Nixon, Richard

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Revision as of 16:28, 13 September 2007

Richard M. Nixon
Richard M. Nixon
37th President of the United States
Term of office January 20, 1969 – August 9, 1974
Preceded by Lyndon B. Johnson
Succeeded by Gerald Ford
Date of birth January 9, 1913
Place of birth Yorba Linda, California
Date of death April 22, 1994
Place of death New York City, New York
Spouse Patricia Ryan Nixon
Political party Republican


Richard Milhous Nixon (January 9, 1913 – April 22, 1994) was the 37th President of the United States, serving from 1969 to 1974. He was also the 36th Vice President, serving under Dwight D. Eisenhower. Nixon redefined the office of Vice President, making it for the first time a high visibility platform and base for a presidential candidacy. He is the only person to have been elected twice to the Vice Presidency and twice to the Presidency, and the only president to have resigned that office. His resignation came after advisement of imminent impeachment related to the Watergate break-in and subsequent Watergate scandal.

Nixon is noted for his diplomatic foreign policy, especially relaxed with the Soviet Union and China, and ending the Vietnam War. He is also noted for his middle-of-the-road domestic policy that combined conservative rhetoric and, in many cases, liberal action, as in his environmental policy.

As president, Nixon imposed wage and price controls, indexed Social Security for inflation, and created Supplemental Security Income. The number of pages added to the Federal Register each year doubled under Nixon. He advocated gun control, reduced speed limits, and eradicated the last remnants of the gold standard. Nixon created the Environmental Protection Agency and Occupational Safety and Health Administration and implemented the Philadelphia Plan, the first significant federal affirmative action program. As a party leader, Nixon helped build the GOP, but he ran his 1972 campaign separately from the party, which perhaps helped the GOP escape some of the damage from Watergate.

Early Years

Richard Nixon was born in Yorba Linda, California, to Francis A. Nixon and Hannah Milhous Nixon in a house his father built from a kit purchased from Sears, Roebuck. He was raised by his mother as an evangelical Quaker. His upbringing is said to have been marked by conservative evangelical Quaker observances, like refraining from drinking, dancing, and swearing. His father was a former member of the Methodist Protestant Church who had sincerely converted to Quakerism but never fully absorbed its spirit, retaining instead a volatile temper. Richard Nixon's great-grandfather, George Nixon III, had been killed at the Battle of Gettysburg during the American Civil War while serving in the 73rd Ohio Volunteer Infantry.

The young Lt Commander Richard Nixon of the US Navy 1945

Nixon attended Fullerton High School and Whittier High School. He graduated first in his class; showing a penchant for Shakespeare and Latin. He won a full tuition scholarship from Harvard; but since it did not cover living expenses, Nixon's family was unable to afford to send him away to college. Nixon attended Whittier College, a local Quaker school where he co-founded the Orthogonian Society, a fraternity that competed with the already established Franklin Society. Nixon was elected student body president. A lifelong football fan, Nixon practiced with the team assiduously but spent most of his time on the bench. In 1934, he graduated second in his class from Whittier and went on to Duke University School of Law, where he received a full scholarship.

Nixon returned to California, passed the bar exam, and began working in the small-town law office of a family friend in nearby La Mirada. The work was mostly routine, and Nixon generally found it to be dull, although he was entirely competent. He later wrote that family law cases caused him particular discomfort, since his reticent Quaker upbringing was severely at odds with the idea of discussing intimate marital details with strangers.

It was during this period that he met his wife Patricia Ryan, a high school teacher; they were married on June 21, 1940. They had two daughters, Tricia and Julie.

During World War II, Nixon served as an officer in the Navy. He received his training at Quonset Point, Rhode Island, and Ottumwa, Iowa, before serving in the supply corps in the South Pacific. There he was known as "Nick" and for his prowess in poker, banking a large sum that helped finance his first campaign for Congress.

Nixon was elected to the United States House of Representatives in 1946, defeating Democratic incumbent Jerry Voorhis for California's 12th Congressional district. During his two terms, he became well known as a member of the House Un-American Activities Committee, particularly for his leading role in the Alger Hiss case.

Vice Presidency

File:Eisenhower 68-40-67.jpg
Nixon and Eisenhower at a 1952 Campaign stop

In 1952, Nixon was elected Vice President on Dwight D. Eisenhower's ticket, although he was only 39 years old.

One notable event of the campaign was Nixon's innovative use of television. Nixon was accused by nameless sources of misappropriating money out of a business fund for personal use. He went on TV and defended himself in an emotional speech, where he provided an independent third-party review of the fund's accounting along with a personal summary of his finances, which he cited as exonerating him from wrongdoing, and he charged that the Democratic Presidential candidate, Adlai Stevenson, also had a "slush fund." This speech would, however, become better known for its rhetoric, such as when he stated that his wife Pat did not wear mink, but rather "a respectable Republican cloth coat," and that although he had been given a cocker spaniel named "Checkers" in addition to his other campaign contributions, he was not going to give it back, because his daughters loved it. As a result, this speech became known as the "Checkers speech" and it resulted in a flood of support, prompting Eisenhower to keep Nixon on the ticket.

Nixon reinvented the office of Vice President. Although he had no formal power, he had the attention of the media and the Republican party. He demonstrated for the first time that the office could be a springboard to the White House; most Vice Presidents since have followed his lead and sought the presidency. Nixon was the first Vice President to actually step in to temporarily run the government. He did that three times when Eisenhower was ill: On the occasions of Eisenhower's heart attack on September 24, 1955; his ileitis in June 1956; and his stroke on November 25, 1957. His quick thinking was on display on July 24, 1959, at the opening of the American National Exhibition in Moscow where he and Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev had an impromptu "kitchen debate" about the merits of capitalism versus communism.

During Nixon's vice-presidency, he became involved in several arguments with President Eisenhower, which later resulted in Eisenhower's hesitation to support Nixon during the 1960 presidential campaign.

1960 election and post-Vice Presidency

File:Jfknixon.jpg
Vice President Nixon, right, and Senator John Kennedy during their TV debate prior to the 1960 presidential election

In 1960, Nixon ran for President on his own, but lost to John F. Kennedy. The race was very close all year long, and any number of small episodes could have tilted the results one way or the other, including the televised debates. Nixon campaigned on his experience, but Kennedy said it was time for new blood and suggested the Eisenhower-Nixon administration had been soft on defense. It also didn't help that when asked of major policy decisions that Nixon had helped make, Eisenhower responded: "Give me a week and I might think of one." This hurt his standing early in the campaign, showing that he didn't necessarily have Ike's backing or the experience to be president.

In 1962, Nixon lost a race for Governor of California. In his concession speech, Nixon accused the media of favoring his opponent Pat Brown, and stated that it was his "last press conference" and that, "You don't have Dick Nixon to kick around any more."

1968 election

File:Nixonoath.jpg
Nixon takes the oath of office on January 20, 1969

Nixon moved to New York City, where he became a senior partner in a leading law firm; Nixon, Mudge, Rose, Guthrie, and Alexander. During the 1966 Congressional elections, he traveled the country in support of Republican candidates, rebuilding his base in the party. In the Presidential election of 1968, he completed a remarkable political comeback by winning the Republican nomination. Nixon appealed to what he called the "silent majority" of socially conservative Americans who disliked the "hippie" counterculture and anti-war demonstrators. Nixon promised "peace with honor," and without claiming to be able to win the war, Nixon claimed that "new leadership will end the war and win the peace in the Pacific". He did not explain in detail his plans to end the war in Vietnam, leading to allegations from Democratic nominee Hubert H. Humphrey and the media that he must have some "secret plan." Nixon never used the phrase himself, and stated in his memoirs that he had no such plan. He defeated Humphrey and independent candidate George Wallace to become the 37th President of the United States.

Presidency 1969-1974

Policies

Once in office, he proposed the Nixon Doctrine to establish a strategy of turning the fighting of the war over to the Vietnamese people. In July 1969, he visited South Vietnam, and met with President Nguyen Van Thieu and with United States military commanders, promoting the "Vietnamization" of the war. American involvement in the war declined steadily until all American combat troops left in 1973. After the withdrawal of American soldiers, fighting was left to the South Vietnamese army. Although well supplied with modern arms and equipment, their fighting capability was marginal due to corruption and low morale. A lack of adequate funding for maintenance and supplies was due primarily to increasing cutbacks by the United States Congress in response to constituents voicing opposition to an already unpopular war.

Nixon secretly ordered bombing campaigns in Cambodia in March, 1969 (code-named Menu) to destroy what were believed to be the headquarters and large numbers of soldiers of the National Front for the Liberation of Vietnam. Cambodia also served as Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Regular Army supply routes and staging areas.

File:Nixon greets POW McCain.jpg
President Nixon greets released POW, (and future Republican Senator from Arizona) Navy officer John McCain after years of imprisonment in the Hanoi Hilton in North Vietnam, 1973.

In ordering the bombings, Nixon realized he would be extending an unpopular war as well as breaching Cambodia's "official," but insincere neutrality. During deliberations over Nixon's impeachment, his unorthodox use of executive powers over the ordering of these bombings was considered as an article of impeachment, but the charge was dropped as it was not a violation of Constitutional powers.

On July 20, 1969, Nixon addressed Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin during their historic moonwalk, live via radio. Nixon also made the world's longest distance phone call to Neil Armstrong while Armstrong was on the moon. On January 5, 1972, Nixon approved the development of the NASA Space Shuttle program, a decision that profoundly influenced U.S. efforts to explore and develop space for decades afterward.

Responding to mounting public concern, the Environmental Protection Agency was established through initiatives undertaken by the Nixon Administration on December 2, 1970, to preserve the national and global environment and ecology.

Relations between the Western and Eastern power blocs changed dramatically in the early 1970s. In 1960, the People's Republic of China ended the alliance with its biggest ally, the Soviet Union, in the Sino-Soviet Split. As tension between the two communist nations reached its peak in 1969 and 1970, Nixon decided to use their conflict to shift the balance of power towards the West in the Cold War. In what later would be known as the "China Card," Nixon deliberately improved relations with China in order to blackmail the Soviet Union.

In 1971, a move was made to improve relations when China invited an American table tennis team to China; hence the term "Ping Pong Diplomacy." America's response was to support China’s entry into the U.N., something it had always vetoed. In October 1971, China entered the United Nations. In 1972, Richard Nixon became the first United States president to visit China, although the United States Navy kept a large naval fleet near Taiwan, stationed at Manila in the Phillipines. Fearing the possibility of a Sino-American alliance, the Soviet Union yielded to Nixon immediately. The first Strategic Arms Limitation Talks were concluded the same year.

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President Nixon greets Communist Party of China Chairman Mao (left) in a visit to China, 1972

Nixon supported the wave of military "golpes de Estado" in South America. Through Henry Kissinger, he gave at least implicit help to Augusto Pinochet's coup in 1973, and then helped set up operation Condor. A United States intelligence base in the Panama Canal zone coordinated the acts of the various Latino secret services, DINA, and other subversive groups.

In the presidential election, 1972 Nixon was re-elected in one of the largest landslide election victories in U.S. political history, defeating George McGovern and garnering over 60 percent of the popular vote. He carried 49 of the 50 states, losing only the traditional blue collar democrat state, Massachusetts.

On January 2, 1974, Nixon signed a bill that lowered the nation-wide highway and interstate maximum speed limit to 55 miles per hour (90 kilometers per hour) in to order to conserve gasoline during the 1973 energy crisis. This law also proved effective in lowering vehicle accident fatalities and remained in effect until George H. W. Bush's administration in the late 1980s.

On April 3, 1974, Nixon announced he would pay $432,787.13 in back taxes plus interest after a Congressional committee reported that he had inadvertently underpaid his 1969 and 1972 taxes.

In light of the near certainty of both impeachment proceedings due to the Watergate scandal by the House of Representatives and his income tax underpayment conviction by the Senate, on August 9, 1974, Nixon became the only United States president to resign his office.

Major Initiatives

Mobutu Sese Seko and Richard Nixon at the White House 1973
  • Normalizing of diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China and partially abandoning the Republic of China on Taiwan as part of Realpolitik, a foreign policy eschewing moral considerations. In the short term Nixon was successful in playing the "China card" against the Soviet Union and its client state, North Vietnam.
  • Détente, or the peaceful pause in the Cold War; détente ended in 1979, replaced by another phase of the Cold War.
  • Establishment of the Environmental Protection Agency.
  • Establishment of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
  • Establishment of the Drug Enforcement Administration.
  • Establishment of the Supplemental Security Income program.
  • Establishment of the Office of Minority Business Enterprise.
  • Post Office Department abolished as a cabinet department and reorganized as a government owned corporation, the U.S Postal Service.
  • SALT I, or Strategic Arms Limitation Talks, led to the signing of the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty.
  • "Vietnamization:" the training and arming of South Vietnamese forces to allow the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam.
  • Suspension of the convertibility of the U.S. dollar into gold, a central point of the Bretton Woods system, allowing its value to float in world markets.
  • Space Shuttle program started under NASA.
  • Endorsed an enlightened self-determination policy for Native Americans that changed the direction of policy as continued from the New Deal through the Great Society.

Administration and Cabinet

OFFICE NAME TERM
President Richard Nixon 1969–1974
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew 1969–1973
Gerald Ford 1973–1974
State William P. Rogers 1969–1973
Henry A. Kissinger 1973–1974
Treasury David M. Kennedy 1969–1971
John B. Connally 1971–1972
George P. Shultz 1972–1974
William E. Simon 1974
Defense Melvin R. Laird 1969–1973
Elliot L. Richardson 1973–1973
James R. Schlesinger 1973–1974
Attorney General John N. Mitchell 1969–1972
Richard G. Kleindienst 1972–1973
Elliot L. Richardson 1973–1974
William B. Saxbe 1974
Postmaster General Winton M. Blount 1969–1974
Secretary of the Interior Walter J. Hickel 1969–1971
Rogers C. B. Morton 1971–1974
Secretary of Agriculture Clifford M. Hardin 1969–1971
Earl L. Butz 1971–1974
Secretary of Commerce Maurice H. Stans 1969–1972
Peter George Peterson 1972–1973
Frederick B. Dent 1973–1974
Secretary of Labor George P. Shultz 1969–1970
James D. Hodgson 1970–1973
Peter J. Brennan 1973–1974
Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare Robert H. Finch 1969–1970
Elliot L. Richardson 1970–1973
Caspar W. Weinberger 1973–1974
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development George Romney 1969–1973
James T. Lynn 1973–1974
Secretary of Transportation John A. Volpe 1969–1973
Claude S. Brinegar 1973–1974


Supreme Court appointments

Nixon appointed the following Justices to the Supreme Court of the United States:

  • Warren E. Burger (Chief Justice)—1969
  • Harry Andrew Blackmun—1970
  • Lewis Franklin Powell, Jr.—1972
  • William Rehnquist—1972

Nixon also made the following unsuccessful Supreme Court nominations:

  • Harrold Carswell—rejected by the United States Senate
  • Clement Haynesworth—rejected by the United States Senate
  • Hershel Friday—passed over in favor of Lewis Franklin Powell, Jr. after the American Bar Association found Friday "unqualified."
  • Mildred Lillie—passed over in favor of William Rehnquist after the American Bar Association found Lillie "unqualified."

Watergate

Nixon departing the White House on August 9, 1974

In October 1972, The Washington Post reported that the FBI had determined Nixon aides had spied on and sabotaged numerous Democratic presidential candidates as a part of the operations that led to the infamous Watergate scandal. During the campaign, five burglars were arrested on June 17, 1972, in the Democratic Party headquarters at the Watergate office complex. They were subsequently linked to the White House. This became one of a series of major scandals involving the Committee to Re-Elect the President, including the White House enemies list and assorted "dirty tricks." The ensuing Watergate scandal exposed the Nixon administration's rampant corruption, illegality, and deceit.

The American left rallied against Nixon and successfully coalesced with the various student movements opposed to the Vietnam War. "Jail to the Chief!" became a frequent rallying cry in demonstrations throughout the nation. Nixon himself downplayed the scandal as mere politics, but when his aides resigned in disgrace, Nixon's role in ordering an illegal cover-up came to light in the press, courts, and congressional investigations. It was alleged that Nixon evaded taxes, accepted illicit campaign contributions, ordered secret bombings, and harassed opponents with executive agencies, wiretaps, and break-ins. Vice President Spiro Agnew resigned in October 1973 for accepting bribes, but Nixon remained in office, claiming, "I am not a crook."

His secret recordings of White House conversations were subpoenaed, and revealed details of his complicity in the cover-up. Nixon was named by the grand jury investigating Watergate as "an un-indicted co-conspirator" in the Watergate Scandal. He lost support from some in his own party as well as much popular support after what became known as the Saturday Night Massacre of October 20, 1973, in which he ordered Archibald Cox, the special prosecutor in the Watergate case, to be fired, as well as firing several of his own subordinates who objected to this move. The House Judiciary Committee opened formal and public impeachment hearings against Nixon on May 9, 1974. Despite his efforts, one of the secret recordings, known as the "smoking gun" tape, was released on August 5, 1974, and revealed that Nixon authorized hush money to Watergate burglar E. Howard Hunt, and also revealed that Nixon arranged for the blackmailing of the CIA into telling the FBI to stop investigating certain topics because of "the Bay of Pigs thing." Several of the Watergate burglars were involved in the Bay of Pigs operation. Haldeman would later claim that when Nixon used the phrase "the Bay of Pigs thing," he was actually referring to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

In light of his loss of political support and the near certainty of both his impeachment by the House of Representatives and his conviction by the Senate, he resigned on August 9, 1974, after addressing the nation on television the previous evening. He never admitted wrongdoing, though he later conceded errors of judgment.

On September 8, 1974, a blanket pardon from President Gerald R. Ford, who served as Nixon's second vice president, effectively ended any possibility of indictment. The pardon was highly controversial and Nixon's critics claimed that the blanket pardon was quid pro quo for his resignation. No evidence of this "corrupt bargain" has ever been proven, and many modern historians dismiss any claims of overt collusion between the two men concerning the pardon. The pardon hurt Ford politically, and it was one of the major reasons cited for Ford's defeat in the election of 1976.

Later years and death

In his later years, Nixon worked to rehabilitate his public image, and enjoyed considerably more success than could have been anticipated at the time of his resignation. He gained great respect as an elder statesman in the area of foreign affairs, being consulted by both Democratic and Republican successors to the Presidency.

Further tape releases, however, removed any doubt of Nixon's involvement both in the Watergate cover-up and also the illegal campaign finances and intrusive government surveillance that were at the heart of the scandal.

Nixon wrote many books after his departure from politics, including his memoirs.

On April 18, 1994, Nixon, 81, suffered a major stroke at his home in Park Ridge, New Jersey, and died four days later, on April 22. He was buried beside his wife, Pat Nixon (who had died ten months earlier, on June 22, 1993, of lung cancer) on the grounds of the Richard Nixon Library & Birthplace in Yorba Linda, California.

File:Pres38-42.jpg
Presidents Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush, and Clinton watched over Nixon's funeral in 1994. He was the first president to die since Lyndon B. Johnson in the 1970s, while Nixon was still president.

President Bill Clinton, former secretary of state Henry Kissinger, Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, and California Republican Governor Pete Wilson spoke at the April 27 funeral, the first for an American president since that of Lyndon Johnson on January 25, 1973, a ceremony Nixon presided over when president; also in attendance were former presidents Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, and their respective first ladies. Nixon was survived by his two daughters, along with his four grandchildren.

Quotations

  • "You don't have Nixon to kick around anymore. Because, gentlemen, this is my last press conference." 1962, after losing the race for Governor of California.
  • "This is the greatest week in the history of the world since the Creation, because as a result of what happened in this week, the world is bigger, infinitely." (concerning the Apollo Moon landing)
  • "I made my mistakes, but in all my years of public life, I have never profited from public service. I've earned every cent. And in all of my years in public life I have never obstructed justice. And I think, too, that I can say that in my years of public life that I welcome this kind of examination because people have got to know whether or not their President is a crook. Well, I'm not a crook. I've earned everything I've got." (in response to the Watergate scandal)

Foreign policy

  • "People react to fear, not love—they don't teach that in Sunday School, but it's true." (concerning fear and paranoia in the Cold War)
  • "No event in American history is more misunderstood than the Vietnam War. It was misreported then, and it is misremembered now." (1985 looking back at the Vietnam War)
  • On his secret war in Cambodia even after it became public knowledge. "Publicly, we say one thing…. Actually, we do another."

On Watergate

  • "When you get in these people when you…get these people in, say, 'Look, the problem is that this will open the whole, the whole Bay of Pigs thing, and the President just feels that,' ah, without going into the details… don't, don't lie to them to the extent to say there is no involvement, but just say this is sort of a comedy of errors, bizarre, without getting into it, 'the President believes that it is going to open the whole Bay of Pigs thing up again. And, ah because these people are plugging for, for keeps and that they should call the FBI in and say that we wish for the country, don't go any further into this case,' period!" The smoking gun tape on June 23, 1972. Nixon was telling Haldeman to tell the CIA to stop the FBI investigation, by telling the CIA that it would "open the whole Bay of Pigs thing." Haldeman did give Nixon's order to the CIA's Richard Helms, who exploded into a rage of fury when told, according to Haldeman. Haldeman would later write that Nixon used the expression "the Bay of Pigs thing" when he was referring to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
  • "I recognize that this additional material I am now furnishing may further damage my case." (after the ordered release of the White House tapes August 5 1974)
  • "The greatness comes not when things go always good for you, but the greatness comes and you are really tested, when you take some knocks, some disappointments, when sadness comes, because only if you have been in the deepest valley can you ever know how magnificent it is to be on the highest mountain… Always remember, others may hate you. Those who hate you don't win unless you hate them. And then you destroy yourself." Farewell to White House staff August 8, 1974.

On peace

  • "Any nation that decides the only way to achieve peace is through peaceful means is a nation that will soon be a piece of another nation." (from his book No More Vietnams)
  • "The greatest honor history can bestow is the title of peacemaker." (From his 1969 inaugural; later used as Nixon's epitaph)

Miscellaneous

  • "Sock it to me?" (cameo on the television comedy series Laugh-In during the 1968 election)
  • "I don't know a lot about politics, but I do know a lot about baseball."
  • "Solutions are not the answer."
  • "I would have made a good pope."
  • "Let me say this about that."
  • "McCarthy goes after Communists with a shotgun; I go after them with a rifle."
  • "We are all Keynesians now."
  • "Bunch of big 'ol flag-mangling traitors," referring to the Democratic Party after the nomination of George McGovern.
  • "In all the decisions I have made in my public life, I have always tried to do what was best for the nation. I have never been a quitter."
  • "Any man who has had power, has been a lonely man."
  • "I am not a crook."

Nixon's image and media portrayals

Nixon's career was frequently dogged by Nixon's personality, and the public perception of it. Editorial cartoonists such as Herblock and comedians had fun exaggerating Nixon's appearance and mannerisms, to the point where the line between the human and the caricature version of him became increasingly blurred. He was often portrayed as a sullen loner, with unshaven jowls, slumped shoulders, and a furrowed, sweaty brow. He was also characterized as the very epitome of a "square" and the personification of unpleasant adult authority. Nixon tried to shed these perceptions by staging photo-ops with young people, and even cameo appearances on popular TV shows such as Laugh-In and Hee Haw (before he was president). He also frequently brandished the two-finger V sign (alternately viewed as the "Victory sign" or "peace sign") using both hands, an act which became one of his best-known trademarks. Once the transcripts of the White House tapes were released, people were shocked at the amount of swearing and vicious comments about opponents that Nixon issued. This did not help the public perception, and fed the comedians even more. Nixon's sense of being persecuted by his "enemies," his grandiose belief in his own moral and political excellence, and his commitment to utilize ruthless power at all costs led some experts to describe him as having a narcissistic and paranoid personality. During the Watergate Scandal, Nixon's approval rating had fallen to 25 percent.

Nixon meets Elvis Presley in December 1970
  • The book and movie All the President's Men tells Woodward and Bernstein's story of the Watergate affair.
  • Best-selling historian-author Stephen Ambrose wrote a three-volume biography (Nixon: The Education of a Politician 1913-1962, Nixon: The Triumph of a Politician, 1962-1972, Nixon: Ruin and Recovery 1973-1990) considered the definitive work among many Nixon biographies. The detailed accounts were mostly favorably regarded by both liberal and conservative reviewers.
  • Conservative author Victor Lasky published a book in 1977 called It Didn't Start With Watergate. The book points out that past presidents may have used wiretaps and engaged in other activities that Nixon was accused of, but were never pursued by the press or the subject of impeachment hearings.
  • Chuck Colson gives an insider account of the Watergate affair in Born Again.
  • H.R. Haldeman also provides an insider's perspective in the books The Ends of Power and The Haldeman Diaries: Inside the Nixon White House
  • The movie Nixon directed by Oliver Stone.
  • Nixon in China is an opera dealing with Nixon's visit there.
  • From 1976 to 1979, Nixon was portrayed on NBC's Saturday Night Live by Dan Aykroyd.

Trivia

  • The very first Kennedy-Nixon debate took place on April 21, 1947, when Democratic Congressman Frank Buchanan selected freshman congressmen Nixon and John F. Kennedy to debate the Taft-Hartley Act at a public meeting.
  • In 1952, Nixon became the first native-born Californian to appear on a presidential ticket when he became running mate to Dwight D. Eisenhower.
  • On June 14, 1959, Vice-President Nixon and his family inaugurated the Disneyland Monorail System, the first daily operating monorail in the western hemisphere.
  • On December 22, 1968, Julie Nixon (Richard's daughter) and David Eisenhower (Dwight's grandson) were married.
  • From January 22, 1973, when his predecessor Lyndon B. Johnson died, until his resignation on August 9, 1974, Nixon was the only living current or former U.S. President.
  • Nixon financed much of his first congressional campaign with the poker winnings he accumulated in the U.S. Navy during World War II.
  • Nixon was an accomplished pianist, as was Harry S. Truman.
  • Nixon was the first U.S. President to visit the People's Republic of China.
  • Nixon was the second U.S President to visit the Soviet Union (the first was President Franklin Delano Roosevelt at the Yalta Conference in 1945).
  • Nixon was granted a coat of arms by the short-lived American College of Heraldry and Arms.
  • Nixon was an avid bowler and allegedly once bowled a perfect game.
  • Nixon was a knowledgeable sports fan, with a particular interest in football and baseball. During his presidency, he even had the odd habit of calling the losing team after the Super Bowl to offer his condolences and support.
  • Nixon was the first president to visit all 50 states.
  • Nixon played golf frequently, as did Dwight D. Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy.
  • Nixon's last public appearance was at a Conestoga High School performance of Into the Woods. His granddaughter Jennie Eisenhower, great-granddaughter of Dwight D. Eisenhower, played the role of Little Red Riding Hood.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

Primary sources

  • Nixon, Richard. (1960). The Challenges We Face: Edited and Compiled from the Speeches and Papers of Richard M. Nixon. ISBN 0195457626
  • Six Crises. Doubleday. ISBN 038500125.
  • —(1978). RN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon (Reprint). Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0671707418
  • —(1980). Real War. Sidgwich Jackson. ISBN 0283986506.
  • —1982). Leaders. Random House. ISBN 0446512494
  • —(1987). No More Vietnams. Arbor House Publishing. ISBN 0877956685
  • —(1988). 1999: Victory Without War. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0671627120
  • —(1990). In the Arena: A Memoir of Victory, Defeat, and Renewal. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0671723189
  • —(1992). Seize The Moment: America's Challenge In A One-Superpower World. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0671743430
  • —(1994). Beyond Peace. Random House. ISBN 0679433236

Secondary sources

  • Ambrose, Stephen. Nixon: The Education of a Politician 1913–1962. 1987.
  • Ambrose, Stephen. Nixon: The Triumph of a Politician, 1962–1972. 1989.
  • Ambrose, Stephen. Nixon: Ruin and Recovery 1973–1990. 1991.
  • Flippen, J. Brooks. Nixon and the Environment. 2000.
  • Friedman, Leon and William F. Levantrosser, eds. Watergate and Afterward: The Legacy of Richard M. Nixon. 1992.
  • Friedman, Leon and William F. Levantrosser, eds. Richard M. Nixon: Politician, President, Administrator. 1991.
  • Gellman, Irwin. The Contender: Richard Nixon: The Congress Years, 1946 to 1952. 1999.
  • Genovese, Michael A. The Nixon Presidency: Power and Politics in Turbulent Times. 1990.
  • Greenberg, David. Nixon's Shadow: The History of an Image. 2003.
  • Hoff, Joan. Nixon Reconsidered. 1994.
  • Kissinger, Henry. Memoirs. 2 vols. 1979, 1982.
  • Kutler, Stanley I. The Wars of Watergate: The Last Crisis of Richard Nixon. 1990.
  • Levantrosser, William F. ed. Cold War Patriot and Statesman, Richard M. Nixon. 1993.
  • Morris, Roger. Richard Milhous Nixon: The Rise of an American Politician. 1990.
  • Parmet, Herbert S. Richard Nixon and His America. 1990.
  • Reeves, Richard. President Nixon: Alone in the White House. 2002.
  • Reichley, A. James. Conservatives in an Age of Change: The Nixon and Ford Administrations. 1981.
  • Small, Melvin. The Presidency of Richard Nixon. 2003.
  • Summers, Anthony. The Arrogance of Power The Secret World of Richard Nixon. 2000.
  • Thornton, Richard C. The Nixon-Kissinger Years: Reshaping America's Foreign Policy. 1989.
  • Wicker, Tom. One of Us: Richard Nixon and the American Dream. 1991.

External links

Speeches

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