Visit Your Local PBS Station PBS Home PBS Home Programs A-Z TV Schedules Watch Video Support PBS Shop PBS Search PBS
 
The Presidents Connect today's election issues with the past

 

Chapter:

The Mid-Term Elections of 1946 (4:47)
The Republicans gain majorities in both houses of Congress.
FDR

Now
Playing

Truman
LBJ
Nixon
Carter
Reagan
G H W Bush

Related Clips


FDR, Chapter 17

Hard Times (8:05)
With no economic recovery in sight, Roosevelt's relief programs meet opposition.
Watch Now

FDR, Chapter 4

Eleanor is an Angel (13:17)
Roosevelt marries his distant cousin Eleanor, the niece of his hero Theodore Roosevelt. They move next door to his mother in New York.
Watch Now

CARTER, Chapter 13

Champion for Human Rights (7:31)
Carter's foreign policy opposes torture and imprisonment without due process. Yet the U.S. continues to support the oppressive Shah of Iran.
Watch Now

Chapter 1

Introduction (2:58)
Part one of a biography of Harry Truman, the 33rd president.
Watch Now

Chapter 2

Early Years (14:11)
Harry Truman grows up in Independence, Missouri. He gets his first taste of politics at the 1900 Democratic National Convention.
Watch Now

Chapter 3

The Family Farm (10:22)
After working office jobs in Kansas City, Truman returns to the family farm to help his father. He woos Elizabeth Wallace.
Watch Now

Chapter 4

Love and Death (10:23)
Bess Wallace rejects Truman. After his father dies, Truman leaves the farm to make his fortune, but fails in business.
Watch Now

Chapter 5

World War I (9:52)
Truman shows leadership as the captain of Battery D, fighting in World War I's bloodiest battles.
Watch Now

Chapter 6

Marriage and Politics (13:12)
After the war, Truman marries Bess Wallace and runs for public office.
Watch Now

Chapter 7

Senator Truman, (6:45)
With the help of Kansas City political boss Tom Pendergast, Truman wins a seat in the U.S. Senate.
Watch Now

Chapter 8

Truman Proves Himself (9:07)
Truman works hard to understand the workings of the Senate and finds sucess.
Watch Now

Chapter 9

The 1944 Election (11:21)
Truman becomes the Democrats' compromise choice for vice president.
Watch Now

Chapter 10

Vice President for 82 Days (5:25)
Roosevelt keeps Truman out of his inner circle. When the president dies, Truman is nervous and unprepared.
Watch Now

Chapter 11

A Man of the People (10:27)
As president, Truman makes a show of energy and confidence. Americans warm to his straightforward manner.
Watch Now

Chapter 12

Endgame in Japan (10:04)
After the war in Europe ends, Truman focuses on the bitter battle with Japan. Bess Truman is uncomfortable as first lady.
Watch Now

Chapter 13

On the World Stage (10:27)
Truman meets with Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin to decide the fate of Europe. In New Mexico the atomic bomb is successfully tested.
Watch Now

Chapter 14

Nuclear Diplomacy (7:06)
Truman takes a tougher stance at Potsdam after receiving news of a successful atomic bomb test in New Mexico.
Watch Now

Chapter 15

Hiroshima and Nagasaki (7:32)
The U.S. drops atomic bombs on two Japanese cities. The Japanese surrender and World War II ends.
Watch Now

Chapter 16

CreditsProduction credits for part one of the television program.
Watch Now

Chapter 17

CreditsHead credits for part two of the television program.
Watch Now

Chapter 18

Introduction (2:16)
Part two of a biography of Harry Truman, the 33rd president.
Watch Now

Chapter 19

The Post War Economy (10:59)
Truman faces domestic challenges. He takes a tough stance against striking railroad workers.
Watch Now

Chapter 20

The Mid-Term Elections of 1946 (4:47)
The Republicans gain majorities in both houses of Congress.
Watch Now

Chapter 21

The Truman Doctrine (9:04)
As the Soviets control Eastern Europe, Truman acts to stop Communism in Greece and Turkey.
Watch Now

Chapter 22

American Power (6:50)
Truman establishes the Marshall Plan and prepares the country for a new kind of war -- the Cold War.
Watch Now

Chapter 23

A Stand for Human Rights (11:21)
Before the election of 1948, Truman boldly calls for civil rights for African Americans and for Israel to be recognized.
Watch Now

Chapter 24

The Conventions (6:41)
Despite Democrats' misgivings, President Truman is nominated at a dispirited Democratic Convention.
Watch Now

Chapter 25

Truman Defeats Dewey (9:47)
Taking his "New Deal" message on a whistlestop campaign across the country, Truman defeats New York governor Thomas Dewey.
Watch Now

Chapter 26

Fighting Communism (10:10)
Facing the Communist threat, Truman shows U.S. strength with an airlift to blockaded Berlin and air strikes and infantry in Korea.
Watch Now

Chapter 27

The Korean War (5:29)
U.S. troops in Korea retreat until Douglas MacArthur's surprise attack on Inchon forces the North Koreans to pull back to the 38th Parallel.
Watch Now

Chapter 28

Crossing the 38th Parallel (9:35)
MacArthur convinces Truman to fight the Chinese in Korea. Truman denies MacArthur's demand to use atomic weapons.
Watch Now

Chapter 29

Under Pressure (6:22)
Truman persists with a "limited war." Pressure on him grows intense as casualties mount and U.S. troops are repelled by Chinese forces.
Watch Now

Chapter 30

Dismissing MacArthur (6:58)
In a controversial move, Truman removes General Douglas MacArthur from his command for insubordination.
Watch Now

Chapter 31

The Last Years (9:06)
With the lowest popularity rating in history, Truman decides not to seek re-election. He retires to Independence, Missouri.
Watch Now

Chapter 32

CreditsProduction credits for part two of the television program.
Watch Now

  • TRUMAN: Chapter 1
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 2
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 3
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 4
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 5
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 6
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 7
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 8
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 9
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 10
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 11
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 12
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 13
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 14
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 15
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 16
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 17
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 18
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 19
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 20
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 21
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 22
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 23
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 24
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 25
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 26
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 27
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 28
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 29
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 30
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 31
  • TRUMAN: Chapter 32
Choose a format

Choose a Video Format

Quicktime | Windows Media

Download a free player
QuickTime | Windows Media

Related Links


TRUMAN
Learn more about Harry S. Truman.

Postwar Berlin
Photographs of a destroyed city.

The Nuremberg Trials
Surviving Nazi leaders go on trial.

Purchase Videos & DVDs

• See Comments

Loading comments...

You must log in to submit a comment. If you don't have an account at American Experience, you will need to register to comment. It's fast and easy to do!

Post a Comment (Limit 5000 Characters)

• View Transcripts •

 

Transcript: Chapter 20

NARRATOR: The strike was over. But Truman had paid a high price. His gut response had cost him the support of the unions he so desperately needed.

ALONZO HAMBY: The labor leaders, and the liberals in general, are shocked, horrified ... not without reason. And from this point on it is going to be very, very tough for Truman to drum up labor-liberal enthusiasm for the Democratic ticket in the '46 elections.

NARRATOR: The 1946 mid-term elections would be, for Truman, a disaster. Republicans blamed the president for America's problems, and most Americans seemed to agree. Truman's popularity plummeted.

ALONZO HAMBY: It seems to me that Truman really hits rock bottom in the 1946 campaign. For an awful lot of people, he's still very much in the shadow of FDR.

DAVID MCCULLOUGH: He wasn't coping very well and people were beginning to make fun of him. "To err is Truman." "I'm just mild about Harry."

ROBERT DONOVAN: There were periods there when Truman didn't look up to the job. The Republicans would say, yeah, he was a little man, who came out of nowhere, a haberdasher.

NARRATOR: There were shortages of practically everything -- bread, meat, housing. And inflation was threatening to undermine the economy -- prices had shot up six per cent in a single month.

NELSON LICHTENSTEIN, Historian: What this meant was that millions and millions of potential Democratic voters, people who had voted for Roosevelt, they said, "To heck with it ... they bungled it."

And the Republicans said, "Had enough?" That was their slogan. People agreed with them. Truman gets blamed. They stay home. The Republicans sweep to power.

NARRATOR: The Republicans won control of the Senate, the House of Representatives, even the state governorships.

NELSON LICHTENSTEIN: The elections of '46 were a Republican sweep, a huge turnaround and why? Not because everyone voted Republican, but because the Democrats, the New Dealers, the labor people, they stayed home.

NARRATOR: Discredited by his own party, voted down by the American people, Harry Truman, pundits were saying, was an embarrassment.

NARRATOR: The disastrous election over, Truman fled to his vacation hideaway on Florida's Key West.

"Dear Bess,

I'm seeing no outsiders. I don't give a damn how put out they get. I'm doing as I damn please for the next two years and to hell with all of them. The only regret I have is that you are not here ... You know I guess I'm a damn fool, but I'm happier when I can see you -- even when you give me hell I'd rather have you around than not."

Bess continued to spend as much time as she could in Independence. When asked how it felt to be First Lady, she replied, "So-so." She looked, her husband said approvingly, "exactly as a woman of her age should look."

When Bess and Harry Truman had first moved into the White House, Bess's mother Madge Wallace had moved in too. After more than a quarter of a century, she continued to call her son-in-law, "Mr. Truman."

REX SCOUTEN, Secret Service: She didn't care much for the president. She never did. That was I guess the thing that sticks out in my mind. She was a lovely lady, but she just never, never... we.... could never figure it out why she just didn't care for the president.

NORWOOD WILLIAMS, White House Butler: I think that she felt that Miss Bess was above him. Even though he was president, he was beneath Miss Bess. He was a failure in his haberdashery. She would tell you. Oh, she didn't mind telling you that even though he was the president of the United States, that she didn't care much for him or for his mother. I'm sorry, but that's the way it was.

back to top

 
 

Major funding provided by the National
Endowment for the Humanities and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting

NEH Corporation for Public Broadcasting


Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this Web site do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.