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Harry S. Truman National Historic Site

Coordinates:39°05′36″N94°25′23″W / 39.09333°N 94.42306°W /39.09333; -94.42306 (Harry S Truman National Historic Site)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
National Historic Site of the United States in Missouri

United States historic place
Harry S Truman National Historic Site
Map
Interactive map showing the location of Harry S. Truman National Historic Site
Location219 N. Delaware St.,Independence, Missouri
Coordinates39°05′36″N94°25′23″W / 39.09333°N 94.42306°W /39.09333; -94.42306 (Harry S Truman National Historic Site)
Area0.8 acres (0.32 ha)
Built byGeorge Porterfield Gates (1867 house)
James W. Adams (1885 modification)[2]
ArchitectJames W. Adams (1885 modification)
Architectural styleGothic, Ecletic Victorian
Visitation31,316 (2012)
Websitewww.nps.gov/hstr
NRHP reference No.85001248[1]
Added to NRHPMay 31, 1985

TheHarry S. Truman National Historic Site (officially styled without the period after theS[3][4]) preserves the longtime home ofHarry S. Truman, the 33rdpresident of the United States, as well as other properties associated with him in theKansas City, Missouri metropolitan area. The site is operated by theNational Park Service, with its centerpieces being theTruman Home inIndependence and theTruman Farm Home inGrandview. It also includes the Noland home of Truman's cousins, and the George and Frank Wallace homes ofBess Truman's brothers. The site was designated aNational Historic Site on May 23, 1983.[5]

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Harry S. Truman







Harry S. Truman's signature
Seal of the President of the United States

Truman Home in Independence

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TheTruman Home (earlier known as the Gates–Wallace home), 219 North Delaware Street,Independence, Missouri, was the home ofHarry S. Truman from the time of his marriage toBess Wallace on June 28, 1919, until his death on December 26, 1972. Bess Truman's maternal grandfather, George Porterfield Gates, built the house between the years 1867 and 1885.

After Bess's father, David Willock Wallace, committed suicide in 1903, she and her mother and brothers moved into the house with Bess's grandparents, George and Elizabeth Gates. At the time Harry and Bess married in 1919, Harry was putting all of his money into his business partnership, a men's clothing store called Truman & Jacobson at 104 West 12th Street in downtown Kansas City, so living at the Wallace home made good financial sense.

After Truman'shaberdashery failed in 1922, he and his wife continued to live in the house to save money while he paid his debts. After being elected to theSenate in 1935, he moved to Washington, D.C., with his wife and daughter. Whenever they came back toMissouri, the house at 219 N. Delaware was their home.

After he retired in 1953, until theTruman Library was opened on July 6, 1957, the Truman Home served as Truman's personal office. Bess lived in the home until her death in 1982, and shebequeathed the property to the National Park Service.[6] The home was closed for 8 months in 2009-10 for a $1.1 million renovation that improved fire safety, visitor comfort and structural stability.[7]

The Truman Home offers a glimpse at the personal life of the 33rd President of the United States, particularly the simple life the family enjoyed in Independence before and after Harry's eight years as president. The Trumans' only child,Mary Margaret, was born in the home on February 17, 1924. The site also includes the two adjacent homes of Mrs. Truman's brothers, and, across Delaware Street, the Noland Home, where the President's favorite aunt and cousins lived. The site operates a visitor center, located inside an historic firehouse, in downtown Independence. NPSpark ranger-interpreters lead guided tours of the home on a regular basis, providing a look at the home much as the Truman family left it.[8]

The second-floor bedroom of Harry and Bess Truman, in their home in Independence, Missouri.

The second floor of the home has never been open to the public – Bess wrote into her will that to protect her family's privacy, the second floor was to remain closed until the death of her daughter, Margaret. Though Margaret died in 2008, the NPS has maintained the closure in order to best preserve the home.[6] A photo tour of the closed rooms, including Harry and Bess's bedroom, is available.

On display in the ground floor of the home is theSteinway piano Truman originally purchased as a Christmas present for Margaret, and which was played by Truman in theWhite House; a portion of the Trumans' extensive personal library (including the mysteries preferred by Bess); the familyrecord collection; the official White House portrait of the First Lady (the one in Washington D.C., is a copy): and paintings including a panorama ofAthens, Greece, a "primitive" of Key West featuring palm trees and a backward-looking donkey, and a canvas entitled "Swan River." The fireplace is framed with tiles depicting a fanciful Middle Eastern desert landscape with tents and minarets, likely inspired byOne Thousand and One Nights.

Truman is one of the few Presidents who never owned his own home prior to his time in office. He lived with his parents until he married, then in the Wallace House, in rented apartments and houses in Washington (including 4701 Connecticut Avenue), inBlair House (the official state visitors residence), and in theWhite House, but it was not until July 1953, following his term of office and the December 1952 death of Madge Gates Wallace, that Harry and Bess Truman purchased the home at 219 North Delaware Street.

The house is now located in theHarry S. Truman Historic District, aNational Historic Landmark District.

Truman Farm Home in Grandview

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Truman's farm home in Grandview, Missouri

TheHarry S. Truman Farm Home is located 15 miles (24 km) away from Independence inGrandview, Missouri. ANational Historic Landmark, the farmhouse at 12301 Blue Ridge Blvd. was built in 1894 by Harry Truman's maternal grandmother, and is the centerpiece of a 5.25 acres (2.12 ha) remnant of the family's former 600-acre (240 ha) farm. Truman worked the farm as a young man, from 1906 to 1917. It was here, said his mother, that Harry got his "common sense." There is no visitor center on the site, but the grounds are open year-round for self-guided tours, and an audio tour is available.[8] Guided tours were formerly conducted during the summer, but were cancelled in 2013 due tosequestration-related budget cuts.[9]

The site consists of a two-story farm house; a reconstructed smokehouse; the Grandview post office-turned-garage (Truman moved it to the farm to store his 1911 Stafford automobile); a restored box wagon once used on the farm; and several stone fence posts marking the original boundaries of the farm, plus other original and reconstructed buildings.

After Truman returned to private life he sold portions of the farm for the Truman Corners Shopping Center as well as other Kansas City suburban development.

See also

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References

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  1. ^"National Register Information System – (#85001248)".National Register of Historic Places.National Park Service. November 2, 2013.
  2. ^"National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Harry S Truman National Historic Site".National Park Service. RetrievedJanuary 10, 2022. Withaccompanying pictures
  3. ^An Act To establish the Harry S Truman National Historic Site in the State of Missouri, and for other purposes, Public Law 98-32,Government Printing Office.
  4. ^Harry S Truman National Historic Site
  5. ^Park Management – National Park Service
  6. ^abTruman Home Second Floor Photo Tour, National Park Service
  7. ^Truman home open again for toursArchived May 31, 2010, at theWayback Machine, The (Independence, Mo.) Examiner, May 31, 2010
  8. ^abHSTNHS Things To Do – National Park Service
  9. ^Sequestration Cuts at Park, National Park Service

External links

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Media related toHarry S. Truman National Historic Site at Wikimedia Commons

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