Lutz has extensive holdings of the famous names of the Vietnam War period, including Presidents Eisenhower, Johnson and Nixon, Generals Westmoreland and Giap, Senator Robert Kennedy, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Presidential advisor Henry Kissinger. Click on photographs to explore the archive.
President Nixon Writes To Henry Cabbot Lodge, His Ambassador To South Vietnam. Nixon, Seeing The American POWs Return To America After The Peace Treaty, Notes “I Was Never So Proud To Be An American”
Dr. Martlin Luther King, Jr. Signs His Famous 1967 Anti War Speech The Casualties Of The War In Vietnam
President Lyndon Johnson Appoints Diplomat Philip Habib To Be “Counselor Of Embassy For Political Affairs At Saigon”
The Pass For American Negotiator Philip Habib To Attend The Landmark 1968 Paris Peace Talks With North Vietnam; Note The Low Number Of “00003” Indicating His Rank And Importance
Governor Ronald Reagan Writes A Letter In 1970 About Leftist College Professors (Page One)
Governor Ronald Reagan Writes A Letter In 1970 About Leftist College Professors (Page Two)
Ronald Reagan Handwrites A Draft Of A Letter: “What To Do When Our Nation Is At War Unites Many Of Us Regardless Of Party”
Robert F. Kennedy Signs A Condolence Letter To The Family Of A Soldier Killed In Vietnam: “Courage Is Rightly Esteemed As The First Of All Human Qualities Because It Is The One That Guarantees All Others”
President Carter Signs His Controversial 1977 Presidential Pardon Of The Conscientious Objectors
Ronald Reagan Signs A Document To The President of North Vietnam, Asking That American POWs Be Treated Humanely In The Spirit Of The Geneva Convention
President Lyndon Johnson Signs A Letter To A Newspaper Editor: “The Peace We Seek Will Come SOoner When All Americans Unite In Its Pursuit”
Henry Kissinger Writes To General Maxwell Taylor About Some Of The Final Negotiating Points With North Vietnam
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