Few phrases conjure seedy or rundown images quite like “The wrong side of the tracks.”
In Abilene, Kansas, the divide is clear – mansions line Buckeye Street from the commercial district to the railroad tracks. These grand mansions dating to Abilene’s heyday as a cattle and rail center. But one has to cross to the wrong side of the tracks to reach Abilene’s biggest attraction. Just south of those tracks lies Dwight Eisenhower’s boyhood home, part of a campus including his presidential library, museum and final resting place.
In American history, few people from the wrong side of the tracks have fared as well.
How many times have I passed Abilene and gone no further than the gas stations along the interstate? This December Saturday I shrugged at my schedule and decided to spend the afternoon among everything Eisenhower.
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| Boyhood home |
Eisenhower’s esteem as president has grown in time, from the image of him as a kindly bus driver guiding the nation during its most prosperous days to a shrewd battle-hardened commander who avoided war while seeking to expand opportunity for all Americans. Growing up in racially diverse part of Abilene gave Eisenhower more enlightened views on race than most people of his time.
Outside with the 1890s boyhood home, the buildings date to the 1950s and 60s. The museum has been renovated and updated in the 21st century.
Still, I started at The Place of Meditation. The small chapel inters the Eisenhowers and their first-born son Doud Buried in a family plot in Denver Eisenhower would reinter Doud at The Place of Meditation, later the resting place of the president and Mrs. Eisenhower, who survived her husband by several years.The museum discusses Doud, who died from scarlet fever at age 3, in a small but brutal exhibit. A biography I read of Eisenhower years ago delves into how that loss shaped Eisenhower and never left him, early destroying the couple’s marriage. The couple would have another son, John David Eisenhower, who lived until 2013.
While working the night shift at a creamery because he couldn't afford college, Eisenhower won a statewide writing contest to receive his appointment to West Point in 1911. That would lead to serving in World War I and rising in the chain of command across stations across the U.S. Army's reach.
Eisenhower’s successes against the Axis in North Africa would lead him to become the nation’s first five-star general and Allied Supreme Commander for the duration of World War II.
As the Allies drove for Berlin, Eisenhower personally saw the atrocities at liberated concentration camps; he urged other soldiers and the press to see them to deny the Nazi regime a chance to gloss over the murder of millions. He quarreled with generals such as George Patton on the desire for a fast strike to Berlin, because Eisenhower knew it would strain and expose the Allies' supply lines.
He served a stint as president of Columbia University, then Republicans succeeded in convincing Eisenhower to run for president in 1952. He would win two terms in landslides, only the third commanding general to hold the presidency after George Washington and Ulysses S .Grant.
The museum hosts numerous personal items and some special pieces, including the Packard that served as Eisenhower’s car during the war (with its five-starred license plate). Eisenhower’s speeches and accomplishments – Atoms for Peace, completing desegregation of the military, and initial construction of the interstate highway system, among others. There were stumbles – Eisenhower largely ignored Joseph McCarthy’s witch-hunts until McCarthy went after White House staff.In American history, only two farewell addresses deserve top billing – George Washington’s original that warmed against entangling alliances and defined American foreign policy for a century, and Eisenhower’s surprise warning against the military-industrial complex. While important, Eisenhower’s words have largely been ignored by governmental policy in the decades since his term ended. It was a warning only a military man could give.
The wind roared, clearing out some lingering clouds to give me a clean backdrop to photograph Eisenhower’s statue at the center of the grounds. At the east end of the campus stand five pylons featuring Eisenhower quotes.The modest boyhood home, where Eisenhower and six siblings were raised, stands apart from the stone buildings housing the president’s papers and museum. Eisenhower lived here from 1892 until his appointment to West Point.
When he became a hero after World War II, the nascent Eisenhower Foundation rushed to buy the house and irked the future president with their pushiness. At that time, his mother Ida still lived in it. He and his brothers would later donate it to the foundation. The home was modest for a large family, with large vegetable garden in back. Visitors can see how it informed Eisenhower’s views.
I headed back across the tracks a bit overloaded on everything Eisenhower.
But most of all, I think the statue stayed with me. Cast in bronze, a giant of the 20th century U.S.A manages to stand tall and stay grounded, forever a product of the wrong side of the tracks in Abilene.
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| Eisehhower's painting of his boyhood home |














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