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"This caused" TFOP, 474.
the "Little Blitz" CCTBOM, 462.
German bombers WSC, VII, 689. See also C & R, II, 739.
"We have just had" C & R, II, 740.
At a one-on-one dinner Danchev and Todman, eds., War Diaries: Alanbrooke, 525.
A series of irritating disagreements See especially Kimball, Forged in War, and WSC, VII and VIII.
sicker than he would let on See Robert H. Ferrell, The Dying President: Franklin D. Roosevelt, 19441945 (Columbia, Mo., 1998), for a comprehensive account of Roosevelt's health in the last year or so of his life-and Roosevelt's efforts to conceal his condition.
"Raining in Was.h.i.+ngton" CC, 285287.
"I think all of us" TIR, 329. See CC and Ferrell, The Dying President, for evidence that FDR did talk about his health with Daisy.
Anna . . . prevailed on Admiral McIntire Burns, The Soldier of Freedom, 447448.
Eleanor was in Guatemala The New York Times, March 28, 1944.
Winthrop Rutherfurd had died CC, 287.
"felt fever coming on" Ibid., 288.
lunched together Ibid.
did not leave until about six-thirty Ibid., 288.
"He got on the sofa" Ibid., 201202.
Roosevelt's circle was Lash, Eleanor and Franklin, 700.
Roosevelt's medical appointment in Was.h.i.+ngton Ferrell, The Dying President, 3637.
"G.o.d-awful" Ibid., 37.
Churchill was at No. 10 Danchev and Todman, eds., War Diaries: Alanbrooke, May 7, 1944, 544.
"although looking fit" Diary of Meeting, Charles Eade, October 14, 1943, CEP.
Of course Roosevelt and Churchill looked tired For a discussion of the question of their health and the conduct of the war, see Kimball, Forged in War, 339341.
Lucy came to visit Asbell, The FDR Memoirs, 412.
a meeting after midnight Alan Kirk, COH, 297298.
Churchill "would be" TFOP, 485.
"I do not agree" C & R, III, 87.
"We have just heard" Ibid., 167.
"I feel so much for you" WAC, 496.
Eleanor remembered that TIR, 328.
Eisenhower hated the idea Churchill, Closing the Ring, 619.
two frank letters Ibid., 620621.
Churchill still regretted Ibid., 624.
had to content himself Ismay, Memoirs, 353.
In a train Ibid.
Roosevelt spent the weekend CC, 307.
On the porch Ibid., 308.
"The P. used" Ibid.
Churchill went to bed Ismay, Memoirs, 355.
A letter arrived from Roosevelt Churchill, Closing the Ring, 626.
"Dear Winston" C & R, III, 139.
Churchill long remembered Churchill, Closing the Ring, 626.
Replying from Portsmouth C & R, III, 162.
"The hour was now striking" Churchill, Closing the Ring, 631.
"We returned to London" Ismay, Memoirs, 357.
He had, Eleanor noted, "learned" EROH, Session 12, 2.
one of only four such occasions CCTBOM, 463.
Clementine came in to say good night Ibid., 468.
Back in the White House CC, 309.
Roosevelt briefed Eleanor Lash, Eleanor and Franklin, 701.
"the golden thread of love" WAC, xx. Lady Soames used the image in connection with her parents, but I believe the sense of her point applies to the Roosevelts as well.
"On D-Day" EROH, Session 12, 2.
She thought Franklin TIR, 252.
"Even then" Ibid.
made it through Russell W. Linaka survived, and there is correspondence at FDRL about his future a.s.signments. PPF 7548: Linaka, Russell W., December 11, 1944.
there were about 10,300 American, British, and Canadian casualties Dear, ed., The Oxford Companion to World War II, 667.
"All that weekend" Pamela Churchill to Averell Harriman, June 11, 1944, PHP.
spent ten minutes talking about Italy Churchill, Triumph and Tragedy, 56.
"Thank G.o.d!" EROH, Session 12, 2.
"Except for the planes overhead" Pamela Churchill to Averell Harriman, June 11, 1944, PHP.
ran into Martha Gellhorn Ibid.
the preponderance of the evidence I am grateful to the military historian Williamson Murray for his insights on this subject.
Warren Kimball later explained C & R, III, 168.
"My dear Winston" Ibid., 168169.
Churchill would again brief the House The New York Times, June 7, 1944.
had distributed the text beforehand Ibid.
one hundred million Newsweek, June 19, 1944. The prayer had been published in the afternoon editions of the nation's newspapers. See Stephen E. Ambrose, D-Day: June 6, 1944 (New York, 1994), 491.
"Almighty G.o.d" The New York Times, June 7, 1944.
Roosevelt had the prayer bound C & R, III, 507.
the Soviets, Averell Harriman said Harriman and Abel, Special Envoy, 314.
"The first wave of excitement" Pamela Churchill to Averell Harriman, June 15, 1944, PHP.
played bezique at Chequers Ibid., June 11, 1944, PHP.
an operation code-named ANVIL Burns, The Soldier of Freedom, 478479.
"I am shocked" C & R, III, 213.
Roosevelt rejected Ibid., 221223.
called for General Brooke Danchev and Todman, eds., War Diaries: Alanbrooke, 565.
"We are deeply grieved" C & R, III, 227229.
Brooke found Churchill Danchev and Todman, eds., War Diaries: Alanbrooke, 565.
"tired & listless" CC, 315.
"I appreciate deeply" C & R, III, 232.
Stalin, Daisy said, had been quoted CC, 316.
Mary had to deal CCTBOM, 468469.
"I am very happy" C & R, III, 258.
"Thank you so much" Ibid., 259.
a heated dinner debate CC, 276.
CHAPTER 11: LIFE IS NOT VERY EASY.
"We have immense tasks" C & R, III, 203.
"Over here" Ibid., 161.
had a few health scares Burns, The Soldier of Freedom, 507508.
"Nothing," wrote John Gunther Gunther, Roosevelt in Retrospect, 345.
What Beaverbrook heard "Notes on Conversations," 1943, LBP.
"I saw a lot of Richard Pim" Author interview with George Elsey.
"Father asked me" Anna Roosevelt Halsted, COH, 4849.
"It was a terrible decision" Ibid.
"Johnny called" TIR, 318.
At tea in late June with the Chinese amba.s.sador CC, 314.
giving Churchill a number of C & R, III, 238239.
"visiting card" Ibid., 271.