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Richard Milhous Nixon ( January 9, 1913 - April 22,
1994 ) was the thirty-sixth ( 1953 - 1961 ) Vice
President, and the thirty-seventh ( 1969 - 1974 )
President of the United States. He is the only
President to have resigned from office. His
resignation came in response to the complex of
scandals called the Watergate conspiracy.
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Order: |
37th
President |
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Term of
Office: |
January 20
, 1969 - August 9 , 1974 |
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Followed: |
Lyndon
Johnson |
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Succeeded
by: |
Gerald
Ford |
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Date of
Birth |
Thursday ,
January 9 , 1913 |
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Place of
Birth: |
Yorba
Linda, California |
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Date of
Death: |
Friday ,
April 22 , 1994 |
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Place of
Death: |
New York
City , New York |
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First Lady
: |
Thelma
"Patricia" Catherine Ryan |
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Profession: |
Lawyer |
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Political
Party : |
Republican |
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Vice
President : |
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Birth and early years
Nixon was raised as
an evangelical Quaker by his mother, Hannah, who
hoped he would become a Quaker missionary. His
upbringing is said to have been marked by such
conservative Quaker observances as refraining from
drinking, dancing, and swearing. However, this is
doubtful, as the evangelical sect of Quakerism known
as Friends Churches, having been largely organized
by itinerant Methodists, bore little resemblance to
the traditional 'unprogrammed' Quaker religion, with
its silent worship, avoidance of paid clergy, and
strict adherence to pacifism. In any case, his
father was less religious, focusing on the family
business, a store that sold groceries and gasoline.
There is much debate as to whether Nixon went
through the expected Quaker soul-searching attendant
on whether to become a conscientious objector in
World War II. During the period of his political
career, however, he was not a practicing Quaker.
He
attended Whittier College (a Quaker school),
graduating second in his class, and Duke University
Law School, where he received a full scholarship. He
served as a noncombatant officer in the US Navy in
World War II, and was a lawyer for PepsiCo.
Early political career
Nixon was elected to
Congress in 1946, in a class of freshman war
veterans that included his future rival John F.
Kennedy, of Massachusetts.
Nixon climbed the ladder swiftly, making his name as
an anti-Communist and a rough, no-holds-barred
campaigner. He was elected to the United States
House of Representatives from California in 1948
where he became a member of the House Un-American
Activities Committee and was instrumental in the
trial of the ex-government official Alger Hiss for
perjury as a part of the accusation that he was a
Soviet spy.
Nixon was elected to the Senate in 1950, defeating
actress/congresswoman Helen Gahagan, who Nixon
accused during the campaign of having communist
sympathies.
Vice Presidency
In 1952 was elected
Vice President on Dwight Eisenhower 's ticket when
he was only 39 years old.
One
notable event of the campaign was Nixon's innovative
use of television. Nixon was found to have been
financed by a slush fund provided by business
supporters. He went on TV and defended himself in an
emotional speech in which he stated that his wife
Pat did not wear mink, but "a good Republican cloth
coat" and stated that although he had been given a
cocker spaniel named "Checkers", he was not going to
give it back because his daughters loved it. This
broadcast resulted in a flood of support that
required Eisenhower to keep Nixon on the ticket.
As
Vice President, Nixon journeyed to South America and
was praised for his courage in facing angry mobs
protesting US foreign policy.
Nixon was notable among Vice Presidents in having
actually stepped up to run the government three
times when Eisenhower was ill: on the occasions of
Eisenhower's heart attack on September 24, 1955; his
ileitis in June 1956; and his stroke in November
1957. He also proved to be able to quickly think on
his feet which was demonstrated on July 24 , 1959 at
the opening of the American National Exhibition in
Moscow where Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev had an
impromptu "kitchen debate" about the merits of
capitalism vs communism
1960 election and post-Vice Presidency
In 1960, he ran for
President on his own but lost to John F. Kennedy,
ironically a friend of Nixon's (Kennedy, in fact,
was one of the first to congratulate Nixon when he
was chosen as Eisenhower's running mate). A crucial
factor in his loss was the first televised
presidential debate . Despite his five o'clock
shadow , Nixon refused television makeup and was
feeling sick, having injured his knee on the way to
the studio. He expected to win voters with his
foreign-policy expertise, but people only saw a
sickly man sweating profusely and wearing a gray
suit that blended into the scenery while his rival,
Kennedy, looked great. Later research showed that
those who had listened to the debate on radio
thought Nixon had won, but that the television
audience gave the win to Kennedy.
On
November 7, 1962, he lost a race for Governor of
California. In his concession speech, Nixon stated
that it was his "last press conference" and that
"You won't have Dick Nixon to kick around any
more".
Presidency
The defeated mood did
not last. He moved to New York City and worked as a
high-powered lawyer and in the election of 1968
completed a remarkable political comeback by
defeating Hubert H. Humphrey to become the 37th U.S.
President.
Major initiatives during his presidency:
-
Normalizing of
diplomatic relations with the People's Republic
of China and partially abandoning the Republic
of China on Taiwan as part of Realpolitik, a
foreign policy eschewing moral considerations.
In the short term Nixon was successful in
playing the "China card" against the Soviet
Union and its client state North Vietnam .
-
Establishment of
the Environmental Protection Agency .
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Establishment of
the Drug Enforcement Administration .
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"Vietnamization":
the slow withdrawal of US troops from Vietnam
while dramatically increasing the scale of
bombing.
-
Space Shuttle
program started.
Nixon appealed to what he claimed was the "silent
majority" of moderate Americans who disliked the "
hippie " counterculture and civil rights and peace
demonstrators. Nixon also promised "peace with
honor" by his "secret plan" to end the Vietnam War.
He proposed the Nixon Doctrine to establish the
strategy to turn over the fighting of the war to the
Vietnamese. During the war, on July 3 , 1969, Nixon
made an unscheduled visit to South Vietnam and met
with President Nguyen Van Thieu and with US military
commanders. The war ended during Nixon's term, but
only after four more years of strategic bombing and
defeat on the ground, and the withdrawal of US
troops, leaving the battle to the South Vietnamese
army.
The
Nixon administration's massive bombing campaigns of
Cambodia and its support for the overthrow of the
neutralist royal government of Sihanouk by the
rightist military dictator Lon Nol drove much of the
peasant population of that country into the arms of
the Khmer Rouge, a Maoist revolutionary movement
that would kill 1.7 million Cambodians after taking
power.
On
January 5, 1972 Nixon ordered the development of a
space shuttle program. Nixon's name appears
alongside former UN Secretary General U Thant 's on
a special plaque that was placed on the moon's
surface.
On
January 2, 1974 Nixon signed a bill that lowered the
maximum US speed limit to 55 MPH in order to
conserve gasoline during the first OPEC oil
embargo.
Nixon was eventually investigated for the
instigation and cover-up of the burglary of the
Democratic Party offices at the Watergate office
complex, one of a series of scandals involving CREEP
(the Committee to Re-Elect the President), which
also included the enemies list and assorted "dirty
tricks." His secret recordings of White House
conversations were subpoenaed, and revealed details
of his complicity in the cover-up. Nixon, however,
was named by the grand jury investigating Watergate
as "an unindicted co-conspirator" in the Watergate
Scandal. He lost support from his own party as well
as the country in the Saturday Night Massacre in
which he ordered Archibald Cox, the special
prosecutor in the Watergate case fired, as well as
firing several of his own subordinates who objected
to this move. The House of Representatives Judiciary
Committee opened formal and public impeachment
hearings against Nixon on May 9, 1974. Rather than
face impeachment by the House of Representatives and
a conviction by the Senate, he resigned effective
August 9, 1974.
His
successor, Gerald R. Ford , issued a pre-emptive
pardon, ending the investigations.
Nixon's presidency was frequently dogged by Nixon's
personality, and the public perception of it.
Editorial cartoonists and comedians had fun
exaggerating Nixon's appearance and mannerisms, to
the point where the line between the human president
and the caricature version of him became
increasingly blurred. He was usually portrayed as a
sullen loner, with unshaven jowels, slumped
shoulders, and a furrowed, sweaty brow. He was, to
some, especially the younger generation, the very
epitome of a "square," and the personification of
unpleasant adult authority. Nixon tried to shed
these perceptions by staging photo-ops with young
people, and even appearing on popular TV shows such
as Laugh-In and Hee Haw. He also frequently
brandished the two-finger "peace sign" with his
hands, an act which became one of his best-known
trademarks.
Last Years and Death
In his last years,
Nixon managed to rehabiliate himself somewhat and
gained respect as an elder statesman in the area of
foreign affairs and was consulted by both Democratic
and Republican successors to the Presidency. Further
tape releases, however, removed all doubt as to
Nixon's involvement, both in the Watergate cover-up
and the illegal campaign finance and intrusive
government surveillance that were at the heart of
the scandal.
In
July 2003, Jeb Stuart Magruder alleged that Nixon
had personally ordered the Watergate break-in by
phone. Previously the only guilt that was alleged
was his role in the cover up of the break in.
Nixon wrote many books after his departure from
politics, including a history of the Vietnam war and
his own personal memoirs.
Nixon died on April 22, 1994, at the age of 81 from
complications related to a stroke and was buried
beside his wife Pat Nixon in the grounds of the
Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Birthplace in
Yorba Linda, California.
The
Nixon Library contains only Nixon's pre and
post-Presidential papers as his Presidential papers
have been retained as criminal evidence. Nixon's
attempts to protect his papers and gain tax
advantages from them had been one of the important
themes of the Watergate affair. The library is
unique in that it is privately funded; other
presidential libraries receive support from the
National Archives.
Key appointments
-
Spiro Agnew - Vice
President (to 1973)
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Henry Kissinger -
National Security Advisor , then Secretary of
State (from 1973)
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James Schlesinger
- Secretary of Defense (1973-1974)
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George Shultz -
Secretary of the Treasury (1972-1974)
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John Mitchell -
Attorney General (1969-1972)
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Caspar Weinberger
- Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare
(1973-1974)
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Richard Helms -
CIA director (to 1973)
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J. Edgar Hoover -
FBI director (to 1972)
Supreme Court appointments
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Warren E. Burger -
Chief Justice - 1969
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Harry Andrew
Blackmun - 1970
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Lewis Franklin
Powell, Jr. - 1972
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William Rehnquist
- 1972
Quotations
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"You won't have
Nixon to kick around anymore. Because,
gentlemen, this is my last press conference."
1962 after losing race for Governor of
California .
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"This is the
greatest week in the history of the world since
the Creation, because as a result of what
happened in this week, the world is bigger,
infinitely." (concerning the Apollo Moon
landing)
On
Watergate
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" I welcome this
kind of examination because people have got to
know whether or not their President is a crook.
Well I'm not a crook." November 17 , 1973
Televised press conference at Walt Disney World
, Florida .
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"I don't give a
shit what happens. I want you all to stonewall
it, let them plead the Fifth Amendment, cover up
or anything else, if it'll save it, save this
plan. That's the whole point. We're going to
protect our people if we can." (to Haldemann,
tapes ordered released for the trial of Haldeman
, Ehrlichman and Mitchell )
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"I recognize that
this additional material I am now furnishing may
further damage my case," (after the ordered
release of the White House tapes August 5 , 1974
)
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"When the
President does it, that means that it's not
illegal." (explaining his interpretation of
Executive Privilege)
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"I was under
medication when I made the decision not to burn
the tapes."
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"Well, I screwed
it up real good, didn't I?"
On
Peace
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"Any nation that
decides the only way to achieve peace is through
peaceful means is a nation that will soon be a
piece of another nation." (from his book No More
Vietnams )
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"The greatest
honor history can bestow is the title of
peacemaker." (From his 1969 innagural; later
used as Nixon's epitaph )
Misc
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"Sock it to me ?"
(said by Nixon on the television comedy series
Laugh-In )
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"I don't know a
lot about politics, but I do know a lot about
baseball."
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"Solutions are not
the answer."
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"I would have made
a good Pope ."
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"Let me say this
about that."
Nixon in the media
Richard Nixon has appeared as a character, both
major and minor, in a variety of movies and
productions:
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Born Again
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The Cayman
Triangle
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Dick
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Forrest Gump
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Hot Shots! Part
Deux
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JFK
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Nixon
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Secret Honor
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Nixon in China
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