1968 George H.W. Bush Signed Letter Defends Civil Rights Vote, Rebukes Constituent

In stock
SKU
GHWB4260-S

Original signed historically important letter from future U.S. President George H. W. Bush, dated May 20, 1968, written on official Congress of the United States, House of Representatives stationery during his first term representing Texas’s 7th District. Addressed to a constituent, Bush responds directly—and pointedly—to criticism over his voting record, firmly rejecting accusations that he was “voting with the Democrats” and yet defending his opposition to H.R. 2516 and the Civil Rights Act of 1968.

Notably candid in tone, the letter reflects Bush’s characteristic plain-spoken style, opening with a forthright acknowledgment of irritation before transitioning into a detailed policy defense. Included with the signed letter are the original mailed congressional envelope and the attached congressional ratings summary Bush references in his response, providing rare contextual documentation.

While Bush did ultimately vote in favor of the Civil Rights Act of 1968—a vote that was controversial with many of his constituents—his letter does not state that directly but instead emphasizes his conservative voting record in responding to criticism. This is a classic Bush rhetorical strategy — defend the principle and his conservative approach without making the explicit vote the centerpiece. It implies the vote but doesn’t say “I opposed / supported” in clear ideological terms. That subtlety is part of what makes the letter historically compelling.

A strong early political artifact illustrating Bush’s engagement with constituents, his ideological positioning in 1968, and his willingness to respond personally and substantively.

Also includes the original envelope. 

Come with our 100% money-back  guarantee of authenticity. 

$675.00

Details

Written during the height of the civil-rights debate in 1968, this letter responds to a constituent who was openly critical of H.R. 2516, legislation that became part of the Civil Rights Act of 1968, including fair-housing provisions which Bush voted in favor ofr. The constituent’s complaint reflects opposition to the bill itself, while Bush’s reply avoids direct ideological argument. Instead, he defends his position by emphasizing his broader conservative voting record and independent congressional ratings—effectively justifying his civil-rights vote while reaffirming his conservative credentials, a hallmark of his early political style.

More Information

Price

$675.00

Condition

used

Product Condition

very good clear signature, Letterhead is toned and shows some age wear

Size

8" x 11"

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