Franklin And Winston - Part 34
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Part 34

Roosevelt also sent Churchill Ibid., 266.

In midsummer 1944 Breitman, Official Secrets, 208.

Telling Churchill on July 7, 1944 Gilbert, Auschwitz and the Allies, 270.

Citing technical military reasons Ibid., 284285. For more on this topic, see Breitman, Official Secrets, 207211; Beschloss, The Conquerors, 6367; and Michael J. Neufeld and Michael Berenbaum, eds., The Bombing of Auschwitz: Should the Allies Have Attempted It? (New York, 2000).

Churchill proposed a summer summit C & R, III, 249.

Roosevelt, who was Freidel, A Rendezvous with Destiny, 539542.

"I wholly agree" C & R, III, 250.

Henry Wallace was out Freidel, A Rendezvous with Destiny, 529530.

Senator Harry Truman of Missouri David McCullough, Truman (New York, 1992), 297.

Writing to Harriman on July 1 Pamela Churchill to Averell Harriman, July 1, 1944, PHP.

"violent reproaches" Montague Browne, Long Sunset, 299.

"Short of hitting him" Ibid.

"This visit of mine" WAC, 501.

a temperature of 103 CCTBOM, 470.

"I was on a 24-hour leave pa.s.s" Ibid., 479.

"Good G.o.d" TSFS, 173.

"the martyrdom of Warsaw" Churchill, Triumph and Tragedy, 128.

asked Stalin to intervene C & R, III, 283.

Moscow balked WSC, VII, 924926. There was also a political reason: Stalin believed the Poles who started the fighting had failed to coordinate their attack with the Soviets and were allied not with his favored Lublin Committee, which was pro-Soviet, but with the London Poles, who were more democratic.

two British attempts to fly Harriman and Abel, Special Envoy, 338.

Calling the Warsaw situation "a dirty business" Ibid., 342.

"The dead" C & R, III, 293.

a radical solution Ibid., 295.

the Americans wanted rights WSC, VII, 927.

"When the Russians entered the city" Churchill, Triumph and Tragedy, 145.

would disagree about some large matter For the crises that complicated the rest of the war, from Greece to Italy, see, in part, Kimball, Forged in War, 241337; RAH, 837843; WSC, VII and VIII.

"Where is your landing spot?" C & R, III, 303.

"like a boiled owl" CC, 325.

Surrounded by the people TFOP, 509512.

Roosevelt was aboard his train CC, 323.

to see Lucy at her late husband's estate Ibid., 323325.

"tree grower" Gunther, Roosevelt in Retrospect, 80.

"The Pres. is going to look" CC, 323324.

Churchill had written him C & R, III, 307.

"Perfectly delighted" Ibid.

Eleanor was on the platform CC, 325.

"How little one knows" Ibid., 323.

The Roosevelts arrived Richard L. Strout, TRB: Views and Perspectives on the Presidency (New York, 1979), 27.

"Clementine was less 'public relations' conscious" CCTBOM, 472.

She was working Ibid., 472473.

McIntire had sent word to Admiral Brown Wilson Brown Memoir, 163164, FDRL.

generous economic aid WSC, VII, 964.

"While going to bed" TFOP, 515.

Churchill offered Burns, The Soldier of Freedom, 519.

Churchill quoted Milton's Lycidas WSC, VII, 959.

the possibility of a thrust out of Italy Ibid.

the "Morgenthau Plan" See Beschloss, The Conquerors; Warren F. Kimball, Swords or Ploughshares?: The Morgenthau Plan for Defeated n.a.z.i Germany, 19431946 (Philadelphia, 1976).

the two men, wearing academic regalia TFOP, 515.

Roosevelt spoke in a whisper Ibid., 516.

he believed Roosevelt was "very frail" Ibid., 513.

sun-splashed roof of the old fort Ibid., 515516.

"Our affairs are so intermingled" Complete Presidential Press Conferences, XXIV, September 16, 1944, 111116.

Meetings often produce a kind of magic See Jenkins, Churchill, 750752, for an insightful pa.s.sage on Churchill's hunger for personal meetings-a hunger that marked his behavior throughout the war.

"it was a good conference" CC, 326.

Harry Hopkins was at Hyde Park Churchill, Triumph and Tragedy, 161.

eclectic gathering CC, 327.

Eleanor, Clementine told her daughters CCTBOM, 474475.

Clementine also worried WSC, VII, 969.

A group of scientists in the know Rhodes, The Making of the Atomic Bomb, 525538.

"The suggestion that the world" Ibid., 538.

Moran and Colville had had TFOP, 511.

Colville thought he was Ibid., 517.

Roosevelt spent some time CC, 328.

George Elsey accompanied Roosevelt Author interview with George Elsey.

"My darling One" WAC, 505.

decided to try his luck C & R, III, 341.

Roosevelt said no Ibid., 344.

"As the Soviet armies" Bohlen, Witness to History, 161.

"In the afternoon the P.M." TFOP, 523.

Roosevelt drafted a cable C & R, III, 343.

Bohlen was at the State Department Bohlen, Witness to History, 162.

in the map room, Robert Sherwood RAH, 833.

"I said that" Bohlen, Witness to History, 162.

"While I was drafting" Ibid., 163.

"You, naturally" Ibid., 162.

"I supposed that Mr. Churchill" Ibid., 163.

"It was apparent" Ibid.

after struggling to get enough hot water WSC, VII, 989.

"The moment was apt for business" Churchill, Triumph and Tragedy, 227.

diplomacy and politics WSC, VII, 9891033.

"Churchill had high regard" Author interview with Anthony Montague Browne.

"I have had vy nice talks" WAC, 506.

"Tender love" Ibid., 507.

briefly ran a fever TSFS, 216.

"I have to keep the President" WAC, 506.

"Although I hear" C & R, III, 359.

"I do hope your health" Ibid., 362363.

Sat.u.r.day, October 21, 1944 Rosenman, Working with Roosevelt, 480483.

riding fifty-one miles The New York Times, October 22, 1944.

helped undercut the argument Rosenman, Working with Roosevelt, 483.

Mayor Fiorello La Guardia was worn out The New York Times, October 22, 1944.

change of clothes and a drink of bourbon Tully, FDR: My Boss, 281.

There could be no more isolation RAH, 827.

"Republicans in Congress" Life, October 30, 1944, 24.

"Anybody who thinks that" RAH, 827.

His speech in Manhattan The New York Times, October 22, 1944.

Churchill had seen the gray images C & R, III, 368.

reply was charming Ibid., 371.

In Hartford, Connecticut, one day Conversation between Curtis Roosevelt and Alistair Cooke, New York City, October 20, 1993, Acc#95-03, FDRL.

debated a new Big Three meeting C & R, III, 371.