All the more so since I have now acquired an original black-and-white print of the Associated Press wirephoto of the 1962 ceremony, along with a newspaper clipping from the time.
Here is President Kennedy's typewritten (though not, I hasten to add, on the Hammond)speech:
It is interesting, at least for me, to note that various political scientists and commentators have drawn comparisons between President Obama and President Wilson, including in their foreign policy - which was largely what President Obama was in Canberra to talk about yesterday and on Wednesday.
I posted on the 1962 White House event, and President Wilson's other typewriters, on June 15. It's at http://oztypewriter.blogspot.com/2011/06/on-this-day-in-typewriter-history-xxvi.html
ABOVE: "This Hammond typewriter was used by President Wilson in personally preparing the drafts for his messages and speeches. A former president of Princeton University, Wilson was both philosopher and politician, a scholar and a passionate man of action.” From
http://djgagnon.tumblr.com/post/1361447641/president-woodrow-wilsons-typewriter-woodrow
ABOVE: From a Woodrow Wilson House publication: "This Hammond Multiplex typewriter was used by Wilson when he traveled. Wilson wrote his own speeches and messages, sometimes composing them in shorthand before typing them. He took this typewriter with him on his western tour in the late summer of 1919 in an attempt to win support for US entry into the League of Nations.
"Most dramatically, Wilson journeyed more often to Capitol Hill than any president had before. To inaugurate his unprecedented legislative effort, he broke with 113 years of tradition by personally addressing a joint session of Congress, drafting his speech himself on a newfangled machine - the typewriter."
From http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/wilson/portrait/wp_legislate.htmlImage from Richard Polt Collection, The Classic Typewriter Page, http://site.xavier.edu/polt/typewriters/multiplex.jpg
President Wilson’s green Hammond 12 found its way back to the White House after having been “carelessly given away” to his physician, Admiral Cary T. Grayson. It was found at the American Red Cross. “Maker-of-presidents” and Kennedy Administration official David Lawrence told President Kennedy about this, and President Wilson’s Hammond was returned to the White House.
Remarks at the presentation can be heard at
http://old1.jfklibrary.org/Asset-Viewer/Archives/JFKWHA-072-002.aspx
Woodrow Wilson was a very good typist and used typewriters to compose his own speeches and other official documents as president of Princeton, Governor of New Jersey and President of the US.
Here is a ringing endorsement for Hammond from President Wilson, which appears in a link from the "Writers and Their Typewriters" list on Richard Polt's The Classic Typewriter Page:
Very, very interesting. That is such a fine machine and the article is great. It is amazing some of the history behind the Presidents and some of what they had, they used, and what they were like. Thank you for your fine blog.
ReplyDeleteThat's a fantastically interesting story. Well done!
ReplyDeleteEngrossing post!
ReplyDeleteMight you do some posts on other US Presidents who used typewriters? (Or perhaps you already have...)
In any case, this was excellent reading.
Well done. Great photo you got of JFK and the Hammond!
ReplyDeleteI heard recently that Wilson, among his other faults, was quite indifferent to the KKK and lynch mobs, so I hesitate to compare him to our first African-American president.
those dudes standing behind kennedy, the cats with the unibrows, they're freaky.
ReplyDelete