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Truman






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Teacher's Guide: Did You Know? back 5 of 5

Enjoy this list of informative, amusing, and intriguing facts about the 33rd President. The timeline which follows provides a global perspective of Truman's era.

The Buck
The famous saying "The buck stops here" was not coined by Truman himself. However, he had a sign with the quotation on his desk and referred to it often enough so that it became his unofficial motto. The sign was a gift from a friend, a U.S. Marshal in Missouri, who saw a similar sign at the Federal Reformatory at El Reno, Oklahoma, and had one made for the president. "The buck stops here" is derived from the expression "to pass the buck," meaning to pass responsibility on to someone else. According to the Truman Library, the phrase may have developed among poker players, who could pass a marker made from buckhorn -- which became known as a "buck" -- to the next player if they did not wish to deal during a game.

First Daughter of Mystery
Truman's daughter Margaret has not only written biographies of both of her parents (see the Annotated Bibliography in Educator Resources), but she has also become a leading writer of mysteries. Her whodunits all take place in Washington, D.C., including such locations as the Smithsonian Institution, the Capitol Building, the Supreme Court, and, of course, the White House.

A Lincoln Bedroom Controversy
Because she was a Confederate sympathizer and apparently still had deep feelings about the outcome of the Civil War, Truman's mother would not sleep in Lincoln's bed during a visit to the White House.

The Long and Winding Road
One of the alternative parties that split off from the Democrats in 1948 was the Dixiecrat party. Their presidential candidate was Strom Thurmond, who was then governor of South Carolina. He received over 1 million votes in the election. Thurmond, who is in his nineties and a U.S. senator from South Carolina, is currently president pro-tem of the Senate.

Paths Crossing
Coincidentally, Harry Truman roomed with Dwight Eisenhower's older brother Arthur in a boardinghouse in Kansas City, but there is no evidence that the two future presidents met each other at the time.

Tailor Made
Harry Truman wasn't the only future president to make his living in the clothing business. Andrew Johnson, the man who succeeded Lincoln after his assassination, was a tailor until he, too, found politics more to his liking.

Television Pioneer
President Truman was the first president to address the nation on television. In his inaugural speech on January 20, 1949, he asked Americans to conserve food in order to aid starving peoples of the world.

What's in an Initial?
Truman did not have a middle name, but he did have a middle initial. Truman explained that the S was a compromise tribute to his grandfathers, Anderson Shipp Truman and Solomon Young. For years there has been a controversy over whether or not the S should have a period after it; the Harry S. Truman Library does use the period, as does the Government Printing Office, but many people don't because the initial doesn't stand for a name.

International Timeline (1945-1953)
Read a selected chronology of major international events that occurred during Truman's presidency.

1945

Yalta Conference attended by FDR, Churchill, and Stalin

FDR dies on April 12, 1945

United Nations formed

V-E Day marks the end of the war in Europe

Potsdam Conference attended by Churchill, Truman, and Stalin

U.S. drops an atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki; Japan surrenders, ending World War II

Ho Chi Minh establishes the independent republic of Vietnam

Arab League founded to oppose the establishment of a Jewish state

Nuremberg trials begin

World Bank is founded

1946

U.N. General Assembly meets for the first time

Albania, Hungary, Jordan, and Bulgaria become independent

Juan Péron elected president of Argentina

Truman establishes the Atomic Energy Commission

Civil war breaks out in Greece between the right-wing government and communist rebels

1947

U.N. decides to partition Palestine to create a Jewish state

Burma becomes independent

India becomes independent and Pakistan is created

1948

Mahatma Gandhi is assassinated by a Hindu nationalist

Marshall Plan for European relief goes into effect

Israel is created

USSR blockades Berlin; the airlift begins

1949

People's Republic of China is proclaimed under Mao Zedong

Republic of Ireland is established and recognized by Great Britain

Israel joins the U.N.

Blockade of Berlin ends

Apartheid established in South Africa

Pandit Nehru becomes prime minister of India

1950

North Korea invades South Korea

China occupies Tibet

Assassination attempt made against Truman by two Puerto Rican nationalists

1951

King Abdullah of Jordan assassinated

Peace treaty signed between the U.S. and Japan

Julius and Ethel Rosenberg sentenced to death for espionage in the U.S.

1952

Honolulu Conference attended by the U.S., Australia, and New Zealand

Prince Hussein becomes king of Jordan

Mau Mau uprising occurs in Kenya

U.S. begins hydrogen bomb testing in the Pacific

The United Kingdom produces an atomic bomb

1953

U.S. and North Korea sign armistice ending the Korean War

Government of Iran ousted and replaced with regime loyal to Shah Pahlevi

Marshal Tito elected president of Yugoslavia

Josef Stalin dies

Queen Elizabeth II of Great Britain crowned

USSR explodes a hydrogen bomb

Edmund Hilary and Tenzing Norgay are the first to climb Mt. Everest

Watson and Crick discover the structure of DNA

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