Books by "John S. Nixon"

12 books found

A History of Kentucky Baptists

A History of Kentucky Baptists

by John H. Spencer

1885

The Presidency of Gerald R. Ford

The Presidency of Gerald R. Ford

by John Robert Greene

1995

In addition, Greene details Ford's rise to prominence within the Republican party; chronicles the president's problematic relations with his staff, the new Democratic Congress, and Ronald Reagan; sheds new light on the selection and performance of Vice President Nelson Rockefeller; offers new insights into the election of 1976; and provides the first in-depth look at Ford's clemency program for Vietnam era draft evaders.

Wallace's Year-book of Trotting and Pacing in ...

Wallace's Year-book of Trotting and Pacing in ...

by United States Trotting Association, John Hankins Wallace

1888

Chronicles of George Barnard

Chronicles of George Barnard

by John Kern Strecker

1928

History of the Twenty-ninth Division, "Blue and Gray," 1917-1919

History of the Twenty-ninth Division, "Blue and Gray," 1917-1919

by John Abram Cutchins, George Scott Stewart

1921

The Crisis of the Naval War

The Crisis of the Naval War

by Earl John Rushworth Jellicoe Jellicoe, John Rushworth Jellicoe

1920

D-F

D-F

by Benson John Lossing

1915

Nixon Rebuilds

Nixon Rebuilds

by John David Briley

2021 · McFarland

Richard Nixon's election to the presidency in 1968 was an improbable vindication for a man branded as a loser after unsuccessful presidential and gubernatorial campaigns. Yet during the 1966 mid-term elections, he emerged as the critical figure who united the fractured Republican Party after the disastrous 1964 presidential election. Along the way, he sensed how large swaths of the American public were moving against the Democrats, and how a candidate could take advantage of this. Filling an important gap in the Nixon literature, this book explores his dynamic reinvention during the dark days of the mid-sixties--a period that mirrored his 1946-1952 rise from obscure congressman to Eisenhower's vice-president. Beginning with his 1962 press conference after losing the California governor's election and ending with his 1968 presidential victory, a far more human Nixon is revealed, unlike the familiar caricature of the shady politician and orchestrator of Watergate who would do anything to win.