ABSTRACT

Herbert S. Parmet's Eisenhower and the American Crusades is a major assessment of the American presidency during the critical period of America at mid-century. The book follows the career of General Dwight D. Eisenhower from 1952, when he decided to leave his NATO command to campaign for the presidency, to his retirement at Gettysburg nearly nine years later. His entry into politics was well-timed. A mood of conservatism was sweeping the country; surveys indicated that the majority of Americans felt it was time for a change from two decades of executive control 'by those who had permitted events to get out of hand.'Parmet based his study of the Eisenhower years on massive research, conversations with leading figures of the era, and previously unreleased documents. This wealth of material has enabled him to provide answers to questions frequently asked about the thirty-fourth president: Was Eisenhower the kind, fatherly man millions grew up to love on their television or was this an image created by a shrewd politician who knew what the country needed in a trying time?Did he choose Richard Nixon as a running mate or was Nixon forced upon him by political necessities? Was the president intimidated by the appearance of power of Joseph McCarthy, and did the Army-McCarthy hearings influence Eisenhower's decision to involve the United States in Vietnam? Was Eisenhower concerned with the lack of progress in civil rights? Was he the right man for the right time in history or was he merely postponing the major crises of the 1960s?Parmet offers a convincing refutation of the idea of the Eisenhower years as being placid or boring. 'No years that contained McCarthy and McCarthyism, a war in Korea, constant fears of nuclear annihilation, and spreading racial violence, could be so described.' For Parmet, Eisenhower was a stabilizing force in a time of conflict. He may not have been a political genius, but he knew perhaps better than anyone else around him exactly what the people wanted and how they wanted it.

part One|60 pages

“A New Kind of Candidate”

chapter 1|4 pages

Abilene, June 4, 1952

chapter 2|5 pages

The General’s Constituency

chapter 3|4 pages

From Europe to Columbia

chapter 4|4 pages

Why They Liked Ike

chapter 5|2 pages

The Despair of the GOP

chapter 6|4 pages

The Centrist from Mid-America

chapter 7|4 pages

Ike

chapter 8|3 pages

Truman’s Troubles

chapter 9|12 pages

The Forces for Ike

chapter 10|12 pages

The Decision to Return

chapter 11|5 pages

Abilene, June 5, 1952

part Two|556 pages

Launching the Crusade

chapter 12|10 pages

The Road to Chicago

chapter 13|10 pages

Deception at Houston

chapter 14|19 pages

Chicago, July 1952

chapter 15|16 pages

Party Realities

chapter 16|16 pages

The Ordeal of Politics

chapter 17|11 pages

Holding the Center

chapter 18|5 pages

Time for a Change

chapter 19|11 pages

Redeeming the Pledge

chapter 20|8 pages

The Restoration

chapter 21|7 pages

” Walking into Bright Sunshine”

chapter 22|19 pages

The Team

chapter 23|15 pages

Floating Upstream

chapter 24|18 pages

The Politics of jobs, Taxes and Oil

chapter 25|21 pages

The Holy Crusade

chapter 26|22 pages

The Senator and the President

chapter 27|25 pages

Redeeming Containment

chapter 28|22 pages

Ike and the Nationalists

chapter 29|26 pages

The Perils of Moderation

chapter 30|43 pages

The Crises of 1954

chapter 31|26 pages

Two Scorpions in a Bottle”

part Three|170 pages

“Modern Republicanism”

chapter 32|16 pages

The Crisis of the GOP

chapter 33|23 pages

Before San Francisco

chapter 34|10 pages

The Travail of Childe Harold

chapter 35|12 pages

Trust Ike

chapter 36|14 pages

Patience and Moderation

chapter 37|23 pages

The Shrinking Center

chapter 38|46 pages

Voyages ojthe Lame Duck

chapter 39|9 pages

Reßections in a Washington Snowstorm