Wednesday, April 19, 2023

My First Published Work!

During the 1956 presidential campaign, we went to see General Eisenhower in Peoria, Illinois. I wrote about our experience and my account was published in our elementary school "newspaper," called "Heard the Latest." (My last name was Johnson then, before I became Dorothea Jensen.) I was in the 7th grade.

Here's what I wrote:


OUR EPISODE WITH THE PRESIDENT

By Dorothea Johnson


President Eisenhower is coming to Peoria. At this news, we were all pretty excited, but it wasn’t till the day he came that we decided to go. So, at about 7:00 P.M. we started out. My father, uncle, brother, and I. We took some of Mom’s friends with us too, but Mom decided to stay home.

Well, my brother and I both were dressed up, and my father and uncle were wearing suits. First of all, we went to the Bradley University Field House to see him talk, but the place was crowded so they wouldn’t let us in so we went to the airport, after buying some official-looking “I Like Ike” badges.

At the airport, it was mobbed so we lost Mom’s friends in the shuffle. Boy we were lucky that happened, you will know why later as they were dressed in Bermuda shorts and weren’t official-looking at all.

Next, as we were looking for a place see the President taking off, we found a gap in between a fence and a wall. We squeezed through and found ourselves in the midst of Secret Service and FBI Men. One was calling Washington DC on a phone hooked to a special truck nearby, describing the scene. They must have thought Daddy was a senator or something because they didn’t pay any attention to us. Before the President came, however, we noticed a foursome next to us. They were Senator and Mrs. Dirksen and Governor and Mrs. Stratton of Illinois. Pretty soon Governor Stratton came over, shook hands with all of us, and talked to us like he would a senator or something! I was giggling because my uncle’s glasses only had one shaft and he looked pretty silly.

Later, when the President was about to take off in the plane, he was standing in the door of the plane and was nodding at the main group of people, which was way over on the other side from us, and my uncle fairly screamed at the top of his lungs, “Good luck, Mister President!” The President turned, startled, then smiled and waved his hat at my uncle. Of course, he had a reason to be startled, for we were standing among the Secret Service and FBI Men.

Then we went up to the cars the President had arrived in. They were black and had chrome-plated handles for the S.S. and FBI Men to hold onto when they stood on the running board. On the back of the Lincoln convertible there was a big bulletproof transparent bubble. We stuck our heads inside the car and knocked a few times on the bubble. Of course, we received a few glassy stares for this.

When we had looked our fill, we went back to the car and found Mom’s two friends waiting. We had bet ourselves that we could keep quiet about our adventure ‘till we got home. We told them that we couldn’t see the President from where we were. They told us we should have stayed with them because they had a good view from the stands. (Of course, this filled me with uncontrollable giggles.) Halfway home I burst with the giggles and told them the whole story.

I will never forget, as long as I live, our little episode with the President.

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