FIRST LADY MAMIE DOUD EISENHOWER - BOOK SIGNED CO-SIGNED BY: PERLE MESTA, YOUSUF KARSH, GENERAL OMAR N. BRADLEY, MARJORIE MERRIWETHER POST - HFSID 266131
Sale Price $1,195.00
Reg. $1,400.00
MAMIE DOUD EISENHOWER, PERLE MESTA, YOUSUF KARSH, OMAR N. BRADLEY,
MARJORIE MERRIWETHER POST
This guestbook is a fascinating piece of American political history. It
belonged to Washington, DC philanthropist Rebecca Pollard "Polly" Guggenheim
Logan and contains 13 years of signatures - collected between 1962 and 1975 - of
many important politicians, artists, military leaders and other Washington
glitterati.
Guestbook signed "Mamie Doud Eisenhower", "Perle Mesta", "Marjorie Post"
(also twice as "Marjorie Post-West"), "Estrellita and Yousuf Karsh"
and "Omar N Bradley", along with many others. With pencil notations
on many pages in unknown hand. 104 pages including title page, 10¾x8¼, bound
with six gold-colored rings in 11½x9 red leather covers. Front cover is
imprinted with "Polly and Jack Logan" in gilt. "Polly Logan" possibly refers
to Rebecca Pollard Guggenheim Logan - also known as
"Polly" - who died in 1994 at age 90. Logan was an important Washington,
DC hostesses and philanthropist who entertained government officials, artists,
military leaders, fellow philanthropists and Supreme Court justices from
between the 1940s and 1970s at Firenze House, one of Washington's most lavish
estates. The signatures in this book are dated between April, 24, 1962 and
April 26, 1975 and cover 13 years of American political history. On July 1,
1916, 19-year old Mamie Geneva Doud (1896-1979, born in Boone, Iowa)
married 25-year-old 2nd Lieutenant Dwight D. Eisenhower in Denver,
Colorado. They had two sons: Dwight Doud Eisenhower (1917-1920) and John
Sheldon Doud Eisenhower, born in 1923. As an Army wife for 37 years, Mamie grew
accustomed to entertaining groups of influential people, a talent she drew on as
the White House hostess. On July 1, 1966, the Eisenhowers became just the
third presidential couple to have celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary.
John and Abigail Adams and John Quincy and Louisa Adams were the other two.
On December 22, 1968, three months before the former President died at the age
of 78, Dwight and Mamie's grandson, Dwight David Eisenhower II, married Julie
Nixon, the daughter of Eisenhower's Vice President.Mamie, who survived
"Ike" by ten years and 218 days, died in Washington, D.C. on November 1, 1979,
at the age of 82. MESTA (1889-1975, born Perle Skirvin in Sturgis,
Michigan) was known as Washington, DC's "hostess with the mostest" for her
lavish parties that attracted the capitol's glitterati. The wife of steel
manufacturer George Mesta, she inherited his fortune when he died in 1925 and
moved to Washington, DC in 1940. Mesta was a part of the National Woman's Party
and was an early supporter of the Equal Rights Amendment and Harry S. Truman.
Her support of the latter earned her an ambassadorship to Luxembourg. Irving
Berlin fans may recognize her as the inspriation for his musical Call Me
Madam, which starred Ethel Merman. Portrait photographer KARSH
(1908-2002, born Hovsep Karsh in Mardin, Armenia, now Turkey) grew up during the
Turkish massacres in Armenia and eventually fled to Canada. For more than sixty
years his remarkable photographs captured the essence of famous and powerful
people, including Churchill, Einstein, Hemingway, Frank Lloyd Wright,
Picasso, Eleanor Roosevelt and George Bernard Show. His works are coveted by the
world's great art museums. Beginning with Faces of Destiny (1946), he
published collections of his portrait photos. BRADLEY (1893-1981, born near
Clark, Missouri) took command of the First Army in January 1944, which,
constituting the Allied right wing, landed at Utah and Omaha beaches, Normandy
on D-Day, June 6, 1944. In August 1944, he became the Commander of the
12th Army Group, the largest force ever commanded on the field. Bradley
served as the first Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff from 1949 to 1953,
being promoted to Five-Star General of the Army in 1950.
Lacking the arrogance and ostentation of some other generals, Bradley became
known as "the soldier's general." POST (1887-1973, born in Springfield,
Illinois) was an American socialite and once the richest woman in the United
States, with a fortune of around a quarter of a billion dollars. She was the
daughter of C. W. Post and inherited her father's Postum Cereal Company when
she was 27. Postum branched out into other foods under her supervision,
including frozen foods. Her company acquired patents for packaging frozen
food from Clarence Birdseye in 1929 and founded the Birds Eye Frosted Foods
Company, which later became General Foods Corporation. Post was also a
philanthropist. Among her charitable works were donations to build field
hospitals in France during World War I, which earned her France's Legion of
Honor. Pages are lightly toned, stained, soiled, waterspotted and creased.
Nicked edges. Covers are heavily damaged, scratched, scuffed and creased and
with torn and chipped edges. Leather top has completely separated from cardstock
backing. Spine and hinge are repaired with black electrician's tape. Otherwise
in fine condition.
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