Letters To The Editor (Fall 2008 | Volume: 58, Issue: 5)

Letters To The Editor

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Authors: The Readers

Historic Era:

Historic Theme:

Subject:

Fall 2008 | Volume 58, Issue 5

 Welcome Back

I am a second generation subscriber. The editor’s letter in your Spring/Summer issue called the return of American Heritage “revolutionary . . . ‘in the sense of turning back to an early state.’”  That issue carried out that promise brilliantly. I felt that in recent years the magazine had leaned a little too heavily upon what you described as “cultural history and newsworthy pieces.” This new issue is a worthy successor to the days when the hardbound American Heritage was first making a name for itself. I am thrilled to be part of that tradition as it moves into the future. 

—Rev. John E. Hissrich

Pittsburgh, PA

 

Toil and Tears 

To suggest as John Lukacs does (“Churchill Offers Toil and Tears to FDR, Spring/Summer 2008”) that had Herbert Hoover been president at the time, his isolationism would have rebuffed Churchill’s implorations makes for an incongruous comparison, what with the eight-year time gap between their presidencies. Further, to group him with Charles Lindbergh and Joseph Kennedy as being opposed to our entering the war is like comparing apples and oranges. The two latter individuals were Anglophobic. Hoover, a Quaker and pacifist, resisted for moral reasons. 

—James L. Giorgi

Bronx, NY 

 

Infamous Robert Rogers 

In John F. Ross’s article (“Battle for Ticonderoga, Spring/Summer 2008”), he refers to Rogers Rangers as “. . . the now infamous Rogers Rangers.” “Infamous” is a strong word that implies wickedness, disgracefulness, shamefulness—serious moral deficiency. Nowhere in Mr. Ross’s article does he justify this powerfully negative slur.

Infamous? Come on! I’ll buy savage men in a savage time in a savage world; 

but no more and no less bad than their times and their enemies.

—Bob Herron

Rocky Hill, CT

 

The narrative, “Battle for Ticonderoga,” by John F. Ross was wonderful. So enlightening and descriptive. I could envision the entire battle.  

—Joan Stuer

Wethersfield, CT 

 

Gingrich as a Historian 

I believe that Newt Gingrich’s portrayal of Reagan as a Cold War hero (“The Evil Empire, Spring/Summer 2008”) is pure fiction. The U.S. political heroes during the Cold War were Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy. Truman saved Western Europe by initiating the Marshall Plan. He played a vital role in organizing NATO and rallied the United Nations to come to the aid of South Korea.  Eisenhower and JFK continued Truman’s legacy with integrity and vision. The Berlin Airlift and winning the Space Race are just two examples. Gingrich credits Reagan with ending the Cold War by making the arms race too expensive for the communist regime in Russia. I believe Reagan kept the Cold War alive because it was a profit-making enterprise for his political allies and corporate benefactors.  

—Bob Fisher

Encinitas, CA 

 

Newt Gingrich’s viewpoint was well done except for the blatant political slant. He writes about “the side which was right,” “the side that was fundamentally wrong,” and the current conflict.  Clearly he means conservatives, liberals, and the Iraq War. He also writes that “almost no one accepted” Reagan’s views, that Reagan’s own staff opposed him, and that Nixon, Ford, and Carter followed variations of the traditional Cold