Ehrlichman and haldeman

H. R. Haldeman

American political aide and Watergate Scandal figure (1926–1993)

Bob Haldeman

Haldeman in 1971

In office
January 20, 1969 – April 30, 1973
PresidentRichard Nixon
Preceded byJames R. Jones (Appointments Secretary)
Succeeded byAlexander Haig
Born

Harry Robbins Haldeman


(1926-10-27)October 27, 1926
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
DiedNovember 12, 1993(1993-11-12) (aged 67)
Santa Barbara, California, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Spouse

Joanne Horton

(m. 1949)​
Children4
Education
AllegianceUnited States
Branch/serviceUnited States Navy
UnitUnited States Naval Reserve

Harry Robbins "Bob" Haldeman (October 27, 1926 – November 12, 1993) was an American political aide and businessman, best known for his service as White House Chief of Staff to President Richard Nixon and his consequent involvement in the Watergate scandal.

Born in California, Haldeman served in the Navy Reserves in World War II and attended UCLA. In 1949, he joined the

Harry R. Haldeman (White House Special Files: Staff Member and Office Files)

PERSONAL FILES (1969-1973)

Box 1

[Empty: Box includes withdrawal sheets only for 1968 Alpha Subject Files]
[1 of 3]
[2 of 3]
[3 of 3]

Box 2

Telephone Sheets [Jan-March 1969] [1 of 2]
Telephone Sheets [Jan-March 1969] [2 of 2]
Telephone calls-April HRH [April-June 1969] [1 of 2]
Telephone calls-April HRH [April-June 1969] [2 of 2]
HRH Telephone calls 1969 thru March 27, 1970
Haldeman calls-Feb. 1970
Haldeman calls-March 1970 [Empty]
Haldeman calls-April 1970
Haldeman calls-May 1970
Haldeman calls-June 1970
Haldeman calls-Chron July 1970
Phone calls-Haldeman July 1970
Phone calls-Haldeman August 1970
Haldeman calls Chron August 1970
Haldeman-Phone calls September 1970
Haldeman calls Chron Sept. 1970

Box 2A

Haldeman Phone calls Oct.-Dec. 1970 [1 of 2]
Haldeman Phone calls Oct.-Dec. 1970 [2 of 2]
Haldeman, Harry R./Telephone

Box 3

HRH-Confidential 3/70 [1 of 5]
HRH-Confidential 3/70 [2 of 5]
HRH-Confidential 3/70 [3 of 5]
HRH-Confidential 3/70 [4 of 5]
HRH-Confidential 3/70 [5 of 5]
Haldem

Spartacus Educational

Primary Sources

(1) H. R. Haldeman, The Ends of Power (1978)

Chuck Colson had become the President's personal 'hit man'; his impresario of 'hard ball' politics. I had been caught in the middle of most of these, as complaints thundered in about 'Wildman' Colson either crashing arrogantly; or sneaking silently, through political empires supposedly controlled by White House staffers such as Domestic Counselor John Ehrlichman or Cabinet Officers such as Attorney General John Mitchell. Colson cared not who complained. Nixon, he said, was his only boss. And Nixon was behind him all the way on projects ranging from his long-dreamed-of hope of catching Senator Teddy Kennedy in bed with a woman not his wife, to more serious struggles such as the I.T.T. anti-trust 'scandal'.

Colson had signed up an ex-C.I.A, agent named Howard Hunt to work for him and thereafter became very secretive about his exploits in the name of Nixon. Years later I heard of such wild schemes as the proposed fire bombing of a politically liberal foundatio

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