Part 23 (1/2)

”We have a grand day” Morton, Atlantic Meeting, 109110. The Sunday morning service has been well chronicled. My version owes much to Morton, Atlantic Meeting; to Wilson, The First Summit; and to Churchill's own impressions. As the man behind the Sunday ceremony, Churchill left several moving accounts. See The Grand Alliance, 431432, and CWP, III, 10991106. My order of the hymns and prayers, which differs in some accounts, is based on the original ”Order of Service, August 10th, 1941,” President's Official File 200-1-R: Trips of the President: Cruise on the USS AUGUSTA, Aug. 1941, FDRL. The hymns were numbered 450, 643, and 540 in The English Hymnal.

”The PM had given much thought” Martin, Downing Street: The War Years, 58.

”Mr. Churchill walked about inspecting” Morton, Atlantic Meeting, 110.

”The President will embark” Memorandum for Commander C. R. Thompson, August 9, 1941, Prime Minister's Office Papers 19401945, Unit 10, PREM 4/71, Reel 247.

Roosevelt's s.h.i.+p came alongside Morton, Atlantic Meeting, 111.

”only the tenseness” Pawle, The War and Colonel Warden, 117.

”calm, carved face” Morton, Atlantic Meeting, 111.

Churchill by his side Ibid., 112.

”every step” WSC, VI, 1167.

”I shall always remember the look” Pawle, The War and Colonel Warden, 117.

Roosevelt would tell Daisy CC, 141.

”stumping” Ibid., 130.

”completely intermingled” Churchill, The Grand Alliance, 431.

”Every word seemed to stir the heart” Ibid., 432.

”In the long, frightful panorama” Morton, Atlantic Meeting, 113114.

Churchill was weeping Ibid., 114.

”It was . . . a great hour to live” Churchill, The Grand Alliance, 432.

”If nothing else had happened” Elliott Roosevelt, As He Saw It, 33.

”We were all photographed” CC, 141.

”When I looked upon that densely-packed” CWP, III, 1105.

the menu included grouse Martin, Downing Street: The War Years, 59.

game-loving Gunther, Roosevelt in Retrospect, 92.

a ”beautiful” luncheon CC, 141.

Cadogan found Roosevelt's informal conversational style Dilks, ed., The Diaries of Sir Alexander Cadogan, 398.

the s.h.i.+p's cat, Blackie Morton, Atlantic Meeting, 120.

thanked Churchill Ibid.

”It's an honor for us all” Ibid., 121.

went ash.o.r.e Dilks, ed., The Diaries of Sir Alexander Cadogan, 398.

”A great load” Thompson, I Was Churchill's Shadow, 73.

”dining Winston Churchill” CC, 141.

”You sensed that two men” Elliott Roosevelt, As He Saw It, 35.

After dinner Thompson, I Was Churchill's Shadow, 7374.

”Your father is a great man” Ibid., 74.

”I think of it in this way” Churchill, Savrola, 8485.

”Friends.h.i.+p among nations” Rosenman, ed., Public Papers and Addresses of Franklin D. Roosevelt, II, 130.

The Americans agreed WSC, VI, 1160.

In July, Tokyo had Burns, The Soldier of Freedom, 108110.

”Western Hemisphere Defence Plan No. 4” CWP, III, 10471048.

”They are sending us” Ibid., 1061.

would ask for another $5 billion Ibid.

”The war goes on upon” Ibid., 1065.

”I fear the President” Churchill, The Grand Alliance, 442.

Roosevelt told Daisy CC, 141142.

”The various officers” Ibid., 142.

The leave-taking Ibid.

”It symbolizes” CWP, III, 1100.

John Martin told Jock Colville Colville, Inner Circle, 120.

In a letter to his son WSC, VI, 1177.

”All well & a bit of a let-down!” CC, 142.

smooth seas and slept twelve hours Ibid.

only a single vote in the House Burns, The Soldier of Freedom, 120.