Mike Mansfield oral history collection, 1951-1985 [sound recording].

ArchivalResource

Mike Mansfield oral history collection, 1951-1985 [sound recording].

Chiefly recordings of interviews, radio and television news program appearances, speeches, press conferences, etc., of Mike Mansfield relating to his career as a U.S. representative and senator from Montana and as U.S. ambassador to Japan; together with similar recordings of others on occasions which generally have some relation to Mansfield's public career. Other persons represented include Jack Anderson, Bob Clark, Gerald R. Ford, Guy M. Gillette, Tennyson Guyer, Lyndon B. Johnson, and Kenneth P. O'Donnell.

366 sound cassettes.

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 7676127

Library of Congress

Related Entities

There are 10 Entities related to this resource.

United States. Congress. House

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U.S. House of Representatives is the lower house of Congress. From the guide to the Subscription lists, 1870, (L. Tom Perry Special Collections) The first session of the Congress of the United States, under a resolution passed by the Congress of the Confederation, on September 13, 1788, was called to meet in New York City on March 4, 1789. On the appointed day only 13 Members of the House were present and, as this number did not constitute a quorum, the sessions...

Ford, Gerald R., 1913-2006

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Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973

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Mansfield, Michael Joseph "Mike", 1903-2001

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Mike Mansfield Quiet Leadership in Troubled Times On March 24, 1998, Mike Mansfield returned to the Senate to deliver the first Leader's Lecture in the Old Senate Chamber, which had been restored during his long tenure as Senate majority leader. Many of the senators who attended had not served with Mansfield. He was 95 years old, but stood straight and spoke forthrightly. In reflecting on Senate leadership, he chose to deliver a speech that he had planned to give on November 22, 1963, but ...

O'Donnell, Kenneth P., 1924-1977

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Kenneth Phillip O'Donnell (1924-1977) was the Director of campaign organization, John F. Kennedy re-election campaign for Senate in 1958, and Organizer and Director of John F. Kennedy presidential campaign schedule in 1960. From 1961 to 1965, he was the Special Assistant to the President, and in 1964 served as the Executive Director of the Democratic National Committee. In 1965, he was an unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic nomination for Governor of Massachusetts, and in 1968, he was the ...

Gillette, Guy M. (Guy Mark), 1879-1973

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Guy Mark Gillette was born in Cherokee, Iowa, February 3, 1879. After attending public schools, Gillette served as a sergeant in the Fifty-second Iowa Regiment of the US Army during the Spanish-American War, from May 25 until October 30, 1898. He returned to school and graduated from Drake University in Des Moines in 1900. After being admitted to the bar, he established practice in Cherokee. Gillette was City Attorney of Cherokee in 1906 and 1907, prosecuting attorney of Cherokee County from 190...

Clark, Bob, 1922-

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Robert "Bob" Edward Clark (b. 1922) was a reporter for the International News Service during the Eisenhower Administration. From the description of Clark, Bob, 1922- (U.S. National Archives and Records Administration). naId: 10569763 ...

Anderson, Jack, 1922-2005

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Jack Northman Anderson was an investigative journalist, author, television personality, and for over 50 years the columnist behind the syndicated column ⁰́₋Washington Merry-Go-Round.⁰́₊ He was born in Long Beach, CA in 1922, to Orlando and Agnes Mortensen Anderson, devout Mormons who moved the family to Utah when Jack was two years old. (Many sources, including the New York Times obituary, identify him as Jackson Northman Anderson, but this is incorrect; his given name was Jack.) He briefly enro...

Guyer, Tennyson, 1913-1981

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United States. Congress. Senate

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