College and Research Libraries


The Harry S. Truman Library 
as a Center for Research 

on the American Presidency 

WHEN George Washington, having turned 
over the presidential office to John 
Adams, left Philadelphia on March 9, 
1797, to travel, as he put it, "through 
mud and mire to reach more tranquil 
scenes at Mount Vemon" 1 he took with 
him, along with his other chattels, the 
files he had accumulated during eight 
years' service as chief executive, thus set-
ting a precedent which was to be followed 
by each of his successors. In so doing the 
Father of his Country did nothing im-
proper or illegal. The presidency is unique 
in that, with the exception of the vice-
presidency, it is the only office in the 
executive branch of the government to 
have been created by the Constitution 
and not by statute. For this reason presi-
dential papers have a privileged status. 
They are confidential files, intimately in-
volved in the presidential decision-making 
process. To consider them part of the 
official public record would run counter 
to the concept of a government based on 
a separation of powers, which lies at the 
very heart of the American Constitution. 
The validity of this thesis is attested by 
the fact that the right of an outgoing presi-
dent to take his files with him has never 
been successfully challenged in the courts. 

The shipment of Washington's papers 
from Philadelphia to Mount .Vernon re-

1 Letter from George Washington to Matthias 
Slough, Feb. 6, 1797, The Writing s of Georg e Wash-
ington From the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745-
1799, ed. John C. Fitzpatrick (39 vols.; Washington: 
U.S . . Government Printing Office, 1940), XXXV, p. 
385. 

BY PHILIP D. LAGERQUIST 

Mr . Lagerquist is Research Archivist in 
the Harry S. Truman Library, Indepen-
dence, Missouri. 

quired the use of only a few trunks, car-
tons, boxes, and the like, even though 
these documents represented the record 
of executive action during nearly a dec-
ade. Over the years, however, with the 
growth of the republic in area and in 
population, with the development of mod-
em means of communication, especially 
the typewriter, with the increased literacy 
of the electorate, and with the increase in 
the size and responsibilities of the presi-
dential office year after year, the number 
of individual items in collections of presi-
dential papers has multiplied until, in the 
case of our modern-day chief executives 
they are numbered in the millions. While 
such documents are legally the president's 
property, they are, nevertheless, files in 
which the entire nation has a vested inter-
est, for they are the only record we pos-
sess of the daily actions and decisions of 
our chief executive and as such are an 
invaluable and irreplaceable source of 
information for scholars investigating the 
history of our country. It is unfortunate, 
therefore, that the papers of many of our 
presidents have been willfully or acci-
dentally destroyed or are in depositories 
scattered from one end of the country to 
the other. The Library of Congress, our 
greatest manuscript-holding institution, 
has, at present, twenty-three collections of 
presidential papers, sixteen of these being 

32 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES 



of a substantial nature. The number of 
manuscripts in even the largest collec-
tions of presidential papers in the Library 
of Congress, however, is relatively small 
when compared with those of our most 
recent presidents. The largest of the li-
brary's collections, the Taft papers, com-
prises approximately half a million items. 
In contrast, the Truman papers consist of 
well over five million pages, while the 
Franklin D. Roosevelt collection is even 
larger. The processing and servicing of 
collections of this size so that they can 
be made available to researchers is a job 
of considerable magnitude, which, under 
ideal conditions, calls for a trained staff 
which can devote its full attention to work 
on the collection. There was a time, long 
past, when a president could hope upon 
retirement to arrange his papers himself. 
Washington, several years after leaving 
office, wrote a friend that he was devoting 
his leisure hours to "the arrangement and 
overhaul of my voluminous Public Pa-
pers, Civil and Military, that they may go 
into secure deposits, and hereafter, into 
hands that may be able to seperate [sic] 
the grain from the chaff. " 2 Our modem-
day presidents, however, have neither the 
time nor the staff assistance to undertake 
such a task, considering the magnitude 
and scope of their files. This is a job 
which can be successfully undertaken 
only by persons experienced in the care 
of archival collections. 

Moreover, in addition to their papers, 
our presidents also take with them when 
they leave the White House the many 
books and gifts presented to them during 
their terms of office, and provision must 
also be made for the disposition of these 
items. While in the past the papers, 
books, and mementos of former presi-
dents have often been divided among a 
number of institutions for safekeeping, 
our most recent presidents have adopted 
the concept of the individual presidential 
library, relating to a single administration, 

2 Ibid., Letter from George Washington to the 
Secretary of War, July 29, 1798, XXXVI, pp, 373-74. 

JANUARY 1964 

as the best method of preserving for fu-
ture generations the interrelated historical 
materials pertaining to each administra-
tion. The archetype of the present-day 
presidential library is the Hayes Memorial 
library and museum, at Fremont, Ohio. 
The Hayes library, which was opened on 
May 30, 1916, was built to house the 
papers and memorabilia of President 
Rutherford B. Hayes. Erected by the state 
of Ohio, it is maintained and operated 
under the joint supervision of the state 
and the Hayes Foundation. It was fol-
lowed by the Franklin D. Roosevelt li-
brary which was opened to the public in 
1941, the first such institution to be op-
erated by the federal government. With 
the passage by Congress of the Presiden-
tial Libraries Act of 19 55, permanent 
provision was made by Congress for the 
housing and care of the papers, books, 
and gifts of any president who wished to 
present them to the nation. Under the 
provisions of this Act the papers and oth-
er historical materials of presidents Her-. 
bert Hoover, Harry S. Truman, and 
Dwight D. Eisenhower are now deposited 
in libraries bearing their name, and a 
Kennedy library is now in the planning 
stage. Each of these libraries is staffed and 
operated by the National Archives and 
Records Service of the General Services 
Administration, and they are thus a part 
of the government's nationwide record-
keeping system. 

Many consider Harry S. Truman the 
most history-minded of our recent presi-
dents, and so it is perhaps fitting that the 
first institution to be established under 
permanent presidential library legislation 
was built to , house his papers. In his 
Memoirs Mr. Truman states that "the one 
great external influence which, more than 
anything else, nourished and sustained 
[my] interest in government and public 
service was the endless reading of history 
which I began as a boy and which I have 
kept up ever since. " 3 Conscious of his 

3 Harry S. Truman, Memoirs, Vol. I : Year of De-
cisions (New York: Doubleday and Co., 1955) , p. 119. 

33 



own debt to history and to the historical 
profession, Mr. Truman was particularly 
concerned about the ultimate disposition 
of his own papers after his departure 
from the White House. After much cogi-
tation and consultation with friends and 
members of the White House staff, he 
decided to follow the precedent set by 
Franklin D. Roosevelt, and turn over his 
files to the custody of the federal govern-
ment, to be housed in a building erected 
for that purpose in Independence, Mis-
souri, the town where he had lived the 
greater part of his life. The building was 
to be built with money raised by private 
subscription, and for this purpose a non-
profit corporation was formed. An inten-
sive drive for building funds, begun in 
1953 shortly after Mr. Truman's depar-
ture from the White House, resulted in 
contributions from more than seventeen 
thousand individuals and organizations, 
and by the time the building was com-
pleted the goal of $1,750,000 had been 
surpassed. 

The Truman library was formally dedi-
cated on July 6, 1957, by Chief Justice 
Earl Warren in the presence of dignitaries 
representing both major political parties 
and including former President Herbert 
Hoover, Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, for-
mer Secretary of State Dean Acheson, 
and several thousand other citizens. Dur-
ing the course of the ceremonies President 
Truman presented to Dr. Wayne C. Gro-
ver, Archivist of the United States, a 
document attesting the legal transfer to 
the nation of his papers and other his-
torical materials "to the end that the peo-
ple may have those things available for 
study and research and for their enjoy-
ment and education. " 4 

The new building, which by the former 
president's generous action had become 
the property of the nation, is a one-story 
structure of Indiana limestone. It is lo-
cated in a tract of thirteen and two-tenths 

4 Letter from Harry S. Truman to Franklin F. 
Floete, Administrator, U.S. General Services Admin-
istration, Feb. 12, 1957. 

acres about one mile from the center of 
Independence. Shaped roughly like the 
letter "J," the building is six hundred 
feet ·long and has a full basement. One 
end of the structure is devoted to a pub-
lic museum. Here are displayed many 
gifts, valuable and otherwise, which were 
presented to Mr. Truman when he occu-
pied the White House, as well as docu-
ments from the White House files chosen 
for their illustrative value. The main 
theme of the exhibits is the nature and 
history of the presidential office. While 
the exhibit items, with few exceptions, 
originally belonged to Mr. Truman, the 
exhibits, in accordance with the former 
president's wishes, are designed, not to 
glorify him, but to explain in meaning-
ful terms the scope of our chief execu-
tive's manifold duties. Adjacent to the 
museum is an auditorium seating 250 
persons which is used for showing films 
from the library's motion picture collec-
tion and for meetings of scholarly organi-
zations interested in the library's activi-
ties. Here, also, members of the staff, and 
sometimes Mr. Truman himself, talk to 
groups of school children who come to 
tour the museum. 

The central portion of the building con-
tains the library's research facilities. In 
this area are the stacks; a central research 
room where scholars can examine the li-
brary's historical materials; staff offices; a 
microfilm reading room; and a photo-
graphic laboratory. While the entire build-
ing is air-conditioned, the stack areas 
have, in addition, special temperature and 
humidity controls for protection of the 
papers. The director of the library, Philip 
C. Brooks, supervises a staff of fifteen, 
including six professional archivists. Cus-
todial and maintenance personnel are sup-
plied by the General Services Adminis-
tration's Public Buildings Service. 

As far as the general public is con-
cerned, the museum is the library's focal 
point of interest. The library, however, 
is first and foremost a research institution. 
Established as a depository for the White 

34 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES 



House files of the Truman administration, 
the most important task of the library's 
staff is to make these materials available 
to responsible scholars. To this end the 
Truman papers have been removed from 
their original file cases, placed in light-
weight archives boxes, arranged, listed, 
and shelv~d in appropriate order. In ad-
dition to the main body of White House 
papers, files transferred to the government 
by Mr. Truman include such ancillary 
materials as the records of the White 
House official reporter, the records of the 
White House social office, and the files of 
a number of the members of Mr. Tru-
man's White House staff. Also included 
in Mr. Truman's gift were his senatorial 
papers, and the papers accumulated by 
him during his brief term as . vice-presi-
dent. 

To supplement the Truman papers the 
library has for the past several years been 
attempting to acquire the papers of per-
sonal and political associates of Mr. Tru-
man. To date more than fifty individuals 
have donated their personal papers to the 
library, and an equal number have made 
firm commitments to do so at some future 
date. The list includes former members 
of Mr. Truman's cabinet, other officials in 
the executive branch, members of the 
independent regulatory agencies, White 
House staff members, officials of the 
Democratic National Committee, mem-
bers of Congress, and persons who were 
associated with Mr. Truman during the 
early years of his political career. In a 
further attempt to fill in gaps in the his-
torical record, the library has recently ini-
tiated an oral history project. This in-
volves the interviewing by trained mem-
bers of the library's staff of persons who 
held key positions in the Truman admin-
istration or who enjoyed the confidence of 
Mr. Truman at various stages of his ca-
reer. The interviews are recorded on tape 
and, after transcription, are made avail-
able to researchers. 

The library also has an extensive col-
lection of audio-visual materials relating 

JANUARY 1964 

to Mr. Truman and the Truman adminis-
tration, consisting of more than twenty 
thousand photographs, thirteen hundred 
sound recordings, and approximately 
twenty-two thousand and five hundred 
feet of motion picture film. The still pic-
ture collection has been used extensively, 
both by those looking for book illustra-
tions and in connection with the prepara-
tion of documentary films. Motion pic-
tures from the library's collection have 
been shown in the library's auditorium 
from time to time as part of its educa-
tional program, and the sound recordings 
of speeches have been in great demand, 
both by historians and by students wish-
ing to study Mr. Truman's campaign tech-
niques. 

The library's book collection consists 
of approximately twenty-seven thousand 
books and twenty-nine thousand pam-
phlets and other printed items. At the 
time of the library's dedication the book 
collection comprised seven thousand 
items, mostly gifts to Mr. Truman while 
he was president. In order to increase the 
usefulness of the book collection as an 
adjunct to the library's manuscript ma-
terials, additional book purchases have 
for the most part been concentrated in the 
areas in which the library is specializing. 
In addition to anything published about 
Mr. Truman and his associates and about 
the Truman administration, the library is 
also purchasing, on a selective basis, 
books relating to the history and nature 
of the office of the presidency. These pur-
chases include not only published items 
but also, when available, microfilm copies 
of presidential papers in other institu-
tions, notably the Adams papers in the 
Massachusetts Historical Society and the 
Library of Congress collection of presi-
dential papers. 

Portions of the library's museum col-
lection area are also used by researchers 
in connection with their work. One item 
frequently consulted is a large map show-
ing the routes taken by Mr. Truman dur-
ing the course of his 1948 whistle-stop 

35 



campaign, which at one time hung out-
side Mr. Truman's White House office 
and which is now one of the museum's 
most popular exhibits. Useful to scholars 
in another way is the museum's collection 
of more than eight hundred political car-
toons. Most of these are originals, pre-
sented to Mr. Truman by the artists. They 
are much in demand for illustrative pur-
poses. 

While the director of the library has 
discretion in the matter, permission to 
use . the library's historical materials is 
generally granted to persons whose study 
has a serious and useful purpose and who, 
preferably, have had previous experience 
in the use of manuscripts. No one, how-
ever, is given privileged access to the 
files. Those papers which, according to 
law or the wishes of the donor, must, for 
reasons of national security or personal 
propriety, be closed for the time being 
are closed to all researchers. Nearly one-
half of those who have so far studied at 
the library have been candidates for the 
MA or PhD degrees, most of them 
working in the fields of history or political 
science. Other researchers at the library 
have been college professors pursuing ad-
vanced scholarly projects, and biogra-
phers, journalists, and freelance writers 
working on books or magazine and news-
paper articles. Occasionally a senior hon-
ors student, when recommended by his 
advisor, will be allowed to examine the 
papers. Generally, however, the staff will 
suggest that college undergraduates as 
well as high school students use printed 
sources as more suitable for their pur-
poses. Prospective researchers are en-
couraged to write the library in advance 
of their arrival regarding the nature of 
their research project so that the staff may 
ascertain what materials are available on 
the subject. If the library has nothing on 
a topic, an attempt is made to let the re-
searcher know where information on the 
matter can be obtained. After coming to 
the library and before starting to work, 
the prospective researcher is interviewed 

by the director and one of the staff archi-
vists. This gives the staff a better knowl-
edge of the topic to be investigated and 
gives the researcher an opportunity to 
learn in detail about the library's hold-
ings. 

Students utilizing the library's research 
facilities have come from all parts of the 
country. The subjects they have worked 
on run the range of research possibilities 
for the Truman period-from Bernard 
Baruch to Arthur Vandenberg, from anti-
trust laws to the Taft-Hartley law, from 
agricultural policy to unification of the 
armed forces. Although the library has 
been open for research only since 1959, 
an impressive number of dissertations, 
theses, and books has already appeared 
based in large part on work done there. 
As scholarly interest in the Truman peri-
od increases and as more papers become 
available for study, it is anticipated that 
research interest in the library will grow 
correspondingly. To encourage such in-
terest, a nonprofit corporation, the Harry 
S. Truman Library Institute for National 
and International Affairs, has been 
formed. The institute, whose members 
are persons prominent in the fields of edu-
cation and national affairs, has as its pur-
pose the support of the research activi-
ties of the library on a broad scale. Its 
special interest is a grant-in-aid program 
whereby monetary grants up to one thou-
sand dollars may be allotted to worthy 
scholars, especially those who are just 
beginning their academic careers, for 
travel and living expenses while they are 
studying at the library. 

In his book, Mr. Citizen, Mr. Truman, 
in speaking of his part in establishing the 
library, says: "Nothing that has happened 
to me during or since the presidency has 
given me such deep and abiding satisfac-
tion. " 5 The library staff has felt compen-
sated for its many long hours of hard 
work by seeing the library develop into 
a full-fledged research institution. • • 

5 Harry S. Truman, Mr. Citizen (New York: Ber-
nard Geis Associates, c. 1960), p. 259. 

36 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES