May 05, 2016 - Sale 2413

Sale 2413 - Lot 206

Price Realized: $ 938
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 500 - $ 750
"MAKE A CHOICE BETWEEN AN UPSTART LITTLE RABBIT AND THE PRESIDENT" TRUMAN, HARRY S. Typed Letter Signed, "Harry," as President, to James M. Pendergast ("My dear Jim"), explaining why he should not support [Roger C.] Slaughter. 1 1/2 pages, 4to, White House stationery, written on the first and fourth pages of a single folded sheet; folds. With the original envelope. (TFC) Washington, 21 May 1946

Additional Details

". . . I wanted to talk with you about Slaughter. He has become insufferable to the Administration, because of his actions as a member of the powerful Rules Committee of the House. He owes his position on that Committee to me. After giving Speaker Rayburn and myself unqualified assurance that he would go along without question on Administration measures Rayburn appointed him to the Committee. . . . The meanest partisan Republican has been no more anti-Truman than has Slaughter.
"Now if the home county organization with which I have been affiliated slaps the President of the United States in the face by supporting a renegade Congressman it will not be happy for the President nor for the political organization. . . .
"Of course, I don't intend to rehash history . . . . Nor did I suppose that it would ever be necessary for me to ask a Pendergast to make a choice between an upstart little Rabbit and the President of the United States.
"It seems that that is what confronts me--much to my regret. Slaughter is obnoxious to me and you must make your choice. . . ."
Missouri Democratic Representative Roger C. Slaughter (1905-1974) had been supported by Pendergast's political machine until 1946, when Truman asked Pendergast to support another Democratic congressional candidate, Enos Axtell, because Slaughter had been repeatedly voting against Truman's policies. Slaughter was defeated by Axtell in the primaries, but in the election, a Republican won the seat instead of Axtell, who was naturally more opposed to Truman's policies than was Slaughter.
In the Kansas City politics of Truman's day, a "Rabbit" was a Jeffersonian Democrat led by Joseph Shannon and who inhabited the wards near the rivers, and a "Goat" was a West Bottoms-dwelling New Deal Democrat whose political boss was a member of the Pendergast family.