A visit to the Eisenhower farm — and a lesson in leadership

General Dwight D. Eisenhower meeting with Generals Patton, Bradley, and Hodges in Germany, March 1945. Photo from historicalstockphotos.com

I have a suggestion for today’s politicians: Tour the retirement home of Dwight D. Eisenhower in Gettysburg, Pa. And ask for Park Ranger John Joyce to be your tour guide.

Dwight D. Eisenhower. Photo from historicalstockphotos.com

Ike’s leadership would be an example to leaders of both parties. In a time of extremism and conflict (remember McCarthyism?), he was a calming, unifying influence. He was a Republican who didn’t diminish or shrink from using government properly: to build our national infrastructure (the Interstate highway system) and to uphold civil rights. He knew how to end a war. He placed country above party. He thought big, but not about himself.

On a rainy afternoon, Joyce provided insights into Ike’s leadership style to a tour group of Pennsylvania editors visiting the Eisenhower National Historic Site outside Gettysburg. His guiding leadership principles, according to Joyce, author of the Ike Blog:

  • Staff. Eisenhower knew he had to surround himself with good people and let them do their jobs. He wasn’t a micromanager, and he generously credited his successes to the soldiers under his command and to those in his administration.
  • Communication. Ike liked to be clear and concise. No bombast.
  • Persuasion. Ike believed in winning you over with facts and principles, not bullying or ordering you into following.
  • Decisions. Eisenhower believed in results. He made his decisions, carried them out and took responsibility for the results.
  • Quiet diplomacy. His Gettysburg farm was a place for quiet, candid conversations with world leaders. Winston Churchill, Nikita Khrushchev, Charles de Gaulle and Jawaharlal Nehru visited Ike’s farm. Riding his acres in golf carts, Eisenhower took the measure of his guests and maintained peace in volatile times.

He was a strong leader but a humble man. Joyce told how often soldiers who served under Ike spoke of their admiration and devotion to him, and how genuine and warm he was. One recalled the sight of Ike and de Gaulle together at the liberation of Paris. The French leader’s chest was covered with medals and Eisenhower’s uniform sported a single ribbon.

I’ve toured the Gettysburg battlefield four times and will again tomorrow. But this was my first visit to the Eisenhower home. I’m glad I finally made it. We could use more leaders like him.

Park Ranger John Joyce led our tour of the Eisenhower farm.

2 thoughts on “A visit to the Eisenhower farm — and a lesson in leadership

  1. Pingback: Gettysburg: We can’t forget what they did here | 2 Roads Diverged

  2. Pingback: Mimi and I blog about weekend tours at Gettysburg and Antietam « The Buttry Diary

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