The first thing you notice is that the place is huge and sort of beautiful. There's a large reflecting pool capped by an outdoor ceremony area.
The nine acre-site also houses the helicopter Nixon used for Marine 1...
As well as his birth home.
The museum and library themselves are an impressive 52,000 square feet.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdLike any self-respecting museum, the first thing you see is the gift shop. Bostock says Nixon-Elvis memorabilia is usually the hottest item.
This one struck us as particularly interesting.
Beyond the gift shop is a large plaza showing the Nixon foundation's patrons. It's an interesting group that includes the Japanese government and controversial philanthropist Ryoichi Sasakawa.
Nixon's non-Vietnam foreign policy undertakings end up dominating the museum.
Source: New York Times
The inner plaza also features this photo. Presidential solidarity is another theme of the museum — Bill Clinton also makes an appearance, as you'll later see...
The museum begins with with a timeline of Nixon's family history. Here's a photo of his mother as a child. The eyes are unmistakable.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe story of Nixon's upbringing is pretty gripping. He basically came from nothing. His father operated a gas station. Two of his brothers died before the age of 25. The Nixon scowl we would come to know later in life appears to have been present at a very early age.
He carried it with him to Whittier college.
Even those familiar with Nixon's life story may find his entrance into politics obscure. This document explains it: it's the letter from H.L. Perry, a major donor to Whittier College who'd become friendly with Nixon, asking him to run for Congress in southern California.
This document may be the highlight of the entire museum.
It's arguably as fateful as any note written among the founding fathers. Nixon was certainly ambitious — he had previously attempted to run for a local political office — but he'd been turned down from virtually everything for which he'd ever applied. Here, finally, was someone choosing him.
Source: A Life In Full
As Nixon's reply shows, Perry had unleashed an animal.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe museum producers conscientiously include every pivotal moment of Nixon's life, good or bad. However, they have a tendency to include jabs, large or small, at longtime Nixon
For instance, here's future president and then-actor Ronald Reagan defending Screen Actors Guild members accused of Communism at a House Unamerican Activities Commission session.
The museum also occasionally narrows in on sensational but ultimately trivial elements of bad moments in American history, basically missing the forest for the trees. One example is the Alger Hiss case.
Nixon hounded Alger Hiss, a state department functionary, until he successfully "outed" him as a Communist. Many historians now see it as a minor "victory" during an otherwise low point in American history.
The "Checkers" speech is perhaps the best example of how the museum treats the tragic, hysterical and infuriating moments of Nixon's career.
Running alongside General Eisenhower in the 1952 Presidential Election, Nixon came under fire for maintaining a shady political fund. He ended up giving a half-hour address live on TV defending himself and telling an anecdote about how he couldn't afford a dog, so a supporter mailed him one.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe speech worked — according to Rick Perlstein, NBC got more than 2 million telegrams almost universally sympathizing with Nixon. But it would come to be forever mocked for its mawkishness as "The Checkers Speech." So the museum calls it the "Fund Speech."
This photo — Nixon shaking hands with Emperor Hirohito — may help answer his foundation's connection to the Japanese government.
Here's Nixon with Fidel Castro.
One of the biggest questions we had was how the museum would treat Nixon's infamous debate against John Kennedy in 1960. Not only did they not skim over it, they recreated an entire living room for it.
But again, the museum finds a way to blunt the blow of Nixon's worst moments. Facing the TV is this wall of letters from children wishing he'd won the 1960 election.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe way museum looks at the '68 election, one of the most consequential in U.S. history, is rather strange. It ends up being divided into two sections, one capturing the spirit of the times, and another talking about Vietnam. The former doesn't get much beyond this mural.
And there's a small section about how Nixon played the swamp Johnson walked into by escalating Vietnam. But that's it....
We have to get to another section to learn about the campaign more in depth.
And here begins some of the stronger imposition of Nixon's viewpoint. While the argument that Nixon did not have a "secret plan" is technically true, Nixon did nothing to dispel the idea that he did, according to the New York Time:
"Even though Richard Nixon didn't have one, the notion that he had a secret plan to end the Vietnam war helped him win the presidency in 1968.
"Actually, "secret plan" wasn't Nixon's term; a reporter on deadline used it as he covered Nixon's speech promising quick victory in that vastly unpopular war. But recognizing the power of those deceiving words, and politics being politics, Nixon never corrected the journalistic shortcut."
Nixon was going to unite a nation torn apart by "violent" radicals.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThis panel was perhaps the most egregious example. Many historians view Nixon's secret bombing campaign in Cambodia, which killed between 150,000 to 500,000 civilians, as a reprehensible power grab at worse.
Nixon kept the campaign secret from Congress for months. Many commentators also believe the bombings may have constituted war crimes.
Instead, the "violation of sovereignty" the museum refers to here are the bases the North Vietnamese set up there from which they could launch campaigns in the south.
Source: PBS, Yale
Meanwhile, the surrounding section is dominated by Nixon's other foreign policy achievements, including his groundbreaking trip to China. Here's the crate used to transport the pandas Chairman Mao gifted the U.S.
Nixon famously sent two steer.
Arguably the more disappointing and surprising elements of the museum — though perhaps a function of simple space constraints — was how little time was spent on Nixon's domestic achievements.
Nixon's considerable policy accomplishments at home came to be overshadowed by
The museum divides them into six panels that look like this. This one may seem strange but alludes to Nixon's lowering the voting age to 18, which he did somewhat grudgingly.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdMeanwhile, many Americans — including patrons we spoke with at the museum — may not know Nixon created the EPA.
Some would argue this achievement deserves its own wing. Instead it gets a small panel.
Whatever Nixon's personal attitudes toward race may have been, he helped advance desegregation in schools.
The biggest mystery was how the museum would treat Watergate. As we mentioned in the intro, this exhibit was put together by the National Archives and not the foundation.
You can immediately tell the foundation wasn't involved — It turns out to be pretty hokey. It's pretty much a kids tour of a scandal that defined a generation.
You can press a button to see where Nixon's taping equipment was located.
That kind of thing comes at the expense of explaining the complicated origins of the break-in and cover-up, which are explained as having stemmed from Daniel Ellsberg's leaking of the Pentagon papers.
Many historians argue the roots go well beyond that incident to Nixon's tragically entrenched us-against-them mentality.
Source: New York Times
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdAnd there is arguably too much focus on the role of his lieutenants and not on the President himself — though Bostock told us he finds the section too anti-Nixon.
Though this was a sound note on which to end the section.
The final say in the museum is given to Bob Dole...
And, of course, Nixon himself.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdNow find out what life is like in the Oval Office...