Reagan & Joe

Editor’s note: This article first appeared at National Review, February 6, 2010.
This February 6 marks the 99th anniversary of Ronald Reagan’s birth. In a telling development, Republicans around the country have begun holding "Reagan Day" dinners, as they’ve traditionally done every February for Abraham Lincoln. This is another of those unique, spontaneous displays of affection for Reagan.
Having written so much on the man, I get questions about Reagan this time of year, running the gamut from his domestic achievements to his historic foreign-policy triumph: peacefully ending the Cold War. Sometimes I get asked for unreported anecdotes reflecting on his personality and character. I have a bunch of those, eagerly shared with me by people who met Reagan—Reagan talked to anyone—or dug up from thousands of letters Reagan wrote to everyday Americans over a long lifetime. (See my NRO article on Reagan and Ruth Smith of Idaho.)

Reagan was plainly likable. Of all the subjects I’ve studied, few were as universally liked. Sure, Reagan, as president, was demonized by the left; still, most liberals muster nice words about Reagan personally.
Central to that likability was Reagan’s humility. The word "I" didn’t dominate his lexicon, unless he was poking fun at himself. Ronald Reagan was not full of pride; thoroughly un-possessed of self-love.

And so, with that background, I’d like to take the opportunity of Reagan’s time of year—not to mention the month of Presidents’ Day—to share an anecdote, told to me by Bill Clark, Reagan’s close friend and most significant adviser:
Clark had served President Reagan as deputy secretary of state, national security adviser, and secretary of interior. As a senior official, he was required to have a driver to get him to appointments. Clark’s driver was a man named Joe Bullock, a Georgia native who moved to Washington during the Great Depression. Joe was a victim of the cruel Jim Crow laws that plagued the South. He went to Washington for a better life.

Joe first found employment as a mule driver. He eventually traded in the animal for various senior people in the federal government, some of whom, including a high-level figure in the previous (Carter) administration, didn’t treat him well; in fact, that previous figure didn’t speak a word to Joe in three years.
Thus, Joe was taken aback when Bill Clark not only talked to him, asking questions about his life and family, but also whether he could sit up front. Clark rode shotgun with Joe, creating not only a few stares but security concerns, as Clark, given his influence in national security, was a target of America’s enemies.

One morning, Clark’s father visited Washington. He hit it off with Joe. Clark’s father was a rancher, a man of the West. He gave Joe a gift: a Western-style belt, with a kind of "John Wayne belt buckle," as Clark described it. Joe loved it, proudly displaying it by always leaving his blue suit-jacket unbuttoned.
That belt and buckle soon assumed a life of its own. There was an upcoming state visit by England’s Prince Philip. It was customary that the White House provide a gift. Clark and Reagan and a few others brainstormed following a morning briefing. Clark suggested a "Western belt." He had one in mind, made by Si Jenkins, a Santa Barbara friend of both Clark and the president. (Reagan, too, was a California rancher.)

"Well, what does it look like?" asked Reagan. Clark noted he had a model in the car: Joe, who was wearing the belt. "Send him up," ordered the president. They called for Joe, who entered via the door of Reagan’s personal secretary.
Joe had worked for the federal government for 50 years, but had never been within 50 yards of a president or the Oval Office. He walked in. He saw Clark, Vice President Bush, the senior aides, and the president of the United States. He was in awe, overcome. Suddenly, this tough 6’4" man began weeping: He had come so far since Jim Crow and the Great Depression. He was choked up.

No one in the room was prepared for that reaction. They were dead silent, uncomfortable, clueless to respond; except for Ronald Reagan. The president rose, walked over to the driver, extended his hand, breathed in, and said matter-of-factly, "Mr. Bullock, I understand you have a belt to show me?"
It was an "everyman" touch. And it put old Joe immediately at ease. Business-like, Joe showed the belt, and then he and Reagan swapped stories, chatting away like old friends.

"The rest of us just faded away," said Bill Clark, "as the two got along famously." President and driver, remembering the old days.

Bullock left with a story to tell his fellow drivers, and his grandchildren. He died a few years later.

No, this anecdote is nothing dramatic. It’s not like challenging Gorbachev to tear down the wall. It’s simply another of many small stories I hear constantly about Ronald Reagan. This was a good president and a good man. The White House needs more of them. That’s a thought worth bearing in mind this February, a month that marks not only Reagan’s birthday but Presidents’ Day.

— Dr. Paul Kengor is professor of political science at Grove City College. His books include "The Judge: William P. Clark, Ronald Reagan’s Top Hand," "God and Ronald Reagan," and "The Crusader: Ronald Reagan and the Fall of Communism."

www.VisAndVals.org