Description:

Truman Harry



In the Same Year as an Assassination Attempt, Secret Service Agents Submit Detailed Report on President Truman’s Attendance at Wedding

 


,br>[HARRY S. TRUMAN.] Urbanus E. Baughman, Typed Memorandum Signed, January 31, 1950. Including (1) Supplemental Report regarding President and Mrs. Truman’s attendance at Snyder-Horton wedding, signed by three additional Secret Service agents: Russell Daniel, James J. Rowley, and Rubert E. Holmes, January 30, 1950; and (2) Supplemental Report regarding President and Mrs. Truman’s attendance at Snyder-Horton wedding reception, January 30, 1950. 6 pp., 8" x 10.5". Very good.

 

On January 26, 1950, President Harry S. Truman and First Lady Bess Truman were among the thousands to attend the wedding of Secretary of the Treasury John W. Snyder’s daughter Edith (“Drucie”) to Major John E. Horton at the Washington Cathedral. Truman’s daughter Margaret was Snyder’s maid of honor. The press described it as “the most brilliant capital wedding in many a year.” The Trumans also briefly attended the reception with nearly 2,500 guests that evening at the Chevy Chase Country Club in Maryland.

 

Later that year, two Puerto Rican nationalists attempted to assassinate Truman while he was staying at Blair House on Pennsylvania Avenue during renovations to the nearby White House. On November 1, 1950, activists Oscar Collazo and Griselio Torresola killed one Secret Service agent and wounded two others outside the Blair House, while President Truman was inside. Secret Service agents killed Torresola and wounded Collazo, who was taken into custody, tried, and sentenced to be executed. President Truman commuted that sentence to life in prison, and in 1979, President Jimmy Carter commuted Collazo’s sentence to time served.

 

Excerpts

“For your information I am enclosing supplemental reports dated January 30, 1950, relative to the attendance of the President and the First Lady at your daughter’s wedding and wedding reception.”

 

“The President and Mrs. Truman departed the Blair House at 4:42 PM, en route to the Washington Cathedral, via the Shoreham Hotel....”

 

“The bride and groom, upon leaving the Cathedral, posed on the East Side steps of the North Entrance where still and newsreel pictures were taken. Also a group picture of the President with the bride and groom and a third group picture of the President, bride and groom and Secretary and Mrs. Snyder was taken at this time.”

 

“The motorcade proceeded to the Chevy Chase Country Club. The President and Mrs. Truman accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. William Bass, departed immediately thereafter, proceeding over the following route to the Shoreham Hotel....”

 

“The reception began at 6:15 PM and continued without interruption until 8:10 PM. The President, accompanied by the First Lady departed the Blair House at 7:06 PM and with a motorcycle escort proceeded over the route set forth in the Initial Report, arriving at the main entrance of the Chevy Chase Country Club at 7:24 PM. Upon arrival at the Club, the President and Mrs. Truman were greeted by Secretary Snyder and then escorted into the Club.”

 

“The President and Mrs. Truman then proceeded to the reception line where they paid their respects to the bride and groom. Following this, the President and Mrs. Truman passed into the Sun Parlor where they remained for approximately 15 minutes exchanging greetings with the other guests until 7:41 PM, at which time they departed the reception at the Chevy Chase Country Club and returned to the Blair House, arriving there at 8:00 PM.”

 

 

Urbanus E. Baughman (1905-1978) was the chief of the United States Secret Service from 1948 to 1961, under Presidents Harry S. Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, and John F. Kennedy. He was the first head of the Secret Service to publish a memoir. It was entitled Secret Service Chief and was published in 1962. In 1963, he was critical of the methods used by the Secret Service following the assassination of President Kennedy.

 

James J. Rowley (1908-1992) was the chief of the United States Secret Service from 1961 to 1973, under Presidents John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, and Richard M. Nixon. Rowley joined the Federal Bureau of Investigation in 1936 and the Secret Service in 1938. He provided testimony to the Warren Commission after the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

 

Harry S. Truman (1884-1972), Thirty-third President of the United States. A Missouri native, Truman first won elective office in 1922, winning a judge’s seat on the Jackson County Court.  After serving several terms, Truman was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1934, and in 1940 gained national attention for his chairmanship of the Senate Special Committee to Investigate the National Defense Program, which was eventually nicknamed “The Truman Committee.” Truman continued his political rise in 1944, when he was elected Vice-President as Franklin D. Roosevelt’s running mate. After only 82 days as Vice President, Truman was thrust into the Presidency when Roosevelt died unexpectedly. His inheritance was a world at war. Germany had surrendered, but Japan refused to give up the war. Truman, in a desperate move to avoid having to invade the Japanese mainland, ordered the deployment of two atomic bombs. They were dropped on August 6 and August 9, 1945. Japan surrendered on August 14. As President, Truman waged an undeclared war on the Soviet Union, drafting the “Truman Doctrine,” which proclaimed the United States’ willingness to provide aid to countries resisting communism. The Marshall Plan sought to strengthen the European economy in the hopes that this program, too, would prevent the spread of Soviet influence. Elected President for a full term in 1948, he also brought United States troops into the Korean War (1950-1953). In addition to his cold war activities, Truman’s administration expanded the New Deal and promoted Civil Rights initiatives.

 

 

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