Letter from Coffin to McKenzie, April 12, 1948
1 2017-11-16T13:18:47-08:00 Natalia Holtzman 3bc8196281034c0edcbedc5566da15e84a149850 25325 6 This is the response letter to Item #34, in which Congressman Howard A. Coffin was asked to speak at the Polar Bear Reunion in May of 1948. In this response, Congressman Coffin humbly accepts, but with reservations about what he could possibly contribute to the event, and requests additional guidance from Walter Mackenzie about things he might cover in his speech. plain 2017-12-15T11:38:20-08:00 Michael J. Macalla papers, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan April 12, 1948 Letter, Typed 10000016 Walter I. Mackenzie Howard A. Coffin, Congressman, 13th Michigan District Statement of rights from archival material host organization, Bentley Historical Library: “Copyright to this material has not been transferred to the Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan. Complying with copyright law is ultimately the responsibility of the author, producer and publisher. To the extent that the Bentley Historical Library possesses rights to this material, you are granted permission to publish or use images/quote one time only in the work described above.” This archive uses these materials under the above premises and in consideration of Fair Use principles. 38.886745, -77.010115 Letter from Coffin to McKenzie, April 12, 1948, Box 1, Folder 3, Item 36, Michael J. Macalla Papers, 1918-1956, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan. https://quod.lib.umich.edu/p/polar/851792.0003.036/1?rgn=full+text;view=image The collection was donated by Michael Macalla, of Detroit, Michigan, in 1965 (Donor no.: 4274) Rob Pfaff Nov. 8, 2017 April 12, 1948 Mr. Walter I. McKenzie 1066. Federal Building Detroit 26, Michigan Dear Walter: I promised you in my letter of April 7th that I would write you again this week before the proposed date with the Polar Bear Association on Monday, May 31st. I have not been successful as yet in getting out from under an attitude of humility with regard to the important assignment you have asked me to accept. Perhaps this feeling arises out of the fact that I personally was not in the service myself and therefore, anything that I might do on this occasion would lack the inspiration that would come from one who first-hand experience with the heavy sacrifices that those who were in uniform made for all of us. Having said this, which is most sincere, I have convinced myself that if you are still serious in extending this invitation to me the least that I could do is to attempt to accept the responsibility and I will come if you still feel that I should. Please be assured that my feelings will not be hurt if someone else occurs to you in the meantime who is better qualified for this assignment. If, after thinking it over again, you still want me to come, tell me so and I will be there. In answering this letter, provided you still want me to come, I would appreciate your giving me some ties of what you think I can best say that will fit this occasion. Particularly, I would like you to advise me as to the length of time I should take for an occasion of this kind. My own inclination would be to limit what I had to say to not over ten minutes because in meetings like this, people are not usually seated and more lengthy statements are not in keeping with the spirit of the occasion. I take it for granted that the service to which you refer will be entirely an outdoor service and that the audience will, for the most part, be standing and will not welcome your "distinguished guest" taking more time than that which I have indicated. I need all the help and counsel you can give me, both as to the type of statement I can make and the length of time I should plan on using to make it. Please let me hear from you as soon as it is convenient for you to write. I think I should a commutator’s ticket to Detroit. I am under contract to be there now on May 3rd, May 10th and again on May 31st. How do you expect me to save the nation if I am going to spend all my time traveling to Detroit and back? With best wishes. Sincerely Yours, [Signature] Howard A. Coffin, M.C. Natalia Holtzman 3bc8196281034c0edcbedc5566da15e84a149850This page has tags:
- 1 2017-11-18T07:50:56-08:00 Angela Schöpke a9b85985047875065a895f217f6d9371b9e08ba7 Map Angela Schöpke 8 google_maps 2017-12-09T16:32:53-08:00 Angela Schöpke a9b85985047875065a895f217f6d9371b9e08ba7