in Washington, D.C. The library was built with private funds raised by the Harry S. Truman Library Inc., with Truman himself contributing greatly to the fundraising effort by "attending dinners, making speeches around the country, and writing thousands of letters". Built on a hill overlooking the
Kansas City skyline, on land donated by the City of Independence, it was dedicated July 6, 1957. The ceremony included the
Masonic Rites of Dedication and attendance by former president
Herbert Hoover (then the only living former president other than President Truman), Chief Justice
Earl Warren, and former first lady
Eleanor Roosevelt. Here, President
Lyndon B. Johnson signed the
Medicare Act on July 30, 1965. The museum has been victimized by significant burglaries twice.
John Wesley Snyder, Truman's
Treasury Secretary and close friend, donated his personal collection of 450 rare coins to the museum in March 1962. That November, burglars stole the entire collection. None of the stolen coins have been recovered. Snyder helped coordinate an effort among 147 coin collectors to reconstruct the collection, which went back on display in 1967, at a ceremony attended by Truman. While serving as president, Truman had received gifts of jewel encrusted swords and daggers from
Saud of Saudi Arabia, then the crown prince, and
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the last
shah of Iran. He turned these items over to the
National Archives and Records Administration as required by law, and they were displayed at the museum. According to the museum curator, they "had embedded diamonds and rubies and sapphires, a number of precious stones in their hilts and in their scabbards". Neild was also one of the architects involved in the
reconstruction of the
White House during Truman's presidency. Neild died July 6, 1955, at the
Kansas City Club while working on the design. The work was completed by
Alonzo H. Gentry of Gentry and Voskamp, the firm that designed Kansas City's
Municipal Auditorium. Truman had initially wanted the building to resemble his maternal grandfather
Solomon Young's house in
Grandview, Missouri. In response to a
New York Times review that recalled
Frank Lloyd Wright influences in the library's horizontal design, Truman was reported to have said, "It's got too much of that fellow in it to suit me." The changes included the extensive use of glass in the relatively windowless structure and a significant change to the space between Truman's grave and the museum. ==Truman's activities on the premises==