Press Release, Speech of President Harry S. Truman, Greenfield, Indiana
Images (2)
Document
| id |
id
498053008
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 2IMMEDIATE RELEASE
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
REAR PLATFORM REMARKS OF THE PRESIDENT
AT GREENFIELD, INDIANA, OCTOBER 12, 1948
TRONKS
9:12 A.M., C.S.T.
NATIONAL
ARCHIVES
Mr. Chairman, I appreciate most highly that introduction
in this wonderful city of Greenfield. And I am particularly happy
to have the book from the young lady on the rooster. In 1892, when
Grover Cleveland was reelected President of the United States, my
father decorated a rooster weather vane with all the colors of the
American flag, and that flag flew from that rooster as a sign of
victory in 1892 and nearly all through Cleveland's Administration.
I can remember that because I was years old then -- I don't mind
admitting it.
It's a particular pleasure for me to be here in Greenfield
today. Middle-Westerners like myself all look upon your town as a
sort of shrine because we feel that your own great poet, James Whitcomb
Riley, belongs to all of us. I understand his birthday was just a week
ago and that October 7th was made an official holiday in Indiana in
1915.
There wa.3 a lot of down-to-earth common sense in Whitcomb
Riley's poems, and we could use more of that in the world today. I
don't think there is a kid in the country that doesn't know Orphan
Annie, and I don't think there is a boy in the country who doesn't
long for the "old swimmin' hole." And when you read Whitcomb Riley
you read just what we people in the Middle-West- think and act and
do.
He gives us a turn that no ther poet in the country has ever given.
The natural tendency on the part of all of us is to think
of the old times as the best. We tend to forget the hard times, and
remember the good times. We always remember the good things and hardly
ever do we remember the things that caused us trouble -- and some of
us want to live in the past. You can't do that. You've got to go for-
ward with civilization. You've got to follow the clock around. The
clock never runs backward. You can't turn the world around the other
way and bring it back. You've got to go forward with it.
You and I can remember that there were long periods of time in
the so-called "good old days" when the times were bad for Indiana farmers
and Indiana townspeople. All of you remember the great depression and
what that meant to the American farmer. In order to pull the farmer
out of the hole he was in after 12 years of Republican rule President
Roosevelt started a number of programs designed to help the farmer and
make a better living for him -- rural electrification, soil conservation,
The Farm Tenant Purchase Program, the Farm Price Support Program, the
school lunch program, and many others. All these Democratic programs
played their part in raising our farms to the tremendous prosperity they
enjoy today.
You know, the farmers, like everybody else when things are easy
for him, he tends to neglect his political duties. He becomes fat and
lazy and won't go to the polls on election day. He did that in 1946
-- and look what he got. The Republican Congress began immediately to
try to turn the clock back, and the first one they took a whack at was
the farmer.
Prosperity is a good thing. It makes a better life possible for all
farm families, and as a result, the rwhole country is better off. Farmers
and laborers and businessmen can all be prosperous together -- and that's
the Democratic principle. We want to make everybody have a fair share of
the national income.
It was a hard uphill fight to secure these great farm programs
and to achieve prosperity for American farmers. There was determined
Republican opposition to the Democratic efforts to get the necessary
laws on the books.
(OVER)
Relations
belongs_to