It was Harry S. Truman's first Christmas in the White House, and he was antsy to get away.
His wife, Bess, and daughter, Margaret, had already decamped to their home in Independence, Missouri. He planned to join them by taking a December 25, 1945, flight on the presidential aircraft nicknamed the "Sacred Cow."
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| President Truman's plane, a Douglas VC 54C |
Truman's propeller plane was buffeted by ice and high winds during his six-hour flight, but eventually made it to Missouri safely, although several newspaper columnists chided him for taking too great a risk.
Truman was having a difficult time adjusting to life as president since succeeding beloved Franklin Roosevelt, who died in April that year, weeks before the end of hostilities in World War II. By Christmas, Truman had already given the order to drop the world's first atomic bombs in Japan, and wrestling with how to build an enduring peace as a new confrontation loomed with the Soviet Union.
A plainspoken man, Truman had never dreamed of the presidency, although Roosevelt's declining health made his selection as running mate in 1944 a critical one. He'd written home from the White House to Bess in June that just two months earlier, he'd been a "happy and contented" vice president. "But things have changed so much it hardly seems real."
"I sit here in this old house and work on foreign affairs, read reports, and work on speeches — all the while listening to the ghosts walk up and down the hallway and even right in here in the study," the president wrote. "The floors pop and the drapes move back and forth — I can just imagine old Andy (Jackson) and Teddy (Roosevelt) having an argument over Franklin (Roosevelt)."
Truman wasn't the only American desperate to get home. Tens of thousands of service personnel raced the clock to reunite with their families for their first Christmas after leaving foreign battlefields.
On Christmas Day alone, 15,000 troops pulled into New York Harbor after a harrowing trip through Atlantic storms from Europe and North Africa, according to The New York Times. One vessel, the navy cruiser Philadelphia, had been hit by a huge wave that buckled its forecastle, but still limped home with its precious cargo. At ports on the East and West coasts, troops disembarked from transport ships and flocked to bars, cinemas, and bowling alleys while waiting for trains home.
Just a year earlier, these men had been battling Nazi troops in frozen foxholes at the Battle of the Bulge or Imperial Japanese soldiers in Asia. But their euphoria at being back stateside for Christmas was tempered by the grief they carried — the memories of thousands of Americans who'd never come home and the empty places that would remain forever unfilled at Christmas dinner tables.
Still, the sense of relief is palpable from news reports that day in 1945. "Earth wore a tiara of light for Christmas yesterday, for the first time since 1938, and men worshipped in its glow," the Times reported on December 26.
The returning exodus jammed railroad stations, already packed with regular holiday travel. Travelers bound from Union Station in Washington for the Carolinas, Georgia, and Florida were directed to a local train by mistake. The two trains swapped loads at an unscheduled halt in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
San Antonio, Texas, basked in its temperatures of 82 degrees, then the highest on record for Christmas Day. Candlelit services and carol singing took place countrywide.
In Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, even prisoners in the local jail felt the goodwill, chowing down on roast turkey, filling, giblet gravy, candied sweet potatoes, stewed corn, cranberry sauce, celery, pumpkin pie, and coffee.
Christmas also brought tragedy. A man in the capital was stabbed to death with a Japanese dagger brought home from the war as a souvenir. In Berlin, two American soldiers were shot dead* in separate incidents that showed how dangerous it still would be to enforce the Allied occupation.
*The defeated Germans were not involved. I asked ChatGPT, and it reported about only one incident, the Potsdamer Platz shooting. It took place on August 24, 1945, only three months after Germany's surrender.
The victorious Allies had divided Berlin into four occupation zones. Near Potsdamer Platz, where the American, British, and Soviet sectors met, two U.S. Army soldiers allegedly crossed into the Soviet sector. Soviet guards challenged them, the situation escalated, and the Red Army soldiers opened fire. Both Americans were killed.
In the follow-up, the Soviets claimed that the Americans had ignored warnings and had entered a restricted zone. The incident contributed to growing mistrust between the Allies and is often cited as an early sign of the emerging Cold War.
But Truman encapsulated the national mood on a Christmas Eve radio broadcast. "This is the Christmas that a war-weary world has prayed for through long and awful years. With peace come joy and gladness. The gloom of the war years fades as once more we light the National Community Christmas Tree," he said.
The president cast an eye across the capital at the vast marble monuments to great presidents. "It is well in this solemn hour that we bow to Washington, Jefferson, Jackson, and Lincoln as we face our destiny with its hopes and fears, its burdens and its responsibilities. Out of the past we shall gather wisdom and inspiration to chart our future course," he said.
"With our enemies vanquished, we must gird ourselves for the work that lies ahead. Peace has its victories no less hard-won than success at arms. We must not fail or falter."
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President Harry Truman in front of his home in
Independence, Missouri, with his arms laden with Christmas gifts for delivery (©Harry S. Truman Library) |
*Gendering had not yet been invented
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