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Recently,
65 nationally acclaimed historians came out with their annual ratings
for America’s best presidents. Abraham Lincoln topped the list again, followed by
George
Washington, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt and Harry S.
Truman. If you had a chance to sit down and talk to one of these great
men, what would you say? What would you ask? Well, I had just such an
opportunity, and here’s my story. In the spring of
1961, having just been detached from active duty with the US Air Force,
I was traveling home to |
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As the plane reached
its cruising altitude, I began noticing an unusual number of coach
passengers passing through the draped doorway to the first class
compartment, each returning a few moments later. Turning to the sailor
I asked, “What’s all the action, up front?” “Harry Truman is up
there. He got on in “We should go shake
his hand,” I replied. With a scowl on his face, he answered, “I wouldn’t walk across aisle for that SOB!” |
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I was nervous as I
approached the draped doorway, but being in uniform gave me solace.
Pulling the cloth back, I found a small First Class compartment with a
pair of double seats facing each other on both sides. There were only
two men in the entire compartment. On my right, facing me, was a large
fellow dressed in a business suit, staring at my every move. He had to
be Secret Service. On my left, also facing me, was the former President
of the United States. I was overwhelmed with pride and scared to death! His face looked
older and more tired than I remembered it from photographs. With my hand
outstretched, I took a few steps and simply said, “Mr. President I,
would like to shake your hand.” When he looked up
from the magazine he was reading, a broad, warm smile raced across his
face. Extending his hand, he replied, “Airman, I would like to shake
yours.” His handshake was firm and solid for a seventy-seven year old
man. Nodding towards the empty seat in front of him, he continued,
“Sit down Airman. Let’s talk.”
It took a second for
my knees to stop shaking and start bending. Sitting down on the edge of
the seat in front of him, I asked, “Mr. President, where are you going
today?” With his blue eyes
peering into my soul, he answered, “Have to make a speech up in That’s how it
started. I asked him another four or five simple questions. He answered
all my queries but always turned the conversation back to me.
“Where you from, son?... Do you like the Air Force?... What do
you do in the Air Force?... Are you married or have a girlfriend?”
Always the conversation came back to me! But it was more than that: it
was the way he looked at me, as if I were the most important person on
the plane. It was also his eyes, bright and alert, always seeming to
pierce through to my soul. I would like to say
we talked for half-an-hour, but I’m sure it was only a few minutes.
When I finally got my legs to work again and stood up to leave, he shook
my hand again. “Nice talking to
you, Airman. God bless you.” Looking into his
steel-blue eyes for the last time, I knew I was in the presence of a
great leader, as well as a famous President. Walking back to my seat I couldn’t believe how fortunate I had been to meet the former President of the United States. I knew I would remember that brief encounter for the rest of my life, and here I am, writing about it almost fifty years later! Therefore, I was not surprised by the historians’ recent decision to name Harry S. Truman as one of this nation’s greatest Presidents. He was, and I had the honor to meet him! |
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