PRESIDENT RICHARD M. NIXON - TYPED LETTER SIGNED 10/08/1976 - HFSID 1219
Price: $500.00
RICHARD NIXON
Richard Nixon sends a typed letter of birthday greetings for reaching
100.
Typed Letter Signed: "Richard Nixon", 1p, 7¼x10½. La Casa
Pacifica, San Clemente, California, 1976 October 8. To Mr. Vito Siniscalchi, c/o
Mrs. Terry Siniscalchi, Ridgewood, New York. In full: "Mrs. Nixon and I
join in this expression of our heartfelt congratulations as you reach the very
special milestone of celebrating your one-hundredth birthday. With our very best
wishes and the hope that it may be the happiest of occasions for you and your
family, Sincerely," Richard M. Nixon (1913-1994), was elected 37th
President (1969-1974) of the U.S. in 1968 after representing California in
the U.S. House of Representatives (1947-1951) and U.S. Senate
(1951-1953) and serving two terms as Dwight D. Eisenhower's Vice
President. Nixon lost (1960), then won (1968), extremely close Presidential
elections (facing John F. Kennedy and Hubert Humphrey, respectively), then won
re-election by a landslide against George McGovern in 1972. His
re-election triumph rapidly turned sour, however, as the burgeoning Watergate
scandal claimed more and more of his key aides and finally compelled his own
resignation. A pragmatic conservative who gained an early reputation as an
anti-Communist, Nixon would achieve diplomatic triumphs in relations with
China and the Soviet Union. On January 23, 1973, he made the historic
announcement that a cease-fire on January 27 would end American involvement
in the long and devastating Vietnam War. At home, Nixon initiated plans to
improve the environment and added four conservative justices, including Chief
Justice Warren E. Burger, to the U.S. Supreme Court. The first President to
employ the 25th Amendment, he chose Gerald R. Ford to replace the resigning
Spiro T. Agnew as his Vice President. On August 9, 1974, eight months after Ford
was sworn in (December 6, 1973), Nixon resigned his office due to the Watergate
scandal. He was pardoned by his successor on September 8. Nixon's prolific
writings in his retirement years helped repair his reputation and hastened his
re-emergence as an elder statesman. Fold creases not near signature. Fine
condition.
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