LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON was born on
August 27, 1908 near Stonewall, Gillespie County, Texas. His paternal
grandfather had moved to Texas from his birthplace in Georgia and had become a
cattle rancher in the Pedemales River Valley west of Austin. Johnson was the
eldest of the five children of Sam Ealy Johnson, Jr. and Rebekah Baines Johnson.
His father struggled on the family cattle ranch and being politically active,
served five terms in the Texas legislature. In 1913, the Johnson family
abandoned the family ranch and moved to Johnson City, a nearby town named for
his ancestors. Johnson attended public schools in Johnson City and graduated
from Johnson City High School, one of six in the class of 1924.
Johnson decided to make his way to California with a five friends in an
automobile he had purchased. There he performed odd jobs, picking fruit, washing
cars and one as an elevator operator. A year later he hitchhiked home where he
worked on a road construction gang. His mother had impressed the importance of a
college education on him while he was growing up and in 1927 he decided to
follow her advice. He enrolled in nearby Southwest Texas State Teachers College
where he eventually received his B.S. after interrupting his education to teach
Mexican children in the town on Cotulla in South Texas. After graduation, he
accepted a teaching position at Sam Houston High School in Houston, where his
uncle was chairman of the History department. In 1931, at the beginning of his
second year teaching, he accepted a political appointment, going to Washington
as secretary to Democratic Texas congressman, Richard M. Kleberg. He soon gained
prominence in Washington Democratic political circles during the early days of
Roosevelt’s administration. In 1933 he was elected speaker of an organization
of congressional workers called the “Little Congress”
On a trip home to Texas, Johnson met a women he almost immediately knew was
to be his wife. Two months later she agreed and on November 17, 1934, Johnson
married Claudia Alta Taylor, known as “Lady Bird”, a member of a prosperous
Texas family and a recent graduate of the University of Texas. The couple had
two daughters, Lynda bird, born in 1944 and Luci Baines, born in 1947.
On July 25, 1935, Johnson resigned as Secretary to Representative Kleberg and
accepted Roosevelt’s appointment as the Texas Director of the National Youth
Administration. At the age of 26, he was the youngest of the state directors. In
1937, the seat of the incumbent congressman James P. Buchanan in Johnson’s
10th Texas district became vacant due to the congressman’s sudden death. With
$10,00 borrowed by his wife, and aided by many local friends, Johnson ran
against nine opponents. On April 10, 1937, Johnson won with more than 3,000
votes than the next highest candidate. Johnson was an all out supporter of
President Roosevelt and he was appointed to the House Committee on Naval Affairs
at the request of the President. Johnson worked hard for public housing, rural
electrification and eliminating government waste. He won reelection to each
succeeding Congress until 1948.
In the spring of 1941, Senator Morris Sheppard died and Johnson announced his
candidacy for the remaining term. Johnson once again ran as an enthusiastic
supporter of Roosevelt’s. The election in June was very close, but Johnson
lost by 1,311 votes out of nearly 600,000 cast. After the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor in December 1941, Johnson was on of the first congressman to
enlist, joining the Navy. He saw action in the Pacific and received the Silver
Star for gallantry. He returned to Washington in July 1942 where he headed a
special investigating subcommittee of the Naval Affairs Committee. The death of
President Roosevelt in April 1945 was a personal loss for him, telling a
reporter that the President has been his “second daddy.”
In 1948, Johnson again ran for the Senate, this time winning the primary with
a final victory by a margin of 87 votes, out of nearly 900,000 cast, giving him
the nickname “Landslide Lyndon”. He won easily over his Republican opponent,
Jack Porter, in the election and returned to Washington and immediately became a
member of the Senate Armed Services Committee. He advanced rapidly in the
Senate, in 1951 becoming party whip, providing leadership for his party and
developing his peace-making powers. In 1953, he was elected Minority Leader of
the Senate and in 1955, the Majority Leader. During his tenure as Senate
Majority Leader, Johnson served as Chairman of the Democratic Policy Committee,
Democratic Steering Committee, and Democratic Conference of the Senate. On July
2, 1955 Johnson suffered a severe heart attack and entered Bethesda Naval
Hospital. He was released from the hospital and returned home to the LBJ Ranch
to recuperate. He did not return to Washington until December. Johnson resumed
his duties on the Hill, helping to secure the passage of the Civil Rights Act of
1957. He was active as Chairman of the Senate Preparedness Investigating
Subcommittee, beginning hearings on the American space program.
On July 13, 1960, Johnson was nominated for President at the Democratic
National Convention, but he did not count on the superbly managed campaign of
John F. Kennedy, loosing the first-ballot nomination to the young Senator from
Massachusetts. Kennedy then surprised many people by offering Johnson the
vice-presidential nomination. A surprised Johnson accepted and threw himself
into he campaign, working in the South to overcome the Southern Democrats
suspicion of a Roman Catholic candidate. The election was very close, with the
Kennedy/Johnson ticket winning by a narrow margin over the Nixon/Lodge
Republicans.
Johnson was an unusually active vice president, participating significantly
in the decision-making process, and visiting 33 countries on behalf of the
administration. In November 1963, Johnson and Kennedy went to Texas and on the
22nd, they were riding in separate cars in the motorcade in Dallas when the
assassin’s bullets stuck the President. Johnson was administered the oath of
office as the 36th president aboard Air Force One, the presidential airplane as
it sat in Love Field about 112 minutes after Kennedy had died.
The new president quickly took command, placing great emphasis on continuity
of the Kennedy Program. He signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 in a televised
ceremony at the White House. He ordered retaliatory air strikes against North
Vietnam after the attacks on the USS Maddox and her escort the USS C. Turner
Joy. He signed the Southeast Asia Resolution on August 10th, giving him
authority to take “all necessary measures to repel any armed attack against
the forces of the United States and to prevent further aggression.” In
November he was elected President of the United States with the greatest
percentage of the total popular vote (61%) ever attained by a candidate. Hubert
Humphrey was elected Vice President.
Johnson introduced his own “Great Society” program, declaring a “war on
poverty” and calling for urban renewal, aid to education and Medicare for the
elderly. But the situation in South Vietnam deteriorated and Johnson began
enlarging the military commitment. Though never declared, the war in South
Vietnam came to dominate his Presidency. It escalated steadily costing thousands
of American lives and causing bitter protests at home. On March 31, 1968 Johnson
announced that he would not be a candidate for another term as President.
Following the inauguration of Richard M. Nixon in January 1969, Johnson
returned to the LBJ Ranch in Texas. He devoted his time to writing his
presidential memoirs. He again suffered from his heart ailment and on January
22, 1973, he died at this ranch near Johnson City, Texas.
Franklin
D. Roosevelt Library and Museum - Repository of the records of President
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Dwight
D. Eisenhower Presidential Library - preserves and makes available for
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D. Eisenhower
JOHNSON, Lyndon Baines, (father-in-law
of Charles Spittal Robb), a Representative and a Senator from Texas and a Vice
President and 36th President of the United States; born on a farm near
Stonewall, Gillespie County, Tex., on August 27, 1908; moved with his parents to
Johnson City, in 1913; attended the public schools of Blanco County, Tex.;
graduated from Southwest Texas State Teachers College at San Marcos in 1930;
taught high school 1928-1931; served as secretary to Congressman Richard M.
Kleberg in Washington, D.C., 1931-1935; attended the Georgetown University Law
School, Washington, D.C., 1934; State director of the National Youth
Administration of Texas 1935-1937; elected as a Democrat to the Seventy-fifth
Congress by special election, April 10, 1937, to fill the vacancy caused by the
death of James P. Buchanan; reelected to the five succeeding Congresses and
served from April 10, 1937, to January 3, 1949; first Member of Congress to
enlist in the armed forces after the Second World War began; served as
lieutenant commander in the United States Navy 1941-1942; was not a candidate
for renomination to the Eighty-first Congress in 1948; elected to the United
States Senate in 1948 for the term commencing January 3, 1949; reelected in 1954
and again in 1960 for the term ending January 3, 1967; Democratic whip
1951-1953; minority leader 1953-1955; majority leader 1955-1961; chairman,
Special Committee on the Senate Reception Room (Eighty-fourth Congress), Special
Committee on Astronautics and Space (Eighty-fifth Congress), Committee on
Aeronautical and Space Sciences (Eighty-fifth and Eighty-sixth Congresses);
elected Vice President of the United States in November 1960, on the Democratic
ticket with John F. Kennedy, for the term beginning January 20, 1961; resigned
from the United States Senate January 3, 1961; on the death of President Kennedy
was sworn in as President of the United States on November 22, 1963, elected
President of the United States in November 1964, for the term commencing January
20, 1965, and served until January 20, 1969; did not seek reelection in 1968;
retired to his ranch near Johnson City, Tex.; died on January 22, 1973;
interment in the family cemetery at the LBJ ranch.- -Biographical
Data courtesy of the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
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