President Harry Truman’s decision to issue de facto recognition to the infant state of Israel 75 years ago was one of the most consequential moments in 20th Century world politics.
The international ramifications of that decision were profoundly significant in 1948, and remain so today.
The account of how Truman reached that decision included a remarkable Jackson County story.
That involves the president’s longtime Army friend and later haberdashery business partner, Eddie Jacobson.
The story is told here by Shirley Christian, a Kansas City area journalist and historian.
Christian worked as a foreign correspondent for the New York Times, the Associated Press, and the Miami Herald,
In 1980 she joined the Herald’s Latin America Bureau, where she covered the wars then being fought in Central America.
She received a 1981 Pulitzer Prize for international reporting.
Her first book, “Nicaragua: Revolution in the Family,” appeared in 1985.
She also is the author of “Before Lewis and Clark: The Story of the Chouteaus, the French Dynasty That Ruled America’s Frontier,” published in 2004.
This article first appeared in two parts in 2014 in the Jackson County Historical Society Journal.
The Society is pleased to reprint this article, and it thanks the author for her permission to do so.
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