Ask the Scholar

Document scope · 1 page
doc
Scholar
Ask about this object, its catalog metadata, its source description, or the page inventory. For page-specific OCR and visual context, open one of the page chats.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
496279261
label
Summary of Conversation Between Jules Hannaford, Jack Hannaford, and their mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Hannaford
core
doc
dtoType
document
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
496279261
contentType
document
title
Summary of Conversation Between Jules Hannaford, Jack Hannaford, and their mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Hannaford
collections
President's Secretary's Files (Truman Administration)
Summaries of Conversations Files
imageCount
1
hasImages
yes
source
import
hasTranscription
no
Source extras
naId
496279261
levelOfDescription
item
productionDates
day
2
logicalDate
1945-09-02
month
9
year
1945
recordType
description
ocrSource
nara-archive
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
1419575cf70e3c7c
ocrText
Washington, D. C. PR SUMMARY September 2, 1945 3:00 PM JULES HANNAFORD (State Department) and JACK HANNAFORD to their mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. HANNAFORD at White Bear Lake, Minnesota at telephone, White Bear Lake 134. JULES said that he would probably be home in two or three weeks. He said that he would go to Chicago "and look" before he comes home. GERTRUDE, apparently JULES sister, will go to Seattle to visit MARGARET FOLEY week after next. JACK said the commissioning date of his ship now under construction at Norfolk will be on December 20, 1945, and that he may be transferred to another ship. In any event he will probably be out of the service by next spring. At present he is in school 5 days a week. JULES's father said he received a card from a firm with which APPEL (phonetic) is connected. Mrs. HANNAFORD asked JULES about lend-lease and JULES said the Allies didn't know it was to be discontinued. JULES HANNAFORD told his mother and father: "We (the United States Government) have gummed up things pretty badly. His mother asked JULES why it was gummed up and JULES said: "That's the great man we got in the White House." His father asked: "You might vote Republican, huh?" and JULES replied: "That depends on who they put up for Democratic nominee (for President) next time. But I don't think I would vote Republican. JULES continued saying that the Allies didn't know about the stoppage of lend-lease "until a week ago last Monday when they were notified in writing. They'd never been told. It's very bad." Mrs. HANNAFORD: "Why didn't you tell them about it? It wasn't up to the President to tell them, was it?" JULES replied: "Because we, in fact, at our level had told them it would continue for awhile after V-J Day. But the President reversed us. That was what made it very bad CAINES and HALIFAX are arriving the first of the week, I think the conversa- tions will start the end of next week and then when that's over I think I shall come home.