708 résultats
1958172115Washington 1958. unbound. near fine. Gracious typed letter signed "D.E." by the President thanking the recipients for their positive feedback and support for a speech he made before the American Management Association which outlined his Defense modernization plan. 1 page on White House letterhead. 6 3/4" x 9". Washington May 24 1958. Near fine condition.<br/> <br/> ".There is still work to be done since the bill as reported out of the Armed Service Committee presently contains three serious flaws that would tend to encourage disunity. I shall be grateful for anything further that you can do to get these objectional provisions eliminated."<br/> <br/> unknown
19601342Washington DC 1960. Fine. SIGNED "Mamie Doud Eisenhower" in a large firm clean 5" autograph. 6" x 9.25" on cream colored stationary with The White House Washington letterhead. Fine item with usual two mailing folds includes original 4-cent 4th of July 1959 stamp with "Smokey the Bear" cancelation on included White House envelope. Ever the gracious First Lady hostess Mamie rarely missed an opportunity to communicate with supporters and constituents.<br /> <br /> Vivian Martin Unander 1925 - 2010 was born in Leavenworth Washington and attended Washington State University in Pullman where her grandfather was a founding regent. Vivien moved to Portland where she worked as a secretary and fashion model. She married Sigfrid Benson Unander a public servant who served two terms as Oregon State Treasurer and with whom she had two children. An accomplished painter and art historian Vivian showed her work in galleries and exhibitions. She served on the board of the Portland Symphony and was a benefactor to several charitable nonprofit organizations. Her hobbies included sailing hiking gardening and studying French and Japanese culture and language. "Dear Mrs. Unander Thank you very much.It was such a pleasure to meet you and your husband here at the White House last Thursday! With warmest good wishes to you both. Sincerely /s/ Mamie Doud Eisenhower. unknown
2003Q-0375720413Random House Reference 2003-12-09. Paperback. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Random House Reference paperback
1965126169Doubleday & Company 1965. hardcover. Very Good. 9x6x2. 1107 of 1500 signed limited edition in original acetate jacket and slip case. Tight and unmarked. oversized and overweight. Please email for photos. Doubleday & Company hardcover
1965046445New York: Doubleday 1965. First Edition / First Printing . Hardcover. Near Fine/Near Fine. Probably the nicest copy you would be able to get your hands on. Tiny excess glue in binding process causes slight ripple to front jacket flap. Very trivial. Stated first edition in $6.95 priced jacket. Laid in are a couple of ephemeral pieces from the Eisenhower Birthplace. <br/> <br/> Doubleday hardcover
1995MORROCCO-0050-06-15-2026Oxford University Press 1995-05-18. hardcover. Very Good. 5x1x8. 1995 well kept hardcover copy with dust jacket price tag cut no markings stickers or stains. fast shipping with tracking number. Oxford University Press hardcover
1995Q-019508845XOxford University Press 1995-05-18. Hardcover. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Oxford University Press hardcover
0385038682.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1965BOOKS341527Garden City NY: Doubleday & Company. Very Good/Good. 1965. First Edition. Hardcover w/DJ. bookplate signed by author Dwight D. Eisenhower on front fly-leaf see photo . 8vo. 741pp. dust jacket light shelf wear to edges and corners light chipping and creasing light water staining and soiling otherwise quite good; cover light shelf wear to edges and corners corners and spine tips lightly bumped otherwise very good; bookplate signed by author Dwight D. Eisenhower on front fly-leaf measures approx. 4.25x5.75in. very light scuff stain to bottom edge of text block otherwise pages clean and unmarked. . Doubleday & Company hardcover
2001Q-0684863049Free Press 2001-06-04. Hardcover. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Free Press hardcover
2002Q-0743223853Free Press 2002-06-04. Paperback. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Free Press paperback
20013294New York: The Free Press 2001. First Edition First Printing. Cloth & Boards. Near Fine/Very Good . A very handsome First Edition First Printing title by John Eisenhower. Book is in near fine condition save for a 1" black line in marker at bottom page ends. Otherwise book is tightly bound with crisp pages throughout and bright illustrations. Appears in unread condition. Dust jacket protected in archival cover. Dust jacket in very good condition with minor flaws. Light creasing along extremities. A 1" closed tear at upper right on front wrapper minor. Interior flaps intact and bright. An overall handsome edition by the same author of "Intervention!" "The Bitter Woods" and "Strictly Personal The Free Press unknown
2000mon0004113947Times Books 5/27/2008 12:00:01 A. hardcover. Good. 0.8000 8.3000 5.7000. Times Books hardcover
5016DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER 1890-1969. Eisenhower was the Thirty-Fourth. TLS. 1pg. 7†x 10 ½â€. December 29 1954. Augusta Georgia. A typed letter signed “DE†by Dwight Eisenhower as President. On his personal “DDE†letterhead Eisenhower wrote an end-of-the-year letter of thanks to William Jackson of New York: “Dear Bill: As 1954 comes to an end I want again to tell you of my appreciation of your cooperation and assistance on problems of the gravest import to our country and to our world. I hope that as long as I continue in governmental service I may be able to call upon you from time to time. To you and Mrs. Jackson best wishes from Mrs. Ike and me for a Happy New Year and a successful 1955. With warm personal regard Sincerely DEâ€. The letter is in fine condition with mailing folds and a short toning band. unknown books
1949CC423Robert Laffont, 1949 In-8° de 893 pp.,
4159DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER 1890-1969. Thirty-fourth President and Supreme Allied Commander of European forces World War II. PS. 8†x 10â€. October 1963. Gettysburg Pennsylvania. A studio photograph signed “with best wishes from Dwight D. Eisenhower†and inscribed to Mr. and Mrs. Andrew W. Koos. The black and white photograph is in very fine condition. unknown books
4153DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER 1890-1969. Eisenhower was the Thirty-Fourth President and Supreme Allied Commander of European forces World War II. TDS. 1pg. 6†x 9 ¾â€. No date. No place. A typed Presidential Oath of Office signed “Dwight D Eisenhowerâ€. It is in very fine condition. unknown books
4844DWIGHT EISENHOWER 1890-1969. Eisenhower was the Thirty-Fourth President. WILLIAM H. JACKSON 1901-1971. Jackson was a lawyer and intelligence officer who served as Eisenhower’s National Security Advisor. He was also deputy director of the CIA. TLS. 1pg. November 20 1956. The White House Washington. A typed letter signed “Dwight D Eisenhower†as President on White House letterhead. Eisenhower responds to the resignation of his National Security Advisor William H. Jackson. “Dear Bill: I am indeed sorry that the time is near when you must leave Government service and it is with very great regret that I accept your resignation as requested in your letter. Thanks in large measure to your efforts as Special Assistant during the past year there has been achieved a definite strengthening of the important processes through which matters vital to our national security are considered and decided particularly as regards the fulfillment of policy through effective and well coordinated actions. In these days when adherence to principle is of the utmost importance to successful international relations you should take much satisfaction from your knowledge of the place presently occupied by the United States in the estimation of the free world. Because of it I am confident that our nation will be able to assist significantly in developing constructive solutions to existing international problems. I am deeply grateful for the strong and effective support you have consistently provided from your position as Special Assistant as well as for your willingness to take on additional duties during the past several months in respect to the National Security Council. You will be greatly missed in the months ahead by all with whom you have worked and who have had the benefit of your wise counsel. I am sure however that we shall be calling upon you from time to time for further advice and assistance. With warm personal regard Sincerely Dwight D Eisenhowerâ€. The letter is in fine condition with two horizontal mailing folds. unknown books
4391DWIGHT EISENHOWER 1890-1969. Eisenhower was the Thirty-Fourth President. TLS. 1pg. October 15 1960. The White House Washington. A typed letter signed “Dwight D Eisenhower†as President on “The White House†letterhead. Eisenhower thanks a White House staffer for sending a cake and card in honor of Eisenhower’s birthday: “Dear Charles: In view of all the activities at the White House the last week I am more than ever grateful for the cake and the card that you sent to me from yourself and the members of your staff. My gratitude goes to all of you for your dedicated service – and not at all incidentally for your thought of me on my anniversary. With warm regard Sincerely Dwight D Eisenhower P.S. The cake was delicious!†The letter has a large dark autograph and a central mailing fold that affects little; the condition is fine. unknown books
19631508168Doubleday & Company Inc. Garden City NY 1963. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Fine/No Jacket. Two Volume Signed Limited Edition Both volumes in exceptional condition with original clear mylar cust jacket. Light olive cloth covered boards with Presidential Seal embossed in gold on cover boards titled in gold on spine within a larger darker olive green title block. Front endpapers of Volume I are illustrated with a map of the United States rear endpapers a map of Africa Europe the then-Soviet Union and Asia. Front endpapers of Volume II are illustrated with a map of the World rear endpapers also a map of the World but from a different perspective and delineating the many United States alliances. Each volume is crisp and clean within and appears to never have been read. Each volume signed by Dwight D. Eisenhower in black ink on tipped in page preceding the title page facing the limitation page. Both volumes are number 1229. There were a total of 1500 copies of each volume printed. Each volume comes in its original paper covered slipcase; both in fine condition/ $4500 for the set. Also housed in custom-made collector's slipcases. Doubleday & Company, Inc., Garden City, NY hardcover books
feb95359Used. For more details please contact me unknown
19480140<p>New York: Doubleday & Company 1948. Hardcover. Condition: good. Dust jacket condition: fair. Signed and dated by W. L. Eisenhauer on title page. Preceded by a limited edition of 1426 numbered signed copies.</p> Doubleday & Company hardcover
6834DWIGHT EISENHOWER 1890-1969. Dwight Eisenhower was the Thirty-Fourth President.PS. 15 x 18. N.d. N.p. A colored photograph signed Dwight Eisenhower in white ink along his right shoulder. The photo is a bust portrait of Eisenhower. The photograph is in mint condition and is professionally framed. unknown
1959174141959. Civil Rights Presidents. This 1959 AP Press photo depicts President Eisenhower shaking hands with the wife of civil rights leader George M. Johnson. Original photo dated June 9 1959 with inscription on verso. 9" x 7" inches. Johnson was the newest member of the Civil Rights Commission an organization created in 1957 to study and advocate for social equality for minorities in America. He was an African-American attorney and academic who was appointed to the commission and had an interracial marriage with his wife Evelyn which was quite rare and controversial in that era. Ike and the Johnsons are pictured in the White House and wear wide smiles. This photo has a 2" x 1" inch white-out patch adjacent to George Johnson's face. Has AP caption at right side margin. Overall in very good condition. unknown
5932DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER 1890-1969. The Thirty-Fourth President Eisenhower was an Allied commander in World War II and ordered the Normandy invasion. He was elected President in 1952 for two terms.TLS. 1 pg. 8 x 10. November 30 1956. The White House Washington. A typed letter signed by Dwight D Eisenhower to Reverend Eugene Carson Blake D.D.: Thank you very much for the telegram you sent recently on behalf of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Your comments on the policy of the United States Government in the Hungarian and Near East crises with particular reference to the handling of these issues in the United Nations were heartening ones. These two grave situations have represented an urgent opportunity for the United Nations to marshal the strength of universal moral forces on behalf of the rule of international law and justice. Action taken in the United Nations has eloquently revealed the deep-seated longing among the nations for an establishment and maintenance of peace and the universal desire that the independence and integrity of nations be maintained and respected. In the forum of the United Nations we must press our search for solutions of these and other problems which confront the community of nations. I am most appreciative of the role of the churches in support of the United Nations and on behalf of those who suffer and are in want as a result of international calamities. You may be certain that the United States Government will continue its efforts within the United Nations and in its relations with other Governments to further the deep desire of the American people that conditions of true and lasting peace be established in the world. President Eisenhower sent this letter to Eugene Blake the leader of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Blake was a prominent Presbyterian leader who served as President from 1954-1957 and later was a participant in the March on Washington. The NCC is an interdenominational partnership of Christian faith groups in the United States that often spoke forcefully about promoting peace in U.S. foreign policy. The two crises that Eisenhower refers to both in 1956 were the Hungarian Revolution which saw the Soviet Union violently invade and suppress Hungarys new reformist government and the Suez Canal Crisis which saw Great Britain France and Israel launch a joint operation to retake the Suez Canal after Egypts Nasser nationalized it. The actions by Eisenhower and the United Nations in resolving both crises were supported by many like Blake but also criticized by many in the U.S. and around the world. This was especially true as Eisenhower and the United Nations sat back while the Soviet Union killed over 6000 Hungarian soldiers and civilians and displaced over 200000 which was seen as hypocritical given American action in Korea and Vietnam. Regardless this letter is an important reminder about the influence the NCC had as a Christian advocacy body and Eisenhowers role as the leader of the internationalist and institutionalist wing of the Republican Party in the decade after World War II. unknown