|
1956: Eisenhower Reply to Albright
In response to Horace Albright's letter, President Eisenhower echoed Albright's
support for a non-partisan conservation agenda. Ironically, it took just one day
for the Republican National Committee to release the Eisenhower-Albright correspondence
to the public. Eisenhower went on to win reelection in a landslide over Adlai Stevenson
Dated November 2, 1956, Eisenhower's response reads:
Dear Mr. Albright:
I was gratified indeed to receive your letter and the assurance it contained about
the merits of the conservation programs of this Administration. I was brought up
close to the soil of the State of Kansas, and my boyhood experiences taught me many
of the principles of true conservation. Our present programs have objectives which
are in the interest of all of our people and are founded on principles which ought
not to be the basis of partisan politics.
In every Department associated with the problems of soil and water, and of renewable
resources, we have recommended programs designed in our best judgment to promote
the objective so earnestly advocated by Gifford Pinchot -- namely, to insure that
both the use and conservation of natural resources should promote the greatest good
for the greatest number.
Your commendation of the conservation programs we have established is all the more
reassuring in the light of your long and eminent leadership in a cause as important
to the present and future generations of Americans.
Sincerely,
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Source:
Record of Correspondence released by The Republican National Committee,
November 3, 1956.
|