AUSTIN, Texas – Days after the congressional aide met the University of Texas history and journalism graduate in Austin, he boldly proposed marriage.
Claudia Alta Taylor, the 21-year-old ranchers daughter known to her friends as Bird, was intrigued but thought Lyndon Johnsons proposal was much too impulsive. Her clearly smitten suitor, however, was persistent.
It is an important decision, he wrote to her in one of the nearly 90 love letters the pair exchanged during their 10-week courtship in 1934. It isnt being made in one night ... but your lack of decision hasnt tempered either my affection, devotion or ability to know what I want.
She replied that his proposal and repeated insistence sort of put me on the spot, didnt it, dear? All I can say, in absolutely honesty, is – I love you, I dont know how everlastingly I love you – so I cant answer you yet.
The correspondence between the 26-year-old future president and the woman the world would come to know as Lady Bird are available for public review for the first time starting today – Valentines Day – at the LBJ Presidential Library at the University of Texas at Austin.
A few of the letters were previously released, but not the entire collection, which also will be posted online.
Weve had several requests from researchers to release these, said Claudia Anderson, the librarys archivist. It just seemed like a good time to do it.
The letters – most multiple pages – reflect a time when the handwritten note was the chief form of communication.
Dearly Beloved, Taylor begins one, before rethinking her salutation. This sounds like a sermon – it isnt.
He signs them, Lyndon, or Lyndon Baines. She signs, Bird. One closes, Do you still love me? Devotedly, Bird.
Her stationery carries that name, given to her by a caretaker nurse who described her as pretty as a lady bird.
His missives are on letterhead from Washingtons Dodge Hotel, where he lived while working as an aide to U.S. Rep. Richard Kleberg of Texas. Other letters are on Klebergs office stationery, sent simply to Miss Bird Taylor, Karnack, Texas, where her home didnt have a telephone. The envelope carries 6 cents postage.
None of the letters is dated, but merely provides a day of the week. Fortunately for archivists, Taylor saved the envelopes, allowing researchers to assemble what they believe is a chronological order.
In one letter, Taylor defends her indecision on marriage, saying everybody is so constantly urging her to wait, that two months isnt long enough to know him. My head aches, she writes.
Anderson said Johnson is certainly romantic in these letters in that he is wooing her, hes trying to impress her and he makes various arguments why they should get married.
I would not really call these letters sentimental. He wants a commitment from her. ... His letters express that, Anderson said. They are fascinating.
She said the letters reflect characteristics that would come to be synonymous with the couple: His impatience, his passion for helping people; her interest in conservation and nature.
He talks about getting jobs for people, his own job in Washington and complains how she doesnt write every day. Hers progress from, Im not so sure about this to I adore you.
Ten weeks after they met, Johnson showed up in November 1934 at Lady Birds widowed fathers home in Karnack in northeast Texas to press for an answer.
The couple married Nov. 17, 1934, four days after the last letter in the collection, at St. Marks Episcopal Church in San Antonio.
After Johnsons stint in the White House ended in 1969, he and Lady Bird retired to their ranch and Austin, and he died in 1973. Lady Bird died in 2007 at age 94.