The second President, John Adams, proved he was a true American. He asked that he be allowed to make a purchase on a time-payment plan.
Adams wrote a horse dealer that he would buy “a pair of beautiful bays” for $600 if he could have one month to pay for them.
On this Presidents Day, memories of him as well as the other 38 are brought back. Particularly if you happen to be in the company of William R. Coleman of San Bernardino.
When one is with an optometrist, one should anticipate a spectacle, but this is something else. The place is a museum, bejeweled in paper with historically priceless original documents involving each of the nation’s chief executives, documents collected by Coleman as a hobby over the last 35 years.
A Copy by Truman
“I shall not be a candidate for re-election,” Harry S. Truman had scribbled at the end of a prepared speech he delivered at the 1952 Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinner, a bombshell announcement he had disclosed beforehand to few people. The original is in Washington, but Truman later wrote a copy for his longtime friend Dave Morgan, and it is this one that Coleman has.
“I have served my country long and I think efficiently and honestly,” Truman said. “I shall not accept a renomination. I do not feel that it is my duty to spend another four years in the White House.”
The collection ranges from monumental announcements such as these to an example of a clever ploy used by the 26th President, Theodore Roosevelt. “It was his practice to have his secretary intentionally make a mistake in her typed letters,” Coleman said. “He would then make a few changes in his own handwriting, thus giving it a personal touch.”
For instance, in replying to a Maine man seeking appointment of his son to a military academy, Roosevelt scratched out “really” and substituted “exceedingly,” and in place of “in your case,” he wrote “that I am powerless to aid you.”
The optometrist declined to discuss values when it comes to specific items in his collection, but it would be safe to say that near the top of the list would be a 2-inch-by-3-inch card written and signed by the 16th President, Abraham Lincoln.
“Lincoln sometimes dispensed favors by writing on such cards,” Coleman said. “A person generally went to the White House and stood in line.”
Such a favor-seeker on Feb. 17, 1865, apparently was Mrs. J. K. Dougherty of Clay County, Mo. Her husband, John Kerr Dougherty, had enlisted in the Confederate cause and was killed in battle.
His widow, Coleman said, apparently felt she needed something in writing to travel in a Union state to try to find her husband’s body.
Not only did Lincoln pen his permission, but ended it with his wry sense of humor:
“Allow Mrs. J. K. Dougherty of Clay County, Missouri, to remain in New Jersey so long as she does not misbehave.”
Also in the optometrist’s collection is a bound recitation of the Lincoln-Douglas debates, signed in pencil by Lincoln, one of only 21 such signed volumes said to be in existence.
“My first acquisition was in 1952, when I visited an antique fair at the Pan Pacific Auditorium and went home with a military discharge paper signed by George Washington,” said Coleman. “Ever since, I’ve been hooked.”
Like any collector, be it of barbed wire or doorknobs, Coleman, 60, plays it close to his vest when it comes to disclosing the how and where. Two sources are auction houses and offerings by dealers in the quarterly journal of the Manuscript Society, of which he is president.
There was no necessity, however, to have to deal for one of his most prized items–it came directly from the current occupant of the White House.
White House Copies
“In 1824, the secretary of state authorized 200 parchment copies of the Declaration of Independence to be made, and the recipients included ‘two copies for the President’s house,’ ” Coleman said.
“Somewhere along the line, they were lost. When I acquired one of the parchment copies in 1984, I donated it to the White House, where it now hangs in the East Room.”
And in the mail came a letter on White House stationery. Not only was that thank-you note written entirely in Ronald Reagan’s hand, but the 40th President (he holds that number because Grover Cleveland served non-consecutive terms) took the trouble to also hand-write the envelope.
“Living in this historic old home one can’t help but feel a sense of history and a reverence for our heritage,” Reagan wrote.
Over the years, as the accumulation regarding Presidents has grown, some have been framed and displayed on the walls of the spacious house he shares with his wife, Monique, who has an interest of her own–documents of European queens and kings.
Kennedy Notations
The husband’s framed memorabilia include a piece of history from the 35th President, John F. Kennedy. A typed sheet from the original manuscript of “Profiles in Courage” shows notations by Kennedy in the margin, such as the name “McGroarty,” a congressman who had written someone and called him a jackass. The anecdote was recounted by Kennedy in the book.
“Checks signed by some Presidents are particularly difficult to find,” Coleman said.
One he acquired was the April 30, 1936, paycheck to the 32nd President, Franklin D. Roosevelt, in the monthly amount of $6,250, endorsed on the back.
The 17th President, Andrew Johnson, is represented by the event for which he is most remembered: his impeachment trial. A theater-type pass to the trial states: “U.S. Senate, Impeachment of the President, Admit the Bearer, April 28, 1868, To be taken up at main entrance.”
Some of the memories are cryptic. A letter from the 11th President, James K. Polk, is addressed only to a “Dear Sir,” uses only the initials of the principals referred to, seeks employment for someone in Nashville, and ends with the underlined words “Burn This.”
One chief executive is represented by something he signed probably long before his wildest dreams included what he would one day become–the 34th President.
In July of 1920, Army Capt. Dwight D. Eisenhower signed a paper verifying the length of service of a first lieutenant at Camp Meade, Md.
No. 15 to hold the nation’s highest post and the only bachelor President, James Buchanan, is in the collection because of his economy-mindedness. A letter signed by him to the consulate in Zanzibar asks that postage be reduced by having all printed matter sent via bulk mail.
Buchanan’s Ailment
Coleman, being an optometrist, couldn’t resist mentioning that Buchanan had an ailment that resulted in one eye being turned out.
A request by then-military officer William Henry Harrison (President No. 9) seeking whiskey rations for his troops, a Bible signed by Millard Fillmore (No. 13), a thank-you letter by Calvin Coolidge (No. 30) for a book containing photos of Indians, a letter from the White House by Warren G. Harding (No. 29) explaining to a first cousin that he “. . . must insist, however, that I do not be hurried in appointing kinfolk to official positions.”
Coleman’s house is green, but his obvious interest is in a house that is white.