Nixon resignation 50th anniversary

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Fifty years ago last night, August 8, 1974, was one of those "where were you when you heard?" moments that touches everyone in a generation.

Dad, Mom, my sister, and I were in the midst of our first tent-camping vacation, which began with a day at Silver Dollar City (our first visit) and included Harry Truman's birthplace in Lamar, Missouri, and his presidential library in Independence, Missouri and the Kansas City Zoo in Swope Park.

We were driving to the Truman Library on August 8 when we heard the news on the radio that President Nixon would resign.

The library had a recreation of the Oval Office and a lot of items Truman had been given while president. The house where he returned to live after the presidency was not far away and we may have driven by it. His grave was in the library courtyard. He had only passed away a couple of years earlier; Bess Truman was still living.

At the library there was an exhibit with a panel for each of the presidents through the present day. At the end of the display was Nixon. Another boy, maybe a year or two older than I was, looked at the photo of Nixon and said, "I hate that guy!" I told him, "They just said on the radio that he's going to resign." The boy said, "Good! I hate him!" but he still sounded more angry than pleased.

I thought that was an odd thing for a kid to say. Nixon was the first president I was really aware of, sworn in when I was 5. I was inclined to respect him and all presidents of all parties. Around that age, I had a book of the Presidents that I got at the gift shop at Pea Ridge Battlefield. I planned to name my sons Harry S, Dwight David, John Fitzgerald, Lyndon Baines, & Richard Milhous Bates. I suppose I would have used First Ladies' names for any daughters.

I remember watching the Watergate hearings on daytime network TV. I was fascinated. Our babysitter, Mrs. Yount, hated to have her "stories" (soap operas) interrupted.

That night we were at our campsite at the KOA near Lawrence, Kansas. We didn't have access to a TV, so we listened to the resignation speech on the radio in our '72 Chevrolet Kingswood Estate station wagon.

I've spent some travel time today listening to podcasts about the days leading up to the resignation. Here is a series of clips from Frank Gannon's 1983 interviews with Nixon, in which he describes the timing of his decision (made at the end of July), his family's opposition, and his interactions with staff, cabinet members, and congressional leaders.

After the jump, some more viewing and links related to Nixon's resignation.

Nixon's address to the nation announcing his resignation:

Nixon and his family bid farewell to the White House staff on August 9:

Yesterday, the Richard Nixon Presidential Library hosted a virtual panel discussion on the resignation and the wealth of material held by the library. The panel includes Frank Gannon, a deputy to Press Secretary Ron Ziegler, who flew to San Clemente with Nixon to help him begin to organize his memoirs, and Bob Bostock, who worked with Nixon on one of his books and wrote the text of the original 1990 Nixon Library exhibit, covering the years 1962-1974. Archivists and historians discuss Nixon's place in history.

America's Untold Stories podcast is doing an ongoing deep-dive series on the Watergate break-in, looking at each of the burglars and their interesting connections to crime and to intelligence agencies.

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This page contains a single entry by Michael Bates published on August 9, 2024 6:03 PM.

Is INCOG a cabal of WEF globalists? was the previous entry in this blog.

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