Description:

Nixon Richard

Single page TLS, 6.75" x 8.75", dated "December 5, 1970" on White House Stationary with the embossed seal to top. Signed by Richard Nixon as "RN". Accompanied with the original White House envelope, however not postmarked appearing as perhaps a hand delivered letter, 7" x 4.25". Expected center fold else fine condition.  Accompanied by what appears to be a typed copy on tissue paper of Jack Dreyfus' response to Nixon's letter, 8.5" x 10.75" with faint crease, unsigned, but dated January 12, 1971.

Richard Nixon TLS to Jack Dreyfus, composed while President. Nixon had a long term relationship with Dreyfus, who is considered the 2nd most significant money manager of the last century. Dreyfus had contributed heavily to Nixon's campaigns both in 1960, and in 1968 and met frequently with Nixon. In Richard Nixon's letter to Dreyfus, the President enclosed a group of collected speeches as "a token of my appreciation for the important contribution you have made toward the cause of good government" and he noted "I thought these collected speeches might serve to point out the paths this Administration is taking to achieve the goals all of us are seeking -- for our country, for ourselves, and for our children."

The set includes Jack Dreyfus's response to Nixon's letter whereby aside from thanking him for the "book containing your speeches", he also extends his home on Minot's Island to Nixon for vacationing and notes "We have scraped a piece of land level so that a helicopter can land there". A significant letter by Dreyfus as it turned out Nixon would take him up on his offer and frequent Minot's Island quite often, including conducting business both on the phone and in person from the Dreyfus compound.

Richard Nixon's relationship with Jack Dreyfus became highly controversial years later as it has come to light a drug Dreyfus had taken for himself to cure him of Depression, which Dreyfus heralded as a "wonder drug", was offered directly to Nixon by Dreyfus to assist him with his mood disorders, depression, anxiety and stress. In the recent published book, Arrogance of Power, referenced allegations which revealed interviews with Nixon’s former psychotherapist, Dr. Arnold Hutschnecker, who counseled Nixon for decades and considered the president to be “neurotic.”“Everyone has their share of neuroses, but there is indeed significant evidence in the presidency, well before Watergate, that Nixon on occasion behaved in a way that to ordinary people was simply not normal” and that "Concern for Nixon’s mental state was so great, Summers writes, that Secretary of Defense James R. Schlesinger ordered the military not to react to orders from the White House unless they were cleared by him or the secretary of state." It was also known Nixon consumed large quantities of a particular drug without a prescription, the drug Dilantin which was provided to him by Jack Dreyfus.

Jack however had no medical qualifications however he credited Dilantin with relieving him of chronic depression almost overnight, and he had become the leading advocate of it as a panacea for all manner of ailments. In the book, Arrogance of Power, it was confirmed that at a meeting between Nixon and Dreyfus in 1968 at Key Biscayne, Dreyfus told the author of the book that Nixon had said "Why don't you give me some Dilantin?" So he (Dreyfus) thought, "What the heck, he's (going to be) President of the united States. I can't get in trouble … So I went out to the car and got a bottle of a thousand and gave it to him. A few days later he called me and said 'Is it all right if I take two a day?" I said, "Yes I think so." When the author asked what Nixon wanted the Dilantin for, Dreyfus was vague. "Nixon", he said "had a lot of things … worries". At one point when Dreyfus suggested that the president should perhaps get the medication from a doctor, to which Nixon had said, "To heck with the doctor."

The two continued frequent correspondence and met quite regularly both in the White House for business, but also socially and the reader can see in this letter Nixon's overall gratitude to Jack Drefus for his "contributions".

A fantastic letter between Nixon and Jack Dreyfus, an important, significant figure in Nixon's life.

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