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Special Evening with David Harris


David Harris, Executive Director of the American Jewish Committee, will be the featured speaker at this Members Only event. Find an Event

Garrett Peck -- The Great War in America: World War and Its Aftermath


Offered in partnership with Tom’s Town, come celebrate the anniversary of Repeal Day with French 75 cocktails at the Truman Library and an interesting discussion with author and historian Garrett Peck. Find an Event

Mondays with McCullough


Join the Mondays with McCullough book club to study the Pulitzer-prize winning biography “Truman” by David McCullough, one chapter at a time. Find an Event

HST / LBJ: A Presidential Friendship


Join us for a discussion between Clifton Truman Daniel and Luci Baines Johnson in a free program focused on their lives in a presidential family and the friendship President Truman and President Johnson shared. Find an Event

Holiday Open House with Special Guest Matthew Litt


The Harry S. Truman Presidential Library & Museum will host a special Holiday Open House featuring special guest Matthew Litt. Find an Event

Bringing History To Life: Documenting Artifacts


John Emond illustrates the importance of documenting artifacts so their history is preserved—not lost. Find an Event

"Visual Rhetoric" with Mary Stuckey


The FDR Library and Museum will host a presentation by Penn State professor of political rhetoric and communication Mary E. Stuckey entitled VISUAL RHETORIC AND AMERICA'S WORLD WAR II POSTER ART. Find an Event

Veterans Day Event with General McChrystal


Veterans Day event with remarks by General McChrystal Find an Event

Discussion: "Democracy and the Midterms"


On Thursday, November 15, 2018 at 7:00 p.m., the FDR Library and Museum will present a discussion, “Democracy and the Midterms: Analyzing 2018 and the Path Forward,” with Rick Wilson and Alexander Heffner. Find an Event

Frank and Al: FDR, Al Smith, and the Unlikely Alliance that Created the Modern Democratic Party


Terry Golway traces the relationship between political allies, then adversaries, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Al Smith.
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