Tuesday, March 23, 2021
We began the next day with a three-hour drive to the LBJ Ranch in Stonewall, which is due west of Austin.
I am always on the look-out for good murals, and I made Bob stop for this one in Eden. Is that Eve? (Note: We actually did pass the Garden of Eden, but unfortunately it was not on Bob's agenda.)
We visited the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library in Austin in 2012 (although for some reason I never got around to writing about it here). On this trip, nine years later, we decided to visit the ranch where LBJ was born, lived a good part of his life, and was buried.
The LBJ Ranch is in Stonewall (yes, named after Confederate General Stonewall Jackson who died as a result of friendly fire in 1863). After paying our fees at the Visitors Center, we walked out to a living history farm based on a 1918 German farm. (Apparently there were lots of German settlers in this area. In fact, 15 miles away is a town named Fredericksburg that is full of German shops.) The farm was one of the better living history places we have visited. The volunteers work the farm and literally eat the fruits of their own labors.
. . . that supposedly belonged to this friendly couple:
They must have been pretty well-off, or maybe just pretty important, to have their own telephone in the early 1900s.
Behind the house there is a shed and a bell I am assuming Lyndon's mom used to call the family to dinner.
Next stop: The Johnson Family Cemetery. Unlike other Presidential grave sites we have visited, these graves are surrounded by a fence and a locked gate. Apparently the family comes to visit occasionally. Lyndon's great-grandmother was the first person to be buried here in 1905. Lyndon's father was buried here in 1937, and Lyndon himself joined his ancestors in 1973 when he had his third heart attack and passed away at home at age 64. Lady Bird Johnson outlived her husband by over 37 years, dying in 2007. They are surrounded by their parents, grandparents, siblings and their spouses, aunts, and uncles.
The large marker on the left decorated with a flower is Lady Bird's grave. (She was known for her work to protect wildflowers and for planting them along highways across the US. She said, "Where flowers bloom, so does hope.") Lyndon's marker to the right of his wife's has the Presidential seal on it. I was surprised by their simplicity.
Relative to other Presidential burial sites we have seen, this one is surprisingly unostentatious.
The plane is jokingly referred to as "Air Force One-Half" because of its small size. It is a 13-passenger Lockheed JetStar plane. We had to rely on photos at the site to get an idea of what it looks like inside.
Johnson created a landing strip right next to his home in 1951 when he was just a senator so that he had an easy way to go back and forth from Texas to Washington, D.C. Because it is a relatively small landing strip, the Boeing 707 normally used for Air Force One couldn't land here. Johnson would fly in the 707 from D.C. to San Antonio and then fly "Air Force One-Half" the 70 miles to the ranch.
Speaking of The Ranch, apparently it still is one.
The home where LBJ and Lady Bird lived and raised their children is known as "The Texas White House." Like everything else, it was closed for tours because of Covid. Lyndon and Lady Bird bought this house in 1957 from relatives. It was badly run-down, so they spent a year completing extensive renovations, then moved in with their two daughters, Lynda and Luci, in 1952.
Photo from NPS website |
(Interesting note: Lyndon loved his initials and had them embossed on everything. He also made sure they were used by his wife, Lady Bird Johnson--whose real name was Claudia--and two daughters, Lynda Bird Johnson and Luci Baines Johnson.)
During the tumultuous years of his presidency, LBJ often flew home to work and recuperate. Records show that he lived here 490 days during his five-year presidency, about one-fourth of the time. According to one website, "As many as 15 phone lines and 72 rotary phones serviced the house, other ranch buildings and numerous vehicles. Every room in the main house, including Johnson's bathroom, had a telephone."
The last stop was LBJ's Boyhood Home, located in Johnson City. (Our journey around the ranch was obviously not chronological, as far as Lyndon's life was concerned.) LBJ's parents bought this 1901 frame home in 1913 when Lyndon was five years old. The Johnsons raised five children in this house. In 1937, the oldest of those children, Lyndon, launched his campaign for Congress, the first step in his ascent to the Presidency, from the East Porch.
The back of the house has a screened-in porch.
That apple Eve is going to eat is green. I think you need to think twice before eating green apples. Now a nice red and yellow Jonathan would be an entirely different story.
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