Ohio History Journal

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BOOK REVIEWS

BOOK REVIEWS

PUBLIC PAPERS OF THE PRESIDENTS

OF THE UNITED STATES: LYNDON

B. JOHNSON. Two Volumes. (Washing-

ton, D.C.: Office of the Federal Register,

National Archives and Records Service,

General Services Administration, 1968.

Vol. 1: January 1 to June 30, 1967, lix

+ 670p. + A-78p., index, $8.75; Vol. II:

July 1 to December 31, 1967, liii +

p.671-1228 + A-78p., index, $8.00.)

In 1957, acting on a recommendation of

the National Historical Publications Com-

mission, the Office of the Federal Register

began work on a uniform, systematic series

of the Presidents' public papers, compar-

able to the Congressional Record for Con-

gress or the United States Supreme Court

Reports for the judiciary. This project is

now well advanced. Working both forward

and backward from the year 1957, Warren

Reid and his assistants have provided not

only an annual compilation of papers since

then, but also appropriate volumes for the

first Eisenhower and the Truman adminis-

trations. The next step into the past, in

view of the general adequacy of the Rosen-

man series on Roosevelt, will be a set of

badly needed volumes covering the Hoover

period.

The work under review is the latest fruit

of this project. Compiled chiefly from

White House press releases and transcripts,

it contains, along with ceremonial items,

all of the important Presidential addresses,

messages, press conferences, and public let-

ters for the year 1967. Reflected in them

are the major concerns of a difficult and

crucial twelve months, a period when

Johnson's hopes for victory in Vietnam

and lasting solutions to domestic problems

dissolved in disillusionment, and when the

President himself became increasingly petu-

lant and defensive. Some of the documents,

viewed from the perspective of only two

years later, make fascinating reading.

While the arrangement is strictly chrono-

logical, there is an excellent subject index,

enabling the reader to pursue a given topic

through the year. As a reference tool the

work maintains the same high standards

set by earlier volumes. There is no evi-

dence of arbitrary or politically oriented

selection or omission. Texts are faithfully

reproduced; special appendices list the

items from which selections were made; and

the only major omissions are the proclama-

tions, executive orders, and similar docu-

ments that are required by law to appear

in the Federal Register or the Code of Fed-

eral Regulations. One does wish, at times,

for more extensive and more interpretive

notes, along with an occasional Presiden-

tial comment, fuller cross references, or a

set of brief introductions to put the docu-

ments in context and perspective. But this

is really a quarrel with established edi-

torial policy, not with the making of this

particular publication. Those who planned

the project early decided to hold such edi-

torial devices to a minimum.

The public utterances of Lyndon John-

son, even when composed with the aid of

professional speechwriters, will probably

never be regarded as either great literature

or stylistic models. They will not rank with

those of Woodrow Wilson, Franklin D.

Roosevelt, or John F. Kennedy. But in a

system that centers power and policy mak-

ing in the Presidency, they are certainly of

great significance. And these volumes, like

their companions in the over-all series, will

undoubtedly become valuable research tools

for the historian, biographer, social theo-

rist, and interested layman.

ELLIS W. HAWLEY

University of Iowa