Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Presidents

Presidents

FDR drinking Milk

Photograph of Franklin D. Roosevelt drinking milk. Sent to President Harry S. Truman by Charles Speaks, Vice President of the Milk Industry Foundation, seeking a picture of President Truman drinking a glass of milk for June Dairy Month.

President Truman Standing Outside the White House

An informal portrait of President Harry S. Truman standing outside the White House, smiling. Military Aide General Harry Vaughan can be seen over Mr. Truman's shoulder. Note the pick lapel pin. This represents a miner's pick. It is a pin worn by the members of an informal, unofficial group known at the "Hard Rock Club," the members of which are mostly newspaper men who covered the 1944 campaign after which Mr. Truman was elected Vice President.

President Truman and his Cabinet

Portrait of President Truman and his Cabinet seated around a table. Left to right around table: Secretary of Agriculture Clinton Anderson, Secretary of Labor Lewis Schwellenbach, Secretary of Commerce Averell Harriman, Secretary of Interior Julius Krug, Postmaster General Robert Hannegan, Secretary of War Robert Patterson, Secretary of State George C. Marshall, President Harry S. Truman, Secretary of Treasury John Snyder, Attorney General Tom Clark, and Secretary of Navy James Forrestal.

President Truman and his Cabinet

Studio portrait of President Harry S. Truman and his Cabinet seated around a table. Left to right around table: Secretary of the Interior Julius Krug, Secretary of Commerce Averell Harriman, Federal Works Administrator Philip Fleming, Assistant to the President John Steelman, Secretary of Labor Lewis Schwellenbach, Secretary of Agriculture Clinton Anderson, Postmaster General Jesse Donaldson, Secretary of Defense James Forrestal, Secretary of State George C. Marshall, President Truman, Secretary of the Treasury John Snyder and Attorney General Tom Clark.

Big Four Wax Mannequins

A photograph of wax mannequins of the "Big Four" - from left to right, Chiang-Kai Shek, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Marshal Josef Stalin. These manikins were on display in cities throughout the United States for Bond and Red Cross drives during World War II.