207] The conservative coalition of Republicans and conservative Southern Democrats played a major role in blocking passage of the Fair Deal, but the inability of liberals to agree on the details of many programs also contributed to legislative gridlock.[208]

Only one of the major Fair Deal bills, the Housing Act of 1949, was ever enacted.[207] The Housing Act of 1949 provided for sweeping expansion of the federal role in mortgage insurance and construction of public housing.[citation needed] Truman did win other victories in the 81st Congress, as the minimum wage was raised from forty cents an hour to seventy-five cents an hour, Social Security benefits for the retired were doubled, and loopholes in the Sherman Antitrust Act were closed via passage of the Celler–Kefauver Act.[209] The 1950 mid-term elections bolstered Republicans and conservative Democrats, ending any chance of passing further Fair Deal programs.[210] Though Truman failed to pass most of his major Fair Deal deal proposals, he did help ensure that the major New Deal programs still in operation remained intact, and in many cases, received minor improvements.[211] The Fair Deal would later serve as an inspiration for many of the Great Society programs passed during the presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson.[212]

Civil rights

Historians Donald R. McCoy and Richard T. Ruetten write that Truman "was the first president to have a civil rights program, the first to try to come to grips with the basic problems of minorities, and the first to condemn, vigorously and consistently, the presence of discrimination and inequality in America."[213] A 1947 report by the President's Committee on Civil Rights titled To Secure These Rights presented a detailed ten-point agenda of civil rights reforms. In February 1948, the president submitted a civil rights agenda to Congress that proposed creating several federal offices devoted to issues such as voting rights and fair employment practices.[214] This provoked a storm of criticism from Southern Democrats in the runup to the 1948 Democratic National Convention, but Truman refused to compromise, saying: "My forebears were Confederates ... but my very stomach turned over when I had learned that Negro soldiers, just back from overseas, were being dumped out of Army trucks in Mississippi and beaten."[215] At the start of the 81st Congress, pro-civil rights congressmen attempted to reform the Senate's filibuster rules so that a filibuster could be defeated by a simple majority vote. Southern senators blocked this reform, thereby ensuring that civil rights would not emerge as an important legislative issue until the late 1950s.[216]

With his civil rights agenda blocked by Congress, Truman turned to executive actions.[217] In July 1948, he issued Executive Order 9981, requiring equal opportunity in the Armed Forces regardless of race, color, religion or national origin.[218][219][220] Truman also issued Executive Order 9980, ending racial discrimination in the civil service of the federal government [221][222] Another Executive Order, in 1951, established the Committee on Government Contract Compliance (CGCC), which sought to prevent defense contractors from discriminating because of race.[223]

Desegregation took years, with the Air Force under Secretary Stuart Symington taking the lead.[224] After several years of planning between Truman, the Committee on Equality of Treatment and Opportunity, and the various branches of the military, Army units started to be racially integrated in the early 1950s and later the Navy.[225] The 1948 Women's Armed Services Integration Act allowed women to serve in the peacetime military in all-female units.

Truman appointed non-whites to unprecedented positions of power in the executive and judicial branches.[226] Among his appointments was William Henry Hastie, the first African American to serve as a federal appellate judge.[227] In civil rights cases like Sweatt v. Painter, the Justice Department issued amicus curiae briefs that supported ending segregation.[228] In December 1952, the Truman administration filed an amicus curiae brief for the case of Brown v. Board of Education; two years later, the Supreme Court's holding in that case would effectively overturn the "separate but equal" doctrine that allowed for racial segregation in public education.[229]

Health insurance

By the time Truman took office, National health insurance had been on the table for decades, but it had never gained much traction. Starting in the late 1930s hospitals promoted private insurance plans such as Blue Cross,[230] and between 1940 and 1950, the percentage of Americans with health insurance rose from 9 percent to above 50 percent.[231] With the support of the American Federation of Labor (AFL), Truman proposed a national health insurance plan in November 1945, but it was defeated by an alliance of conservatives, the American Medical Association (which rallied the medical community against the bill),[232] and the business community.[233] Many labor unions discovered they could negotiate with business to obtain better health benefits for their own members, so they focused increasingly on that goal.[234] The failure of Truman's healthcare plan solidified the status of private employers as the primary sponsors of health insurance in the United States.[231]

Crime and corruption

With more young men back on the streets and more money in circulation, petty crime rates went up after 1945. Far more serious was organized crime run by professional criminal gangs, which became a favorite attack theme of Republican politicians and the media. The Justice Department in 1947 organized a 'racket squad' to build evidence for grand jury investigations in several major cities, and the income tax returns of many gambling entrepreneurs and racketeers were audited. However, federal officials were reluctant to share their new information with local law enforcement; Truman and his Attorney General J. Howard McGrath told local officials that they had to bear the chief burden in defeating organized crime. Senator Estes Kefauver, a liberal Democrat from Tennessee, launched a major Senate investigation in 1950 as chairman of the Special Committee to Investigate Organized Crime in Interstate Commerce.[235] Kefauver, although only a freshman in the Senate, received large-scale national coverage and became a presidential contender.[236]

The Kefauver committee exposed numerous charges of corruption among senior administration officials, some of whom received expensive fur coats and deep freezers in exchange for favors. Kefauver also found that over 160 Internal Revenue Service (IRS) officials took bribes, used their offices to run private businesses, embezzled federal funds, or tolerated corrupt behavior by their subordinates. The various scandals of organized crime did not directly touch Truman, but they highlighted and exacerbated his problems with scandals inside his administration, such as influence peddling.[237] In 1952, Truman appointed Newbold Morris as a special prosecutor to investigate allegations of corruption at the IRS.[238] When Attorney General McGrath fired Morris for being too zealous, Truman fired McGrath.[237][239][d]

Domestic responses to the Cold War

Anticommunist liberalism

The onset of the Cold War produced turmoil in the left wing of the Democratic Party over foreign policy issues, especially regarding the role of the Soviet Union and the response to domestic communism. After the 1946 elections the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) systematically purged communists and far-left sympathizers from leadership roles in its unions.[240] The CIO expelled some unions that resisted the purge, notably its third-largest affiliate the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE).[241][242] Meanwhile, the AFL set up its first explicitly political unit, Labor's League for Political Education, and increasingly abandoned its historic tradition of nonpartisanship.[243] Expelled leftists coalesced around Henry Wallace, who ran an independent campaign for president in 1948.[244][245] The reforms by the CIO and AFL put both organizations in a good position to fight off Henry Wallace, and the CIO and AFL worked enthusiastically for Truman's reelection.[246] Opponents of Wallace also established an anti-Communist liberal group, Americans for Democratic Action (ADA).[247] Though often critical of the far-right's unrestrained attacks on alleged Communists, members of the ADA attacked left-wing activists who, they feared, took orders from Communist leaders in the Soviet Union.[248]

Truman established the Temporary Commission on Employee Loyalty in November 1946 to create employee loyalty standards designed to weed out communist sympathizers from the federal workforce.[249] In March 1947, Truman issued Executive Order 9835, which ordered purges of left-wingers who refused to disavow communism. It removed about 300 federal employees who currently were members of or associated with any organization identified by the Attorney General as communist, fascist, or totalitarian. Anti-communist liberals by 1947–48 thus played a central role in the Democratic Party, and enthusiastically supported Truman's anti-communist foreign policy.[250][251]

Soviet espionage and McCarthyism

In August 1948, Whittaker Chambers, a former spy for the Soviets and a senior editor at Time magazine, testified to the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) that an underground communist network had been working within the U.S. government since the 1930s. He accused a former State Department official, Alger Hiss, of being a member of that network; Hiss denied the allegations but was convicted in January 1950 for perjury. The Soviet Union's success in exploding an atomic weapon in 1949 and the fall of the nationalist Chinese the same year led many Americans to conclude that subversion by Soviet spies had been responsible for American setbacks and Soviet successes, and to demand that communists be rooted out from the government and other places of influence. However, Truman did not fully share such opinions, and throughout his tenure he would balance a desire to maintain internal security against the fear that a red scare could hurt innocents and impede government operations.[252][253] He famously called the Hiss trial a "red herring,"[254] but also presided over the prosecution of numerous Communist leaders under the terms of the Smith Act.[255]

Secretary of State Acheson's public support for Hiss, the revelation that British atomic bomb scientist Klaus Fuchs was a spy, and various other events led current and former members of HUAC to decry the Truman administration, especially the State Department, as soft on communism. Republican Congressmen Karl E. Mundt of South Dakota and Richard Nixon of California emerged as particularly vocal and prominent critics on HUAC. Wisconsin Senator Joseph McCarthy used a speech in West Virginia to accuse the State Department of harboring communists, and rode the controversy to political fame.[256] Truman responded by arguing that McCarthy's efforts would undermine the bipartisan foreign policy that had prevailed since the end of World War II and thereby give a political gift to the Soviet Union, but few Republicans spoke out against McCarthy during Truman's tenure in office.[257] Democratic Senator William Benton sponsored a motion to expel McCarthy from Congress, but the motion was defeated and Benton lost his 1952 re-election campaign; McCarthy, meanwhile, was re-elected.[258] McCarthy's anti-Communist campaigns, part of a larger Red Scare, played a major role in shaping a more confrontational Cold War foreign policy. It also affected members of Congress and other political leaders, who now worried that the embrace of left-wing policies would leave themselves vulnerable to accusations of being "soft" on Communism.[259]

The outbreak of the Korean War led to renewed interest in such an internal security bill, which had previously been debated during the 80th Congress. Senator Pat McCarran of Nevada put forward a bill that would require Communist organizations to register with the government, and allowed the president to indefinitely detain those who were suspected of having engaged in espionage. The bill received little opposition from members of Congress, who feared being labeled as pro-Communist, and it passed both the House and the Senate as the McCarran Internal Security Act. Truman vetoed the bill in September 1950, arguing that it infringed on personal liberties and would be ineffective at protecting against subversion, but Congress overrode the veto.[260]

Immigration

Immigration had been at a low level in the Great Depression and war years. It surged as the war ended, with the arrival of refugees and family members of citizens. The issue was not a high priority for the Truman administration, but there was great interest in Congress and among various ethnic groups.[261][page needed] In 1945, the War Brides Act allowed foreign-born wives of U.S. citizens who had served in the U.S. Armed Forces to immigrate to the United States; it was later extended to include the fiancés of American soldiers. In 1946, the Luce–Celler Act extended the right to become naturalized citizens to Filipinos and Asian Indians, setting the immigration quota at 100 people per year.[262] In 1952, the McCarran Walter Immigration Act passed over Truman's veto. It kept the quota system of the Immigration Act of 1924 but added many new opportunities for immigration from Europe and elsewhere. In practice two-thirds of the new arrivals entered outside the old quota system. Immigration law was effectively controlled by Congressman Francis E. Walter of Pennsylvania, a Democrat who wanted to minimize immigration.[263]

Failed seizure of steel mills

Though they never reached the severity of the strike wave of 1945–1946, labor disruptions continued to affect the country after 1946.[264] When a steel strike loomed in April 1952, Truman instructed Secretary of Commerce Charles W. Sawyer to seize and continue operations of the nation's steel mills. Truman cited his authority as Commander in Chief and the need to maintain an uninterrupted supply of steel for munitions to be used in the war in Korea. The Supreme Court found the seizure unconstitutional, and reversed the order in a major separation-of-powers decision, Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer (1952). The 6–3 decision, which held that Truman's assertion of authority was too vague and was not rooted in any legislative action by Congress, was delivered by a Court composed entirely of Justices appointed by either Truman or Roosevelt. The high court's reversal of Truman's order was his most notable legal defeat.[265] The Supreme Court decision left the country with the possibility of a critical steel shortage, but Truman was able to convince the steel managers and organized labor to reach a settlement in July 1952.[266]

Territories and dependencies

Truman sought to grant greater rights to the territories and dependencies of the United States. He unsuccessfully pushed for the admission of Hawaii and Alaska as states but Congress did not act on this proposal. Truman was more successful in pushing organic legislation for Guam, Samoa, and the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, the latter of which had been acquired from Japan after World War II. This legislation, passed in 1950 and 1951, transferred the territories from military to civilian administration, though the Navy continued to exercise considerable influence.[267] In 1952, Congress passed a bill to recognize Puerto Rico's newly written constitution.[268]

Elections

Democratic seats in Congress
Congress Senate House
79th 57 243
80th 45 188
81st 54 263
82nd 48 234

1946 mid-term election

In the 1946 mid-term elections, Truman's Democrats suffered losses in both houses of Congress. Republicans, who had not controlled a chamber of Congress since the 1932 elections, took control of both the House and the Senate. Truman's party was hurt by a disappointing postwar economy,[269] and the election was a major blow to Truman's hopes of passing his domestic policies.[270] However, Dallek points to the 1946 elections as the moment when Truman became more sure of himself as president, and stopped trying to appease all factions of the public.[271]

1948 election

 
Clifford K. Berryman's editorial cartoon of Oct. 19, 1948, shows the consensus of experts in mid-October

In the spring of 1948, Truman's public approval rating stood at 36%, and the president was nearly universally regarded as incapable of winning reelection in the 1948 presidential election.[272] The "New Deal" loyalists within the party—including FDR's son James—tried to swing the Democratic nomination to General Dwight D. Eisenhower, a highly popular figure whose political views and party affiliation were totally unknown.[273] Other liberals favored Associate Justice William O. Douglas, but both Eisenhower and Douglas refused to enter the race, and the "Stop Truman" movement failed to unite around any other candidate.[274]

At the 1948 Democratic National Convention, Truman attempted to unify the Northern delegations with a vague civil rights plank in the party platform. He was upstaged by liberals like Minneapolis Mayor Hubert Humphrey, who convinced Truman and the convention to adopt a stronger civil rights plank.[275] In response, many of the delegates from Alabama and Mississippi walked out of the convention. Unfazed, Truman delivered an aggressive acceptance speech attacking the 80th Congress, labeling it the "Do Nothing Congress."[276] For his running mate, Truman accepted Kentucky Senator Alben W. Barkley after his preferred candidate, Justice William O. Douglas, turned down the nomination.[277]

South Carolina Governor Strom Thurmond, a segregationist, declared his candidacy for the presidency on a Dixiecrat ticket and led a full-scale revolt of Southern "states' rights" proponents. This rebellion on the right was matched by one on the left, led by Wallace on the Progressive Party ticket.[278] Wallace strongly criticized Truman's approach to the Soviet Union,[279] and the Progressive Party's platform addressed a wide array of issues, including support for the desegregation of public schools, gender equality, a national health insurance program, free trade, and public ownership of large banks, railroads, and power utilities.[280] Wallace won support from many liberals, intellectuals, union members, and military veterans.[281] The Republicans, meanwhile, nominated New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey, who had been the party's 1944 presidential nominee.[282]

Dewey waged a low-risk campaign and issued vague generalities on his plans once in office, while Thurmond found less support in the South than many had expected, as most white Southerners believed him to be too extreme. Wallace was unable to galvanize support behind his domestic policies, and his conciliatory attitude towards the Soviet Union alienated many potential supporters.[283] Truman, meanwhile, crisscrossed the U.S. by train, delivering "whistle stop" speeches from the rear platform of the observation car. His combative appearances, such as those at the town square of Harrisburg, Illinois, captured the popular imagination and drew huge crowds.[284] The large, mostly spontaneous gatherings at Truman's whistle stop events were an important sign of a change in momentum in the campaign, but this shift went virtually unnoticed by the national press corps. The three major polling organizations stopped polling well before the November 2 election date—Roper in September, and Crossley and Gallup in October—thus failing to measure the period when Truman may have surged past Dewey in public support.[285]

 
1948 electoral vote results.

In the end, Truman held his progressive Midwestern base, won most of the Southern states despite the civil rights plank, and squeaked through with narrow victories in a few critical states, notably Ohio, California, and Illinois. He won over 50 percent of the popular vote and secured 303 electoral votes. Dewey received only 189 electoral votes; Thurmond garnered 39, and Henry Wallace none.[286] Dewey carried several Northeastern states that had generally voted for Roosevelt, and the 1948 election was the closest presidential election since the 1916 election.[287] In the concurrent congressional elections, the Democrats re-took control of the House and the Senate. The defining image of the campaign was a photograph snapped in the early morning hours of the day after the election, when an ecstatic Truman held aloft the erroneous front page of the Chicago Tribune with a huge headline proclaiming "Dewey Defeats Truman."[288]

1950 mid-term election

In Truman's second mid-term election, Republicans ran against Truman's proposed domestic policies and his handling of the Korean War. They picked up seats in both the House and the senate, but failed to gain control of either house of Congress.[289] Truman was particularly upset by the apparent success of those who campaigned on McCarthyism.[290]

1952 election

 
Graph of Truman's approval ratings in Gallup polls

By the time of the 1952 New Hampshire primary, one of the first major contests held in the 1952 Democratic primaries, Truman had not stated whether he would seek re-election, and no other candidate had won Truman's backing. Although the Twenty-second Amendment had been ratified, Truman could run for another term due to a grandfather clause in the amendment. Truman's first choice to succeed him, Chief Justice Vinson, had declined to run, Illinois Governor Adlai Stevenson had also turned Truman down, Vice President Barkley was considered too old,[291] and Truman disliked Senator Kefauver. Accordingly, Truman let his name be entered in the New Hampshire primary by supporters. The highly unpopular Truman was handily defeated by Kefauver; 18 days later the president announced he would not seek a second full term. Truman was eventually able to persuade Stevenson to run, and the governor ultimately gained the nomination at the 1952 Democratic National Convention.[292]

 
1952 electoral vote results.

General Dwight D. Eisenhower's public stature, along with his unknown views on domestic issues, had made him appealing as a potential candidate for both parties in the 1948 election. Though he had generally supported Truman's foreign policy, Eisenhower privately held conservative views on most domestic issues and never seriously considered running for office as a Democrat. Beginning in 1951, eastern, internationalist Republicans, led by Thomas Dewey and Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., coordinated a draft movement designed to nominate Eisenhower as the Republican candidate for president. Eisenhower initially resisted these efforts, but in March 1952 he agreed to allow his name to be entered into the New Hampshire primary. He was motivated in part by his desire to defeat Robert A. Taft, the other major contender for the Republican nomination. The 1952 Republican primaries became a battle between Dewey's internationalist wing of the party and Taft's conservative, isolationist wing. Eisenhower narrowly prevailed over Taft at the 1952 Republican National Convention; with the approval of Eisenhower, the convention nominated Richard Nixon for vice president.[293]

The once good Truman-Eisenhower relationship soured during the campaign. Truman was appalled when Eisenhower appeared on the same platform with Joseph McCarthy in Wisconsin, and failed to defend General George Marshall, who McCarthy had recently denounced as a failure in China.[294] Eisenhower was outraged when Truman, who made a whistle-stop tour in support of Stevenson, accused Ike of disregarding "sinister forces ... Anti-Semitism, anti-Catholicism, and anti-foreignism" within the Republican Party.[295]

Though Stevenson's public service and issue-oriented campaign appealed to many liberals, he was unable to rally support among blacks, ethnic whites, and the working class.[296] Eisenhower campaigned against what he denounced as Truman's failures: "Korea, Communism and Corruption."[297] Polls consistently indicated that Eisenhower would win the race, and Nixon deftly handled a potentially dangerous controversy over his finances with his Checkers speech, delivered live on national television. In part due to the Checkers speech, television emerged as an important medium in the race; the number of households with televisions had grown from under 200,000 in 1948 to over 15 million in 1952.[298] On election day, as widely expected, Eisenhower defeated Stevenson by a wide margin. Eisenhower took 55.4 percent of the popular vote and won 442 electoral votes, taking almost every state outside of the South. Though Eisenhower ran ahead of most congressional Republicans, his party nonetheless took control of both the House and Senate, giving the Republican Party unified control of Congress and the presidency for the first time since the 1930 elections.[299]

Historical reputation

 
Truman poses in 1959 at the recreation of the Truman Oval Office at the Truman Library in 1959, with the famous "The Buck Stops Here" sign on his desk.

Truman's ranking in polls of historians and political scientists have never fallen lower than ninth, and he has ranked as high as fifth in a C-SPAN poll in 2009.[300] A 2018 poll of the American Political Science Association’s Presidents and Executive Politics section ranked Truman as the seventh best president,[301] and a 2017 C-SPAN poll of historians ranked Truman as the sixth best president.[302]

When he left office in 1953, the American public saw Truman as one of the most unpopular chief executives in history. His job approval rating of 22% in the Gallup Poll of February 1952 was lower than Richard Nixon's 24% in August 1974, the month that Nixon resigned in the wake of the Watergate scandal.[citation needed] In 1952, journalist Samuel Lubell stated that "after seven years of Truman's hectic, even furious, activity the nation seemed to be about on the same general spot as when he first came to office ... Nowhere in the whole Truman record can one point to a single, decisive break-through ... All his skills and energies—and he was among our hardest-working Presidents—were directed to standing still".[303] During the years of campus unrest in the 1960s and 1970s, revisionist historians on the left attacked his foreign policy as too hostile to Communism, and his domestic policy as too favorable toward business.[304] However, Truman's image in university textbooks was quite favorable in the 1950s,[305] and more established scholars never accepted the critiques of revisionist historians.[306][307]

American public feeling towards Truman grew steadily warmer with the passing years. Truman died in 1972, when the nation was consumed with crises in Vietnam and Watergate, and his death brought a new wave of attention to his political career.[308] During this period, Truman captured the popular imagination, emerging as a kind of political folk hero, a president who was thought to exemplify an integrity and accountability many observers felt was lacking in the Nixon White House. This public reassessment of Truman was aided by the popularity of a book of reminiscences which Truman had told to journalist Merle Miller beginning in 1961, with the agreement that they would not be published until after Truman's death. Scholars who have compared the audio tapes with the published transcripts have concluded that Miller often distorted what Truman said or fabricated statements Truman never said.[309]

The fall of the Soviet Union in 1991 caused Truman advocates to claim vindication for Truman's decisions in the postwar period. According to Truman biographer Robert Dallek, "His contribution to victory in the cold war without a devastating nuclear conflict elevated him to the stature of a great or near-great president."[212] The 1992 publication of David McCullough's favorable biography of Truman further cemented the view of Truman as a highly regarded chief executive.[212] Nevertheless, Truman continued to receive criticism. After a review of information available to Truman about the presence of espionage activities in the U.S. government, Democratic Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan concluded that Truman was "almost willfully obtuse" concerning the danger of American communism.[310] In 2002, historian Alonzo Hamby concluded that "Harry Truman remains a controversial president."[311]

According to historian Daniel R. McCoy in his book on the Truman presidency,

Harry Truman himself gave a strong and far-from-incorrect impression of being a tough, concerned and direct leader. He was occasionally vulgar, often partisan, and usually nationalistic ... On his own terms, Truman can be seen as having prevented the coming of a third world war and having preserved from Communist oppression much of what he called the free world. Yet clearly he largely failed to achieve his Wilsonian aim of securing perpetual peace, making the world safe for democracy, and advancing opportunities for individual development internationally.[312]

Biographer Robert Donovan has emphasized Truman's personality:

Vigorous, hard-working, simple, he had grown up close to the soil of the Midwest and understood the struggles of the people on the farms and in the small towns....After 10 years in the Senate, he had risen above the Pendergast organization. Still, he had come from a world of two-bit politicians, and its aura was one that he never was able to shed entirely. And he did retain certain characteristics one often sees in machine-bred politicians: intense partisanship, stubborn loyalty, a certain insensitivity about the transgressions of political associates, and a disinclination for the companionship of intellectuals and artists.[313]

Notes

  1. ^ For the historiography see Brazinsky, Gregg (2012). "The Birth of a Rivalry: Sino‐American Relations during the Truman Administration". In Margolies, Daniel S. (ed.). A Companion to Harry S. Truman. pp. 484–497.
  2. ^ The Twenty-second Amendment limited presidents to two full terms. For the purposes of the amendment, a partial term of more than two years would count towards the term limit. The amendment was ratified by the requisite 36 states on February 27, 1951.[196][197]
  3. ^ A later statute, the Labor Management Reporting and Disclosure Act, passed in 1959, tightened these restrictions on secondary boycotts still further.
  4. ^ For a narrative of all the scandals, see Donovan 1983, pp. 114–118, 332–339, 372–381.

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  152. ^ Dallek 2008, pp. 118–119.
  153. ^ Larry Blomstedt, Truman, Congress, and Korea: The Politics of America's First Undeclared War, University Press of Kentucky, 2015.
  154. ^ Paul J. Lavrakas (2008). Encyclopedia of Survey Research Methods. SAGE. p. 30. ISBN 9781506317885.
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  158. ^ Dallek 2008, p. 137.
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  164. ^ All figures, except for debt percentage, are presented in billions of dollars. The receipt, outlay, deficit, GDP, and debt figures are calculated for the fiscal year, which ended on June 30 prior to 1976.
  165. ^ Represents the national debt held by the public as a percentage of GDP
  166. ^ "Historical Tables". White House. Office of Management and Budget. Table 1.1. Retrieved March 4, 2021.
  167. ^ "Historical Tables". White House. Office of Management and Budget. Table 1.2. Retrieved March 4, 2021.
  168. ^ "Historical Tables". White House. Office of Management and Budget. Table 7.1. Retrieved March 4, 2021.
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  171. ^ Patterson 1996, pp. 141–144.
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  173. ^ J. Bradford De Long, "Keynesianism, Pennsylvania Avenue Style: Some Economic Consequences of the Employment Act of 1946," Journal of Economic Perspectives, (1996) 10#3 pp 41–53 online
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  176. ^ a b McCoy 1984, pp. 55–57.
  177. ^ McCoy 1984, pp. 65–66.
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  179. ^ McCoy 1984, p. 58.
  180. ^ View a contemporary newsreel report
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  182. ^ McCullough 1992, pp. 501–6.
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  190. ^ Michael J. Bennett, When Dreams Came True: The G.I. Bill and the Making of Modern America (1996)
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  192. ^ Barbara Mae Kelly, Expanding the American Dream: Building and Rebuilding Levittown (SUNY Press, 1993).
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  215. ^ Truman 1973, p. 429.
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  218. ^ Kirkendall 1990, pp. 10–11.
  219. ^ Morris J. MacGregor, Jr., Integration of the Armed Forces 1940-1965 (Center of Military History, 1981) ch 12 .
  220. ^ Jon Taylor, Freedom to Serve: Truman, Civil Rights, and Executive Order 9981 (Routledge, 2013).
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  234. ^ Edmund F. Wehrle, "'For a Healthy America:' Labor's Struggle for National Health Insurance, 1943–1949." Labor's Heritage (1993) 5#2 pp 28–45 online
  235. ^ William Howard Moore, The Kefauver Committee and the politics of crime, 1950-1952 (U of Missouri Press, 1974).
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  240. ^ Harvey A. Levenstein, Communism, Anti-communism, and the CIO (Praeger, 1981).
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  248. ^ Patterson 1996, pp. 182–183.
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  250. ^ Kirkendall 1990, pp. 72–74, 216, 220–21, 305–306, 384–385.
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  256. ^ Weinstein 1997, pp. 450–53.
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  260. ^ McCoy 1984, pp. 234–235.
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  306. ^ Richard S. Kirkendall, The Truman period as a research field (2nd ed. 1974) p 14.
  307. ^ Robert H. Ferrell, Harry S. Truman and the Cold War Revisionists (U of Missouri Press, 2006).
  308. ^ "HISTORICAL NOTES: Giving Them More Hell". Time. Vol. 102, no. 23. December 3, 1973.
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  312. ^ McCoy 1984, pp. 318–19.
  313. ^ Robert J. Donovan, Conflict and Crisis: The Presidency of Harry S. Truman, 1945–1948 (1977) p. xv.

Works cited

Further reading

Truman's roles, politics

  • Baime, Albert J. Dewey Defeats Truman: The 1948 Election and the Battle for America's Soul (Houghton Mifflin, 2020).
  • Berman, William C. The politics of civil rights in the Truman administration (Ohio State UP, 1970). dissertation version online
  • Bernstein, Barton J. "The Truman administration and the steel strike of 1946." Journal of American History 52.4 (1966): 791–803. online
  • Bernstein, Barton J. "The Truman administration and its reconversion wage policy." Labor History 6.3 (1965): 214–231.
  • Brembeck, Cole S. (1952). "Harry Truman at the whistle stops". Quarterly Journal of Speech. 38: 42–50. doi:10.1080/00335635209381730.
  • Brinkley, Douglas. Silent Spring Revolution: John F. Kennedy, Rachel Carson, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, and the Great Environmental Awakening (2022) excerpt. chapter 2 on Truman
  • Casey, Steven (2012). "Rhetoric and Style of Truman's Leadership". A Companion to Harry S. Truman. pp. 26–46. doi:10.1002/9781118300718.ch2. ISBN 9781118300718.
  • Ciment, James, ed. Postwar America: An Encyclopedia Of Social, Political, Cultural, And Economic History (4 vol 2006); 550 articles in 2000 pp
  • Cochran, Bert. Harry Truman and the crisis presidency (1973); 432pp.
  • Congressional Quarterly. Congress and the Nation 1945–1964 (1965), Highly detailed and factual coverage of Congress and presidential politics; 1784 pages. online
  • Daniels, Jonathan (1998). The Man of Independence. University of Missouri Press. ISBN 0-8262-1190-9.
  • Daniels. Roger, ed. Immigration and the Legacy of Harry S. Truman (2010).
  • Daynes, Byron W. and Glen Sussman, White House Politics and the Environment: Franklin D. Roosevelt to George W. Bush (2010) pp 36–45.
  • Donaldson, Gary A. Truman Defeats Dewey (University Press of Kentucky, 2014).
  • Donovan, Robert J. Conflict and crisis: The presidency of Harry S. Truman, 1945–1948. (1977). Tumultuous Years: The Presidency of Harry S Truman, 1949–1953 (vol 2 1982); journalistic
  • Ferrell, Robert Hugh (1994). Harry S. Truman: A Life. University of Missouri Press. ISBN 978-0-8262-1050-0.
  • Freeland, Richard. The Truman Doctrine and the Rise of McCarthyism (1971).
  • Gardner, Michael R. Harry Truman and civil rights (SIU Press, 2002).
  • Goulden, Joseph C. The Best Years: 1945–1950 (1976), popular social history
  • Graff, Henry F. ed. The Presidents: A Reference History (2nd ed. 1997), pp 443–58.
  • Gronlund, Mimi Clark. "A Controversial Appointment." Supreme Court Justice Tom C. Clark (University of Texas Press, 2021) pp. 137-146.
  • Hah, Chong-do, and Robert M. Lindquist. "The 1952 steel seizure revisited: A systematic study in presidential decision making." Administrative Science Quarterly (1975): 587-605 online.
  • Hamby, Alonzo L. (1991). "An American Democrat: A Reevaluation of the Personality of Harry S. Truman". Political Science Quarterly. 106 (1): 33–55. doi:10.2307/2152173. JSTOR 2152173.
  • Hartmann, Susan M. Truman and the 80th Congress (1971) online
  • James, Rawn. The Truman Court: Law and the Limits of Loyalty (University of Missouri Press, 2021).
  • Karabell, Zachary. The Last Campaign: How Harry Truman Won the 1948 Election (Vintage, 2001).
  • Lacey, Michael J. ed. The Truman Presidency (Cambridge University Press, 1991) 13 essays by specialists.
  • Lee, R. Alton. "The Truman-80th Congress Struggle over Tax Policy." Historian 33.1 (1970): 68–82. online
  • Lee, R. Alton. Truman and Taft-Hartley: A Question of Mandate (1966)
  • McCoy, Donald R. and Richard T. Ruetten. Quest and Response: Minority Rights and the Truman Administration (U Press of Kansas, 1973).
  • Marcus, Maeva. Truman and the Steel Seizure Case (Duke UP, 1994). link
  • Matusow, Allen J. Farm policies and politics in the Truman years (Harvard UP, 1967).
  • Mitchell, Franklin D. Harry S. Truman and the news media: contentious relations, belated respect (U of Missouri Press, 1998).
  • Oshinsky, David M. (2004). "Harry Truman". In Brinkley, Alan; Dyer, Davis (eds.). The American Presidency. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0-618-38273-6.
  • Poen, Monte M. Harry S. Truman versus the medical lobby: The genesis of Medicare (U of Missouri Press, 1996).
  • Pusey, Allen. "Truman Seizes Steel Mills." American Bar Association Journal 103 (2017): 72+.
  • Richardson, Elmo. Dams, Parks and Politics: Resource Development and Preservation the Truman-Eisenhower Era (1973).
  • Savage, Sean J. Truman and the Democratic Party (1997).
  • Schoenebaum, Eleanora W. ed. Political Profiles: The Truman Years (1978) 715pp; short biographies of 435 players in national politics 1945–1952.
  • Sitkoff, Harvard. "Harry Truman and the election of 1948: The coming of age of civil rights in American politics." Journal of Southern History 37.4 (1971): 597-616 online.
  • Stebbins, Phillip E. "Truman and the Seizure of Steel: A Failure in Communication." The Historian 34.1 (1971): 1-21 online.
  • Swanson, Charles E., James Jenkins, and Robert L. Jones. "President Truman Speaks: A Study of Ideas vs. Media." Journalism Quarterly 27.3 (1950): 251–262.

Foreign and military policy

  • Acheson, Dean. Present at the Creation: My Years in the State Department (1969), a major primary source. online
  • Anderson Terry H. The United States, Great Britain, and the Cold War, 1944–1947. (1981)
  • Beisner, Robert L. Dean Acheson: A Life in the Cold War (2015) online, a major scholarly study
  • Blomstedt, Larry (2015). Truman, Congress, and Korea: The Politics of America's First Undeclared War. U Press of Kentucky. pp. 33–38. ISBN 9780813166124.
  • Casey, Steven (2005). "Selling NSC-68: The Truman Administration, Public Opinion, and the Politics of Mobilization, 1950-51" (PDF). Diplomatic History. 29 (4): 655–690. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7709.2005.00510.x.
  • Congressional Quarterly. Congress and the Nation 1945–1964 (1965), Highly detailed and factual coverage of foreign and defense policy; pp 89–334; online
  • Dobbs, Michael. Six Months in 1945: FDR, Stalin, Churchill, and Truman—from World War to Cold War (2012) popular narrative
  • Dudziak, Mary L. (2011). Cold War Civil Rights. doi:10.1515/9781400839889. ISBN 9781400839889.
  • Falk, Stanley L. (1964). "The National Security Council Under Truman, Eisenhower, and Kennedy". Political Science Quarterly. 79 (3): 403–434. doi:10.2307/2145907. JSTOR 2145907.
  • Freda, Isabelle. "Screening Power: Harry Truman and the Nuclear Leviathan" Comparative Cinema 7.12 (2019): 38–52. Hollywood's take.
  • Gaddis, John Lewis. Strategies of Containment: A Critical Appraisal of Postwar American National Security Policy (1982, 2nd ed 2005) online
  • Gaddis, John Lewis. George F. Kennan: An American Life (2011). online
  • Haas, Lawrence J. (2016). Harry and Arthur: Truman, Vandenberg, and the Partnership That Created the Free World. doi:10.2307/j.ctt1d4v19t. ISBN 9781612348346.
  • Herken, Gregg. The winning weapon: The atomic bomb in the cold war, 1945–1950 (1980) online.
  • Holsti, Ole (1996). Public Opinion and American Foreign Policy. U of Michigan Press.
  • House, Jonathan. A Military History of the Cold War, 1944–1962 (2012) excerpt and text search
  • Isaacson Walter, and Evan Thomas. The Wise Men. Six Friends and the World They Made. Acheson, Bohlen, Harriman, Kennan, Lovett, McCloy. (1986) excerpt.
  • Larson, Deborah Welch. "Truman as World Leader." in Origins of Containment (Princeton University Press, 2021) pp. 126–149.
  • Judis, John B. (2014). Genesis: Truman, American Jews, and the Origins of the Arab/Israeli Conflict. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux. ISBN 978-0-374-16109-5.
  • LaFeber, Walter (2002). America, Russia, and the Cold War, 1945–2002. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-284903-7.
  • Leffler, Melvyn P. For the Soul of Mankind: The United States, the Soviet Union, and the Cold War (2007)
  • McFarland, Keith D. and Roll, David L. Louis Johnson and the Arming of America: The Roosevelt And Truman Years (2005)
  • McGhee, George. The US-Turkish-NATO Middle East Connection: How the Truman Doctrine and Turkey's NATO Entry Contained the Soviets (Springer, 2016).
  • McMahon Robert J. Dean Acheson and the Creation of an American World Order (2008)
  • Maddox, Robert James. From War to Cold War: The Education of Harry S. Truman (Routledge, 2019).
  • May, Ernest R. (2002). "1947-48: When Marshall Kept the U.S. Out of War in China" (PDF). The Journal of Military History. 66 (4): 1001–1010. doi:10.2307/3093261. JSTOR 3093261.
  • Matray, James I., and Donald W. Boose Jr, eds. The Ashgate research companion to the Korean War (2014) excerpt.
  • Merrill, Dennis (2006). "The Truman Doctrine: Containing Communism and Modernity". Presidential Studies Quarterly. 36: 27–37. doi:10.1111/j.1741-5705.2006.00284.x.
  • Miscamble, Wilson D. The most controversial decision: Truman, the atomic bombs, and the defeat of Japan (Cambridge UP, 2011).
  • Miscamble, Wilson D. From Roosevelt to Truman: Potsdam, Hiroshima, and the Cold War (2007)
  • Neuse, Steven. David E. Lilienthal: The Journey of an American Liberal. (University of Tennessee Press, 1996). on Atomic Energy Commission
  • Offner, Arnold A. (1999). ""Another Such Victory": President Truman, American Foreign Policy, and the Cold War". Diplomatic History. 23 (2): 127–155. doi:10.1111/1467-7709.00159.
    • Offner, Arnold A. Another Such Victory: President Truman and the Cold War, 1945–1953 (Stanford University Press, 2002). online
  • Paterson, Thomas G. "Presidential Foreign Policy, Public Opinion, and Congress: The Truman Years." Diplomatic History 3.1 (1979): 1–18.
  • Paterson, Thomas G. Meeting the communist threat: Truman to Reagan (Oxford UP, 1989).
  • Pierpaoli, Paul G. Truman and Korea: The Political Culture of the Early Cold War (U of Missouri Press, 1999).
  • Pogue, Forrest C. George C. Marshall. vol 4. Statesman: 1945–1959 (1987). online
  • Sandler, Stanley (2014). Sandler, Stanley (ed.). The Korean War. doi:10.4324/9781315056265. ISBN 9781315056265.
  • Schwartzberg, Steven. Democracy and US Policy in Latin America during the Truman Years (UP of Florida, 2003).
  • Shaffer, Robert. "The Christian Century: Protestants Protesting Harry Truman's Cold War." Peace & Change 42.1 (2017): 93–127.
  • Walton, Richard J. Henry Wallace, Harry Truman, and the cold war (Viking, 1976).
  • Warren, Aiden, and Joseph M. Siracusa. "The Transition from Roosevelt to Truman." in US Presidents and Cold War Nuclear Diplomacy (Palgrave Macmillan Cham, 2021) pp. 19-34.,
  • Watson, Robert P. Michael J. Devine, Robert J. Wolz, eds. The National Security Legacy of Harry S. Truman (2005)
  • Weissman, Alexander D. "Pivotal politics—The Marshall Plan: A turning point in foreign aid and the struggle for democracy." History Teacher 47.1 (2013): 111–129. online, for middle and high schools

Historiography

  • Catsam, Derek (2008). "The Civil Rights Movement and the Presidency in the Hot Years of the Cold War: A Historical and Historiographical Assessment". History Compass. 6: 314–344. doi:10.1111/j.1478-0542.2007.00486.x. S2CID 145006108.
  • Corke, Sarah-Jane (2001). "History, historians and the naming of foreign policy: A postmodern reflection on American strategic thinking during the Truman administration". Intelligence and National Security. 16 (3): 146–165. doi:10.1080/02684520412331306250. S2CID 154408227.
  • Dalfiume, Richard M. "Truman and the Historians: A Review Article." Wisconsin Magazine of History 50#3 (1967), pp. 261–264 online
  • Ferrell, Robert H. Harry S. Truman and the Cold War Revisionists (U of Missouri Press, 2006).
  • Gaddis, John Lewis (1983). "The Emerging Post-Revisionist Synthesis on the Origins of the Cold War". Diplomatic History. 7 (3): 171–190. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7709.1983.tb00389.x. S2CID 154907275.
  • Griffith, Robert. "Truman and the Historians: The Reconstruction of Postwar American History." Wisconsin Magazine of History (1975) 59#1 : 20–47. in JSTOR
  • Hogan, Michael J. (1996). Hogan, Michael J (ed.). America in the World. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511609473. ISBN 9780521498074.
  • Kirkendall, Richard S. The Truman period as a research field: A Reappraisal, 1972 (2nd ed. 1974; 1st ed. 1967); For major essays plus commentaries by experts, 246pp.
  • Kort, Michael. "The Historiography of Hiroshima: The Rise and Fall of Revisionism." New England Journal of History 64#1 (2007): 31–48.
  • Margolies, Daniel S, ed. (2012). A Companion to Harry S. Truman. doi:10.1002/9781118300718. ISBN 9781118300718.
  • Orren, Karen, and Stephen Skowronek. "Regimes and regime building in American government: A review of literature on the 1940s." Political Science Quarterly 113.4 (1998): 689-702. online
  • Savage, Sean J. (2012). "Truman in Historical, Popular, and Political Memory". A Companion to Harry S. Truman. pp. 7–25. doi:10.1002/9781118300718.ch1. ISBN 9781118300718.
  • Smith, Geoffrey S. (1976). ""Harry, We Hardly Know You": Revisionism, Politics and Diplomacy, 1945–1954: A Review Essay". American Political Science Review. 70 (2): 560–582. doi:10.2307/1959657. JSTOR 1959657. S2CID 144330938.
  • Walker, j. Samuel (2005). "Recent Literature on Truman's Atomic Bomb Decision: A Search for Middle Ground". Diplomatic History. 29 (2): 311–334. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7709.2005.00476.x. S2CID 154708989.
  • Williams, Robert J. (1979). "Harry S. Truman and the American Presidency". Journal of American Studies. 13 (3): 393–408. doi:10.1017/S0021875800007428. S2CID 144817103.

Primary sources

  • Acheson, Dean. Present at the creation: My years in the State Department (1987). online
  • Bernstein, Barton J. and Allen J. Matusow, eds. The Truman administration: A Documentary History (1966); 518 pp., online
  • Clark, Clifford, and Holbrooke Richard. Counsel to the President (1991).
  • Gallup, George H., ed. The Gallup Poll-Public Opinion-Volume One (1935–1948); (1972); The Gallup Poll-Public Opinion-Volume Two (1949–1958) (1972)
  • Giglio, James N. (2001). Truman in cartoon and caricature. Kirksville: Truman State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8138-1806-1.
  • Hamby, Alonzo L., ed. Harry S. Truman and the Fair Deal (1974); 223pp; short excerpts from primary sources and from experts.
  • Martin, Joseph William (1960). My First Fifty Years in Politics as Told to Robert J. Donovan. New York: McGraw-Hill.
  • Leahy, William D. I was There: The Personal Story of the Chief of Staff to Presidents Roosevelt and Truman, Based on His Notes and Diaries Made at the Time (1950).
  • Merrill, Dennis, ed. Documentary history of the Truman presidency (University Publications of America, 2001).
  • Miller, Merle. Plain Speaking: An Oral Biography of Harry S. Truman (1974). WARNING: Scholars who have compared the audio tapes with the published transcripts have concluded the Miller often distorted what Truman said or fabricated statements Truman never made. See Robert H. Ferrell, & Francis H. Heller, (May–June 1995). "Plain Faking?". American Heritage Vol. 46, no. 3. pp. 21–33.
  • Roosevelt, Eleanor. ed. Eleanor and Harry: The Correspondence of Eleanor Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman (Citadel Press, 2004)
  • Truman, Harry S. Public papers of the presidents of the United States (8 vol. Federal Register Division, National Archives and Records Service, General Services Administration, 1946–53).
  • Truman, Harry S. (1980). Ferrell, Robert H. (ed.). Off the Record: The Private Papers of Harry S. Truman. Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-8262-1119-4.
  • Truman, Harry S. (1955). Memoirs: Year of Decisions. Vol. 1. Garden City, NY: Doubleday. online
  •  ———  (1956). Memoirs: Years of Trial and Hope. Vol. 2. Garden City, NY: Doubleday. online v 2
  • Lyman Van Slyke, ed. The China White Paper: August 1949 (1967: 2 vol. Stanford U.P.); 1124pp; copy of official U.S. Department of State. China White Paper: 1949 vol 1 online at Google; online vol 1 pdf; vol 2 is not online; see library holdings via World Cat; excerpt are in Barton J. Bernstein, and Allen J. Matusow, eds. The Truman administration: A Documentary History (1966) pp 299–355.
  • Vandenberg, Arthur Hendrick. The Private Papers of Senator Vandenberg (1952), ed by Joe Alex Morris.
  • The Documentary History of the Truman Presidency, edited by Dennis Merrill (35 vol. University Publications of America, 1996) table of contents

External links

  • Fussell, Paul (August 1981). "Thank God for the Atom Bomb" (PDF). The New Republic – via www.uio.no.
  • Harry S. Truman Library & Museum
  • Harry S. Truman: A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress
  • Essays on Harry S. Truman, each member of his cabinet and First Lady from the Miller Center of Public Affairs
  • Newsreel May 23, 1946: Rail strike paralyzes the nation
  • Newsreel May 29, 1946: End of coal strike

presidency, harry, truman, chronological, guide, timeline, harry, truman, presidency, harry, truman, tenure, 33rd, president, united, states, began, april, 1945, upon, death, franklin, roosevelt, ended, january, 1953, been, vice, president, only, days, democra. For a chronological guide see Timeline of the Harry S Truman presidency Harry S Truman s tenure as the 33rd president of the United States began on April 12 1945 upon the death of Franklin D Roosevelt and ended on January 20 1953 He had been vice president for only 82 days A Democrat from Missouri he ran for and won a full four year term in the 1948 election Although exempted from the newly ratified Twenty second Amendment Truman did not run again in the 1952 election because of his low popularity He was succeeded by Republican Dwight D Eisenhower in 1953 Presidency of Harry S Truman April 12 1945 January 20 1953CabinetSee listPartyDemocraticElection1948SeatWhite House Franklin D RooseveltDwight D Eisenhower Seal of the President 1945 1959 Library websiteTruman s presidency was a turning point in foreign affairs as the United States engaged in an internationalist foreign policy and renounced isolationism During his first year in office Truman approved the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and subsequently accepted the surrender of Japan which marked the end of World War II In the aftermath of World War II he helped establish the United Nations and other post war institutions Relations with the Soviet Union declined after 1945 and by 1947 the two countries had entered a long period of tension and war preparation known as the Cold War during which a hot fighting war with Moscow was avoided Truman broke with Roosevelt s Vice President Henry A Wallace who called for friendship with Moscow Wallace was the third party presidential candidate of the far left in 1948 In 1947 Truman promulgated the Truman Doctrine which called for the United States to prevent the spread of Communism through foreign aid to Greece and Turkey In 1948 the Republican controlled Congress approved the Marshall Plan a massive financial aid package designed to rebuild Western Europe In 1949 the Truman administration designed and presided over the creation of NATO a military alliance of Western countries designed to prevent the further westward expansion of Soviet power Truman proposed an ambitious domestic liberal agenda known as the Fair Deal However nearly all his initiatives were blocked by the conservative coalition of Republicans and conservative Southern Democrats Republicans took control of Congress in the 1946 elections after the strike wave of 1945 46 Truman suffered another major defeat by the conservative coalition when the 80th Congress passed the Taft Hartley Act into law over his veto It reversed some of the pro labor union legislation that was central to the New Deal When Robert A Taft the conservative Republican senator unexpectedly supported the Housing Act of 1949 Truman achieved one new liberal program Truman took a strong stance on civil rights ordering equal rights in the military to the disgust of the white politicians in the Deep South They supported a Dixiecrat third party candidate Strom Thurmond in 1948 Truman later pushed for the integration of the military in the 1950s During his presidency fears of Soviet espionage led to a Red Scare Truman denounced those who made unfounded accusations of Soviet sympathies but also purged left wing federal employees who refused to disavow Communism When Communist North Korea invaded South Korea in 1950 Truman sent U S troops to prevent the fall of South Korea After initial successes however the war settled into a stalemate that lasted throughout the final years of Truman s presidency Truman left office as one of the most unpopular presidents of the twentieth century mainly due to the Korean War and his then controversial decision to dismiss General Douglas MacArthur resulting in a huge loss of support In the 1952 election Eisenhower successfully campaigned against what he denounced as Truman s failures Korea Communism and Corruption Nonetheless Truman retained a strong reputation among scholars and his public reputation eventually recovered in the 1960s In polls of historians and political scientists Truman is generally ranked as one of the ten greatest presidents Contents 1 Accession 2 Administration 2 1 Vice presidency 3 Judicial appointments 4 End of World War II 5 Foreign affairs 5 1 Postwar international order 5 1 1 United Nations 5 1 2 Trade and low tariffs 5 1 3 European refugees 5 1 4 Atomic energy and nuclear weapons 5 2 Beginning of the Cold War 1945 1949 5 2 1 Escalating tensions 1945 1946 5 2 2 Truman Doctrine 5 2 3 Military reorganization and budgets 5 2 4 Marshall Plan 5 2 5 Berlin airlift 5 2 6 NATO 5 3 Latin America and Argentina 5 4 Asia 5 4 1 Recognition of Israel 5 4 2 China 5 4 3 Japan 5 4 4 Southeast Asia 5 5 Korean War 5 5 1 Outbreak of the war 5 5 2 Stalemate and dismissal of MacArthur 5 6 International trips 6 Domestic affairs 6 1 Reconversion and labor strife 6 1 1 Reconversion 6 1 2 Labor unrest 6 2 G I Bill 6 3 80th Congress and the Taft Hartley Act 6 4 Fair Deal 6 4 1 Civil rights 6 4 2 Health insurance 6 5 Crime and corruption 6 6 Domestic responses to the Cold War 6 6 1 Anticommunist liberalism 6 6 2 Soviet espionage and McCarthyism 6 7 Immigration 6 8 Failed seizure of steel mills 6 9 Territories and dependencies 7 Elections 7 1 1946 mid term election 7 2 1948 election 7 3 1950 mid term election 7 4 1952 election 8 Historical reputation 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Works cited 11 Further reading 11 1 Truman s roles politics 11 2 Foreign and military policy 11 3 Historiography 11 4 Primary sources 12 External linksAccession EditSee also Presidency of Franklin D Roosevelt third and fourth terms and First inauguration of Harry S Truman While serving as a senator from Missouri Truman rose to national prominence as the leader of the Truman Committee which investigated wasteful and inefficient practices in wartime production during World War II 1 2 As the war continued President Franklin D Roosevelt sought re election in the 1944 presidential election Roosevelt personally favored either incumbent Vice President Henry A Wallace or James F Byrnes as his running mate in 1944 However Wallace was unpopular among conservatives in the Democratic Party Byrnes an ex Catholic was opposed by many liberals and Catholics At the behest of party leaders Roosevelt agreed to run with Truman who was acceptable to all factions of the party and Truman was nominated for vice president at the 1944 Democratic National Convention 3 Democrats retained control of Congress and the presidency in the 1944 elections and Truman took office as vice president in January 1945 He had no major role in the administration and was not informed of key developments such as the atomic bomb On April 12 1945 Truman was urgently summoned to the White House where he was met by Eleanor Roosevelt who informed him that the President was dead Shocked Truman asked Mrs Roosevelt Is there anything I can do for you to which she replied Is there anything we can do for you For you are the one in trouble now 4 The day after assuming office Truman spoke to reporters Boys if you ever pray pray for me now I don t know if you fellas ever had a load of hay fall on you but when they told me what happened yesterday I felt like the moon the stars and all the planets had fallen on me 5 Bipartisan favorable opinion gave the new president a honeymoon 6 Administration EditTruman delegated a great deal of authority to his cabinet officials only insisting that he give the final formal approval to all decisions After getting rid of the Roosevelt holdovers the cabinet members were mostly old confidants The White House was badly understaffed with no more than a dozen aides they could barely keep up with the heavy work flow of a greatly expanded executive department Truman acted as his own chief of staff as well as his own liaison with Congress a body he already knew very well Less important matters he delegated to his Special Counsels Samuel Rosenman in 1945 46 Clark Clifford in 1946 to 1950 and Charles S Murphy in 1950 to 1953 He was not well prepared to deal with the press and never achieved the jovial familiarity of FDR Filled with latent anger about all the setbacks in his career he bitterly mistrusted the journalists seeing them as enemies laying in wait for his next careless miscue Truman was very hard worker often to the point of exhaustion which left him testy easily annoyed and on the verge of appearing unpresidential or petty In terms of major issues he discussed them in depth with cabinet and other advisors such as the atom bomb the Truman Plan the Korean war or the dismissal of General MacArthur He mastered the details of the federal budget as well as anyone Truman s myopia made it hard to read a typescript and he was poor at prepared addresses However his visible anger made him an effective stump speaker denouncing his enemies as his supporters hollered back at him Give Em Hell Harry 7 8 Truman s Cabinet 1949 The Truman cabinetOfficeNameTermPresidentHarry S Truman1945 1953Vice Presidentnone1945 1949Alben W Barkley1949 1953Secretary of StateEdward Stettinius Jr 1945James F Byrnes1945 1947George C Marshall1947 1949Dean Acheson1949 1953Secretary of the TreasuryHenry Morgenthau Jr 1945Fred M Vinson1945 1946John Wesley Snyder1946 1953Secretary of WarHenry L Stimson1945Robert P Patterson1945 1947Kenneth Claiborne Royall1947Secretary of DefenseJames Forrestal1947 1949Louis A Johnson1949 1950George C Marshall1950 1951Robert A Lovett1951 1953Attorney GeneralFrancis Biddle1945Tom C Clark1945 1949J Howard McGrath1949 1952James P McGranery1952 1953Postmaster GeneralFrank C Walker1945Robert E Hannegan1945 1947Jesse M Donaldson1947 1953Secretary of the NavyJames Forrestal1945 1947Secretary of the InteriorHarold L Ickes1945 1946Julius Albert Krug1946 1949Oscar L Chapman1949 1953Secretary of AgricultureClaude R Wickard1945Clinton Anderson1945 1948Charles F Brannan1948 1953Secretary of CommerceHenry A Wallace1945 1946W Averell Harriman1946 1948Charles W Sawyer1948 1953Secretary of LaborFrances Perkins1945Lewis B Schwellenbach1945 1948Maurice J Tobin1948 1953At first Truman asked all the members of Roosevelt s cabinet to remain in place for the time being but by the end of 1946 only one Roosevelt appointee Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal remained 9 Fred M Vinson succeeded Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau Jr in July 1945 Truman appointed Vinson to the Supreme Court in 1946 and John Wesley Snyder was named as the Treasury Secretary 10 Truman quickly replaced Secretary of State Edward Stettinius Jr with James F Byrnes an old friend from Senate days However Byrnes soon lost Truman s trust with his conciliatory policy towards Moscow in late 1945 11 and he was replaced by former General George Marshall in January 1947 Undersecretary of State Dean Acheson was the main force in foreign affairs along with a group of advisers known as the Wise Men Marshall emerged as the face of Truman s foreign policy 12 In 1947 Forrestal became the first Secretary of Defense overseeing all branches of the United States Armed Forces 13 A mental breakdown sent him into retirement in 1949 and he was replaced successively by Louis A Johnson Marshall and finally Robert A Lovett 14 Acheson was Secretary of State 1949 1953 Truman often appointed longtime personal friends sometimes to positions well beyond their competence Such friends included Vinson Snyder and military aide Harry H Vaughan 9 15 Outside of the cabinet Clark Clifford and John R Steelman were staffers who handled lesser matters while Truman acted as his own chief off staff on big issues 16 Vice presidency Edit The office of vice president remained vacant during Truman s first 3 years 253 days partial term as the Constitution then had no provision for filling a vacancy prior to the 1967 ratification of the Twenty fifth Amendment Until the passage of the Presidential Succession Act of 1947 the Secretary of State was next in the presidential line of succession After the passage of the act in July 1947 the Speaker of the House became the next in line During different points of Truman s first term Secretary of State Stettinius Secretary of State Byrnes Secretary of State Marshall Speaker Joseph Martin and Speaker Sam Rayburn would have succeeded to the presidency if Truman left office Alben Barkley served as Truman s running mate in the 1948 election and became vice president during Truman s second term Truman included him in Cabinet deliberations 17 Judicial appointments EditMain articles Harry S Truman Supreme Court candidates and List of federal judges appointed by Harry S Truman Truman made four appointments to the United States Supreme Court 18 After the retirement of Owen Roberts in 1945 Truman appointed Republican Senator Harold Hitz Burton of Ohio to the Supreme Court Roberts was the lone remaining justice on the Supreme Court who had not been appointed or elevated to the position of chief justice by Roosevelt and Truman believed it was important to nominate a Republican to succeed Roberts Chief Justice Harlan F Stone died in 1946 and Truman appointed Secretary of the Treasury Fred M Vinson as Stone s successor Two vacancies arose in 1949 due to deaths of Frank Murphy and Wiley Blount Rutledge Truman appointed Attorney General Tom C Clark to succeed Murphy and federal appellate judge Sherman Minton to succeed Rutledge Vinson served for just seven years before his death in 1953 while Minton resigned from the Supreme Court in 1956 Burton served until 1958 often joining the conservative bloc led by Felix Frankfurter Clark served until 1967 emerging as an important swing vote on the Vinson Court and the Warren Court 19 In addition to his Supreme Court appointments Truman also appointed 27 judges to the courts of appeals and 101 judges to federal district courts End of World War II EditFurther information Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki By April 1945 the Allied Powers led by the United States Great Britain and the Soviet Union were close to defeating Germany but Japan remained a formidable adversary in the Pacific War 20 As vice president Truman had been uninformed about major initiatives relating to the war including the top secret Manhattan Project which was about to test the world s first atomic bomb 21 22 Although Truman was told briefly on the afternoon of April 12 that the Allies had a new highly destructive weapon it was not until April 25 that Secretary of War Henry Stimson told him the details of the atomic bomb which was almost ready 23 Germany surrendered on May 8 1945 ending the war in Europe Truman s attention turned to the Pacific where he hoped to end the war as quickly and with as little expense in lives or government funds as possible 20 Joseph Stalin Harry S Truman and Winston Churchill in Potsdam July 1945 With the end of the war drawing near Truman flew to Berlin for the Potsdam Conference to meet with Soviet leader Joseph Stalin and British leader Winston Churchill regarding the post war order Several major decisions were made at the Potsdam Conference Germany would be divided into four occupation zones among the three powers and France Germany s border was to be shifted west to the Oder Neisse line a Soviet backed group was recognized as the legitimate government of Poland and Vietnam was to be partitioned at the 16th parallel 24 The Soviet Union also agreed to launch an invasion of Japanese held Manchuria 25 While at the Potsdam Conference Truman was informed that the Trinity test of the first atomic bomb on July 16 had been successful He hinted to Stalin that the U S was about to use a new kind of weapon against the Japanese Though this was the first time the Soviets had been officially given information about the atomic bomb Stalin was already aware of the bomb project having learned about it through espionage long before Truman did 26 Truman announces Japan s surrender Washington DC August 14 1945 In August 1945 the Japanese government ignored surrender demands as specified in the Potsdam Declaration With the support of most of his aides Truman approved the schedule of the military s plans to drop atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Hiroshima was bombed on August 6 and Nagasaki three days later leaving approximately 135 000 dead another 130 000 would die from radiation sickness and other bomb related illnesses in the following five years 27 After the Soviet Union invaded Manchuria Japan agreed to surrender on August 10 on the sole condition that Emperor Hirohito would not be forced to abdicate after some internal debate the Truman administration accepted these terms of surrender 28 page needed 29 The decision to drop atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki provoked long running debates 30 Supporters of the bombings argue that given the tenacious Japanese defense of the outlying islands the bombings saved hundreds of thousands of lives that would have been lost invading mainland Japan 31 After leaving office Truman told a journalist that the atomic bombing was done to save 125 000 youngsters on the American side and 125 000 on the Japanese side from getting killed and that is what it did It probably also saved a half million youngsters on both sides from being maimed for life 32 Truman was also motivated by a desire to end the war before the Soviet Union could invade Japanese held territories and set up Communist governments 33 Critics such as Allied commander and Truman s successor Dwight D Eisenhower have argued that the use of nuclear weapons was unnecessary given that conventional tactics such as firebombing and blockade might induce Japan s surrender without the need for such weapons 34 35 page needed 36 Foreign affairs EditMain article Foreign policy of the Harry S Truman administration Postwar international order Edit Further information Aftermath of World War II United Nations Edit Further information History of the United Nations In his last years in office Roosevelt had promoted several major initiatives to reshape the postwar politics and economy and avoid the mistakes of 1919 37 20 Chief among those organizations was the United Nations an intergovernmental organization similar to the League of Nations that was designed to help ensure international cooperation When Truman took office delegates were about to meet at the United Nations Conference on International Organization in San Francisco 38 As a Wilsonian internationalist Truman strongly supported the creation of the United Nations and he signed the United Nations Charter at the San Francisco Conference Truman did not repeat Woodrow Wilson s partisan attempt to ratify the Treaty of Versailles in 1919 Instead he cooperated closely with Senator Arthur H Vandenberg and other Republican leaders to ensure ratification Cooperation with Vandenberg a leading figure on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee proved crucial for Truman s foreign policy especially after Republicans gained control of Congress in the 1946 elections 39 40 Construction of the United Nations headquarters in New York City was funded by the Rockefeller Foundation and completed in 1952 Trade and low tariffs Edit See also Tariffs in United States history In 1934 Congress had passed the Reciprocal Tariff Act giving the president an unprecedented amount of authority in setting tariff rates The act allowed for the creation of reciprocal agreements in which the U S and other countries mutually agreed to lower tariff rates 41 Despite significant opposition from those who favored higher tariffs Truman was able to win legislative extension of the reciprocity program and his administration reached numerous bilateral agreements that lowered trade barriers 42 The Truman administration also sought to further lower global tariff rates by engaging in multilateral trade negotiations and the State Department proposed the establishment of the International Trade Organization ITO The ITO was designed to have broad powers to regulate trade among member countries and its charter was approved by the United Nations in 1948 However the ITO s broad powers engendered opposition in Congress and Truman declined to send the charter to the Senate for ratification In the course of creating the ITO the U S and 22 other countries signed the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade GATT a set of principles governing trade policy Under the terms of the agreement each country agreed to reduce overall tariff rates and to treat each co signatory as a most favoured nation meaning that no non signatory country could benefit from more advantageous tariff rates Due to a combination of the Reciprocal Tariff Act the GATT and inflation U S tariff rates fell dramatically between the passage of the Smoot Hawley Tariff Act in 1930 and the end of the Truman administration in 1953 41 European refugees Edit Further information International Refugee Organization World War II left millions of refugees displaced in Europe especially former prisoners and forced laborers in Germany Truman took a leadership role in meeting the challenge 43 He backed the new International Refugee Organization IRO a temporary international organization that helped resettle refugees 44 The United States also funded temporary camps and admitted large numbers of refugees as permanent residents Truman obtained ample funding from Congress for the Displaced Persons Act of 1948 which allowed many of the displaced people of World War II to immigrate into the United States 45 Of the approximately one million people resettled by the IRO more than 400 000 settled in the United States The most contentious issue facing the IRO was the resettlement of European Jews many of whom with the support of Truman were allowed to immigrate to British controlled Mandatory Palestine 44 The administration also helped create a new category of refugee the escapee at the 1951 Geneva Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees The American Escapee Program began in 1952 to help the flight and relocation of political refugees from communism in Eastern Europe The motivation for the refugee and escapee programs was twofold humanitarianism and use as a political weapon against inhumane communism 46 Truman also set up a Presidential Displaced Person Commission which people such as Harry N Rosenfield and Walter Bierlinger served on 47 48 Atomic energy and nuclear weapons Edit See also History of nuclear weapons In March 1946 at an optimistic moment for postwar cooperation the administration released the Acheson Lilienthal Report which proposed that all nations voluntarily abstain from constructing nuclear weapons As part of the proposal the U S would dismantle its nuclear program once all other countries agreed not to develop or otherwise acquire nuclear weapons Fearing that Congress would reject the proposal Truman turned to the well connected Bernard Baruch to represent the U S position to the United Nations The Baruch Plan largely based on the Acheson Lilienthal Report was not adopted due to opposition from Congress and the Soviet Union The Soviet Union would develop its own nuclear arsenal testing a nuclear weapon for the first time in August 1949 49 The United States Atomic Energy Commission directed by David E Lilienthal until 1950 was in charge of designing and building nuclear weapons under a policy of full civilian control The U S had only 9 atomic bombs in 1946 but the stockpile grew to 650 by 1951 50 Lilienthal wanted to give high priority to peaceful uses for nuclear technology especially nuclear power plants but coal was cheap and the power industry was largely uninterested in building nuclear power plants during the Truman administration Construction of the first nuclear plant would not begin until 1954 51 The Soviet Union s successful test of an atomic bomb in 1949 triggered an intense debate over whether the United States should proceed with development of the much more powerful hydrogen bomb 52 There was opposition to the idea from many in the scientific community and from some government officials but Truman believed that the Soviet Union would likely develop the weapon itself and was unwilling to allow the Soviets to have such an advantage 53 Thus in early 1950 Truman made the decision to go forward with the H bomb 52 The first test of thermonuclear weaponry was conducted by the United States in 1952 the Soviet Union would perform its own thermonuclear test in August 1953 54 Beginning of the Cold War 1945 1949 Edit Escalating tensions 1945 1946 Edit Further information Origins of the Cold War Following World War II the United States France Britain and the Soviet Union each took control of occupation zones in Germany and the German capital of Berlin The Second World War dramatically upended the international system as formerly powerful nations like Germany France Japan and even the USSR and Britain had been devastated At the end of the war only the United States and the Soviet Union had the ability to exercise influence and a bipolar international power structure replaced the multipolar structure of the Interwar period 55 On taking office Truman privately viewed the Soviet Union as a police government pure and simple but he was initially reluctant to take a hard line towards it as he hoped to work with Stalin the aftermath of Second World War 56 Truman s suspicions deepened as the Soviets consolidated their control in Eastern Europe throughout 1945 and the February 1946 announcement of the Soviet five year plan further strained relations as it called for the continuing build up of the Soviet military 57 At the December 1945 Moscow Conference Secretary of State Byrnes agreed to recognize the pro Soviet governments in the Balkans while the Soviet leadership accepted U S leadership in the occupation of Japan U S concessions at the conference angered other members of the Truman administration including Truman himself 58 By the beginning of 1946 it had become clear to Truman that Britain and the United States would have little influence in Soviet dominated Eastern Europe 59 Henry Wallace Eleanor Roosevelt and many other prominent New Dealers continued to hope for cooperative relations with the Soviet Union 60 Some liberals like Reinhold Niebuhr distrusted the Soviet Union but believed that the United States should not try to counter Soviet influence in Eastern Europe which the Soviets saw as their strategic security belt 61 Partly because of this sentiment Truman was reluctant to fully break with the Soviet Union in early 1946 60 but he took an increasingly hard line towards the Soviet Union throughout the year 62 He privately approved of Winston Churchill s March 1946 Iron Curtain speech which urged the United States to take the lead of an anti Soviet alliance though he did not publicly endorse it 60 Throughout 1946 tensions arose between the United States and the Soviet Union in places like Iran which the Soviets had partly occupied during World War II Pressure from the U S and the United Nations finally forced the withdrawal of Soviet soldiers 63 Turkey also emerged as a point of contention as the Soviet Union demanded joint control over the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus key straits that controlled movement between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean Sea The U S forcefully opposed this proposed alteration to the 1936 Montreux Convention which had granted Turkey sole control over the straits and Truman dispatched a fleet to the Eastern Mediterranean to show his administration s commitment to the region 64 Moscow and Washington also argued over Germany which had been divided into four occupation zones In the September 1946 Stuttgart speech Secretary of State Byrnes announced that the United States would no longer seek reparations from Germany and would support the establishment of a democratic state The United States France and Britain agreed to combine their occupation zones eventually forming West Germany 65 In East Asia Truman denied the Soviet request to reunify Korea and refused to allow the Soviets or any other country a role in the post war occupation of Japan 66 By September 1946 Truman was convinced that the Soviet Union sought world domination and that cooperation was futile 67 He adopted a policy of containment based on a 1946 cable by diplomat George F Kennan 68 Containment a policy of preventing the further expansion of Soviet influence represented a middle ground position between friendly detente as represented by Wallace and aggressive rollback to regain territory already lost to Communism as would be adopted in 1981 by Ronald Reagan 69 Kennan s doctrine was based on the notion that the Soviet Union was led by an uncompromising totalitarian regime and that the Soviets were primarily responsible for escalating tensions 70 Wallace who had been appointed Secretary of Commerce after the 1944 election resigned from the cabinet in September 1946 due to Truman s hardening stance towards the Soviet Union 71 Truman Doctrine Edit In the first major step in implementing containment Truman extended money to Greece and Turkey to prevent the spread of Soviet aligned governments 72 Prior to 1947 the U S had largely ignored Greece which had an anti communist government because it was under British influence 73 Since 1944 the British had assisted the Greek government against a left wing insurgency but in early 1947 the British informed the United States that they could no longer afford to intervene in Greece At the urging of Acheson who warned that the fall of Greece could lead to the expansion of Soviet influence throughout Europe Truman requested that Congress grant an unprecedented 400 million aid package to Greece and Turkey In a March 1947 speech before a joint session of Congress Truman articulated the Truman Doctrine which called for the United States to support free people who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures Overcoming those who opposed U S involvement in Greek affairs as well those who feared that the aid would weaken post war cooperation Truman won bipartisan approval of the aid package 74 The congressional vote represented a permanent break with the non interventionism that had characterized U S foreign policy prior to World War II 75 The United States supported the government against the communists in the Greek Civil War but did not send any military force The insurgency was defeated in 1949 Stalin and Yugoslavian leader Josip Broz Tito both provided aid to the insurgents but a dispute over the aid led to the start of a split in the Communist bloc 76 American military and economic aid to Turkey also proved effective and Turkey avoided a civil war 77 78 The Truman administration also provided aid to the Italian government in advance of the 1948 general election The aid package combined with a covert CIA operation anti Communist mobilization by the Catholic Church and pressure from prominent Italian Americans helped to ensure a Communist defeat in the election 79 The initiatives of the Truman Doctrine solidified the post war division between the United States and the Soviet Union and the Soviet Union responded by tightening its control over Eastern Europe 80 Countries aligned with the Soviet Union became known as the Eastern Bloc while the U S and its allies became known as the Western Bloc Military reorganization and budgets Edit U S military spending 81 Fiscal Year GNP1945 38 1946 21 1948 5 0 1950 4 6 1952 13 Learning from wartime organizational problems the Truman administration reorganized the military and intelligence establishment to provide for more centralized control and reduce rivalries 13 The National Security Act of 1947 combined and reorganized all military forces by merging the Department of War and the Department of the Navy into the National Military Establishment which was later renamed as the Department of Defense The law also created the U S Air Force the Central Intelligence Agency CIA and the National Security Council NSC The CIA and the NSC were designed to be non military advisory bodies that would increase U S preparation against foreign threats without assuming the domestic functions of the Federal Bureau of Investigation 82 The National Security Act institutionalized the Joint Chiefs of Staff which had been established on a temporary basis during World War II The Joint Chiefs of Staff took charge of all military action and the Secretary of Defense became the chief presidential adviser on military matter In 1952 Truman secretly consolidated and empowered the cryptologic elements of the United States by creating the National Security Agency NSA 83 Truman and Marshall also sought to require one year of military service for all young men but this proposal failed as it never won more than modest support among members of Congress 84 Truman had hoped that the National Security Act would minimize interservice rivalries but each branch retained considerable autonomy and battles over the military budgets and other issues continued 85 In 1949 Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson announced that he would cancel a so called supercarrier which many in the navy saw as an important part of the service s future 86 The cancellation sparked a crisis known as the Revolt of the Admirals when a number of retired and active duty admirals publicly disagreed with the Truman administration s emphasis on less expensive strategic atomic bombs delivered by the air force During congressional hearings public opinion shifted strongly against the navy which ultimately kept control of marine aviation but lost control over strategic bombing Military budgets following the hearings prioritized the development of air force heavy bomber designs and the United States accumulated a combat ready force of over 1 000 long range strategic bombers capable of supporting nuclear mission scenarios 87 Following the end of World War II Truman gave a low priority to defense budgets he was interested in curtailing military expenditures and had priorities he wanted to address with domestic spending 88 From the beginning he assumed that the American monopoly on the atomic bomb was adequate protection against any and all external threats 89 Military spending plunged from 39 percent of GNP in 1945 to only 5 percent in 1948 90 but defense expenditures overall were still eight times higher in constant dollars than they had been before the war 91 The number of military personnel fell from just over 3 million in 1946 to approximately 1 6 million in 1947 although again the number of military personnel was still nearly five times larger than that of U S military in 1939 92 These jumps were considerably larger than had taken place before and after the Spanish American War or before and after World War I indicating that something fundamental had changed regarding American defense posture 91 Paired with the aforementioned decision to go ahead with the H bomb Truman ordered a review of U S military policies as they related to foreign policy planning 52 The National Security Council drafted NSC 68 which called for a major expansion of the U S defense budget increased aid to U S allies and a more aggressive posture in the Cold War Despite increasing Cold War tensions Truman dismissed the document as he was unwilling to commit to higher defense spending 93 The Korean War convinced Truman of the necessity for higher defense spending and such spending would soar between 1949 and 1953 94 Marshall Plan Edit Main article Marshall Plan Marshall Plan expenditures by country The United States had terminated the war time Lend Lease program in August 1945 but it continue a program of loans to Britain Furthermore the U S sent massive shipments of food to Europe in the years immediately following the end of the war 95 With the goal of stemming the spread of Communism and increasing trade between the U S and Europe the Truman administration devised the Marshall Plan which sought to rejuvenate the devastated economies of Western Europe 96 To fund the Marshall Plan Truman asked Congress to approve an unprecedented multi year 25 billion appropriation 97 Congress under the control of conservative Republicans agreed to fund the program for multiple reasons The conservative isolationist wing of the Republican Party led by Senator Kenneth S Wherry argued that the Marshall Plan would be a wasteful operation rat hole Wherry held that it made no sense to oppose communism by supporting the socialist governments in Western Europe and that American goods would reach Russia and increase its war potential Wherry was outmaneuvered by the emerging internationalist wing in the Republican Party led by Senator Arthur H Vandenberg citation needed With support from Republican Senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr Vandenberg admitted there was no certainty that the plan would succeed but said it would halt economic chaos sustain Western civilization and stop further Soviet expansion 98 Both houses of Congress approved of the initial appropriation known as the Foreign Assistance Act by large majorities and Truman signed the act into law in April 1948 99 Congress would eventually allocate 12 4 billion in aid over the four years of the plan 100 In addition to aid the Marshall Plan also focused on efficiency along the lines of American industry and removing tariffs and trade barriers Though the United States allowed each recipient to develop its own plan for the aid it set several rules and guidelines on the use of the funding Governments were required to exclude Communists socialist policies were discouraged and balanced budgets were favored Additionally the United States conditioned aid to the French and British on their acceptance of the reindustrialization of Germany and support for European integration To avoid exacerbating tensions the U S invited the Soviet Union to become a recipient in the program but set terms that Stalin was likely to reject 101 The Soviet Union refused to consider joining the program and vetoed participation by its own satellites The Soviets set up their own program for aid the Molotov Plan and the competing plans resulted in reduced trade between the Eastern bloc and the Western bloc 102 The Marshall Plan helped European economies recover in the late 1940s and early 1950s By 1952 industrial productivity had increased by 35 percent compared to 1938 levels The Marshall Plan also provided critical psychological reassurance to many Europeans restoring optimism to a war torn continent Though European countries did not adopt American economic structures and ideas to the degree hoped for by some Americans they remained firmly rooted in mixed economic systems The European integration process led to the creation of the European Economic Community which eventually formed the basis of the European Union 103 Berlin airlift Edit Further information Berlin Blockade In reaction to Western moves aimed at reindustrializing their German occupation zones Stalin ordered a blockade of the Western held sectors of Berlin which was deep in the Soviet occupation zone Stalin hoped to prevent the creation of a western German state aligned with the U S or failing that to consolidate control over eastern Germany 104 After the blockade began on June 24 1948 the commander of the American occupation zone in Germany General Lucius D Clay proposed sending a large armored column across the Soviet zone to West Berlin with instructions to defend itself if it were stopped or attacked Truman believed this would entail an unacceptable risk of war and instead approved Ernest Bevin s plan to supply the blockaded city by air On June 25 the Allies initiated the Berlin Airlift a campaign that delivered food and other supplies such as coal using military aircraft on a massive scale Nothing like it had ever been attempted before and no single nation had the capability either logistically or materially to accomplish it The airlift worked and ground access was again granted on May 11 1949 The Berlin Airlift was one of Truman s great foreign policy successes and it significantly aided his election campaign in 1948 105 NATO Edit Map of NATO and the Warsaw Pact which was created in 1955 The original NATO members are shaded dark blue Rising tensions with the Soviets along with the Soviet veto of numerous United Nations Resolutions convinced Truman Senator Vandenberg and other American leaders of the necessity of creating a defensive alliance devoted to collective security 106 In 1949 the United States Canada and several European countries signed the North Atlantic Treaty creating a trans Atlantic military alliance and committing the United States to its first permanent alliance since the 1778 Treaty of Alliance with France 107 The treaty establishing NATO was widely popular and easily passed the Senate in 1949 NATO s goals were to contain Soviet expansion in Europe and to send a clear message to communist leaders that the world s democracies were willing and able to build new security structures in support of democratic ideals The treaty also re assured France that the United States would come to its defense paving the way for continuing French cooperation in the re establishment of an independent German state The United States United Kingdom France Italy the Netherlands Belgium Luxembourg Norway Denmark Portugal Iceland and Canada were the original treaty signatories 108 Shortly after the creation of NATO Truman convinced Congress to pass the Mutual Defense Assistance Act which created a military aid program for European allies 109 Cold War tensions heightened following Soviet acquisition of nuclear weapons and the beginning of the Korean War The United States increased its commitment to NATO invited Greece and Turkey to join the alliance and launched a second major foreign aid program with the enactment of the Mutual Security Act Truman permanently stationed 180 000 in Europe and European defense spending grew from 5 percent to 12 percent of gross national product NATO established a unified command structure and Truman appointed General Dwight D Eisenhower as the first Supreme Commander of NATO West Germany which fell under the aegis of NATO would eventually be incorporated into NATO in 1955 110 Latin America and Argentina Edit Further information Latin America United States relations Cold War tensions and competition reached across the globe affecting Europe Asia North America Latin America and Africa The United States had historically focused its foreign policy on upholding the Monroe Doctrine in the Western Hemisphere but new commitments in Europe and Asia diminished Washington s attentions there 111 Partially in reaction to fears of expanding Soviet influence the U S led efforts to create collective security pact in the Western Hemisphere In 1947 the United States and most Latin American nations joined the Rio Pact a defensive military alliance The following year the independent states of the Americas formed the Organization of American States OAS an intergovernmental organization designed to foster regional unity Many Latin American nations seeking favor with the United States cut off relations with the Soviet Union 112 Latin American countries also requested aid and investment similar to the Marshall Plan but Truman believed that most U S foreign aid was best directed to Europe and other areas that could potentially fall under the influence of Communism 113 There was bad blood with Argentina Washington detested dictator Juan Peron who held fascist sympathies tried to remain neutral in the Cold War and continued to harbor Nazi war criminals Washington blocked funds from international agencies and restricted trade and investment opportunities 114 Asia Edit Recognition of Israel Edit President Truman in the Oval Office receiving a Hanukkah Menorah from the Prime Minister of Israel David Ben Gurion center To the right is Abba Eban Ambassador of Israel to the U S See also Israel United States relations Truman had long taken an interest in the history of the Middle East and was sympathetic to Jews who sought a homeland in British controlled Mandatory Palestine In 1943 he had called for a homeland for those Jews who survived the Nazi regime However State Department officials were reluctant to offend the Arabs who were opposed to the establishment of a Jewish state in the region 115 Regarding policy in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East Palestine was secondary to the goal of protecting the Northern Tier of Greece Turkey and Iran from communism 116 In 1947 the United Nations approved the partition of Mandatory Palestine into a Jewish state which would become known as Israel and an Arab state In the months leading up to the British withdrawal from the region the Truman administration debated whether or not to recognize the fledgling state of Israel Overcoming initial objections from Marshall Clark Clifford convinced Truman that non recognition would lead Israel to tilt towards the Soviet Union in the Cold War 117 Truman recognized the State of Israel on May 14 1948 eleven minutes after it declared itself a nation 118 Israel would secure its independence with a victory in the 1948 Arab Israeli War but the Arab Israeli conflict remains unresolved 119 China Edit Further information Marshall Mission China United States relations and Taiwan United States relations In 1945 China descended into a civil war The civil war baffled Washington as both the Nationalists under Chiang Kai shek and the Communists under Mao Zedong had American advocates 120 Truman sent George Marshall to China in early 1946 to broker a compromise featuring a coalition government but Marshall failed He returned to Washington in December 1946 blaming extremist elements on both sides 121 Though the Nationalists held a numerical advantage in the aftermath of the war the Communists gained the upper hand in the civil war after 1947 Corruption poor economic conditions and poor military leadership eroded popular support for the Nationalist government and the Communists won many peasants to their side As the Nationalists collapsed in 1948 the Truman administration faced the question of whether to intervene on the side of the Nationalists or seek good relations with Mao Chiang s strong support among sections of the American public along with desire to assure other allies that the U S was committed to containment convinced Truman to increase economic and military aid to the Nationalists However Truman held out little hope for a Nationalist victory and he refused to send U S soldiers 122 Mao Zedong and his Communists took control of the mainland of China in 1949 driving the Nationalists to Taiwan The United States had a new enemy in Asia and Truman came under fire from conservatives for losing China 123 Along with the Soviet detonation of a nuclear weapon the Communist victory in the Chinese Civil War played a major role in escalating Cold War tensions and U S militarization during 1949 124 Truman would have been willing to maintain some relationship between the U S and the Communist government but Mao was unwilling 125 Chiang established the Republic of China on Taiwan Truman made sure it retained China s permanent seat on the UN Security Council 126 127 a In June 1950 after the outbreak of fighting in Korea Truman ordered the Navy s Seventh Fleet into the Taiwan Strait to prevent further conflict between the communist government and the Republic of China 128 Japan Edit Further information Occupation of Japan Under the leadership of General Douglas MacArthur the U S occupied Japan after the latter s surrender in August 1945 MacArthur presided over extensive reforms of the Japanese government and society that in many ways resembled the New Deal 129 130 He imposed a new constitution that established a parliamentary democracy and granted women the right to vote He also democratized the Japanese educational system enabled labor unions and oversaw major economic changes although Japanese business leaders were able to resist the reforms to some degree As the Cold War intensified in 1947 Washington officials took greater control over the occupation ending Japanese reparations to the Allied Powers and prioritizing economic growth over long term reform The Japanese suffered from poor economic conditions until 1950 when heavy American spending on supplies to support the Korean War stimulated growth 131 In 1951 the United States and Japan signed the Treaty of San Francisco which restored Japanese sovereignty but allowed the United States to maintain bases in Japan 132 Over the opposition of the Soviet Union and some other adversaries of Japan in World War II the peace treaty did not contain punitive measures such as reparations though Japan did lose control of the Kuril Islands and all its pre war possessions 133 Southeast Asia Edit See also Decolonization of Asia With the end of World War II the United States fulfilled the commitment made by the 1934 Tydings McDuffie Act and granted independence to the Philippines The U S had encouraged decolonization throughout World War II but the start of the Cold War changed priorities The U S used the Marshall Plan to pressure the Dutch to grant independence to Indonesia under the leadership of the anti Communist Sukarno and the Dutch recognized Indonesia s independence in 1949 However in French Indochina the Truman administration recognized the French client state led by Emperor Bảo Đại The U S feared alienating the French who occupied a crucial position on the continent and feared that the withdrawal of the French would allow the Communist faction of Ho Chi Minh to assume power 134 Despite initial reluctance to become involved in Indochina by 1952 the United States was heavily subsidizing the French suppression of Ho s Việt Minh in the First Indochina War 94 The U S also established alliances in the region through the creation of the Mutual Defense Treaty with the Philippines and the ANZUS pact with Australia and New Zealand 135 Korean War Edit Outbreak of the war Edit Further information Korean War President Truman signing a proclamation declaring a national emergency and authorizing U S entry into the Korean War Following World War II the United States and the Soviet Union occupied Korea which had been a colony of the Japanese Empire The 38th parallel was chosen as a line of partition between the occupying powers since it was approximately halfway between Korea s northernmost and southernmost regions and was always intended to mark a temporary separation before the eventual reunification of Korea 136 Nonetheless the Soviet Union established the Democratic People s Republic of Korea North Korea in 1948 while the United States established the Republic of Korea South Korea that same year 137 Hoping to avoid a long term military commitment in the region Truman withdrew U S soldiers from the Korean Peninsula in 1949 The Soviet Union also withdrew their soldiers from Korea in 1949 but continued to supply North Korea with military aid 138 On June 25 1950 Kim Il sung s Korean People s Army invaded South Korea starting the Korean War In the early weeks of the war the North Koreans easily pushed back their southern counterparts 139 The Soviet Union was not directly involved though Kim did win Stalin s approval before launching the invasion 140 Truman meanwhile did not view Korea itself as a vital region in the Cold War but he believed that allowing a Western aligned country to fall would embolden Communists around the world and damage his own standing at home 141 The top officials of the Truman administration were heavily influenced by a desire to not repeat the appeasement of the 1930s Truman stated to an aide there s no telling what they ll do if we don t put up a fight right now 142 Truman turned to the United Nations to condemn the invasion With the Soviet Union boycotting the United Nations Security Council due to the UN s refusal to recognize the People s Republic of China Truman won approval of Resolution 84 The resolution denounced North Korea s actions and empowered other nations to defend South Korea 141 North Korean forces experienced early successes capturing the city of Seoul on June 28 Fearing the fall of the entire peninsula General Douglas MacArthur commander of U S forces in Asia won Truman s approval to land U S troops on the peninsula Rather than asking Congress for a declaration of war Truman argued that the UN Resolution provided the presidency the constitutional power to deploy soldiers as a police action under the aegis of the UN 141 The intervention in Korea was widely popular in the United States at the time and Truman s July 1950 request for 10 billion was approved almost unanimously 143 By August 1950 U S troops pouring into South Korea along with American air strikes stabilized the front around the Pusan Perimeter 144 Responding to criticism over unreadiness Truman fired Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson and replaced him with the former Secretary of State George Marshall With UN approval Truman decided on a rollback policy conquest of North Korea 145 UN forces launched a counterattack scoring a stunning surprise victory with an amphibious landing at the Battle of Inchon that trapped most of the invaders UN forces marched north toward the Yalu River boundary with China with the goal of reuniting Korea under UN auspices 146 Stalemate and dismissal of MacArthur Edit Territory often changed hands early in the Korean War until the front stabilized in 1951 North Korean Chinese and Soviet forces South Korean U S Commonwealth and United Nations forces As the UN forces approached the Yalu River the CIA and General MacArthur both expected that the Chinese would remain out of the war Defying those predictions Chinese forces crossed the Yalu River in November 1950 and forced the overstretched UN soldiers to retreat 147 Fearing that the escalation of the war could spark a global conflict with the Soviet Union Truman refused MacArthur s request to bomb Chinese supply bases north of the Yalu River 148 UN forces were pushed below the 38th parallel before the end of 1950 but under the command of General Matthew Ridgway the UN launched a counterattack that pushed Chinese forces back up to the 38th parallel 149 MacArthur made several public demands for an escalation of the war leading to a break with Truman in late 1950 and early 1951 150 On April 5 House Minority Leader Joseph Martin made public a letter from MacArthur that strongly criticized Truman s handling of the Korean War and called for an expansion of the conflict against China 151 Truman believed that MacArthur s recommendations were wrong but more importantly he believed that MacArthur had overstepped his bounds in trying to make foreign and military policy potentially endangering the civilian control of the military After consulting with the Joint Chiefs of Staff and members of Congress Truman decided to relieve MacArthur of his command 152 The dismissal of General Douglas MacArthur ignited a firestorm of outrage against Truman and support for MacArthur Fierce criticism from virtually all quarters accused Truman of refusing to shoulder the blame for a war gone sour and blaming his generals instead Others including Eleanor Roosevelt supported and applauded Truman s decision MacArthur meanwhile returned to the U S to a hero s welcome and addressed a joint session of Congress 153 In part due to the dismissal of MacArthur Truman s approval mark in February 1952 stood at 22 according to Gallup polls which was until George W Bush in 2008 the all time lowest approval mark for an active American president 154 Though the public generally favored MacArthur over Truman immediately after MacArthur s dismissal congressional hearings and newspaper editorials helped turn public opinion against MacArthur s advocacy for escalation 155 The war remained a frustrating stalemate for two years 156 UN and Chinese forces fought inconclusive conflicts like the Battle of Heartbreak Ridge and the Battle of Pork Chop Hill but neither side was able to advance far past the 38th parallel 157 Throughout late 1951 Truman sought a cease fire but disputes over prisoner exchanges led to the collapse of negotiations 156 Of the 116 000 Chinese and Korean prisoners of war held by the United States only 83 000 were willing to return to their home countries and Truman was unwilling to forcibly return the prisoners 158 The Korean War ended with an armistice in 1953 after Truman left office dividing North Korea and South Korea along a border close to the 38th parallel 159 Over 30 000 Americans and approximately 3 million Koreans died in the conflict 160 The United States maintained a permanent military presence in South Korea after the war 161 International trips Edit Truman made five international trips during his presidency 162 His only trans Atlantic trip was to participate in the 1945 Potsdam Conference with British Prime Ministers Churchill and Attlee and Soviet Premier Stalin He also visited neighboring Bermuda Canada and Mexico plus Brazil in South America Truman only left the continental United States on two other occasions to Puerto Rico the Virgin Islands Guantanamo Bay Naval Base Cuba February 20 March 5 1948 and to Wake Island October 11 18 1950 during his nearly eight years in office 163 Dates Country Locations Details1 July 15 1945 Belgium Antwerp Brussels Disembarked en route to Potsdam July 16 August 2 1945 Germany Potsdam Attended Potsdam Conference with British Prime Ministers Winston Churchill and Clement Attlee and USSR leader Joseph Stalin August 2 1945 United Kingdom Plymouth Informal meeting with King George VI 2 August 23 30 1946 Bermuda Hamilton Informal visit Met with Governor General Ralph Leatham and inspected U S military facilities 3 March 3 6 1947 Mexico Mexico D F State visit Met with President Miguel Aleman Valdes 4 June 10 12 1947 Canada Ottawa Official visit Met with Governor General Harold Alexander and Prime Minister Mackenzie King and addressed Parliament 5 September 1 7 1947 Brazil Rio de Janeiro State visit Addressed Inter American Conference for the Maintenance of Continental Peace and Security and the Brazilian Congress Domestic affairs EditReconversion and labor strife Edit See also 79th United States Congress Federal finances and GDP during Truman s presidency 164 FiscalYear Receipts Billion Outlays Billion Surplus Deficit GDP Debt as a of GDP 165 1945 45 2 92 7 47 6 226 4 103 91946 39 3 55 2 15 9 228 0 106 11947 38 5 34 5 4 0 238 9 93 91948 41 6 29 8 11 8 261 9 82 61949 39 4 38 8 0 6 276 5 77 51950 39 4 42 6 3 1 278 7 78 61951 51 6 45 5 6 1 327 1 65 51952 66 2 67 7 1 5 357 1 60 11953 69 6 76 1 6 5 382 1 57 2Ref 166 167 168 Reconversion Edit Although foreign affairs dominated much of Truman s time in office reconversion to a peacetime economy became his administration s central focus in late 1945 Truman faced several major challenges in presiding over the transition to a post war economy including a large national debt and persistent inflation The United States had emerged from the Great Depression in part due to the war production that began in 1940 Most observers expected that the nation would sink into another decline with the end of the war spending While the country had been unified in winning the war there was no consensus on the best methods of post war economic reconversion after the war or the level of involvement that the federal government should have in economic affairs 169 Truman faced a Congress that on domestic issues was dominated by the conservative coalition an alliance of Republicans and conservative Southern Democrats This group opposed many of Truman s domestic policies and did not welcome strong presidential leadership 170 Truman asked Congress for a host of measures including a bill that would make the Fair Employment Practice Committee a permanent institution but his focus on foreign affairs during this period prevented him from effectively advocating for his programs with members of Congress 171 Truman was particularly concerned about keeping unemployment levels low nearly 2 million people lost jobs within days of the Japanese surrender and he feared that even more would lose their jobs in the following months 172 Liberal New Dealers pushed for an explicit federal commitment to ensuring full employment but Congress instead passed the Employment Act of 1946 The act created the Council of Economic Advisers and mandated the federal government to foster and promote free competitive enterprise and the general welfare and to promote maximum employment production and purchasing power 173 The United States had instituted price controls and wage controls during the war in order to avoid large scale inflation or deflation Within the Truman administration some advocated lifting these controls immediately in order to allow private industries to hire new workers while others feared that immediately lifting the controls would lead to runaway inflation Truman sought to find a middle course between the two camps price controls on many nonessential items were lifted by the end of September 1945 but others remained in place by the end of 1945 174 Increasingly concerned about inflation Truman reimposed some price controls in December 1945 but the unpopularity of those controls led the administration to seek other ways to curb inflation including cuts to federal spending 175 In July 1946 after average prices rose at the unprecedented rate of 5 5 percent Truman won passage of a bill that extended his authority to institute price controls on some items 176 Though unemployment remained low labor unrest inflation and other issues badly damaged Truman s popularity which in turn contributed to a poor Democratic showing in the November 1946 mid term elections 177 After the Republican victory in those elections Truman announced the end of all federal wage and price controls with the exception of rent controls 176 Labor unrest Edit Further information Strike wave of 1945 46 Conflict between management and labor presented one of the biggest challenges to the conversion of the economy to peacetime production Organized labor had adhered to its pledge to refrain from striking during the war but labor leaders were eager to share in the gains from a postwar economic resurgence After several labor disputes broke out in September and October 1945 Truman convened a national conference between leaders of business and organized labor in November at which he advocated collective bargaining in order to avoid labor related economic disruptions The conference failed to have a major impact an unprecedented wave of major strikes affected the United States and by February 1946 nearly 2 million workers were engaged in strikes or other labor disputes 178 Many of the strikes were led by John L Lewis of the Congress of Industrial Organizations CIO who Truman despised 179 When a national rail strike threatened in May 1946 Truman seized the railroads to continue operations but two key railway unions struck anyway The entire national railroad system was shut down 24 000 freight trains and 175 000 passenger trains a day stopped moving 180 better source needed For two days public anger mounted among the general public and Truman himself and the president drafted a message to Congress that called on veterans to form a lynch mob and destroy the union leaders 181 After top aide Clark Clifford rewrote and toned down the speech Truman delivered a speech calling for Congress to pass a new law to draft all the railroad strikers into the army As he was concluding his speech he read a message just handed to him that the strike was settled on presidential terms Truman nevertheless finished the speech making clear his displeasure with the strike 182 183 Truman s speech marked the end of the strike wave as business and labor leaders both generally avoided subsequent actions that would provoke a strong response from the administration The strikes damaged the political standing of unions and the real wages of blue collar workers fell by over twelve percent in the year after the surrender of Japan 184 At the same time the CIO s efforts to expand massively into the South a campaign known as Operation Dixie failed 185 G I Bill Edit The G I Bill had been passed in 1944 by a conservative coalition that wanted to restrict benefits to deserving wartime veterans as opposed to the larger welfare program favored by the Roosevelt administration that would reach both veterans and non veterans 186 The most famous component of the G I Bill provided free collegiate vocational and high school education for veterans not only free tuition but also full housing and subsistence allowances for the veterans and their families There was a remarkable transformation of higher education as 2 2 million veterans crowded into hastily built classrooms 187 Due in large part to the G I Bill the number of college degrees awarded rose from just over 200 000 in 1940 to nearly 500 000 in 1950 188 In addition to education and housing benefits the bill included aid to veterans who wanted to start a small business or farm as well one year of unemployment compensation 189 190 page needed The G I Bill also guaranteed low cost loans for veterans with very low down payments and low interest rates In 1947 alone 540 000 veterans bought a house at the average price of 7 300 Developers purchased empty land just outside the city installed tract houses based on a handful of designs and provided streets and utilities 191 The most famous development was Levittown in Long Island it offered a new house featuring three bedrooms and a landscaped lot of 75 by 100 feet for the total price of 10 000 192 page needed 15 million housing units were built between 1945 and 1955 and the home ownership rate grew from 50 percent in 1945 to 60 percent in 1960 Together with the growth of the automobile industry the G I Bill s housing benefits helped provide for a major expansion of suburbs in the United States 193 80th Congress and the Taft Hartley Act Edit Further information 80th United States Congress The 1946 mid term election left Republicans in control of Congress for the first time since the early 1930s Truman initially hoped to work with Republican leaders in Congress focusing on the passage of housing programs and other potential areas of common ground 194 Truman and the 80th Congress were able to agree on a balanced budget albeit one that spent less on defense and some other programs that Truman favored Congress also assented to the creation of the Hoover Commission which proposed a series of reorganizations to the executive branch 195 However the 80th Congress proved strongly resistant to Truman s policies One of its first major acts was to approve what would become the Twenty second Amendment which established presidential term limits in an implicit rebuke to Franklin Roosevelt the only president who had ever served more than two terms 194 b Congress also passed bills designed to cut taxes weaken the Interstate Commerce Commission and reduce the number of employees covered by Social Security but all were vetoed by Truman in 1947 198 Upon returning to session in 1948 Congress passed the Revenue Act of 1948 another major tax cut Truman again vetoed the bill but this time his veto was overridden by Congress 199 In response to the labor unrest of 1945 and 1946 Congress passed the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947 also known as the Taft Hartley Act which amended the National Labor Relations Act of 1935 Truman vetoed the bill denouncing it as slave labor bill but Congress overrode the veto 198 The Taft Hartley Act added a list of prohibited union actions to the National Labor Relations Act of 1935 also known as the Wagner Act which had defined several types of employer actions as unfair labor practices Taft Hartley prohibited jurisdictional strikes in which a union strikes in order to pressure an employer to assign particular work to the employees that union represents and secondary boycotts and common situs picketing in which unions picket strike or refuse to handle the goods of a business with which they have no primary dispute but which is associated with a targeted business c The act also outlawed closed shops which were contractual agreements that required an employer to hire only union members 200 The Taft Hartley Act also granted states power to pass right to work laws which ban union shop shops 201 All union officials were required to sign an affidavit that they were not Communists or else the union would lose its federal bargaining powers guaranteed by the National Labor Relations Board 200 Despite his vocal opposition to the Taft Hartley Act Truman used its emergency provisions a number of times to halt strikes and lockouts Repeated union efforts to repeal or modify it always failed and it remains in effect today 202 Historian James T Patterson concludes that By the 1950s most observers agreed that Taft Hartley was no more disastrous for workers than the Wagner Act had been for employers What ordinarily mattered most in labor relations was not government laws such as Taft Hartley but the relative power of unions and management in the economic marketplace Where unions were strong they usually managed all right when they were weak new laws did them little additional harm 203 dd Fair Deal Edit Main article Fair Deal See also 81st United States Congress and 82nd United States Congress In his first major address to Congress after taking office Truman articulated a liberal domestic program but his early domestic policy was dominated by post war reconversion 204 As he readied for the 1948 election Truman made clear his identity as a Democrat in the New Deal tradition advocating a national health care system repeal of the Taft Hartley Act federal aid to education expanded public housing programs a higher minimum wage more public power projects like the Tennessee Valley Authority and a more progressive tax structure 205 The administration also put forth the Brannan Plan which would have removed the government s production controls and price supports in agriculture in favor of direct payments to farmers 206 Taken together Truman s proposals constituted a broad legislative agenda that came to be known as the Fair Deal 205 A major difference between the New Deal and the Fair Deal was that the latter included an aggressive civil rights program which Truman termed a moral priority Truman s proposals were not well received by Congress even with renewed Democratic majorities in Congress after 1948 207 The conservative coalition of Republicans and conservative Southern Democrats played a major role in blocking passage of the Fair Deal but the inability of liberals to agree on the details of many programs also contributed to legislative gridlock 208 Only one of the major Fair Deal bills the Housing Act of 1949 was ever enacted 207 The Housing Act of 1949 provided for sweeping expansion of the federal role in mortgage insurance and construction of public housing citation needed Truman did win other victories in the 81st Congress as the minimum wage was raised from forty cents an hour to seventy five cents an hour Social Security benefits for the retired were doubled and loopholes in the Sherman Antitrust Act were closed via passage of the Celler Kefauver Act 209 The 1950 mid term elections bolstered Republicans and conservative Democrats ending any chance of passing further Fair Deal programs 210 Though Truman failed to pass most of his major Fair Deal deal proposals he did help ensure that the major New Deal programs still in operation remained intact and in many cases received minor improvements 211 The Fair Deal would later serve as an inspiration for many of the Great Society programs passed during the presidency of Lyndon B Johnson 212 Civil rights Edit Historians Donald R McCoy and Richard T Ruetten write that Truman was the first president to have a civil rights program the first to try to come to grips with the basic problems of minorities and the first to condemn vigorously and consistently the presence of discrimination and inequality in America 213 A 1947 report by the President s Committee on Civil Rights titled To Secure These Rights presented a detailed ten point agenda of civil rights reforms In February 1948 the president submitted a civil rights agenda to Congress that proposed creating several federal offices devoted to issues such as voting rights and fair employment practices 214 This provoked a storm of criticism from Southern Democrats in the runup to the 1948 Democratic National Convention but Truman refused to compromise saying My forebears were Confederates but my very stomach turned over when I had learned that Negro soldiers just back from overseas were being dumped out of Army trucks in Mississippi and beaten 215 At the start of the 81st Congress pro civil rights congressmen attempted to reform the Senate s filibuster rules so that a filibuster could be defeated by a simple majority vote Southern senators blocked this reform thereby ensuring that civil rights would not emerge as an important legislative issue until the late 1950s 216 With his civil rights agenda blocked by Congress Truman turned to executive actions 217 In July 1948 he issued Executive Order 9981 requiring equal opportunity in the Armed Forces regardless of race color religion or national origin 218 219 220 Truman also issued Executive Order 9980 ending racial discrimination in the civil service of the federal government 221 222 Another Executive Order in 1951 established the Committee on Government Contract Compliance CGCC which sought to prevent defense contractors from discriminating because of race 223 Desegregation took years with the Air Force under Secretary Stuart Symington taking the lead 224 After several years of planning between Truman the Committee on Equality of Treatment and Opportunity and the various branches of the military Army units started to be racially integrated in the early 1950s and later the Navy 225 The 1948 Women s Armed Services Integration Act allowed women to serve in the peacetime military in all female units Truman appointed non whites to unprecedented positions of power in the executive and judicial branches 226 Among his appointments was William Henry Hastie the first African American to serve as a federal appellate judge 227 In civil rights cases like Sweatt v Painter the Justice Department issued amicus curiae briefs that supported ending segregation 228 In December 1952 the Truman administration filed an amicus curiae brief for the case of Brown v Board of Education two years later the Supreme Court s holding in that case would effectively overturn the separate but equal doctrine that allowed for racial segregation in public education 229 Health insurance Edit See also History of health care reform in the United States By the time Truman took office National health insurance had been on the table for decades but it had never gained much traction Starting in the late 1930s hospitals promoted private insurance plans such as Blue Cross 230 and between 1940 and 1950 the percentage of Americans with health insurance rose from 9 percent to above 50 percent 231 With the support of the American Federation of Labor AFL Truman proposed a national health insurance plan in November 1945 but it was defeated by an alliance of conservatives the American Medical Association which rallied the medical community against the bill 232 and the business community 233 Many labor unions discovered they could negotiate with business to obtain better health benefits for their own members so they focused increasingly on that goal 234 The failure of Truman s healthcare plan solidified the status of private employers as the primary sponsors of health insurance in the United States 231 Crime and corruption Edit With more young men back on the streets and more money in circulation petty crime rates went up after 1945 Far more serious was organized crime run by professional criminal gangs which became a favorite attack theme of Republican politicians and the media The Justice Department in 1947 organized a racket squad to build evidence for grand jury investigations in several major cities and the income tax returns of many gambling entrepreneurs and racketeers were audited However federal officials were reluctant to share their new information with local law enforcement Truman and his Attorney General J Howard McGrath told local officials that they had to bear the chief burden in defeating organized crime Senator Estes Kefauver a liberal Democrat from Tennessee launched a major Senate investigation in 1950 as chairman of the Special Committee to Investigate Organized Crime in Interstate Commerce 235 Kefauver although only a freshman in the Senate received large scale national coverage and became a presidential contender 236 The Kefauver committee exposed numerous charges of corruption among senior administration officials some of whom received expensive fur coats and deep freezers in exchange for favors Kefauver also found that over 160 Internal Revenue Service IRS officials took bribes used their offices to run private businesses embezzled federal funds or tolerated corrupt behavior by their subordinates The various scandals of organized crime did not directly touch Truman but they highlighted and exacerbated his problems with scandals inside his administration such as influence peddling 237 In 1952 Truman appointed Newbold Morris as a special prosecutor to investigate allegations of corruption at the IRS 238 When Attorney General McGrath fired Morris for being too zealous Truman fired McGrath 237 239 d Domestic responses to the Cold War Edit Anticommunist liberalism Edit The onset of the Cold War produced turmoil in the left wing of the Democratic Party over foreign policy issues especially regarding the role of the Soviet Union and the response to domestic communism After the 1946 elections the Congress of Industrial Organizations CIO systematically purged communists and far left sympathizers from leadership roles in its unions 240 The CIO expelled some unions that resisted the purge notably its third largest affiliate the United Electrical Radio and Machine Workers of America UE 241 242 Meanwhile the AFL set up its first explicitly political unit Labor s League for Political Education and increasingly abandoned its historic tradition of nonpartisanship 243 Expelled leftists coalesced around Henry Wallace who ran an independent campaign for president in 1948 244 245 The reforms by the CIO and AFL put both organizations in a good position to fight off Henry Wallace and the CIO and AFL worked enthusiastically for Truman s reelection 246 Opponents of Wallace also established an anti Communist liberal group Americans for Democratic Action ADA 247 Though often critical of the far right s unrestrained attacks on alleged Communists members of the ADA attacked left wing activists who they feared took orders from Communist leaders in the Soviet Union 248 Truman established the Temporary Commission on Employee Loyalty in November 1946 to create employee loyalty standards designed to weed out communist sympathizers from the federal workforce 249 In March 1947 Truman issued Executive Order 9835 which ordered purges of left wingers who refused to disavow communism It removed about 300 federal employees who currently were members of or associated with any organization identified by the Attorney General as communist fascist or totalitarian Anti communist liberals by 1947 48 thus played a central role in the Democratic Party and enthusiastically supported Truman s anti communist foreign policy 250 251 Soviet espionage and McCarthyism Edit In August 1948 Whittaker Chambers a former spy for the Soviets and a senior editor at Time magazine testified to the House Un American Activities Committee HUAC that an underground communist network had been working within the U S government since the 1930s He accused a former State Department official Alger Hiss of being a member of that network Hiss denied the allegations but was convicted in January 1950 for perjury The Soviet Union s success in exploding an atomic weapon in 1949 and the fall of the nationalist Chinese the same year led many Americans to conclude that subversion by Soviet spies had been responsible for American setbacks and Soviet successes and to demand that communists be rooted out from the government and other places of influence However Truman did not fully share such opinions and throughout his tenure he would balance a desire to maintain internal security against the fear that a red scare could hurt innocents and impede government operations 252 253 He famously called the Hiss trial a red herring 254 but also presided over the prosecution of numerous Communist leaders under the terms of the Smith Act 255 Secretary of State Acheson s public support for Hiss the revelation that British atomic bomb scientist Klaus Fuchs was a spy and various other events led current and former members of HUAC to decry the Truman administration especially the State Department as soft on communism Republican Congressmen Karl E Mundt of South Dakota and Richard Nixon of California emerged as particularly vocal and prominent critics on HUAC Wisconsin Senator Joseph McCarthy used a speech in West Virginia to accuse the State Department of harboring communists and rode the controversy to political fame 256 Truman responded by arguing that McCarthy s efforts would undermine the bipartisan foreign policy that had prevailed since the end of World War II and thereby give a political gift to the Soviet Union but few Republicans spoke out against McCarthy during Truman s tenure in office 257 Democratic Senator William Benton sponsored a motion to expel McCarthy from Congress but the motion was defeated and Benton lost his 1952 re election campaign McCarthy meanwhile was re elected 258 McCarthy s anti Communist campaigns part of a larger Red Scare played a major role in shaping a more confrontational Cold War foreign policy It also affected members of Congress and other political leaders who now worried that the embrace of left wing policies would leave themselves vulnerable to accusations of being soft on Communism 259 The outbreak of the Korean War led to renewed interest in such an internal security bill which had previously been debated during the 80th Congress Senator Pat McCarran of Nevada put forward a bill that would require Communist organizations to register with the government and allowed the president to indefinitely detain those who were suspected of having engaged in espionage The bill received little opposition from members of Congress who feared being labeled as pro Communist and it passed both the House and the Senate as the McCarran Internal Security Act Truman vetoed the bill in September 1950 arguing that it infringed on personal liberties and would be ineffective at protecting against subversion but Congress overrode the veto 260 Immigration Edit Further information History of immigration to the United States Immigration had been at a low level in the Great Depression and war years It surged as the war ended with the arrival of refugees and family members of citizens The issue was not a high priority for the Truman administration but there was great interest in Congress and among various ethnic groups 261 page needed In 1945 the War Brides Act allowed foreign born wives of U S citizens who had served in the U S Armed Forces to immigrate to the United States it was later extended to include the fiances of American soldiers In 1946 the Luce Celler Act extended the right to become naturalized citizens to Filipinos and Asian Indians setting the immigration quota at 100 people per year 262 In 1952 the McCarran Walter Immigration Act passed over Truman s veto It kept the quota system of the Immigration Act of 1924 but added many new opportunities for immigration from Europe and elsewhere In practice two thirds of the new arrivals entered outside the old quota system Immigration law was effectively controlled by Congressman Francis E Walter of Pennsylvania a Democrat who wanted to minimize immigration 263 Failed seizure of steel mills Edit Though they never reached the severity of the strike wave of 1945 1946 labor disruptions continued to affect the country after 1946 264 When a steel strike loomed in April 1952 Truman instructed Secretary of Commerce Charles W Sawyer to seize and continue operations of the nation s steel mills Truman cited his authority as Commander in Chief and the need to maintain an uninterrupted supply of steel for munitions to be used in the war in Korea The Supreme Court found the seizure unconstitutional and reversed the order in a major separation of powers decision Youngstown Sheet amp Tube Co v Sawyer 1952 The 6 3 decision which held that Truman s assertion of authority was too vague and was not rooted in any legislative action by Congress was delivered by a Court composed entirely of Justices appointed by either Truman or Roosevelt The high court s reversal of Truman s order was his most notable legal defeat 265 The Supreme Court decision left the country with the possibility of a critical steel shortage but Truman was able to convince the steel managers and organized labor to reach a settlement in July 1952 266 Territories and dependencies Edit Truman sought to grant greater rights to the territories and dependencies of the United States He unsuccessfully pushed for the admission of Hawaii and Alaska as states but Congress did not act on this proposal Truman was more successful in pushing organic legislation for Guam Samoa and the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands the latter of which had been acquired from Japan after World War II This legislation passed in 1950 and 1951 transferred the territories from military to civilian administration though the Navy continued to exercise considerable influence 267 In 1952 Congress passed a bill to recognize Puerto Rico s newly written constitution 268 Elections EditDemocratic seats in Congress Congress Senate House79th 57 24380th 45 18881st 54 26382nd 48 2341946 mid term election Edit Main article 1946 United States elections In the 1946 mid term elections Truman s Democrats suffered losses in both houses of Congress Republicans who had not controlled a chamber of Congress since the 1932 elections took control of both the House and the Senate Truman s party was hurt by a disappointing postwar economy 269 and the election was a major blow to Truman s hopes of passing his domestic policies 270 However Dallek points to the 1946 elections as the moment when Truman became more sure of himself as president and stopped trying to appease all factions of the public 271 1948 election Edit Main articles Harry S Truman 1948 presidential campaign and 1948 United States presidential election Clifford K Berryman s editorial cartoon of Oct 19 1948 shows the consensus of experts in mid October In the spring of 1948 Truman s public approval rating stood at 36 and the president was nearly universally regarded as incapable of winning reelection in the 1948 presidential election 272 The New Deal loyalists within the party including FDR s son James tried to swing the Democratic nomination to General Dwight D Eisenhower a highly popular figure whose political views and party affiliation were totally unknown 273 Other liberals favored Associate Justice William O Douglas but both Eisenhower and Douglas refused to enter the race and the Stop Truman movement failed to unite around any other candidate 274 At the 1948 Democratic National Convention Truman attempted to unify the Northern delegations with a vague civil rights plank in the party platform He was upstaged by liberals like Minneapolis Mayor Hubert Humphrey who convinced Truman and the convention to adopt a stronger civil rights plank 275 In response many of the delegates from Alabama and Mississippi walked out of the convention Unfazed Truman delivered an aggressive acceptance speech attacking the 80th Congress labeling it the Do Nothing Congress 276 For his running mate Truman accepted Kentucky Senator Alben W Barkley after his preferred candidate Justice William O Douglas turned down the nomination 277 South Carolina Governor Strom Thurmond a segregationist declared his candidacy for the presidency on a Dixiecrat ticket and led a full scale revolt of Southern states rights proponents This rebellion on the right was matched by one on the left led by Wallace on the Progressive Party ticket 278 Wallace strongly criticized Truman s approach to the Soviet Union 279 and the Progressive Party s platform addressed a wide array of issues including support for the desegregation of public schools gender equality a national health insurance program free trade and public ownership of large banks railroads and power utilities 280 Wallace won support from many liberals intellectuals union members and military veterans 281 The Republicans meanwhile nominated New York Governor Thomas E Dewey who had been the party s 1944 presidential nominee 282 Dewey waged a low risk campaign and issued vague generalities on his plans once in office while Thurmond found less support in the South than many had expected as most white Southerners believed him to be too extreme Wallace was unable to galvanize support behind his domestic policies and his conciliatory attitude towards the Soviet Union alienated many potential supporters 283 Truman meanwhile crisscrossed the U S by train delivering whistle stop speeches from the rear platform of the observation car His combative appearances such as those at the town square of Harrisburg Illinois captured the popular imagination and drew huge crowds 284 The large mostly spontaneous gatherings at Truman s whistle stop events were an important sign of a change in momentum in the campaign but this shift went virtually unnoticed by the national press corps The three major polling organizations stopped polling well before the November 2 election date Roper in September and Crossley and Gallup in October thus failing to measure the period when Truman may have surged past Dewey in public support 285 1948 electoral vote results In the end Truman held his progressive Midwestern base won most of the Southern states despite the civil rights plank and squeaked through with narrow victories in a few critical states notably Ohio California and Illinois He won over 50 percent of the popular vote and secured 303 electoral votes Dewey received only 189 electoral votes Thurmond garnered 39 and Henry Wallace none 286 Dewey carried several Northeastern states that had generally voted for Roosevelt and the 1948 election was the closest presidential election since the 1916 election 287 In the concurrent congressional elections the Democrats re took control of the House and the Senate The defining image of the campaign was a photograph snapped in the early morning hours of the day after the election when an ecstatic Truman held aloft the erroneous front page of the Chicago Tribune with a huge headline proclaiming Dewey Defeats Truman 288 1950 mid term election Edit Main article 1950 United States elections In Truman s second mid term election Republicans ran against Truman s proposed domestic policies and his handling of the Korean War They picked up seats in both the House and the senate but failed to gain control of either house of Congress 289 Truman was particularly upset by the apparent success of those who campaigned on McCarthyism 290 1952 election Edit Main articles 1952 United States presidential election and Presidential transition of Dwight D Eisenhower Graph of Truman s approval ratings in Gallup polls By the time of the 1952 New Hampshire primary one of the first major contests held in the 1952 Democratic primaries Truman had not stated whether he would seek re election and no other candidate had won Truman s backing Although the Twenty second Amendment had been ratified Truman could run for another term due to a grandfather clause in the amendment Truman s first choice to succeed him Chief Justice Vinson had declined to run Illinois Governor Adlai Stevenson had also turned Truman down Vice President Barkley was considered too old 291 and Truman disliked Senator Kefauver Accordingly Truman let his name be entered in the New Hampshire primary by supporters The highly unpopular Truman was handily defeated by Kefauver 18 days later the president announced he would not seek a second full term Truman was eventually able to persuade Stevenson to run and the governor ultimately gained the nomination at the 1952 Democratic National Convention 292 1952 electoral vote results General Dwight D Eisenhower s public stature along with his unknown views on domestic issues had made him appealing as a potential candidate for both parties in the 1948 election Though he had generally supported Truman s foreign policy Eisenhower privately held conservative views on most domestic issues and never seriously considered running for office as a Democrat Beginning in 1951 eastern internationalist Republicans led by Thomas Dewey and Henry Cabot Lodge Jr coordinated a draft movement designed to nominate Eisenhower as the Republican candidate for president Eisenhower initially resisted these efforts but in March 1952 he agreed to allow his name to be entered into the New Hampshire primary He was motivated in part by his desire to defeat Robert A Taft the other major contender for the Republican nomination The 1952 Republican primaries became a battle between Dewey s internationalist wing of the party and Taft s conservative isolationist wing Eisenhower narrowly prevailed over Taft at the 1952 Republican National Convention with the approval of Eisenhower the convention nominated Richard Nixon for vice president 293 The once good Truman Eisenhower relationship soured during the campaign Truman was appalled when Eisenhower appeared on the same platform with Joseph McCarthy in Wisconsin and failed to defend General George Marshall who McCarthy had recently denounced as a failure in China 294 Eisenhower was outraged when Truman who made a whistle stop tour in support of Stevenson accused Ike of disregarding sinister forces Anti Semitism anti Catholicism and anti foreignism within the Republican Party 295 Harry S Truman s Farewell Address source source Harry S Truman s speech on leaving office and returning home to Independence Missouri January 15 1953 Problems playing this file See media help Though Stevenson s public service and issue oriented campaign appealed to many liberals he was unable to rally support among blacks ethnic whites and the working class 296 Eisenhower campaigned against what he denounced as Truman s failures Korea Communism and Corruption 297 Polls consistently indicated that Eisenhower would win the race and Nixon deftly handled a potentially dangerous controversy over his finances with his Checkers speech delivered live on national television In part due to the Checkers speech television emerged as an important medium in the race the number of households with televisions had grown from under 200 000 in 1948 to over 15 million in 1952 298 On election day as widely expected Eisenhower defeated Stevenson by a wide margin Eisenhower took 55 4 percent of the popular vote and won 442 electoral votes taking almost every state outside of the South Though Eisenhower ran ahead of most congressional Republicans his party nonetheless took control of both the House and Senate giving the Republican Party unified control of Congress and the presidency for the first time since the 1930 elections 299 Historical reputation Edit Truman poses in 1959 at the recreation of the Truman Oval Office at the Truman Library in 1959 with the famous The Buck Stops Here sign on his desk Truman s ranking in polls of historians and political scientists have never fallen lower than ninth and he has ranked as high as fifth in a C SPAN poll in 2009 300 A 2018 poll of the American Political Science Association s Presidents and Executive Politics section ranked Truman as the seventh best president 301 and a 2017 C SPAN poll of historians ranked Truman as the sixth best president 302 When he left office in 1953 the American public saw Truman as one of the most unpopular chief executives in history His job approval rating of 22 in the Gallup Poll of February 1952 was lower than Richard Nixon s 24 in August 1974 the month that Nixon resigned in the wake of the Watergate scandal citation needed In 1952 journalist Samuel Lubell stated that after seven years of Truman s hectic even furious activity the nation seemed to be about on the same general spot as when he first came to office Nowhere in the whole Truman record can one point to a single decisive break through All his skills and energies and he was among our hardest working Presidents were directed to standing still 303 During the years of campus unrest in the 1960s and 1970s revisionist historians on the left attacked his foreign policy as too hostile to Communism and his domestic policy as too favorable toward business 304 However Truman s image in university textbooks was quite favorable in the 1950s 305 and more established scholars never accepted the critiques of revisionist historians 306 307 American public feeling towards Truman grew steadily warmer with the passing years Truman died in 1972 when the nation was consumed with crises in Vietnam and Watergate and his death brought a new wave of attention to his political career 308 During this period Truman captured the popular imagination emerging as a kind of political folk hero a president who was thought to exemplify an integrity and accountability many observers felt was lacking in the Nixon White House This public reassessment of Truman was aided by the popularity of a book of reminiscences which Truman had told to journalist Merle Miller beginning in 1961 with the agreement that they would not be published until after Truman s death Scholars who have compared the audio tapes with the published transcripts have concluded that Miller often distorted what Truman said or fabricated statements Truman never said 309 The fall of the Soviet Union in 1991 caused Truman advocates to claim vindication for Truman s decisions in the postwar period According to Truman biographer Robert Dallek His contribution to victory in the cold war without a devastating nuclear conflict elevated him to the stature of a great or near great president 212 The 1992 publication of David McCullough s favorable biography of Truman further cemented the view of Truman as a highly regarded chief executive 212 Nevertheless Truman continued to receive criticism After a review of information available to Truman about the presence of espionage activities in the U S government Democratic Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan concluded that Truman was almost willfully obtuse concerning the danger of American communism 310 In 2002 historian Alonzo Hamby concluded that Harry Truman remains a controversial president 311 According to historian Daniel R McCoy in his book on the Truman presidency Harry Truman himself gave a strong and far from incorrect impression of being a tough concerned and direct leader He was occasionally vulgar often partisan and usually nationalistic On his own terms Truman can be seen as having prevented the coming of a third world war and having preserved from Communist oppression much of what he called the free world Yet clearly he largely failed to achieve his Wilsonian aim of securing perpetual peace making the world safe for democracy and advancing opportunities for individual development internationally 312 Biographer Robert Donovan has emphasized Truman s personality Vigorous hard working simple he had grown up close to the soil of the Midwest and understood the struggles of the people on the farms and in the small towns After 10 years in the Senate he had risen above the Pendergast organization Still he had come from a world of two bit politicians and its aura was one that he never was able to shed entirely And he did retain certain characteristics one often sees in machine bred politicians intense partisanship stubborn loyalty a certain insensitivity about the transgressions of political associates and a disinclination for the companionship of intellectuals and artists 313 Notes Edit For the historiography see Brazinsky Gregg 2012 The Birth of a Rivalry Sino American Relations during the Truman Administration In Margolies Daniel S ed A Companion to Harry S Truman pp 484 497 The Twenty second Amendment limited presidents to two full terms For the purposes of the amendment a partial term of more than two years would count towards the term limit The amendment was ratified by the requisite 36 states on February 27 1951 196 197 A later statute the Labor Management Reporting and Disclosure Act passed in 1959 tightened these restrictions on secondary boycotts still further For a narrative of all the scandals see Donovan 1983 pp 114 118 332 339 372 381 References Edit Michael James Lacey 1991 The Truman Presidency pp 35 36 ISBN 9780521407731 Dallek 2008 pp 12 14 McCoy 1984 pp 8 9 McCullough 1992 p 425 McCullough 1992 p 436 Robert J Donovan Conflict and crisis The presidency of Harry S Truman 1945 1948 Vol 1 U of Missouri Press 1996 pp xiv 15 62 excerpt Alonzo Hamby Truman Harry S in The Encyclopedia of the American Presidency edited by Leonard Levy and Louis Fisher vol 4 1994 pp 1497 1505 Steven Casey Rhetoric and Style of Truman s Leadership in A Companion to Harry S Truman 2012 pp 26 46 a b McCullough 1992 p 366 McCoy 1984 pp 63 64 Herring 2008 pp 599 603 Herring 2008 pp 612 613 a b Herring 2008 pp 613 614 McCoy 1984 pp 148 149 Hamby 1995 pp 301 302 472 McCoy 1984 p 146 Polly Ann Davis Alben W Barkley Vice President The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 1978 76 2 pp 112 132 in JSTOR U S Senate Supreme Court Nominations 1789 Present www senate gov Retrieved March 28 2017 Abraham Henry Julian 1999 Justices Presidents and Senators A History of the U S Supreme Court Appointments from Washington to Clinton Rowman amp Littlefield pp 182 187 ISBN 9780847696055 a b c McCoy 1984 pp 21 22 Barton J Bernstein Roosevelt Truman and the atomic bomb 1941 1945 a reinterpretation Political Science Quarterly 90 1 1975 23 69 Philip Padgett 2018 Advocating Overlord The D Day Strategy and the Atomic Bomb U of Nebraska Press p cxv ISBN 9781640120488 Dallek 2008 pp 19 20 Robert Cecil Potsdam and its Legends International Affairs 46 3 1970 455 465 McCoy 1984 pp 23 24 John Lewis Gaddis Intelligence espionage and Cold War origins Diplomatic History 13 2 1989 191 212 Patterson 1996 pp 108 111 Hasegawa Tsuyoshi 2005 Racing the enemy Stalin Truman and the surrender of Japan Cambridge Massachusetts Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674022416 McCoy 1984 pp 39 40 Patterson 1996 p 109 Review of Thank God for the Atom Bomb and Other Essays by Paul Fussell PWxyz January 1 1988 Retrieved May 27 2018 Fussell Paul 1988 Thank God for the Atom Bomb Thank God for the Atom Bomb and Other Essays New York Summit Books ISBN 9780671638665 Lambers William May 30 2006 Nuclear Weapons William K Lambers p 11 ISBN 0 9724629 4 5 Herring 2008 pp 591 593 O Reilly Bill 2016 Killing the rising sun how America vanquished World War II Japan First ed New York p 133 ISBN 9781627790628 Eisenhower Dwight D 1963 The White House Years Mandate For Change 1953 1956 New York Doubleday amp Company Kramer Ronald C Kauzlarich David 2011 Rothe Dawn Mullins Christopher W eds Nuclear weapons international law and the normalization of state crime State crime Current perspectives pp 94 121 ISBN 978 0 8135 4901 9 Townsend Hoopes and Douglas Brinkley FDR and the Creation of the UN Yale UP 1997 Herring 2008 pp 579 590 Thomas Michael Hill Senator Arthur H Vandenberg the Politics of Bipartisanship and the Origins of Anti Soviet Consensus 1941 1946 World Affairs 138 3 1975 219 241 in JSTOR Lawrence J Haas Harry and Arthur Truman Vandenberg and the Partnership That Created the Free World 2016 a b Irwin Douglas A 1998 From Smoot Hawley to Reciprocal Trade Agreements Changing the Course of U S Trade Policy in the 1930s In Bordo Michael D Goldin Claudia White Eugene N eds The Defining Moment The Great Depression and the American Economy in the Twentieth Century University of Chicago Press ISBN 9781479839902 McCoy 1984 p 270 Phil Orchard and Jamie Gillies Atypical leadership the role of the presidency and refugee protection 1932 1952 Presidential Studies Quarterly 45 3 2015 490 513 online a b McCoy 1984 pp 74 75 Harry S Truman Statement by the President Upon Signing the Displaced Persons Act Presidency ucsb edu Retrieved August 15 2012 Susan L Carruthers Between Camps Eastern Bloc Escapees and Cold War Borderlands American Quarterly 57 3 2005 911 942 online Walter Bieringer 90 Helped War Refugees The New York Times June 20 1990 Rosenfield Harry N Papers Harry S Truman Library amp Museum Retrieved December 6 2021 Dallek 2008 pp 49 50 90 Gregg Herken The winning weapon The atomic bomb in the cold war 1945 1950 1980 Rebecca S Lowen Entering the Atomic Power Race Science Industry and Government Political Science Quarterly 102 3 1987 459 479 in JSTOR a b c Paul Y Hammond NSC 68 Prologue to Rearmament pp 290 292 in Warner R Schilling Paul Y Hammond and Glenn H Snyder Strategy Politics and Defense Budgets Columbia University Press 1962 Patterson 1996 pp 173 175 Patterson 1996 pp 175 176 Herring 2008 pp 595 596 Dallek 2008 pp 21 23 Dallek 2008 pp 28 29 42 Herring 2008 pp 602 603 McCoy 1984 pp 78 79 a b c Dallek 2008 pp 43 44 Patterson 1996 pp 120 121 Herring 2008 pp 605 606 Dallek 2008 pp 44 45 Herring 2008 pp 609 610 Herring 2008 pp 608 609 Patterson 1996 p 116 Herring 2008 pp 610 611 Dallek 2008 p 43 John Lewis Gaddis Strategies of Containment A Critical Appraisal of American National Security Policy during the Cold War 2nd ed 2005 Patterson 1996 p 114 Dallek 2008 pp 46 48 Herring 2008 pp 614 615 Dallek 2008 pp 56 57 Herring 2008 pp 614 616 Dallek 2008 pp 58 59 Herring 2008 pp 616 617 Joseph C Satterthwaite The Truman doctrine Turkey The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 401 1 1972 74 84 online Suhnaz Yilmaz Turkish American Relations 1800 1952 Between the Stars Stripes and the Crescent Routledge 2015 Herring 2008 p 621 Herring 2008 p 622 Kirkendall 1990 p 237 Dallek 2008 pp 62 63 Charles A Stevenson 2008 The Story Behind the National Security Act of 1947 Military Review 88 3 McCoy 1984 pp 117 118 Patterson 1996 p 133 Patterson 1996 p 168 Keith McFarland The 1949 Revolt of the Admirals Parameters Journal of the US Army War College Quarterly 1980 11 2 53 63 online Archived January 26 2017 at the Wayback Machine Hogan 1998 pp 83 85 Kirkendall 1990 p 238 Kirkendall 1990 pp 237 239 a b Warner R Schilling The Politics of National Defense Fiscal 1950 pp 29 30 in Warner R Schilling Paul Y Hammond and Glenn H Snyder Strategy Politics and Defense Budgets Columbia University Press 1962 McCoy 1984 p 116 Herring 2008 pp 637 639 a b Herring 2008 p 647 McCoy 1984 pp 71 100 Dallek 2008 pp 60 61 Herring 2008 pp 618 619 John C Campbell The United States in World affairs 1947 1948 1948 pp 500 505 McCoy 1984 pp 127 128 Robert C Grogin Natural Enemies The United States and the Soviet Union in the Cold War 1917 1991 2001 p 118 Herring 2008 pp 617 618 McCoy 1984 pp 126 127 Herring 2008 pp 619 620 Herring 2008 pp 623 624 Wilson D Miscamble Harry S Truman the Berlin Blockade and the 1948 election Presidential Studies Quarterly 10 3 1980 306 316 in JSTOR McCoy 1984 pp 139 140 Dallek 2008 p 89 Dallek 2008 pp 89 91 McCoy 1984 pp 198 201 Herring 2008 pp 645 649 Darlene Rivas United States Latin American Relations 1942 1960 in Robert Schulzinger ed A Companion to American Foreign Relations 2008 230 54 on historiography Herring 2008 pp 626 627 McCoy 1984 pp 228 229 Roger R Trask Spruille Braden versus George Messersmith World War II the Cold War and Argentine Policy 1945 1947 Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 26 1 1984 69 95 McCullough 1992 pp 595 97 Michael Ottolenghi Harry Truman s recognition of Israel Historical Journal 2004 963 988 Herring 2008 pp 628 629 Lenczowski 1990 p 26 Herring 2008 p 629 Warren I Cohen America s Response to China A History of Sino American Relations 4th ed 2000 pp 151 72 Forrest C Pogue George C Marshall vol 4 Statesman 1945 1959 1987 pp 51 143 Herring 2008 pp 631 633 Ernest R May 1947 48 When Marshall Kept the U S out of War in China Journal of Military History 2002 66 4 1001 1010 online Patterson 1996 p 169 170 June M Grasso Truman s Two China Policy 1987 Cochran Harry Truman and the crisis presidency 1973 pp 291 310 William W Stueck The road to confrontation American policy toward China and Korea 1947 1950 U of North Carolina Press 1981 Donovan 1983 pp 198 199 Theodore Cohen Remaking Japan the American Occupation as New Deal Free Press 1987 Ray A Moore and Donald L Robinson Partners for democracy Crafting the new Japanese state under MacArthur Oxford UP 2002 Herring 2008 pp 633 634 Herring 2008 pp 646 647 McCoy 1984 pp 271 272 Herring 2008 pp 634 635 McCoy 1984 pp 270 271 Patterson 1996 p 208 Dallek 2008 p 92 Patterson 1996 p 209 McCoy 1984 pp 222 27 Patterson 1996 pp 209 210 a b c Dallek 2008 pp 106 107 Patterson 1996 p 211 Patterson 1996 pp 214 215 John J Chapin 2015 Fire Brigade U S Marines In The Pusan Perimeter ISBN 9781786251619 James I Matray Truman s Plan for Victory National Self Determination and the Thirty Eighth Parallel Decision in Korea Journal of American History 66 2 1979 314 333 in JSTOR Stokesbury 1990 pp 81 90 Patterson 1996 pp 219 222 Dallek 2008 pp 113 Patterson 1996 pp 225 226 Patterson 1996 pp 226 228 Dallek 2008 pp 117 118 Dallek 2008 pp 118 119 Larry Blomstedt Truman Congress and Korea The Politics of America s First Undeclared War University Press of Kentucky 2015 Paul J Lavrakas 2008 Encyclopedia of Survey Research Methods SAGE p 30 ISBN 9781506317885 Patterson 1996 pp 230 232 a b Dallek 2008 p 124 Patterson 1996 p 232 Dallek 2008 p 137 Chambers II 1999 p 849 Herring 2008 p 645 Patterson 1996 p 235 Travels of President Harry S Truman U S Department of State Office of the Historian President Truman s Travel logs The Harry S Truman Library and Museum Retrieved February 26 2016 All figures except for debt percentage are presented in billions of dollars The receipt outlay deficit GDP and debt figures are calculated for the fiscal year which ended on June 30 prior to 1976 Represents the national debt held by the public as a percentage of GDP Historical Tables White House Office of Management and Budget Table 1 1 Retrieved March 4 2021 Historical Tables White House Office of Management and Budget Table 1 2 Retrieved March 4 2021 Historical Tables White House Office of Management and Budget Table 7 1 Retrieved March 4 2021 McCoy 1984 pp 41 44 Patterson 1996 pp 139 141 Patterson 1996 pp 141 144 McCoy 1984 p 49 J Bradford De Long Keynesianism Pennsylvania Avenue Style Some Economic Consequences of the Employment Act of 1946 Journal of Economic Perspectives 1996 10 3 pp 41 53 online McCoy 1984 pp 45 49 McCoy 1984 pp 53 54 a b McCoy 1984 pp 55 57 McCoy 1984 pp 65 66 McCoy 1984 pp 49 51 57 McCoy 1984 p 58 View a contemporary newsreel report McCullough 1992 pp 498 501 McCullough 1992 pp 501 6 John Acacia 2009 Clark Clifford The Wise Man of Washington p 22 ISBN 978 0813139258 McCoy 1984 p 60 Griffith Barbara S 1988 The Crisis of American Labor Operation Dixie and the Defeat of the CIO Temple University Press ISBN 978 0877225034 Suzanne Mettler The creation of the GI Bill of Rights of 1944 Melding social and participatory citizenship ideals Journal of Policy History 17 4 2005 345 374 Keith W Olson The G I Bill and Higher Education Success and Surprise American Quarterly 25 5 1973 pp 596 610 in JSTOR McCoy 1984 p 9 Glenn C Altschuler and Stuart M Blumin The GI Bill a New Deal for Veterans 2009 Michael J Bennett When Dreams Came True The G I Bill and the Making of Modern America 1996 Joseph Goulden The Best Years 1945 1950 1976 pp 135 39 Barbara Mae Kelly Expanding the American Dream Building and Rebuilding Levittown SUNY Press 1993 Patterson 1996 pp 70 73 a b McCoy 1984 pp 93 95 McCoy 1984 pp 94 96 Huckabee David C September 30 1997 Ratification of Amendments to the U S Constitution PDF Congressional Research Service reports Washington D C Congressional Research Service The Library of Congress U S Constitution Amendments FindLaw Retrieved April 29 2017 a b McCoy 1984 pp 97 99 McCoy 1984 pp 102 103 a b Judith Stepan Norris and Maurice Zeitlin 2003 Left Out Reds and America s Industrial Unions p 9 ISBN 9780521798402 Patterson 1996 p 51 R Alton Lee Truman and Taft Hartley A question of mandate U of Kentucky Press 1966 Patterson 1996 p 52 McCoy 1984 pp 47 48 a b Dallek 2008 pp 84 86 Patterson 1996 pp 166 167 a b Lamb Charles M Nye Adam W 2012 Do Presidents Control Bureaucracy The Federal Housing Administration during the Truman Eisenhower Era Political Science Quarterly 127 3 445 67 doi 10 1002 j 1538 165x 2012 tb00734 x JSTOR 23563185 McCoy 1984 p 183 McCoy 1984 pp 175 181 182 McCoy 1984 p 257 Richard E Neustadt From FDR to Truman Congress and the Fair Deal Public Policy 1954 351 381 a b c Dallek 2008 p 152 Donald R McCoy and Richard T Ruetten Quest and Response Minority Rights and the Truman Administration U Press of Kansas 1973 p 352 Harry S Truman February 2 1948 Special Message to the Congress on Civil Rights Retrieved April 1 2021 Truman 1973 p 429 Patterson 1996 p 166 Dallek 2008 p 66 Kirkendall 1990 pp 10 11 Morris J MacGregor Jr Integration of the Armed Forces 1940 1965 Center of Military History 1981 ch 12 online Jon Taylor Freedom to Serve Truman Civil Rights and Executive Order 9981 Routledge 2013 Alonzo L Hamby October 4 2016 Harry S Truman Domestic Affairs The Miller Center for Public Affairs University of Virginia Retrieved April 2 2021 McCullough 1992 p 651 McCoy 1984 pp 254 255 Alan L Gropman The Air Force 1941 1951 From Segregation to Integration Air power history 40 2 1993 25 29 online MacGregor 1981 pp 312 15 376 78 457 59 McCoy 1984 pp 106 107 168 Judge William Hastie 71 Of Federal Court Dies New York Times April 15 1976 Retrieved May 11 2018 McCoy 1984 p 171 McCoy 1984 p 307 Jill Quadagno Why the United States Has No National Health Insurance Stakeholder Mobilization against the Welfare State 1945 1996 Journal of Health and Social Behavior Vol 45 Extra Issue 2004 pp 25 44 in JSTOR a b Carroll Aaron E September 5 2017 The Real Reason the U S Has Employer Sponsored Health Insurance New York Times Retrieved September 5 2017 MARKEL HOWARD March 2015 Give Em Health Harry Milbank Quarterly 93 1 1 7 doi 10 1111 1468 0009 12096 PMC 4364422 PMID 25752341 Monte M Poen Harry S Truman versus the Medical Lobby The Genesis of Medicare 1996 Edmund F Wehrle For a Healthy America Labor s Struggle for National Health Insurance 1943 1949 Labor s Heritage 1993 5 2 pp 28 45 online William Howard Moore The Kefauver Committee and the politics of crime 1950 1952 U of Missouri Press 1974 Philip A Grant Kefauver and the New Hampshire Presidential Primary Tennessee Historical Quarterly 31 4 1972 372 380 in JSTOR a b Kirkendall 1990 pp 85 86 191 192 228 229 273 275 321 Greenberg Gerald 2000 Historical Encyclopedia of U S Independent Counsel Investigations Westport CT Greenwood Press pp 231 233 ISBN 0 313 30735 0 Andrew J Dunar The Truman scandals and the politics of morality U of California Press 1997 Harvey A Levenstein Communism Anti communism and the CIO Praeger 1981 Ronald L Filippelli Mark D McColloch 1995 Cold War in the Working Class The Rise and Decline of the United Electrical Workers SUNY Press pp 10 11 ISBN 9780791421826 Robert E Weir 2013 Workers in America A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 114 ISBN 9781598847185 Joseph E Hower Our conception of non partisanship means a partisan non partisanship the search for political identity in the American Federation of Labor 1947 1955 Labor History 51 3 2010 455 478 Thomas Devine The Communists Henry Wallace and the Progressive Party of 1948 Continuity A Journal of History 26 2003 33 79 Alonzo L Hamby Henry A Wallace the liberals and Soviet American relations Review of Politics 30 2 1968 153 169 in JSTOR Daniel B Cornfield and Holly J McCammon Approaching merger The converging public policy agendas of the AFL and CIO 1938 1955 in Nella Van Dyke and Holly J McCammon eds Strategic Alliances Coalition Building and Social Movements 2010 79 98 Patterson 1996 p 146 Patterson 1996 pp 182 183 McCoy 1984 pp 83 84 Kirkendall 1990 pp 72 74 216 220 21 305 306 384 385 Alan D Harper The politics of loyalty The White House and the Communist issue 1946 1952 1969 Dallek 2008 pp 87 88 McCoy 1984 pp 194 217 18 Hamby 1995 p 522 McCoy 1984 pp 217 218 Weinstein 1997 pp 450 53 McCoy 1984 pp 218 219 McCoy 1984 pp 273 274 Patterson 1996 pp 204 205 McCoy 1984 pp 234 235 Roger Daniels ed Immigration and the Legacy of Harry S Truman 2010 Digital History 2011 Archived from the original on February 11 2012 Retrieved February 6 2012 Marion T Bennett The immigration and nationality McCarran Walter Act of 1952 as Amended to 1965 The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 367 1 1966 127 136 McCoy 1984 pp 290 291 Marcus Maeva Truman and the steel seizure case The limits of presidential power 1994 McCoy 1984 p 293 McCoy 1984 pp 205 207 McCoy 1984 pp 295 296 Conley Richard June 2000 Divided Government and Democratic Presidents Truman and Clinton Compared Presidential Studies Quarterly 30 2 222 244 doi 10 1111 j 0360 4918 2000 00110 x Busch Andrew 1999 Horses in Midstream University of Pittsburgh Press pp 159 164 Dallek 2008 pp 49 50 John E Mueller Presidential popularity from Truman to Johnson American Political Science Review 64 1 1970 18 34 online Sean J Savage Truman and the Democratic Party 1997 pp 30 31 Patterson 1996 pp 155 156 Timothy Nel Thurber 1999 The Politics of Equality Hubert H Humphrey and the African American Freedom Struggle pp 55 56 ISBN 9780231110471 R Alton Lee The Turnip session of the do nothing Congress Presidential campaign strategy Southwestern Social Science Quarterly 1963 256 67 in JSTOR Pietrusza 2011 pp 226 232 McCoy 1984 pp 153 158 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 436 438 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 480 481 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 481 484 485 488 Patterson 1996 pp 158 159 McCoy 1984 pp 160 162 McCullough 1992 p 657 David Edwin Harrell Jr et al 2005 Unto a Good Land A History of the American People Volume 2 From 1865 p 1003 ISBN 9780802829450 Morison Samuel Eliot 1965 The Oxford History of the American People New York Oxford University Press p 1054 LCCN 65 12468 Patterson 1996 p 162 Newspaper mistakenly declares Dewey president History com On this day in history New York A amp E Television Networks Retrieved June 15 2017 Busch Andrew 1999 Horses in Midstream University of Pittsburgh Press pp 91 94 Dallek 2008 pp 112 113 McCullough 1992 p 887 Dallek 2008 pp 139 142 Patterson 1996 pp 249 252 William I Hitchcock The Age of Eisenhower America and the World in the 1950s 2019 p 81 Dallek 2008 p 144 Patterson 1996 pp 252 255 Herbert H Hyman and Paul B Sheatsley The political appeal of President Eisenhower Public Opinion Quarterly 17 4 1953 443 460 in JSTOR Patterson 1996 pp 256 258 Patterson 1996 p 260 see Associated Press List of Presidential rankings Feb 16 2009 Rottinghaus Brandon Vaughn Justin S February 19 2018 How Does Trump Stack Up Against the Best and Worst Presidents New York Times Retrieved May 14 2018 Presidential Historians Survey 2017 C SPAN Retrieved May 14 2018 Lubell Samuel 1956 The Future of American Politics 2nd ed Anchor Press pp 9 10 OL 6193934M See Barton J Bernstein ed Politics and Policies of the Truman Administration 1970 pp 3 14 Robert Griffith Truman and the Historians The Reconstruction of Postwar American History Wisconsin Magazine of History 1975 20 47 Richard S Kirkendall The Truman period as a research field 2nd ed 1974 p 14 Robert H Ferrell Harry S Truman and the Cold War Revisionists U of Missouri Press 2006 HISTORICAL NOTES Giving Them More Hell Time Vol 102 no 23 December 3 1973 Ferrell Robert H amp Heller Francis H May June 1995 Plain Faking American Heritage Vol 46 no 3 pp 21 33 Retrieved May 27 2018 Moynihan Daniel Patrick 1997 Chairman s Foreword Report of the Commission on the Protecting and Reducing Government Secrecy Report Retrieved May 27 2018 via Federation of American Scientists FAS Alonzo Hamby How Do Historians Evaluate the Administration of Harry Truman July 8 2002 McCoy 1984 pp 318 19 Robert J Donovan Conflict and Crisis The Presidency of Harry S Truman 1945 1948 1977 p xv Works cited Edit Chambers II John W 1999 The Oxford Companion to American Military History Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 507198 0 Cohen Eliot A Gooch John 2006 Military Misfortunes The Anatomy of Failure in War New York Free Press ISBN 978 0 7432 8082 2 Culver John C Hyde John 2000 American Dreamer A Life of Henry A Wallace W W Norton ISBN 0 393 04645 1 Dallek Robert 2008 Harry S Truman New York Times Books ISBN 978 0 8050 6938 9 Donovan Robert J 1983 Tumultuous Years 1949 1953 New York W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 01619 2 Hamby Alonzo Truman Harry S in The Encyclopedia of the American Presidency edited by Leonard Levy and Louis Fisher vol 4 1994 pp 1497 1505 Hamby Alonzo L 1995 Man of the People A Life of Harry S Truman Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 504546 8 Herring George C 2008 From Colony to Superpower U S Foreign Relations Since 1776 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 507822 0 Hogan Michael J 1998 A Cross of Iron Harry S Truman and the Origins of the National Security State 1945 1954 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 79537 1 Kennedy David M 1999 Freedom from Fear The American People in Depression and War 1929 1945 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195038347 Kirkendall Richard S 1990 Harry S Truman Encyclopedia G K Hall Publishing ISBN 978 0 8161 8915 1 Lenczowski George 1990 American Presidents and the Middle East Durham Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 0972 7 MacGregor Morris J Jr 1981 Integration of the Armed Services 1940 1965 Washington D C Center of Military History ISBN 978 0 16 001925 8 McCoy Donald R 1984 The Presidency of Harry S Truman University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0252 0 McCullough David 1992 Truman Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 86920 5 Patterson James 1996 Grand Expectations The United States 1945 1974 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195117974 Pietrusza David 2011 1948 Harry Truman s Improbable Victory and the Year That Transformed America Union Square Press ISBN 978 1 4027 6748 7 Stokesbury James L 1990 A Short History of the Korean War New York Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0 688 09513 0 Truman Margaret 1973 Harry S Truman New York William Morrow ISBN 978 0 688 00005 9 Weinstein Allen 1997 Perjury The Hiss Chambers Case revised ed Random House ISBN 0 679 77338 X Further reading EditMain article Bibliography of Harry S Truman Truman s roles politics Edit Baime Albert J Dewey Defeats Truman The 1948 Election and the Battle for America s Soul Houghton Mifflin 2020 Berman William C The politics of civil rights in the Truman administration Ohio State UP 1970 dissertation version online Bernstein Barton J The Truman administration and the steel strike of 1946 Journal of American History 52 4 1966 791 803 online Bernstein Barton J The Truman administration and its reconversion wage policy Labor History 6 3 1965 214 231 Brembeck Cole S 1952 Harry Truman at the whistle stops Quarterly Journal of Speech 38 42 50 doi 10 1080 00335635209381730 Brinkley Douglas Silent Spring Revolution John F Kennedy Rachel Carson Lyndon Johnson Richard Nixon and the Great Environmental Awakening 2022 excerpt chapter 2 on TrumanCasey Steven 2012 Rhetoric and Style of Truman s Leadership A Companion to Harry S Truman pp 26 46 doi 10 1002 9781118300718 ch2 ISBN 9781118300718 Ciment James ed Postwar America An Encyclopedia Of Social Political Cultural And Economic History 4 vol 2006 550 articles in 2000 pp Cochran Bert Harry Truman and the crisis presidency 1973 432pp Congressional Quarterly Congress and the Nation 1945 1964 1965 Highly detailed and factual coverage of Congress and presidential politics 1784 pages online Daniels Jonathan 1998 The Man of Independence University of Missouri Press ISBN 0 8262 1190 9 Daniels Roger ed Immigration and the Legacy of Harry S Truman 2010 Daynes Byron W and Glen Sussman White House Politics and the Environment Franklin D Roosevelt to George W Bush 2010 pp 36 45 Donaldson Gary A Truman Defeats Dewey University Press of Kentucky 2014 Donovan Robert J Conflict and crisis The presidency of Harry S Truman 1945 1948 1977 Tumultuous Years The Presidency of Harry S Truman 1949 1953 vol 2 1982 journalistic Ferrell Robert Hugh 1994 Harry S Truman A Life University of Missouri Press ISBN 978 0 8262 1050 0 Freeland Richard The Truman Doctrine and the Rise of McCarthyism 1971 Gardner Michael R Harry Truman and civil rights SIU Press 2002 Goulden Joseph C The Best Years 1945 1950 1976 popular social history Graff Henry F ed The Presidents A Reference History 2nd ed 1997 pp 443 58 Gronlund Mimi Clark A Controversial Appointment Supreme Court Justice Tom C Clark University of Texas Press 2021 pp 137 146 Hah Chong do and Robert M Lindquist The 1952 steel seizure revisited A systematic study in presidential decision making Administrative Science Quarterly 1975 587 605 online Hamby Alonzo L 1991 An American Democrat A Reevaluation of the Personality of Harry S Truman Political Science Quarterly 106 1 33 55 doi 10 2307 2152173 JSTOR 2152173 Hartmann Susan M Truman and the 80th Congress 1971 online James Rawn The Truman Court Law and the Limits of Loyalty University of Missouri Press 2021 Karabell Zachary The Last Campaign How Harry Truman Won the 1948 Election Vintage 2001 Lacey Michael J ed The Truman Presidency Cambridge University Press 1991 13 essays by specialists Lee R Alton The Truman 80th Congress Struggle over Tax Policy Historian 33 1 1970 68 82 online Lee R Alton Truman and Taft Hartley A Question of Mandate 1966 McCoy Donald R and Richard T Ruetten Quest and Response Minority Rights and the Truman Administration U Press of Kansas 1973 Marcus Maeva Truman and the Steel Seizure Case Duke UP 1994 link Matusow Allen J Farm policies and politics in the Truman years Harvard UP 1967 Mitchell Franklin D Harry S Truman and the news media contentious relations belated respect U of Missouri Press 1998 Oshinsky David M 2004 Harry Truman In Brinkley Alan Dyer Davis eds The American Presidency Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 618 38273 6 Poen Monte M Harry S Truman versus the medical lobby The genesis of Medicare U of Missouri Press 1996 Pusey Allen Truman Seizes Steel Mills American Bar Association Journal 103 2017 72 Richardson Elmo Dams Parks and Politics Resource Development and Preservation the Truman Eisenhower Era 1973 Savage Sean J Truman and the Democratic Party 1997 Schoenebaum Eleanora W ed Political Profiles The Truman Years 1978 715pp short biographies of 435 players in national politics 1945 1952 Sitkoff Harvard Harry Truman and the election of 1948 The coming of age of civil rights in American politics Journal of Southern History 37 4 1971 597 616 online Stebbins Phillip E Truman and the Seizure of Steel A Failure in Communication The Historian 34 1 1971 1 21 online Swanson Charles E James Jenkins and Robert L Jones President Truman Speaks A Study of Ideas vs Media Journalism Quarterly 27 3 1950 251 262 Foreign and military policy Edit Acheson Dean Present at the Creation My Years in the State Department 1969 a major primary source online Anderson Terry H The United States Great Britain and the Cold War 1944 1947 1981 Beisner Robert L Dean Acheson A Life in the Cold War 2015 online a major scholarly study Blomstedt Larry 2015 Truman Congress and Korea The Politics of America s First Undeclared War U Press of Kentucky pp 33 38 ISBN 9780813166124 Casey Steven 2005 Selling NSC 68 The Truman Administration Public Opinion and the Politics of Mobilization 1950 51 PDF Diplomatic History 29 4 655 690 doi 10 1111 j 1467 7709 2005 00510 x Congressional Quarterly Congress and the Nation 1945 1964 1965 Highly detailed and factual coverage of foreign and defense policy pp 89 334 onlineDobbs Michael Six Months in 1945 FDR Stalin Churchill and Truman from World War to Cold War 2012 popular narrative Dudziak Mary L 2011 Cold War Civil Rights doi 10 1515 9781400839889 ISBN 9781400839889 Falk Stanley L 1964 The National Security Council Under Truman Eisenhower and Kennedy Political Science Quarterly 79 3 403 434 doi 10 2307 2145907 JSTOR 2145907 Freda Isabelle Screening Power Harry Truman and the Nuclear Leviathan Comparative Cinema 7 12 2019 38 52 Hollywood s take Gaddis John Lewis Strategies of Containment A Critical Appraisal of Postwar American National Security Policy 1982 2nd ed 2005 online Gaddis John Lewis George F Kennan An American Life 2011 online Haas Lawrence J 2016 Harry and Arthur Truman Vandenberg and the Partnership That Created the Free World doi 10 2307 j ctt1d4v19t ISBN 9781612348346 Herken Gregg The winning weapon The atomic bomb in the cold war 1945 1950 1980 online Holsti Ole 1996 Public Opinion and American Foreign Policy U of Michigan Press House Jonathan A Military History of the Cold War 1944 1962 2012 excerpt and text search Isaacson Walter and Evan Thomas The Wise Men Six Friends and the World They Made Acheson Bohlen Harriman Kennan Lovett McCloy 1986 excerpt Larson Deborah Welch Truman as World Leader in Origins of Containment Princeton University Press 2021 pp 126 149 Judis John B 2014 Genesis Truman American Jews and the Origins of the Arab Israeli Conflict New York Farrar Straus amp Giroux ISBN 978 0 374 16109 5 LaFeber Walter 2002 America Russia and the Cold War 1945 2002 McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 284903 7 Leffler Melvyn P For the Soul of Mankind The United States the Soviet Union and the Cold War 2007 McFarland Keith D and Roll David L Louis Johnson and the Arming of America The Roosevelt And Truman Years 2005 McGhee George The US Turkish NATO Middle East Connection How the Truman Doctrine and Turkey s NATO Entry Contained the Soviets Springer 2016 McMahon Robert J Dean Acheson and the Creation of an American World Order 2008 Maddox Robert James From War to Cold War The Education of Harry S Truman Routledge 2019 May Ernest R 2002 1947 48 When Marshall Kept the U S Out of War in China PDF The Journal of Military History 66 4 1001 1010 doi 10 2307 3093261 JSTOR 3093261 Matray James I and Donald W Boose Jr eds The Ashgate research companion to the Korean War 2014 excerpt Merrill Dennis 2006 The Truman Doctrine Containing Communism and Modernity Presidential Studies Quarterly 36 27 37 doi 10 1111 j 1741 5705 2006 00284 x Miscamble Wilson D The most controversial decision Truman the atomic bombs and the defeat of Japan Cambridge UP 2011 Miscamble Wilson D From Roosevelt to Truman Potsdam Hiroshima and the Cold War 2007 Neuse Steven David E Lilienthal The Journey of an American Liberal University of Tennessee Press 1996 on Atomic Energy Commission Offner Arnold A 1999 Another Such Victory President Truman American Foreign Policy and the Cold War Diplomatic History 23 2 127 155 doi 10 1111 1467 7709 00159 Offner Arnold A Another Such Victory President Truman and the Cold War 1945 1953 Stanford University Press 2002 online Paterson Thomas G Presidential Foreign Policy Public Opinion and Congress The Truman Years Diplomatic History 3 1 1979 1 18 online Paterson Thomas G Meeting the communist threat Truman to Reagan Oxford UP 1989 Pierpaoli Paul G Truman and Korea The Political Culture of the Early Cold War U of Missouri Press 1999 Pogue Forrest C George C Marshall vol 4 Statesman 1945 1959 1987 online Sandler Stanley 2014 Sandler Stanley ed The Korean War doi 10 4324 9781315056265 ISBN 9781315056265 Schwartzberg Steven Democracy and US Policy in Latin America during the Truman Years UP of Florida 2003 Shaffer Robert The Christian Century Protestants Protesting Harry Truman s Cold War Peace amp Change 42 1 2017 93 127 Walton Richard J Henry Wallace Harry Truman and the cold war Viking 1976 Warren Aiden and Joseph M Siracusa The Transition from Roosevelt to Truman in US Presidents and Cold War Nuclear Diplomacy Palgrave Macmillan Cham 2021 pp 19 34 Watson Robert P Michael J Devine Robert J Wolz eds The National Security Legacy of Harry S Truman 2005 Weissman Alexander D Pivotal politics The Marshall Plan A turning point in foreign aid and the struggle for democracy History Teacher 47 1 2013 111 129 online for middle and high schoolsHistoriography Edit Catsam Derek 2008 The Civil Rights Movement and the Presidency in the Hot Years of the Cold War A Historical and Historiographical Assessment History Compass 6 314 344 doi 10 1111 j 1478 0542 2007 00486 x S2CID 145006108 Corke Sarah Jane 2001 History historians and the naming of foreign policy A postmodern reflection on American strategic thinking during the Truman administration Intelligence and National Security 16 3 146 165 doi 10 1080 02684520412331306250 S2CID 154408227 Dalfiume Richard M Truman and the Historians A Review Article Wisconsin Magazine of History 50 3 1967 pp 261 264 online Ferrell Robert H Harry S Truman and the Cold War Revisionists U of Missouri Press 2006 Gaddis John Lewis 1983 The Emerging Post Revisionist Synthesis on the Origins of the Cold War Diplomatic History 7 3 171 190 doi 10 1111 j 1467 7709 1983 tb00389 x S2CID 154907275 Griffith Robert Truman and the Historians The Reconstruction of Postwar American History Wisconsin Magazine of History 1975 59 1 20 47 in JSTOR Hogan Michael J 1996 Hogan Michael J ed America in the World doi 10 1017 CBO9780511609473 ISBN 9780521498074 Kirkendall Richard S The Truman period as a research field A Reappraisal 1972 2nd ed 1974 1st ed 1967 For major essays plus commentaries by experts 246pp Kort Michael The Historiography of Hiroshima The Rise and Fall of Revisionism New England Journal of History 64 1 2007 31 48 online Margolies Daniel S ed 2012 A Companion to Harry S Truman doi 10 1002 9781118300718 ISBN 9781118300718 Orren Karen and Stephen Skowronek Regimes and regime building in American government A review of literature on the 1940s Political Science Quarterly 113 4 1998 689 702 onlineSavage Sean J 2012 Truman in Historical Popular and Political Memory A Companion to Harry S Truman pp 7 25 doi 10 1002 9781118300718 ch1 ISBN 9781118300718 Smith Geoffrey S 1976 Harry We Hardly Know You Revisionism Politics and Diplomacy 1945 1954 A Review Essay American Political Science Review 70 2 560 582 doi 10 2307 1959657 JSTOR 1959657 S2CID 144330938 Walker j Samuel 2005 Recent Literature on Truman s Atomic Bomb Decision A Search for Middle Ground Diplomatic History 29 2 311 334 doi 10 1111 j 1467 7709 2005 00476 x S2CID 154708989 Williams Robert J 1979 Harry S Truman and the American Presidency Journal of American Studies 13 3 393 408 doi 10 1017 S0021875800007428 S2CID 144817103 Primary sources Edit Acheson Dean Present at the creation My years in the State Department 1987 online Bernstein Barton J and Allen J Matusow eds The Truman administration A Documentary History 1966 518 pp onlineClark Clifford and Holbrooke Richard Counsel to the President 1991 Gallup George H ed The Gallup Poll Public Opinion Volume One 1935 1948 1972 The Gallup Poll Public Opinion Volume Two 1949 1958 1972 Giglio James N 2001 Truman in cartoon and caricature Kirksville Truman State University Press ISBN 978 0 8138 1806 1 Hamby Alonzo L ed Harry S Truman and the Fair Deal 1974 223pp short excerpts from primary sources and from experts Martin Joseph William 1960 My First Fifty Years in Politics as Told to Robert J Donovan New York McGraw Hill Leahy William D I was There The Personal Story of the Chief of Staff to Presidents Roosevelt and Truman Based on His Notes and Diaries Made at the Time 1950 Merrill Dennis ed Documentary history of the Truman presidency University Publications of America 2001 Miller Merle Plain Speaking An Oral Biography of Harry S Truman 1974 WARNING Scholars who have compared the audio tapes with the published transcripts have concluded the Miller often distorted what Truman said or fabricated statements Truman never made See Robert H Ferrell amp Francis H Heller May June 1995 Plain Faking American Heritage Vol 46 no 3 pp 21 33 Roosevelt Eleanor ed Eleanor and Harry The Correspondence of Eleanor Roosevelt and Harry S Truman Citadel Press 2004 Truman Harry S Public papers of the presidents of the United States 8 vol Federal Register Division National Archives and Records Service General Services Administration 1946 53 Truman Harry S 1980 Ferrell Robert H ed Off the Record The Private Papers of Harry S Truman Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 8262 1119 4 Truman Harry S 1955 Memoirs Year of Decisions Vol 1 Garden City NY Doubleday online 1956 Memoirs Years of Trial and Hope Vol 2 Garden City NY Doubleday online v 2 Lyman Van Slyke ed The China White Paper August 1949 1967 2 vol Stanford U P 1124pp copy of official U S Department of State China White Paper 1949 vol 1 online at Google online vol 1 pdf vol 2 is not online see library holdings via World Cat excerpt are in Barton J Bernstein and Allen J Matusow eds The Truman administration A Documentary History 1966 pp 299 355 Vandenberg Arthur Hendrick The Private Papers of Senator Vandenberg 1952 ed by Joe Alex Morris The Documentary History of the Truman Presidency edited by Dennis Merrill 35 vol University Publications of America 1996 table of contentsExternal links EditFussell Paul August 1981 Thank God for the Atom Bomb PDF The New Republic via www uio no Harry S Truman Library amp Museum Harry S Truman A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress Essays on Harry S Truman each member of his cabinet and First Lady from the Miller Center of Public Affairs Newsreel May 23 1946 Rail strike paralyzes the nation Newsreel May 29 1946 End of coal strike Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Presidency of Harry S Truman amp oldid 1129955852, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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