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obitoftheday:

Obit of the Day: He Got Us to “Like Ike”

In 1948, when General Dwight D. Eisenhower was sitting in retirement after successfully leading the U.S. military to victory in Europe during World War II, there was already a stirring for him to become president. One enterprising reporter from Pittsburgh went to A.G. Trimble and his son, Richard, to create a campaign button as a way to encourage Eisenhower to run. The reporter was frustrated, telling the Trimbles, “I can’t come up with a slogan, but I do like Ike*.”

A.G. Trimble, who had made campaign buttons beginning in 1920, told the young man, “That’s your slogan.” Richard Trimble set to work to design the now iconic “I Like Ike” button that would first be produced in 1948 and then take off in 1952 when Ohio Senator Bob Taft recruited General Eisenhower to run for the Republican nomination in 1952. (Eisenhower would win in 1952 and again in 1956)

Richard Trimble wasn’t supposed to be in the family business. He was trained as a chemical engineer at Carnegie Tech (now Carnegie Mellon University) but was severely poisoned in 1944 while working on a project for the war. After taking a year to recover he found himself working at the side of his father and would spend his career at A.G. Trimble Company.

On November 28, 2012, two days after his 91st birthday, Richard Trimble passed away. He ran the company from 1972 until he handed over the reigns to his son, current president Rick Trimble, in 1988.

Random note: A.G. Trimble, the company’s founder, who died at the age of 102 in 1983, was born on election day 1880. Because of that, his father wanted to name him Garfield Arthur Trimble for the winning Republican ticket of James Garfield and Chester A. Arthur. His mother interceded and decided Arthur Garfield was better. A.G. Trimble was such a staunch supporter of the G.O.P. that he refused to manufacture campaign buttons for Democrats until Richard convinced him to make a Truman button in 1948.

Sources: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, AGTrimble.com

(Images: Top left, www.loriferber.com; bottom left, www.conservapedia.com; bottom right, www.affordablepoliticalitems.com. I could not determine which button was the original created by the Trimbles.)

* “Ike” was a nickname that evolved from Eisenhower.

    • #I Like Ike
    • #Campaigns
    • #Slogans
    • #Dwight D. Eisenhower
  • 5 months ago > obitoftheday
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usnatarchives:

Some of the wildest campaign slogans come from the 1940 Presidential campaign:

FDR’s Republican opponent in 1940 was Wendell Willkie, a business leader with no experience in political office. Willkie and the Republicans focused considerable criticism on Roosevelt’s attempt to win a third term.


While there was no constitutional barrier to a third term in 1940, no president had ever exceeded the two-term precedent established by George Washington. The fifteen Willkie campaign buttons seen above include many with a “third term” theme. There are also buttons aimed at Eleanor Roosevelt—reflecting the First Lady’s high profile in Washington.

Despite this chapter in their political history, Wilkie and FDR went on to become allies!
You can read more about their strange story on the blog of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library.
Image: Campaign buttons, FDR Presidential Library.
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usnatarchives:

Some of the wildest campaign slogans come from the 1940 Presidential campaign:

FDR’s Republican opponent in 1940 was Wendell Willkie, a business leader with no experience in political office. Willkie and the Republicans focused considerable criticism on Roosevelt’s attempt to win a third term.

While there was no constitutional barrier to a third term in 1940, no president had ever exceeded the two-term precedent established by George Washington. The fifteen Willkie campaign buttons seen above include many with a “third term” theme. There are also buttons aimed at Eleanor Roosevelt—reflecting the First Lady’s high profile in Washington.

Despite this chapter in their political history, Wilkie and FDR went on to become allies!

You can read more about their strange story on the blog of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library.

Image: Campaign buttons, FDR Presidential Library.

    • #FDR
    • #Slogans
    • #Buttons
    • #Campaigns
    • #Election
    • #History
    • #Vintage
  • 6 months ago > usnatarchives
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Campaign Slogans, 1964
“All the Way with LBJ,” Presidential Campaign Button, 1964
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Campaign Slogans, 1964

“All the Way with LBJ,” Presidential Campaign Button, 1964

Source: presidentialtimeline.org

    • #LBJ
    • #Memorabilia
    • #Campaings
    • #History
    • #Lyndon B. Johnson
    • #Slogans
  • 7 months ago
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Campaign Memorabilia, 1960
This campaign button with the slogan “New Leadership - Kennedy/Johnson,” was used during the 1960 presidential campaign.
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Campaign Memorabilia, 1960

This campaign button with the slogan “New Leadership - Kennedy/Johnson,” was used during the 1960 presidential campaign.

Source: presidentialtimeline.org

    • #JFK
    • #LBJ
    • #Slogans
    • #Campaigns
    • #Election
    • #History
    • #memorabilia
  • 7 months ago
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“Remember Pearl Harbor” quickly became a rallying cry for Americans as the nation entered World War II. The expression appeared frequently in the press, on posters, and in other media throughout the war.  These words were also incorporated into hand-made items produced by everyday Americans. Some sent their handiworks to the President as gifts. 
This painted cast iron weathervane was made by Claude C. Ferdinand of Hawthorne, New Jersey shortly after the Pearl Harbor attack. It depicts Colonial American soldiers flanking an American eagle and a “V” for victory symbol. Mr. Ferdinand sent his weathervane to President Franklin D. Roosevelt on January 27, 1942.
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“Remember Pearl Harbor” quickly became a rallying cry for Americans as the nation entered World War II. The expression appeared frequently in the press, on posters, and in other media throughout the war.  These words were also incorporated into hand-made items produced by everyday Americans. Some sent their handiworks to the President as gifts.

This painted cast iron weathervane was made by Claude C. Ferdinand of Hawthorne, New Jersey shortly after the Pearl Harbor attack. It depicts Colonial American soldiers flanking an American eagle and a “V” for victory symbol. Mr. Ferdinand sent his weathervane to President Franklin D. Roosevelt on January 27, 1942.

Source: fdrlibrary.wordpress.com

    • #FDR
    • #franklin d. roosevelt
    • #World War II
    • #Slogans
    • #Media
    • #Handmade
    • #Artisans
    • #Pearl Harbor
  • 1 year ago
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