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Landslide: LBJ and Ronald Reagan at the Dawn of a New America
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PRESIDENTIAL SERIES > WE ARE OPEN - WEEK TWELVE - PRESIDENTIAL SERIES: LANDSLIDE - February 16th - February 22nd, 2015 - Chapter Eleven - No Spoilers, Please

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message 1: by Jerome, Assisting Moderator - Upcoming Books and Releases (new)

Jerome Otte | 4776 comments Mod
Hello Everyone,

For the week of February 16th - February 22nd, we are reading Chapter Eleven of Landslide

The twelfth week's reading assignment is:

Week Twelve - February 16 - February 22
Chapter Eleven: A Thousand Days (pages 315-348)

We will open up a thread for each week's reading. Please make sure to post in the particular thread dedicated to those specific chapters and page numbers to avoid spoilers. We will also open up supplemental threads as we did for other spotlighted books.

This book is being kicked off on December 1st.

We look forward to your participation. Amazon, Barnes and Noble and other noted on line booksellers do have copies of the book and shipment can be expedited. The book can also be obtained easily at your local library, local bookstore or on your Kindle. Make sure to pre-order now if you haven't already. This weekly thread will be opened up February 16th

There is no rush and we are thrilled to have you join us. It is never too late to get started and/or to post.

Bentley will be leading this discussion and back-up will be Assisting Moderators Kathy, Jill, Bryan, and Jerome.

Welcome,

~Jerome

TO ALWAYS SEE ALL WEEKS' THREADS SELECT VIEW ALL

Landslide LBJ and Ronald Reagan at the Dawn of a New America by Jonathan Darman by Jonathan Darman (no photo)

REMEMBER NO SPOILERS ON THE WEEKLY NON SPOILER THREADS - ON EACH WEEKLY NON SPOILER THREAD - WE ONLY DISCUSS THE PAGES ASSIGNED OR THE PAGES WHICH WERE COVERED IN PREVIOUS WEEKS. IF YOU GO AHEAD OR WANT TO ENGAGE IN MORE EXPANSIVE DISCUSSION - POST THOSE COMMENTS IN ONE OF THE SPOILER THREADS. THESE CHAPTERS HAVE A LOT OF INFORMATION SO WHEN IN DOUBT CHECK WITH THE CHAPTER OVERVIEW AND SUMMARY TO RECALL WHETHER YOUR COMMENTS ARE ASSIGNMENT SPECIFIC. EXAMPLES OF SPOILER THREADS ARE THE GLOSSARY, THE BIBLIOGRAPHY, THE INTRODUCTION AND THE BOOK AS A WHOLE THREADS.

Notes:

It is always a tremendous help when you quote specifically from the book itself and reference the chapter and page numbers when responding. The text itself helps folks know what you are referencing and makes things clear.

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If you need help - here is a thread called the Mechanics of the Board which will show you how:

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

Also the citation thread:

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

Introduction Thread:

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

Table of Contents and Syllabus

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

Glossary

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Bibliography

There is a Bibliography where books cited in the text are posted with proper citations and reviews. We also post the books that the author used in his research or in his notes. Please also feel free to add to the Bibliography thread any related books, etc with proper citations. No self promotion, please. We will be adding to this thread as we read along.

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

Book as a Whole and Final Thoughts - SPOILER THREAD

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

Landslide LBJ and Ronald Reagan at the Dawn of a New America by Jonathan Darman by Jonathan Darman (no photo)

Directions on how to participate in a book offer and how to follow the t's and c's - Landslide - What Do I Do Next?

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...


message 2: by Jerome, Assisting Moderator - Upcoming Books and Releases (new)

Jerome Otte | 4776 comments Mod
All, we do not have to do citations regarding the book or the author being discussed during the book discussion on these discussion threads - nor do we have to cite any personage in the book being discussed while on the discussion threads related to this book.

However if we discuss folks outside the scope of the book or another book is cited which is not the book and author discussed then we do have to do that citation according to our citation rules. That makes it easier to not disrupt the discussion.


message 3: by Jerome, Assisting Moderator - Upcoming Books and Releases (new)

Jerome Otte | 4776 comments Mod
Hello Everyone,

For the week of February 16th-February 22nd we are reading Chapter Eleven of Landslide

The twelfth week’s reading assignment is:

Week Twelve - February 16-22
Chapter Eleven - A Thousand Days-pages 315 to 348

Chapter Overview and Summary

A Thousand Days


The Johnson administration, in more subtle ways, continues to worry about how they measure up to the Kennedys, despite widespread popular support and many legislative successes. Poverty remains an issue that threatens to mock Johnson’s agenda, while Vietnam threatens Johnson’s image and gives his critics a hammer. Robert Kennedy and Richard Nixon threaten Johnson’s future. The rise of Reagan marks a resurgence in Republicanism and conservatism. Reagan wins the governorship of California in a landslide, and Democratic control of Congress is threatened. The publication of William Manchester’s The Death of a President reveals tensions between the Kennedy and Johnson families.

The Death of a President November 20-November 25, 1963 by William R. Manchester by William R. Manchester William R. Manchester


Justin Poe | 50 comments I'm struck early on in this chapter at the irony in how history has portrayed JFK and LBJ. Darman points out on pages 316-317 how much more LBJ really did accomplish versus the first 1,000 days of the JFK administration. Yet, one president is much maligned and scrutinized to this day and one is held up with utter reverence.

I'm still reading the chapter but I'm supposing this is due to the one big disaster known as Vietnam on LBJ's record which overshadows all else.


Bryan Craig It is an interesting phenomenon, Justin. Clearly, LBJ has more accomplishments to his name than JFK, but the times changed quickly and Vietnam.

On the other, we have a president who is assassinated and the Kennedys are very keen to develop and protect an image.

I think the riots would have happened under JFK's watch, and I wonder what he would have done...


message 6: by Jerome, Assisting Moderator - Upcoming Books and Releases (new)

Jerome Otte | 4776 comments Mod
That is an interesting contrast. It does seem like a president's image and popular conception is more well-remembered than his actual accomplishments, at least when considering these two presidents. It was a quite a turbulent time period, and Johnson was easy to blame for such fiascoes as Vietnam, which I think overshadowed everything else.

Johnson was just unable to remove the war from his image. It is somewhat ironic since Johnson committed to Vietnam only reluctantly, and partly to protect his image. Nor did Johnson have Kennedy's glitz.


Katy (kathy_h) Justin wrote: "I'm struck early on in this chapter at the irony in how history has portrayed JFK and LBJ. Darman points out on pages 316-317 how much more LBJ really did accomplish versus the first 1,000 days of..."

I too was impressed with that part also, Justin. I remember studying US History at the University and my professor teaching us that really as a president that Kennedy was mediocre -- but that is not how "history" was remembered.


Martin Zook | 615 comments It seems quite reasonable when comparing the records of LBJ and JFK to conclude the Texan accomplished much more than the Boston Brahman.

But Vietnam was such a disaster, not just in immediate and direct loses and discredit of the US but also long-term damage to our foreign policy for which we pay even today, that many say it offsets LBJ's domestic accomplishments.

I'm not in agreement with the assessment that Vietnam eclipses the extraordinary domestic record of LBJ's accomplishments at home, even though I agree that Vietnam is (note present tense) a crippling failure of the US.


Peter Flom Like others (and like Darman), I agree that LBJ accomplished more than JFK. That seems inescapable. But one thing he didn't accomplish was the management of his image - at that, JFK and the Kennedys were true masters.

I am left with the same feeling I had earlier: LBJ belonged in the Senate, not the White House. The glare of presidential publicity was too much for him. The Senate was just the right size.

LBJ found it much easier to control his image and his power among a small group - 100 senators and, earlier in his life, other moderately sized groups. JFK, on the other hand, was perfect for the huge audience.


message 10: by Katy (new) - rated it 4 stars

Katy (kathy_h) I agree that LBJ shined in the senate, but I'm not sure it was all the publicity that made the difference. In the Senate, LBJ was able to be a "worker." That is what he excelled at, getting things done himself. As president (the executive branch) his job description changed. And this new job was not set up for his strengths.


Steve D | 43 comments LBJ got things done domestically, but wouldn't you agree that his ultimate results fell well short of his promises? He sold himself as the guy that would fix all the country's problems and lead the US into some kind of economic and social utopia. Despite the bills that were passed, those things did not come to be. Obviously, the disaster of Vietnam contributed negatively to the way he was viewed on foreign policy, but Vietnam seemed to also have a negative impact on the economy at home as well as "The Great Society" as a whole.


Peter Flom I think LBJ oversold what could have been done, even without Vietnam. Then there was Vietnam on top of it.

And, again playing to his strengths in a small group:
One of LBJ's great talents was the ability to size up an individual person, figure out what he/she wanted, feared, liked and so on, and use that information to get what he (LBJ) wanted. He did this throughout his career, and it didn't fail until he met the Kennedys.

And then it failed utterly as president: He couldn't go up and talk to and learn about and figure out the American people; still less could he do that with the Vietnamese.

At least with regard to Americans, this is where Reagan shone; although I never liked him, he did have the ability to sense what the great mass of people wanted to hear and feel (and, from what I can tell, he lacked LBJ's one on one abilities).


Martin Zook | 615 comments Steve wrote: "LBJ got things done domestically, but wouldn't you agree that his ultimate results fell well short of his promises? He sold himself as the guy that would fix all the country's problems and lead th..."

Yeah, well, did he under-deliver, or over-promise?


message 14: by Katy (new) - rated it 4 stars

Katy (kathy_h) I am interested in what you all think about the subtitle of this book: The Dawn of a New America.


David (nusandman) | 111 comments No matter what you accomplish in your first term, it seems that the odds are stacked against you in the second term. Deserved or not. Really makes me wonder if we hadn't changed the term limits after FDR if we would have ever had a President be able to last beyond 2 terms? Or even want to.


Peter Flom Kathy wrote: "I am interested in what you all think about the subtitle of this book: The Dawn of a New America."

I think maybe the subtitle oversells a little. Was the new America the one LBJ ushered in (or was that a continuation of FDR and Truman?) Or was it the one Reagan ushered in? (if so, the book should be about his presidency).

Or did we have a "new America" at all?

I think change is gradual and varied.


message 17: by Teri (new) - rated it 4 stars

Teri (teriboop) I had honestly overlooked the subtitle. I'm with Peter, I don't see this as a new America whether it was one Johnson brought in or Reagan. Do you think they really "changed politics forever?" That is a line from the Amazon/Goodreads synopsis.


message 18: by Martin (last edited Feb 16, 2015 03:59PM) (new) - rated it 3 stars

Martin Zook | 615 comments Every day is a New America, Kathy. In fact, new is a tautology. America is new everyday.

Reinventing one's self, with little to no regard for History, is the quintessential quality that differentiates America from other nations.


Helga Cohen (hcohen) | 591 comments Peter wrote: "I think LBJ oversold what could have been done, even without Vietnam. Then there was Vietnam on top of it.

And, again playing to his strengths in a small group:
One of LBJ's great talents was the..."


I agree with your statements about Reagan and LBJ. LBJ really accomplished a lot though he is remembered more for Vietnam which he did not really warm up to in the beginning. Reagan just had a way to act and do what he felt the people wanted which was his strong point due to his acting.


Bryan Craig Yeah, it seems the subtitle is a little forced, but I expect the author did not have much choice sometimes.

You get a sense LBJ felt "free" with his grand plans to change society, so he went for it. However, grand designs are extremely difficult to handle for a president.


Ann D I think that as we get further away from Johnson's presidency, he will get more credit for his real accomplishments.

When he decided not to run again, there were kids shouting in the streets "Hey, hey LBJ, how many kids did you kill today." People remembered that hostility for a long, long time. Until I read Caro'sThe Passage of Power with The History Book Club I had little appreciation for the man and his accomplishments.

Peter, I fully agree that "he [Reagan] did have the ability to sense what the great mass of people wanted (my italics) to hear and feel." He geared his speeches to that and, for many, was hugely popular as a result. However, in my opinion, this ability did not make him a real leader.

On the other had, Johnson's utopian promises don't reflect well on him either.

The Passage of Power (The Years of Lyndon Johnson, #4) by Robert A. Caro by Robert A. Caro Robert A. Caro


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Bentley | 44291 comments Mod
Ann I agree with you. Yes, Reagan seems to be the type of speaker that just tells them what they want to hear.

As far as Johnson - I think just like when we studied Wilson we have to judge them in terms of the time they lived in. I think he was getting carried away in trying to lead the people out of their grief for JFK and wanted to make folks feel that there was hope for them and the country. He seemed to get a little carried away with his metaphors and symbolism for sure (smile).


Justin Poe | 50 comments Martin wrote: "Steve wrote: "LBJ got things done domestically, but wouldn't you agree that his ultimate results fell well short of his promises? He sold himself as the guy that would fix all the country's proble..."

Martin, that's an excellent question...did he under deliver or over promise? To me, that's really the theme of Darman's book and something I'll hit on more in my book review.

I think Darman is pointing this out for both political parties. Candidates promise, sometimes with the best of intentions, way more then they can ever deliver in the end.


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Bentley | 44291 comments Mod
Great thought Justin - promise versus execution


Martin Zook | 615 comments Justin wrote: "Martin wrote: "Steve wrote: "LBJ got things done domestically, but wouldn't you agree that his ultimate results fell well short of his promises? He sold himself as the guy that would fix all the c..."

Yes. Darman does conclude that there is something unique about the overpromising bit. I'm not so sure that the first candidate to run for office in a democracy isn't the first guilty to promise more than they can deliver. It seems to be an inherent weakness to democracies.

That raises the question of whether it's possible to manage expectations that a candidate creates with promises.

While that may sound reasonable, it may lead to candidates who are not held accountable. At least an over-promising candidate can be held to their lofty words, where a person managing expectations may set the bar lower.

Another factor to take into account is the unforseen. We tend to think of presidential candidates of having more leeway to implement than they actually do. Take Nixon, for instance: politically in his day he was conservative Republican, yet the domestic accomplishments of his administration included establishing the Environmental Protection Agency and passage of the Clean Air and Water acts among other liberal achievements. International affairs is an area where little can be accurately predicted (ISIS?).


Ann D Excellent point, Martin. Problems in the rest of the world frequently force a president to make detours. Look at Obama and what he promised in the campaign regarding foreign involvement and sitting down to talk with our enemies.

Presidents find the job to be a lot more complicated than they anticipated as candidates.

And Bentley, you are very correct about the need to judge presidents in the context of their own times.


Brian Sandor (briansandor) | 70 comments I think LBJ way over promised and then couldn't deliver because of Vietnam. The midterms was the bill coming due. It was going to catch up to him sooner or later.


message 28: by Lewis (new)

Lewis Codington | 291 comments Regarding the subtitle, I think America was at the dawn of a perceived new age or generation. We were leaving behind WWII and the focus on Europe and its problems and were beginning to look at our own "unlimited" potential and possibilities...


message 29: by Lewis (new)

Lewis Codington | 291 comments I see that the first thousand days perspective has been discussed a good bit already. It does seem surprising and peculiar that the public (including me) focuses so much on nice sounding cliches, appearances, charm, etc. instead of the long slog involved in turning a big ship around. LBJ had the energy and vision but perhaps not the charm and feel good appearance that the public often is influenced by...and eventually judges leaders by... Will history in time view things more objectively?


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Bentley | 44291 comments Mod
I like that explanation Lewis - that is very interesting (the first part). However - don't you think by the time that JFK came along and LBJ that we had already done that. When did World War II end - September 1945 (after 6 long years) - JFK was in office in 1961 - 1963 - so the LBJ days began in 1963 and he was elected on his own in 1964 which is where the book begins. So I am not sure that World War II was still in the country's psyche or was the focus of the subtitle. That might be a good question for Darman in the Q&A - I am told that he will be back to answer the outstanding questions.


message 31: by Bentley, Group Founder, Leader, Chief (new) - rated it 4 stars

Bentley | 44291 comments Mod
Brian wrote: "I think LBJ way over promised and then couldn't deliver because of Vietnam. The midterms was the bill coming due. It was going to catch up to him sooner or later."

Viet Nam was the albatross around his neck for sure


message 32: by Lewis (new)

Lewis Codington | 291 comments Page 316:
"Kennedy had spoken..."
"Johnson had passed programs..."
Do words speak louder than actions??


message 33: by Lewis (new)

Lewis Codington | 291 comments Page 320: "...the collapsing urban centers..."
How important are perception and timing for a successful presidency?


message 34: by Bentley, Group Founder, Leader, Chief (new) - rated it 4 stars

Bentley | 44291 comments Mod
Lewis - what are you trying to say with message 32 and 33?


message 35: by Lewis (new)

Lewis Codington | 291 comments Page 332: "...he fled."
Is this too harsh to say that LBJ was running from his domestic problems? When things appear wobbly or unclear at home, perhaps it is understandable to suggest that a president is running from his problems. But communicating and getting along with the rest of the world seems like a very high priority and necessity if we are to live in peace with other nations.


message 36: by Lewis (new)

Lewis Codington | 291 comments Page 333: "...an extended campaign stop..."
Perhaps LBJ was campaigning... Certainly any activity can be viewed as an opportunity to score points for a politician. But that doesn't diminish the need to develop relationships beyond our borders.


message 37: by Lewis (last edited Feb 18, 2015 07:25PM) (new)

Lewis Codington | 291 comments I don't know how grim the situation in California may have been in the mid-60s, but RR seems to have always found a way to rise above the issues in the eyes of the public and charm them over...(page 337).


message 38: by Bentley, Group Founder, Leader, Chief (new) - rated it 4 stars

Bentley | 44291 comments Mod
Lewis I agree in part - Reagan use to skim the surface - never any depth so he never got mired in the details or the muck.


message 39: by Lewis (new)

Lewis Codington | 291 comments Certainly Vietnam was devastating for LBJ (and we'll never know what it might have done to JFK or RR), but was he really perceived as being devious and crafty (page 342)? Those seem like harsh words for one who not too many months before was riding the crest of the wave...


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Bentley | 44291 comments Mod
If somebody is the Master of the Senate and gets the amount of legislation through that he managed to do - I think devious and crafty are understatements - I would have used words like awesome or maybe how about supercalifragilisticexpialidocious (lol). Devious and crafty seem like words that are too pithy to describe the power of LBJ. I think devious and crafty and powerful and manipulative, sharp and insightful are all words that could describe LBJ in really a positive way.


message 41: by Lewis (new)

Lewis Codington | 291 comments Bentley wrote: "Lewis - what are you trying to say with message 32 and 33?"

Just seems surprising to me that we assess leaders based on grand statements ("Don't ask what America can do...?") rather than on concrete action. Also, the crumbling urban centers likely did not happen overnight...but the spotlight shining on them happened on LBJ's untimely watch...


message 42: by Bentley, Group Founder, Leader, Chief (last edited Feb 18, 2015 07:41PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Bentley | 44291 comments Mod
Americans love hyperbole (lol) - the grander the better - even though most of what politicians say is fatuous (especially in campaigns). The urban centers and infrastructure are still crumbling and yet zillions are going overseas.


message 43: by Lewis (new)

Lewis Codington | 291 comments Bentley wrote: "I like that explanation Lewis - that is very interesting (the first part). However - don't you think by the time that JFK came along and LBJ that we had already done that. When did World War II e..."

Well, I was thinking that Ike was also a very long WWII shadow/reminder cast across the land. The new faces of JFK-LBJ-RR represented a turning away from the past and a new start to the future.


message 44: by Lewis (new)

Lewis Codington | 291 comments Page 348: "...so little time."
I wonder if it seemed mind boggling to LBJ how quickly his fortunes had turned...or did he think back to his father and figure, "Well, I knew this would happen sooner or later..."


message 45: by Ann D (last edited Feb 20, 2015 06:37AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ann D Johnson's health history also put extra pressure on him to accomplish a lot in a limited amount of time. He had a very serious heart attack when he was not quite 47, and said that the men in his family usually died by 65. He made it to 64.

The urban decay had been there for a long time, but the race riots really focused attention on it.


Martin Zook | 615 comments Good point. I'd forgotten about his health history. But as someone who descends from a long line of men who check out with coronaries now entering the red zone, I get it.


message 47: by Bentley, Group Founder, Leader, Chief (last edited Feb 19, 2015 07:32AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Bentley | 44291 comments Mod
Ann you are incorrect in message 45 - Johnson did not die at 54 years old. He almost made it to the family norm for men - he made it to 64 and if he had taken better care of himself which he refused to do - who knows.

64 (1908–1973)

January 23, 1973

OBITUARY

Lyndon Johnson, 36th President, Is Dead; Was Architect of 'Great Society' Program

Special to THE NEW YORK TIMES

SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Jan. 22--Lyndon Baines Johnson, 36th President of the United States, died today of an apparent heart attack suffered at his ranch in Johnson City, Tex.

The 64-year-old Mr. Johnson, whose history of heart illness began in 1955, was pronounced dead on arrival at 4:33 P.M. central time at San Antonio International Airport, where he had been flown in a family plane on the way to Brooke Army Medical Center here.

A spokesman at Austin said that Mr. Johnson's funeral would probably be held Thursday at the National City Christian Church in Washington. He said the body would lie in state at the Johnson Library in Austin from noon tomorrow until 8 A.M. Wednesday, with an honor guard, and then would be taken to Washington, where it will lie in state at the Capitol rotunda until the funeral. Mr. Johnson will be buried at the L.B.J. Ranch.

Death came to the nation's only surviving former President as the nation observed a period of mourning proclaimed less than a month ago for former President Harry S. Truman.

A Legacy of Progress

Although his vision of a Great Society dissolved in the morass of war in Vietnam, Mr. Johnson left to the nation a legacy of progress and innovation in civil rights, Social Security, education, housing and other programs attesting to his fundamental affection for his fellow Americans.

At Fort Sam Houston, where Brooke Army Medical Center is situated, flags were hoisted to full staff and then immediately lowered again in respect for the Texan who was thrust into the Presidency on Nov. 22, 1963, when an assassin's bullet took the life of President Kennedy in Dallas.

Ironically, Mr. Johnson died in what appeared to be the waning days of the Vietnam war. The man who won election in 1964 to a full term as President with the greatest voting majority ever accorded a candidate was transformed by that war into the leader of a divided nation.

Amid rising personal unpopularity, in the face of the lingering war and racial strife at home, Mr. Johnson surprised the nation on March 31, 1968, with a television speech in which he announced, "I shall not seek and I will not accept the nomination of my party as your President."

Stage Set for Defeat

He thus renounced an opportunity to cap with a second full term a career in public life that began in 1937 with his election to Congress as an ardent New Dealer and led to the majority leadership of the Senate and to the Vice-Presidency and the Presidency. His renunciation set the stage for Democratic defeat at the polls in 1968.

Two days before Mr. Johnson's death, Richard M. Nixon, the Republican who was elected in 1968, took the oath of office for his second term as President. Mr. Nixon telephoned Mrs. Johnson today at the hospital here to express his sympathy.

At a news briefing tonight in Austin at KTBC, the Johnson family's television and radio station, Tom Johnson, executive vice president of the station, who was also a long-time aide to Mr. Johnson, gave the following account of the former President's death:

At 3:50 P.M., while in his bedroom for his regular afternoon nap, Mr. Johnson called the ranch switchboard and asked for Mike Howard, the head of his Secret Service detail, who was out in a car.

Bill Morrow, the switchboard operator, tried to call Mr. Howard and other Secret Service agents.

The first agents he reached were Ed Nowland and Harry Harris. They raced to the bedroom with a portable oxygen unit.

They found Mr. Johnson lying beside his bed. They said later he had already turned dark blue and appeared to be dead.

Nevertheless, they began trying to revive him. Mr. Nowland administered mouth-to- mouth resuscitation.

Two physicians were telephoned, Col. George McGranahan of Brooke Hospital and Dr. David J. Abbott of nearby Johnson City.

Placed Aboard Plane

Mr. Howard reached the bedroom at 3:55 P.M. and began an external heart massage.

At 4:05 P.M., Mrs. Johnson was called while riding in a car about a block from the L.B.J. Library in Austin, where she has an office. She flew by helicopter from the library to San Antonio.

At 4:19 P.M., Mr. Johnson was placed aboard a family plane, a Beech King Air. Also aboard the twin-engined plane were Dr. Abbott; Mr. Nowland; Mr. Harris; Mrs. Dale Malechek, wife of the ranch foreman, and the pilot, Barney Hulett.

The plane arrived at 4:33 in San Antonio, where Dr. Abbott pronounced the former President dead. At 4:45 P.M., Mrs. Johnson arrived from Austin, about 70 miles away. The ranch is about 45 miles from San Antonio.

At about the same time, Colonel McGranahan arrived at the airport and confirmed the death.

Mrs. Johnson, the former Claudia Alta Taylor, known as Lady Bird, returned to Austin in the company of Mr. Howard, arriving at 6:45 P.M. local time and going to her penthouse apartment at the family broadcasting station.

A short time later, she was joined by Brig. Gen. James Cross, Air Force, retired, a family friend and former pilot of the Presidential plane, Air Force One.

The Johnsons' two daughters, Mrs. Patrick J. Nugent and Mrs. Charles S. Robb, accompanied by their husbands, later met their mother at the ranch. Also present was J. C. Kellam, the general manager of the family business interests.

While they discussed funeral plans, the body of the former President was taken from Brooke Army Medical Center to Austin by the Weed-Corley Funeral Home of Austin.

Mr. Johnson had always made it clear that he wanted to be buried on the family ranch in Johnson City, in a small, walled burial plot about 400 yards from the ranch house, where his father, mother and other relatives had been laid to rest.

Colonel McGranahan said tonight that the former President's death was apparently caused by a coronary thrombosis.

An autopsy performed by Col. L. R. Hieger, chief of pathology at Brooke General Hospital, showed that Mr. Johnson had been suffering from severe coronary arterial disease. Two of three major arteries supplying the heart were completely occluded, Colonel Heiger said, and the third artery was 60 per cent occluded. Further evaluation will be made later, he said.

At a news briefing tonight Tom Johnson said Mrs. Johnson had told him that the former President's health had not altered recently, although she mentioned that he had been quieter than usual.

One of Mr. Johnson's last formal appearances took place last Tuesday in Austin, where he attended the inauguration of Gov. Dolph Briscoe and Lieut. Gov. William P. Hobby. On the ceremonial platform outside the capitol, Mr. Johnson, looking thin, seemed to be enjoying an opportunity to see old friends and shake hands with well-wishers who flocked around him.

Later that day, he took Walter Heller, the former chairman of his Council of Economic Advisers, to Southwest Texas State University, Mrs. Johnson's alma mater, in San Marcos, for a talk to a group of students.

During the question-and-answer session, Mr. Johnson said to the audience, "Come on, now, make your questions quicker, and Walter, you make your answers shorter."

In a discussion of food and meat prices, Mr. Heller predicted a rise of 6 to 7 per cent in meat prices.

"I can tell you what's happening with cattle," Mr. Johnson said. "I paid my dealer $92 a ton for feed. The bill went to $110 a ton and now it's costing me $156 a ton for food."

Last Saturday, joining Mrs. Johnson in her beautification work, the former President went to Ranch Road 1, which runs across the Pedernales River from the L.B.J. Ranch, and planted a redbud tree, a Texas tree that blooms with red flowers. The tree was the first of 100 to be planted along the road.

On that occasion, Mr. Johnson told a friend that he was not feeling very well and said that that was why he had not gone to Washington for the inauguration of President Nixon.

Source: On This Day - January 23, 1973


message 48: by Bentley, Group Founder, Leader, Chief (last edited Feb 19, 2015 07:39AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Bentley | 44291 comments Mod
I really believe that Lyndon Johnson did not run again because he just knew that he was not feeling well. And I think he knew about the health prognosis of the men in his family and felt that he would die before either beginning the presidency or during the term. He always had one foot in the past with his family and was always fearful of the past and potential ruin due to his father. I also think that he did not want to be the one to give the country another shock with another President not fulfilling his term or even being able to start one. I think Viet Nam really hurt his health too.


message 49: by Katy (new) - rated it 4 stars

Katy (kathy_h) When I look at the pictures of LBJ during his presidency, I am struck by how old he looks. I believe he is in his late 50s at this time, and he looks 10-20 years older.


message 50: by Bentley, Group Founder, Leader, Chief (last edited Feb 19, 2015 08:02AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Bentley | 44291 comments Mod
Exactly Kathy - you took the words right out of my head (lol). I thought he looked older than McCain does today.

Just look at the man: (this was Lyndon in 1964!!!!) - he was born in 1908 so in this photo he was 56!!!



And look at McCain:



McCain was born August 29, 1936. And this is McCain now. He is 79 this year. This 79 year old today looks younger than Lyndon Johnson looked when he was about 56 in 1964 when that photo was taken.


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