Ford Library Home Skip Navigation Links
  • President & Mrs. Ford
  • Research
  • Exhibits
  • Digital Collections
  • Education Center
  • Events
  • Plan Your Visit
  • More Options
President Gerald R. Ford | First Lady Betty Ford | White House Pets
Conducting Research | Textual Collections | A / V Collections | Oral Histories | Artifact Collections | News for Researchers | Research Grants | Contact Us
Permanent Exhibits (Grand Rapids) | Temporary Exhibits: Grand Rapids • Ann Arbor | Online Exhibits | Artifact Collections | Digital Collections | Contact Us
Textual & A/V Collections | Artifact Collections
Museum's Online Education Center | Library Educational Programs: On-Site • Virtual | Public Programs
Upcoming Events | Previous Events
Museum in Grand Rapids Hours and Admissions | Maps and Directions | Special Needs | Tour Groups | School Field Trips | About the Museum
Library in Ann Arbor Hours and Admissions | Maps and Directions | Special Needs | Researcher Accommodations | About the Library
About the Library | About the Museum | Contact Us | Facility Rental: Grand Rapids • Ann Arbor | Museum Store | Volunteer | Internships | Site Map | Search
 

COLLECTION FINDING AID



GERALD R. FORD: MATERIALS FROM THE WRITING OF A TIME TO HEAL, 1977-79



CONTENTS

Summary Description | Container List

view digitized copies of the documents


SUMMARY DESCRIPTION

Gerald R. Ford's handwritten personal reflections on twenty-seven different topics ranging from "How I make decisions" to "Advice to a teen-age daughter."

QUANTITY
15 linear feet (ca. 30,000 pages)

DONOR
Gerald R. Ford (accession number 80-13, 83-19, 91-2, 92-20, 92-26, 94-7, and 97-22)

ACCESS
Most of this collection is unprocessed and temporarily restricted from public access.  The items listed on the container list are open.

COPYRIGHT
Gerald R. Ford has donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections.  The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them.  Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain.

Prepared December 1993
[s:\bin\findaid\ford, gerald - a time to heal.doc]


INTRODUCTION

While writing his autobiography,  A Time to Heal (New York:  Harper & Row, 1979), Gerald R. Ford composed a series of personal reflections on twenty-seven topics ranging from "How I make decisions" to "Advice to a teen-age daughter."  Most deal with personal principles:  the value of competition, of loyalty, of ambition.  Others concern politics and governance:  making decisions, the use of the presidential veto, or the role of regulatory agencies.  A few relate to more mundane topics such as socializing in Washington or favorite movies.  Some touch on historical topics, including a nine-page comment on how history will view Richard Nixon.

What makes these documents so unusual is not only their introspection but also their form.  President Ford recorded these observations by hand, writing in blue ball point on his favored yellow writing tablets.  The original documents are permanently preserved at the Gerald R. Ford Library in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

The rest of this collection is still unprocessed and is not yet available for research.


CONTAINER LIST

The portion of the collection that has been processed and opened is in digital form. Please click on the folder titles to view the handwritten documents and transcripts prepared by the Ford Library staff.

Gerald R. Ford's Personal Handwritten Reflections

Personal Principles

  • What religion means to me?
  • Definition of a successful marriage
  • Advice to a young man going off on his own
  • Advice to a teen-age daughter
  • Making and keeping friends
  • Playing poker to win
  • Learning how to lose
  • The art of compromise
  • Learning how to be alone
  • Athletics and importance of keeping fit
  • Revenge or forgiveness -- have I attempted revenge or extended forgiveness?
  • What I've learned from blacks & other minorities
  • The brilliance of the English language
  • The disappearance of the personal letter
  • Movies I've liked best

Politics and Governance

  • My definition of a statesman as opposed to a politician
  • How I make decisions
  • Credo -- do's and don'ts for a young man going into politics
  • The unelected representatives on Capitol Hill
  • The G.O.P.'s image today -- what it is vs. what it should be?
  • Regulatory Agencies -- why so big, so ineffective, so expensive? What did I try to do about it?
  • How to deal with experts
  • Importance of the veto
  • Washington parties -- what sets them apart?

History

  • Changes in the U.S.A.
  • The impact of television and its consequences
  • Richard Nixon's place in history