White House Press Release, Rear Platform Remarks of President Harry S. Truman at Everett, Washington
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IMMEDIATE RELEASE
JUNE 9, 1948
Rear Platform Remarks of the President, Everett, Washington,
June 9, 1948, 7.50 p.m., Everett Time.
Thank you, Mon. I am not fooled a bit. This crowd turned
out for the home town boy who is Governor of Washington. And that is
just exactly what they should have done.
Mr. Mayor, I can't tell you how very much I appreciated that
cordial welcome. I am overwhelmed at the turn-out, even though Mon is
on the train. I have been here before on two different occasions. I
came here and spent the time with Mon Wallgren at his home, when his
father and mother were living here. And I don't know when I have ever
met a person I thought more of than I did of Mon's father. His mother
is a grand person - she is just like my mother -- she raised a good
son, and here he is.
You know, a boy or a girl reflects his parents, and I think Mon
is a shining example of a good beginning.
I have been in this State all day - started at Spokane -
NARA
got in a car -- went up to the Grand Coulee Dam. I have been there twice
before, but I have never seen as much water in my life. And I have seen
the Missouri and the Mississippi in flood stage, and I have been to
Niagara, and I have been up the Hudson. I have not seen the Yukon, but
I have seen every other river in the United States.
The Columbia is really on a rampage, and I am sorry. They tell
me there has never been a flood like it since 1894. Well, in 1903 we had
a flood on the Missouri River, and they said there never had been another
like it since 1844. That's a long time, too. My grandmother saw both
floods, and she said the 1903 one was worse than the 1844 flood. There
were no houses or buildings there, and that is true here in 1894 -
there wasn't anything on the Columbia River to wash away so nobody
heard about it.
Now that river has been developed - part;ly not completely.
And I came out here at the suggestion of your Governor to see what could
be done to complete the developme t of the Columbia River from a power,
reclamation, irrigation and flood control standpoint.
You know, the people on the Columbia River will appreciate
what alood control means now. Since 1894 they haven't appreciated it
because they didn't think it could happen to them. That's the way
everybody feels, unless he has the experience.
Now I think the Columbia Basin, and the Missouri Basin, and
the Ohio Basin, and the Mississippi Basin can get together and really
work for a good control and a proper development program. I hope
that is the case. I am going to try to see that it is the case. And
I think I know something about the situation here and at home and in
the eastern side of the United States.
I brought a lot of reporters with me on this trip, and I venture
to say there isn't half of them ever saw anything west of the Applachian
Mountains. Now they are going to find out where the country lies! And
where the resources of the country come from. And I hope they will tell
their eastern readers and constituents just exactly what they have seen
in the last three or four days. If they do, we will have a united
country for the
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