Lyndon Johnson Now

A turning point came in 1928, when he took a year off college to teach at a segregated school for Mexican-American children in Cotulla, Texas. Seeing the crushing poverty of his students left a "profound impression" on him, forming the emotional bedrock for his future "War on Poverty".

He retired to his Texas ranch, where he grew out his hair, watched the news, and died of a heart attack in 1973—just a few hundred feet from where he was born. Today, he is remembered as a complex figure: a flawed man who did more for civil rights than any president since Lincoln, but whose legacy remains forever haunted by the jungles of Vietnam. lyndon johnson

The story of Lyndon Baines Johnson (LBJ) is one of the most dramatic and contradictory arcs in American history—the tale of a "master of the Senate" who rose from rural Texas poverty to reach the pinnacle of power, only to see his legacy fractured by a war he could not win. A turning point came in 1928, when he

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