Tuesday, October 17, 2023

We Like Ike

 

I might have my native Kansan card revoked. I've lived in Kansas my entire life, but I'd never been to the Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum in Abilene. I must have passed the billboards advertising it hundreds of time as we've traveled down I-70 to go to Manhattan and beyond for school, ballgames and family time.

We finally changed that on a recent trip to Topeka. Randy had visited as a child with his parents. That's been a year or two ago - give or take a few decades. 

Randy & me in front of Eisenhower's boyhood home.

Like Randy and me, Ike was proud to "come from the very heart of America." But this Kansas boy became the 34th president of the United States, serving from January 20, 1953, to January 20, 1961. He was the only 5-star General to become president. The Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum is one of 15 Presidential Libraries operated by the National Archives and Records Administration.

Ike grew up on the "south side" of the tracks in Abilene. However, his humble beginnings served him well. He was born October 14, 1890, to David and Ida Stover Eisenhower. As one of the displays says, the Eisenhower parents "lived in piety and Christian service, brought sons into the world, and taught them the ways of righteousness, of charity to all men and reverence to God."

Ike was the third of six surviving brothers  - Arthur, Edgar, Roy, Earl & Milton. (Another brother, Paul, died as a child.) All the brothers were successful adults. The youngest, Milton, served as president of his (and our) alma mater, Kansas State University. He later went on to serve as president of both Pennsylvania State University and Johns Hopkins University. Milton was Ike's closest confidant during his presidency. Milton also served Presidents Kennedy and Johnson. 

This photo of Ida reading a letter from Ike is in the front entryway of the home.
 

The boys credited their mother, who they called "the greatest personal influence" in their lives. She filled them with ambition and raised them to value learning, discipline, service and hard work.

The boys didn't get to spend much time in the parlor.

His boyhood home and the furnishings are just like when the Eisenhower's lived there.

With six growing boys, I'm sure this bread box for mixing and proofing dough got plenty of use from their mother.

Next stop was the museum.

 

Dwight D. Eisenhower from a small town in the middle of the country was selected as a West Point cadet. As one of the displays said:

Eisenhower's intelligence and determination placed him on a path that led to the center of world events. He helped save the world from tyranny and set it on a course of peace and prosperity that endured for decades. Eisenhower not only came from the heart of America - he defined it.

This table was where Ike and other Allied leaders planned Operation Overlord, the invasion of Normandy. The success of the operation ultimately shortened the war against Nazi Germany. Ike worked tirelessly revising invasion plans and preparing the millions of troops for the liberation of Europe.


When Randy was a boy, he had a couple of favorite displays at the museum. One of them was Eisenhower's staff car.

General Eisenhower used several different cars over the course of World War II. The 1942 Cadillac Fleetwood was used by Ike during and after the war. Although there are many pictures of Ike visiting troops, there are few of him with his staff car for personal security reasons. It was refurbished and presented to him as a gift in 1957. 


Before we even got to Abilene, Randy said he remembered a display of jeweled swords. We found these. (In Randy's "little boy" mind, he remembered more swords and more heavily bejeweled.)

Eisenhower's success on the battlefield introduced him to the world stage and ultimately gave him the name recognition and popular standing that helped him win the election as President of the United States.

 

President & Mamie Eisenhower

Though that name recognition and reputation may have been forged in war, Eisenhower was an advocate for peace.


After 40 years of military service, Eisenhower devoted his presidency to waging peace. He strengthened the nation through alliances, promoting prosperity and demonstration moral leadership. He consistently sought peaceful positive alternatives to military action. In doing so, Eisenhower helped to established the post-war order that guided American policy for more than 60 years. The Eisenhower Administration become known for its eight years of peace and prosperity. (From a museum display)

He promoted the nation's economic well-being by improving the movement of goods (national highway system), the social safety net, funding research and development, balancing the federal budget and creating new opportunities for all Americans. 

During his presidency, the percentage of American households with cars increased - from 40.3 million cars in 1950 to 61.7 million in 1960.  In 1950, only 8 percent of American households had a television, while that number increased to 87 percent in 1960. With the GI Bill, many more Americans were able to afford family homes. 

Eisenhower left the presidency in 1961 at the age of 70. From Eisenhower's farewell speech:

The world will soon be yours ... Approach your task with boldness and hope and the joy of challenge in your hearts and with the dedication to freedom and human dignity, for this is the only route to peace with justice. Good luck then ... I, for one, believe in you.
Dwight D. Eisenhower

In addition to the regular museum displays, there were some temporary exhibits. Randy and I especially enjoyed a display featuring Paint By Numbers creations. I suppose it's because we remember the kits from our childhood.


Even the White House was involved in the fad. Eisenhower's appointment secretary, Thomas Edwin Stephens, secretly handed out kits to Cabinet members, government leaders and visitors. He collected the resulting paintings and created a gallery of them in his office and around the West Wing. Aware of Ike's fondness for painting, the exhibit was a surprise gift.

Randy thinks this dog paint by number painting was in his childhood home growing up. 

By his brother, Milton

By J. Edgar Hoover

In addition to the paint by numbers, a few colleagues and friends did their own freehand paintings.


I think the paint-by-numbers display is only available through December. 


Our final stop was the chapel where Eisenhower is buried.  Eisenhower hoped that visitors would reflect upon the ideals that made this a great nation and pledge themselves again to continued loyalty to those ideals.

 


I loved the reflection of the stained glass windows on the wall as we departed from the chapel.

It seems the world could use a dose of Eisenhower's ideals these days. We could have spent more time there, but we had an important volleyball game to get to in Topeka. Perhaps we will make another stop. We would recommend it.


4 comments:

  1. Thank you for sharing! I enjoyed learning more about this president (that we don't hear much about).
    And that bread box table for proofing is so neat... I wonder where I could get one those!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks for taking time to comment! I'd never seen a bread proofing box like that either. Like I mentioned, I'm sure it got a great deal of use with all those mouths to feed!

      Delete
  2. A remarkable family and man. His resting place is beautiful and the quotes impactful, especially at the moment.

    ReplyDelete