While handshakes are everyday gestures of goodwill, peace and etiquette, a few have produced truly gripping history. These are 6 of history’s most famous handshakes.
1.
Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee (April 9, 1865)
The only thing civil about the terrible war between
the Union and the Confederacy was its climax. On Palm Sunday 1865,
General Ulysses S. Grant strode into the parlor of Wilmer McLean’s
farmhouse in Appomattox Court House, Virginia, and shook hands with
General Robert E. Lee. Grant tried to break the ice by recalling their
only other meeting, during the Mexican-American War. For 25 minutes, the
men talked cordially until Lee, tired of the chitchat, brought up the
elephant in the parlor: his surrender, the capitulation that would end
the Civil War.
2.
William McKinley and Leon Czolgosz (September 6, 1901)
Few presidents could press the flesh as well as
William McKinley. On receiving lines, he even employed his own handshake,
the “McKinley grip,” to prevent cramping and to usher through as many as
50 people a minute. During the 1901 Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo,
McKinley held one of his public meet-and-greets inside the Temple of
Music. When Leon Czolgosz approached, the president noticed what
appeared to be a bandage on the man’s right hand. Displaying the nimble
skills of a politician, McKinley adjusted on the fly and extended his
left hand. At that moment, the assassin fired two shots from a gun
hidden underneath the wrappings on his right hand. A little more than a
week later, McKinley died from his wounds.
3.
Adolf Hitler and Neville Chamberlain (September 23, 1938)
With Nazi Germany poised to send troops into
Czechoslovakia to occupy the Sudetenland, British Prime Minister Neville
Chamberlain traveled to Godesberg, Germany, for a late-night meeting
with Chancellor Adolf Hitler. Hitler greeted Chamberlain at the Hotel
Dreesen with a handshake, but the meeting did not go well. Less than a
week later, Chamberlain returned to Germany, and the two men struck a
deal in Munich. Chamberlain allowed the Nazi occupation of the
Sudetenland in return for a separate peace between Germany and Britain.
The prime minister, who believed Hitler’s claim that he had no further
territorial ambitions, said the agreement ensured “peace for our time.”
Chamberlain returned to a hero’s welcome in London. He was driven
straight to Buckingham Palace to receive royal congratulations and
became the first commoner to appear on the balcony before cheering
throngs. With the horror of World War II, however, Chamberlain’s
handshake with Hitler came to be a symbol of appeasement.
4.
Anwar Sadat and Menachem Begin (March 26, 1979)
A state of war that had lasted more than 30 years
between neighboring countries came to an end with a treaty signing and a
symbolic handshake between Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli
Prime Minister Menachem Begin. The formal signing ceremony of the 1979
Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty on the South Lawn of the White House was one
of the highlights of Jimmy Carter’s presidency. Carter played a key role
in the negotiation of the 1978 Camp David Accords, which laid the
groundwork for the treaty. With the agreement, Egypt became the first
Arab state to officially recognize Israel. Sadat and Begin shared the
1978 Nobel Peace Prize.
5.
Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat (September 13, 1993)
The South Lawn of the White House was again the
setting for a notable handshake in Middle East history when Israeli
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Palestinian Liberation Organization
(PLO) Chairman Yasser Arafat were present for the signing of the Oslo
Accords, the first face-to-face agreement between Israel and the PLO.
Standing in between the two men who had been bitter enemies for decades,
President Bill Clinton gently coaxed Rabin and Arafat together for a
symbolic handshake, the men’s first. Arafat and Rabin, along with
Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, were awarded the 1994 Nobel Peace
Prize. Unfortunately, the peace hoped for by the Oslo Accords failed to
live up to the promise of that sun-soaked handshake.
6.
Bill Clinton and John F. Kennedy (July 24, 1963)
It was a bright summer day in the White House Rose
Garden when President John F. Kennedy emerged to address a group of
youth leaders attending Boys Nation in the nation’s capital. One of the
boys Kennedy shook hands with that day, 16-year-old Bill Clinton, would
become a future occupant of the White House. Clinton pointed to the
moment as inspiring him to public service, and the photograph of the
handshake between the once and future presidents became one of the
enduring images of the 1992 campaign.
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