Navy Day 1945... Post World War II celebration...
Item # 727949
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THE NEW YORK TIMES, October 28, 1945
* "Navy Day" Central Park, New York City
* Post World War II military celebration
* President Harry S. Truman speeches & more
The front page has a nice banner headline: "TRUMAN BARS RECOGNITION OF 'IMPOSED' REGIMES AND SETS 12-POINT U. S. POLICY FOR WORLD PEACE; 5,000,000 SEE MIGHTIEST NAVAL AND AIR DISPLAY" with subheads and related photo. Lengthy coverage continues on inside pages with more photos. Loads of text.
Other news, sports and advertisements of the day. Complete 1st section with all 46 pages, rag edition in very nice condition.
Background: This monumental Navy Day celebration served as the definitive bridge between the end of World War II and the dawn of the Cold War, functioning simultaneously as a triumphant victory lap and a stern geopolitical warning. By staging the largest naval display in history before five million spectators in New York City, the United States visually demonstrated its unprecedented global hegemony and technological supremacy at the exact moment the postwar world order was being forged. When President Truman paired this awe-inspiring exhibition of military might with his 12-point foreign policy speech—explicitly refusing to recognize regimes imposed by foreign force—he effectively drew a line in the sand against Soviet expansion in Eastern Europe. Consequently, this single day marked the formal transition of American foreign policy from wartime alliance to active containment, setting the ideological and military precedents that would govern global politics for the next half-century.
* "Navy Day" Central Park, New York City
* Post World War II military celebration
* President Harry S. Truman speeches & more
The front page has a nice banner headline: "TRUMAN BARS RECOGNITION OF 'IMPOSED' REGIMES AND SETS 12-POINT U. S. POLICY FOR WORLD PEACE; 5,000,000 SEE MIGHTIEST NAVAL AND AIR DISPLAY" with subheads and related photo. Lengthy coverage continues on inside pages with more photos. Loads of text.
Other news, sports and advertisements of the day. Complete 1st section with all 46 pages, rag edition in very nice condition.
Background: This monumental Navy Day celebration served as the definitive bridge between the end of World War II and the dawn of the Cold War, functioning simultaneously as a triumphant victory lap and a stern geopolitical warning. By staging the largest naval display in history before five million spectators in New York City, the United States visually demonstrated its unprecedented global hegemony and technological supremacy at the exact moment the postwar world order was being forged. When President Truman paired this awe-inspiring exhibition of military might with his 12-point foreign policy speech—explicitly refusing to recognize regimes imposed by foreign force—he effectively drew a line in the sand against Soviet expansion in Eastern Europe. Consequently, this single day marked the formal transition of American foreign policy from wartime alliance to active containment, setting the ideological and military precedents that would govern global politics for the next half-century.
Category: The 20th Century
Price
$52
100% Authentic: Original printing, never a reproduction.