
Biography | Memorial Service Video | Photo Gallery
The staff and volunteers of the Harry S. Truman Library and the Harry S. Truman Library Institute wish to extend their sincere condolences to the Daniel Family.
Margaret Truman, daughter of President and Mrs. Harry S. Truman, was born on February 17, 1924, in Independence, Missouri. She was christened Mary Margaret Truman, Mary after her aunt, Mary Jane Truman, and Margaret for her maternal grandmother, Margaret Gates Wallace. She
attended public school in Independence until 1934 when her father was
elected to the United States Senate. From 1935 until 1942, her school
year was divided between Independence and Washington, DC. She was a
student at the public schools in Independence from September to January.
From January to May she attended Gunston Hall, a private school for
girls in Washington. Graduated in 1942, she enrolled at George Washington
University and in 1944, the year her father was elected Vice President,
she was awarded the Associate of Arts degree. She graduated from George
Washington University in 1946, receiving the Bachelor of Arts degree
in history. Her father, who had been President since April 12, 1945,
gave the commencement address and presented her with her diploma.
On July 20, 1950, Miss Truman had her first lesson with Sidney Dictch who had replaced Traubel as her voice instructor. In the fall of 1950, she made her first national television appearance on Ed Sullivan's "Toast of the Town" show, and began another concert tour which ended on December 5, 1950 when she again sang in Constitution Hall. In 1951 and 1952, she made trips to Europe with friends. She went on another concert tour in the spring of 1951 and participated in the Presidential campaign in the fall of that year. In
January 1953 when her father left the White House, she moved to New
York City to continue her work with the National Broadcasting Company,
with which she had signed a contract in February 1951. On May 27, 1955,
substituting for Edward R. Murrow on his television show "Person to
Person," she interviewed her parents in their Independence home. In
1955 and 1956, she acted as hostess on a radio program called "Weekday."
In February 1965, she started her first daily television show as co-host
on a half-hour special events program broadcast live from Philadelphia.
In 1966, Mrs. Daniel conducted a radio program called "Authors in the
News," a five-minute interview with prominent writers which was broadcast
each weekday on more than 100 radio stations. In addition to her television and radio work, Mrs. Daniel was an author, having published her first book, Souvenier: Margaret Truman's Own Story, in 1956. She is best known for her Capital crime series novels, most of which take place in the Washington, DC area. In 1973, the Daniel family moved from New York to Washington where Daniel became chief of the New York Times Washington bureau. In 1977, Daniel retired and the family moved back to New York. Clifton Daniel died at home on February 21, 2000 at the age of 87. From
1977 until the time of her death, Mrs. Daniel served as secretary to
the board of trustees of the Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation
created by Congress in 1975 to award scholarships to college students
planning careers in Government. She was also on the board of directors
of the Harry S. Truman Library Institute, a non-profit corporation formed In 1983 and 1984 she was a member of the Executive Committee of the Truman Centennial Committee which made plans for the observance of the one-hundredth anniversary of the birth of her father. Mrs. Daniel was the 1984 recipient of the Harry S. Truman Public Service Award presented annually by the City of Independence to an outstanding American citizen. Margaret Truman Daniel was 83 years old.
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