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<text id=93HT1406>
<title>
Man of Year 1948: Harry S. Truman
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Man of the Year
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
January 3, 1949
Man of the Year
Harry S. Truman: Fighter in a Fighting Year
</hdr>
<body>
<p> A free nation's decision is slow in the making, and no one
knows certainly on what day of what month a people makes up its
mind. Its decision is the slow growth of conviction in many
minds, the slow swelling of resolve in many hearts. It is reached
not at the green-topped tables of states, but at the corner store
and the village market, at the tea table and the union meeting.
It is taken by corporations examining their books, by housewives
scribbling a market list, by farmers squinting at a crop of
wheat. Until the voice of a free people is heard clearly few
major decisions of statesmen can carry the power of democracy's
full force.
</p>
<p> Firm Resolve. In the year 1948--a fitful year--in a
nervous century--historians could record that a mass of U.S.
intentions, promises and pledges had hardened into resolve
and action. In 1948, the world's greatest nation of free men
finally resolved to meet Communism's deadly
challenge with every weapon of peace that it possessed; and if
the struggle against Communism required war, the U.S. would
fight.
</p>
<p> In 1948, the U.S. Congress passed and the U.S. President
signed the Economic Cooperation Act, called by England's
Economist "an act without peer in history...of inspired and
generous diplomacy." What had been promised in the Marshall Plan
became solid fact, and the U.S. moved into its massive
counterattack against the enemy.
</p>
<p> In 1948, under savage and provocative Russian pressure in
Berlin, the U.S. refused to abandon Europe's helpless peoples.
With that decision, the U.S. accepted the risk of war. Major
General William H. Tunner's airlift blazed a roaring, dramatic
demonstration of U.S. determination across Europe's troubled
skies. Not only to Berliners but to the world, the Berlin airlift
was the symbol of the year: the U.S. meant business. (Last week,
completing six months of operation, U.S. and British planes had
carried a total of 700,172 tons in 96,640 flights.)
</p>
<p> No Dissent. Grimly and regretfully, the country shouldered the
burden of a record peacetime rearmament. In little issues and
big, the signs of the people's decision were clearly written.
Congress authorized a peacetime draft and stamped its approval on
a massive Air Force, Army and Navy--without a whisper of
partisan dispute in an election year.
</p>
<p> Through the acts of two widely disparate individuals, the last
trace of doubt about the nature of the enemy had disappeared. In
Czechoslovakia, Jan Masaryk jumped to his death, the tragic
figure of thousands of men of good will who stubbornly held to
the theory that the liberal can work with the Communist. In
Manhattan, a distraught Russian schoolteacher leaped from an
upper window in the Soviet consulate to escape return to Russia.
More than speeches, reports or eyewitness accounts of life under
Communism, her act nakedly revealed the bitter despair behind the
glowing promises in Communism's workers' paradise.
</p>
<p> Largely, in its observation of the ebb & flow of Communism's
tide, the U.S. looked at the motherlands of Europe. For the rest
of the world it found time only for the quick, uneasy glance. It
knew there was trouble afoot in Southeast Asia, it had an uneasy
conscience about China, where Communism was carving out a great
political and military victory. Thanks partly to George
Marshall's tactic of fighting Communism in Europe first, and
partly to the influence of fellow travelers and gulliberals on
U.S. foreign policy, the U.S. had never made up its mind to save
China from Communism.
</p>
<p> The Foe. As boss of all the world's Communists, Russia's
Stalin was the free world's great single antagonist. On balance,
Joseph Stalin had a pretty good year. He could score one minor
and one major victory. In Czechoslovakia, he had openly seized
what he had already possessed in fact. In China, his devoted
apostles--Mao Tse-tung, leader of China's Communist Party, and
Chu Teh, commander of China's Communist armies--were winning a
victory for which they could thank the stupidities of their
opponents as much as their own skill. History, which would be
little concerned with the "whys," might still record the loss of
China--if it was to be a loss--as 1948's major event and
major catastrophe. Journalism could certainly record Mao
Tse-tung and Chu-Teh as Communism's Men of the Year.
</p>
<p> Elsewhere, Stalin was little more than holding his own. His
Communists suffered electoral defeats in France and Italy;
Yugoslavia's strong-willed Tito brashly challenged his absolute
authority. The Western Allies moved forward toward setting up an
independent Western Germany, and then stayed in Berlin as one
gauge of their determination to get on with the job.
</p>
<p> In the world's outer reaches, fighting and violence flickered
menacingly. A series of military coups and attempted coups ran
like a fever through Latin America. In New Delhi, Mahatma Gandhi
was murdered; India's blood bath subsided in shocked dismay and
its legislature legally abolished the untouchability which, in
life, Gandhi had abominated above all of India's other woes.
Under the purposeful hands of David Ben-Gurion, the new state of
Israel was born on Judah's ancient soil. Its young armies whipped
the Arabs into defeat, rested, and then at year's end renewed the
fight against their enemy.
</p>
<p> Acts of Peace. There was little talk of peace in 1948. The
U.S. had learned the price of endlessly talking peace with men
who had no intention of concluding a peace. Talk meant only delay
and delay was costly. But in 1948's troubled world, the U.S. had
reason to be thankful. In the midst of hunger and want it knew
unequaled prosperity. The year's harvest was the biggest in
history. With few exceptions, everyone who wanted a job had one.
Labor got a third round of wage increases, and strikes were at a
postwar low. Prices inched upward and everyone worried,
complained, and talked about them. But the U.S. citizen was
earning more actual buying power than ever before. He also
managed to save some money (personal savings were up $4.9 billion
over 1947). The year's crop of babies pushed the population to
147,280,000--up 15,500,000 since 1940.
</p>
<p> Women & Shmoos. Undeniably, the U.S. had domestic peace and
prosperity, even if it was made uneasy by the tension in the rest
of the world. Its fads and foibles rang changes on those of other
years, but they were unmistakably American. Bebop, a frantic,
disorganized musical cult whose high priest was quid-cheeked
Dizzy Gillespie, replaced swing; the Shmoo took the place of
1947's Sparkle Plenty.
</p>
<p> Babe Ruth died, and true grief dropped into public bathos; a
coal miner's daughter nicknamed "Bobo" married into the
Rockefeller clan; Manhattan's nickel subway fare went to a dime;
the year's most popular book on human behavior was by a zoologist
named Kinsey.
</p>
<p> In 1948, women took the family was and their gossip to
"Launderettes," which became a modern urban equivalent to the
village well; they flocked to quiz programs where prizes reached
a frenetic peak of absurdity. The world learned officially that
man had flown faster than sound. In sport, the athlete of the
year was a horse; Citation won everything worth winning, was
probably the greatest horse of all time. Television became an
accepted part of U.S. life.
</p>
<p> The Man. In this year, which at home differed only in
accidentals from other prosperous peacetime years, the U.S. also
held an election. On the whole, the U.S. people did not pay much
attention to it. There was comparatively little talk about it; it
raised few heated arguments. To all except a hardy band of
diehards (who are now trumpeting their clairvoyance), if seemed
that there was almost no point in going to the polls; the result
was in the bag. The election would prove to the world that the
world's greatest democracy could change leaders almost as easily
as its motorists changed gears.
</p>
<p> But when the results were in, there was proof of another kind.
It was this: in the mechanized U.S.A. there is one thing which
does not yet work by buttons--the free will of the voters. With
their ballots on Nov. 2, the U.S. people made Harry Truman the
Man of 1948.
</p>
<p> His election was a personal victory almost without historical
parallel; a victory of the fighting spirit. Whatever their
politics, the nation's common people found in his election a
great emotional satisfaction. He had humbled the confident,
discomfited the savants and the pollsters, and given a new luster
to the old-fashioned virtues of work and dogged courage. The year
1948 was Harry Truman's year.
</p>
<p> Man Nobody Wanted. Harry Truman began his year of triumph a
sorely beset man. He was popular with almost nobody. The country
grinned at the G.O.P. jeers: "Don't shoot the piano player, he's
doing the best he can," "To err is Truman," "I'm just mild about
Harry." Eastern wags even gibed at his farmer's habit of rising
early: he did it only to have more time to put both feet in his
mouth.
</p>
<p> When, in a New York by-election, the Democrats were trounced
by the Progressive Party's Leo Isacson in Boss Ed Flynn's own
Bronx, panic swept the Democratic ranks. Politicos began to
desert the Truman ship. Anybody but Truman was the cry. Through
it all, the man from Missouri kept his own counsel, and laid his
plans. When he was asked to withdraw, he retorted grimly: "I was
not brought up to run from a fight."
</p>
<p> When Harry Truman, brisk and smiling in a gleaming white linen
suit, walked into the steamy Philadelphia convention hall, he
faced a sullen, demoralized Democratic Party. The delegates had
kept him waiting for four hours while the South staged a last
fight against his nomination. Mississippi's and half of Alabama's
delegation had walked out. It was 2 a.m., delegates were sweaty,
rumpled and tired.
</p>
<p> Minutes later, the bedraggled delegates were on their feet,
yelling, applauding and cheering the man nobody had wanted. Harry
Truman had announced that he was recalling the 80th Congress to
demand that they enact their own Republican platform.
</p>
<p> The call for the special session was a piece of political
sharpshooting by which Harry Truman stood to benefit no matter
what happened. To the hostile "Turnip Day" session, he sent an
eleven-point program; Congress could not have passed it if it sat
for a year. But politically, Harry Truman's point had been made.
He had put the Republican Congress on the spot. When it adjourned
(after twelve days), Harry Truman had a target of his own
choosing.
</p>
<p> He set out to "tell the people the facts." He was no orator.
He stumbled over big words, made mistakes in grammar, got tangled
up in his sentences. A man without pose or side, he was incapable
of dramatizing an issue as Franklin Roosevelt had dramatized "The
Forgotten Man," or William Jennings Bryan his "Cross of Gold."
Much of Truman's program was a grab bag of well-worn New Deal
projects. His attacks on the "gluttons of privilege" and "Wall
Street reactionaries" struck no chords. His irresponsible
implication that a vote for Thomas Dewey was a vote for fascism
horrified his soberer followers. But Harry Truman succeeded in
dramatizing himself; to millions of voters he seemed a simple,
sincere man fighting against overwhelming odds--fighting a
little recklessly perhaps, but always with courage and a high
heart.
</p>
<p> Few men have been able to communicate their personality so
completely. He never talked down to his audience. He showed no
shadow of pompousness. He introduced his wife as "my boss,"
sometimes as "the madam." "I would rather have peace than be
President," he cried. He never had to remind his audience that he
had been a Missouri farmer, a man who could stick a cow for
clover bloat and plow the straightest furrow in the county, a
small-time businessman who could still twist a tie into a
haberdasher's knot. When he stumbled over a phrase or a name, he
would grin broadly and try again. Newsmen snickered and
politicians winced. But his audiences smiled sympathetically.
They knew just how he felt. "Pour it, on, Harry," they cried,
"Give 'em hell!"
</p>
<p> Down on the Farm. There were many other reasons for Harry
Truman's victory. Housewives voted for the man who promised to
bring lower prices--by price control, if necessary. Labor
remembered that he had vetoed the Taft-Hartley Act; labor worked
hard & well. Tenants voted for rent control, veterans for more
houses, which Harry Truman promised. The West voted for more
power dams and irrigation. Said a farmer: "I wasn't voting for a
man or a party. I was voting for the price of wheat."
</p>
<p> In a moment of exuberance, Harry Truman declared that his
biggest asset was his opponent, Tom Dewey, who had cried at
Louisville, "Don't worry about me." The voters didn't.
</p>
<p> "It Makes a Man Study." In his day of triumph, Harry Truman
spoke in homely phrases from the north portico of the White
House: "It is overwhelming. It makes a man study and wonder
whether he is worthy of the confidence, worthy of the
responsibility which has been thrust upon him."
</p>
<p> Many a voter wondered too. Even in the flush of post-election
emotion, few could mistake Truman for an inspiring leader in the
pattern of Churchill or Roosevelt. Many remembered the
bewildered, fumbling Harry Truman groping through the tumbling
squalls of the postwar economy, often seeming to dismiss his
problems as jauntily as the captain of the Walloping Windowblind.
But not even his opponents doubted his essential integrity and
simplicity and, in the calmer waters of 1948, that seemed enough.
Said a young businessman: "He'll do what he thinks he ought to.
Up home in North Carolina, we call him mule head."
</p>
<p> To most, he had seemed as friendly and honest and likable as
the man next door and they were sure he was on their side.
</p>
<p> The New Orthodoxy. What was their side, in 1948? It seemed to
be the body of ideas, laws and generalized intentions which
Franklin Roosevelt called the New Deal. It was no longer
radical--it had been accepted for 16 years. As far as the
Democratic Party was concerned it was the new orthodoxy, and
Harry Truman, no original thinker but a man tempered with
Missouri caution, was orthodox clear through.
</p>
<p> It was a doctrine that held that the Government should be
something like a modern, bureaucratic Great White Father to all
its peoples. Government was expected not only to protect the
helpless, but also to make full employment, regulate business and
let labor run on a minimum of regulation. It was a doctrine that
meant guaranteed security--for the farmer and the worker, and for
the old and the sick. In 1948, the U.S. wanted a man who believed
in that doctrine. It rejected the party--the Republican Party--which
it suspected of wanting to change it.
</p>
<p> New Load. The day after Franklin Roosevelt died, Harry Truman,
the man who never wanted to be President, confided to reporters:
"Did you ever have a bull or a load of hay fall on you? If you
have, you know how I felt last night." In 1948, the load was
bigger. But Harry Truman was not the abjectly humble man of 1945
who had begged every casual visitor to pray for him. He had the
air of a man who felt he had learned his job. In an informal
talk, he conceded recently that there were a million men in the
U.S. who would make a better President than he was or ever would
be. But that was not the point, he said. He, Harry Truman, was
President.
</p>
<p> There was not a new Truman. At 64, he was the same brisk,
gregarious, stubborn, artless man, the fanatically loyal friend
who flew from Washington to attend the funeral of Boss Tom
Pendergast, the same engaging Missourian who tripped over his
academic gown and blurted: "Whups! I forgot to pull up my dress."
Home in Independence for Christmas last week, Harry Truman
tramped through the familiar streets with careless informality,
dropped in on his friends, doffed his hat to neighbors. Like any
well-trained husband, he carefully knocked the snow off his boots
before going into the house.
</p>
<p> A man who neither expects nor inspires pomp & circumstance, he
still likes to sit up late over a poker table, drinks branch
water and bourbon, and roars when his military aide, Major
General Harry Vaughan, tells an off-color joke. He has learned to
duck embarrassing questions, but he is still capable of insisting
stubbornly that the spy hearings are "a red herring" long after
the charge has become ridiculous.
</p>
<p> Harry Truman had said: "I bear no malice toward anyone," and
apparently he doesn't. He has listened patiently, as is his way,
grinning quietly and staring at the floor, while politicians
flocked in to assure him that they had been for him all along. To
labor leaders and A.D.A. liberals who demanded a whole new
Administration, he retorted: "I think we are doing fine as we
are." Newspaper attacks on his Cabinet officers only made him
more determined to keep them.
</p>
<p> Proof to Come. Harry Truman had still to prove himself to the
nation's voters. He had run on a program, not a record. Some
680,000 who went to the polls had not cast a ballot for any
presidential candidate. Truman had polled less than a majority,
and his winning margin was the smallest since 1916. Many a voter
had voted for him simply as a protest.
</p>
<p> No one knew that better than Harry Truman. He was determined
to carry out his program to the letter. That meant enactment of
the social props and programs that comprise the new orthodoxy--with
the significant addition of civil rights.
</p>
<p> "Harry le Souriant." Abroad, Harry Truman's victory had raised
spirits and stilled fears. Europe felt new confidence that the
strong hand of the U.S. would continue to bear it up. To the
French, the victory of "Harry le Souriant" (smiling Harry) meant
that the U.S. people had moved closer to them in spirit. In
Greece, Athenian grey-marketeers renamed the street where they
sell U.S. goods "Uncle Harry Street." Said a Tel Aviv newspaper-
man: "He is a simple human being, a man of the people. We would
rather trust our fate to him than to the cool, calculating
diplomats."
</p>
<p> More Than Courage. Harry Truman had never pretended to a great
grasp of foreign affairs. Unlike his predecessors, he depended
heavily on his advisers. Since the humiliating Wallace fiasco, he
had been grateful that he could leave policymaking more or less
in George Marshall's hands. But Harry Truman's horizon was
growing. A few months ago, at a private dinner, General Marshall
rose in his place, looked straight at Harry Truman, and waited
for silence. Then he said with deep seriousness: "The full
stature of this man will only be proven by history, but I want to
say here and now that there has never been a decision made under
this man's Administration, affecting policies beyond our shores,
that has not been in the best interest of this country. It is not
the courage of these decisions that will live, but the integrity
of them." (Harry Truman, deeply moved by the tribute from the man
he most deeply respects, stood with his arms half outstretched as
sought for words. Finally, he gestured toward Marshall and said
simply: "He won the war.")
</p>
<p> For the next four years the cold war would be Harry Truman's
war. In all likelihood, Old Soldier George Marshall would not
stay on to help him fight it. In his inherited term, Harry
Truman, by painful experience, groping and pluck, had evolved a
policy of containment and counterattack. In his new term, the man
of 1948 would carry the full weight of driving that policy to a
decision.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>