Baltimore Sun

Son’s pain open for world to see

Scholars point out bond that’s historic between presidents

- By Steve Hendrix

WASHINGTON — Before this week, the American people had never watched a president stand before the casket of another president who was also his father. They were moments that proved to be as personal as they were historic.

As George W. Bush watched the coffin containing the body of George H.W. Bush being carried into Washington National Cathedral on Wednesday, his face was a map of pain. The same was true Monday in the Capitol Rotunda, where amid the pomp and the honor guards and the echoing marble, the 43rd president looked like nothing more than a boy crying for his dad.

There has long been speculatio­n about the relationsh­ip between the first father and son to reach the White House since John Adams and John Quincy Adams two centuries ago. The younger Adams only learned of the elder’s death after his burial.

Historians have scoured the path both Bushes took — Yale, stints flying fighter planes, the oil business and politics — for every sign of rivalry, jealousy and intrafamil­y psychodram­a. Oedipus Tex.

But the reality was simpler, historians say, and was visible in George W. Bush’s grief, as the 43rd president prepared to eulogize the 41st president.

“He gave us unconditio­nal love. And some of us tested it, I might add,” said George W. Bush in a “60 Minutes” interview that aired two nights after his father’s death.

Rather t han Greek drama, the Bushes had an ordinary father-son bond that played out in extraordin­ary settings, these scholars contend. There were good times and bad, periods of distance and rebellion, the pain of loss and the joy of triumph.

But whatever t he weather, the climate was always loving.

“I think it was a tense relationsh­ip when George W. was in his sowing-hiswild-oats phase; and that was a pretty long phase,” said Jeffrey Engel, director of the Center for Presidenti­al History at Southern Methodist University, who has i nterviewed both Bushes. “But by the end, they were peers.”

Presidenti­al scholar Mark Updegrove spent years talking with the Bushes and those who knew them for his 2017 book on their relationsh­ip, “The Last Republican­s.” Of all the anecdotes he collected, he finds one of the most telling to be a moment of everyday parenting: George and Barbara Bush were walking with their toddler son when little George went into a tantrum, wind- milling blows against his dad.

“His father just holds him at bay with a palm against his red forehead and until he tires out,” Updegrove said. “And then they just walk. There was a way in which George W. would transgress and his father would have the patience to know that his better angels would eventually take hold.”

Both presidents resisted any effort to “put them on the couch,” but the senior Bush left a rich emotional record in thousands of letters he wrote to family and friends through his life. In them, he makes clear the full play of fatherly emotion toward his often-rambunctio­us oldest child.

“Georgie has grown to be a near-man, talks dirty once in a while and occasional­ly swears, aged 4 he wrote to his friend Gerry Bemiss soon after taking his family from Connecticu­t to Midland, Texas. “He lives in his cowboy clothes.”

And then when his son was 9: “Georgie aggravates the hell out of me at times (I am sure I do the same to him), but then at times I am so proud of him I could die,” he wrote to his father-inlaw. “He is out for Little League — so eager. He tries so very hard. It makes me think back to all the times I tried out.”

In 1953, the boy was old enough to understand that tragedy had come to the family. His younger sister Robin had been sick. The Bushes had taken her to New York for treatment and one day months later, he was thrilled when they returned.

“I remember seeing them pull up and thinking I saw my little sister in the back of the car. I remember that as sure as I’m sitting here,” he told The Washington Post in a 1999 interview. “I run over to the car, and there’s no Robin.”

She had died of leukemia. Soon after, George H.W. Bush began his political rise that took him from local party boss to Congress, national Republican chairman, U.N. ambassador and head of the CIA. His son, meanwhile, fell in line on the father’s path to the Ivy League and then back to Texas to look for oil.

It was a well- documented stretch of both work and partying for the younger Bush. His drinking produced some public embarrassm­ents — including one 1985 episode in which he shouted profanity at Wall Street Journal reporter Al Hunt in a Dallas restaurant over a political story that he felt slighted his father, who was then in his second term as vice president.

The boozing was worrying his wife, Laura, and, Bush would say later, alcohol “was beginning to crowd out my energies.”

George W. would quit cold turkey in July 1986. That same month, his father asked him to be a senior adviser in his presidenti­al campaign.

“The younger Bush quickly became a full participan­t in the Bush apparatus, serving as pugnacious gatekeeper during the campaign and an enforcer of sorts in the White House,” Updegrove said.

Father and son had become political partners, even if there was a vast gulf between president and adviser. Remarkably, even that gap would close. Employing all the family assets — from fundraisin­g to friendship­s — George W. began his own rapid political rise, from the governorsh­ip of Texas to, finally, the same Oval Office his dad had occupied.

If there was any rivalry in having to share the country’s highest title with his son, it didn’t show in the giddy, exuberant, detailed letter about George W.’s inaugurati­on that the elder Bush wrote to his friend Hugh Sidey, a Time magazine writer. Friends were calling him “41.”

“It’s funny after all these years to get a new name; but, hey, what does it matter if your boy is the president of the United States of America so help me God,” he wrote.

In his final minutes, George H.W. Bush was on the phone with his son.

The last words the 41st president ever spoke were to the 43rd:

“I love you, too.”

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/POOL VIA GETTY-AFP ?? Former President George W. Bush says goodbye to his father at his funeral service.
ALEX BRANDON/POOL VIA GETTY-AFP Former President George W. Bush says goodbye to his father at his funeral service.

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