President Richard M. Nixon plays the piano while (from left) Pat Nixon, former president Harry S. Truman, and Bess Wallace Truman look on. The Nixons were visiting the Trumans in Independence, Missouri.
President Harry S. Truman receives a piano at the White House for National Music Week, May, 1951. The piano was constructed as a joint and cooperative work of all the members of the Piano Manufacturers Association. The materials that went into its production came from many of the member states of the United Nations.
Actress Ginger Rogers sits down at the piano while visiting the Harry S. Truman Library. The man on the left is Truman Library Director Dr. Philip Brooks. Others are unidentified.
Former President Harry S. Truman sits and plays the piano in the auditorium of the Harry S. Truman Library, possibly during a visit of Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson to the Library. The other men in the background are unidentified.
Mr. de Martins sits at a piano. He was likely a part of the defense counsel for Japanese war criminals at the International Military Tribunal of the Far East held at the War Ministry Building in Tokyo, Japan.
Sidney Moore (foreground) plays the piano for former President Harry S. Truman (seated, left, background) and Rufus Burrus (background, second from left) in the north lobby of the Truman Library.
Sidney Moore (foreground) plays the piano for former President Harry S. Truman (left, background, partly obscured) and Rufus Burrus (background, second from left) in the north lobby of the Truman Library. Others are unidentified.
Sidney Moore (foreground) plays the piano for former President Harry S. Truman (left, background, partly obscured) and Rufus Burrus (background, second from left) in the north lobby of the Truman Library. Others are unidentified.
Sidney Moore (foreground) plays the piano for former President Harry S. Truman (seated, left, background) and Rufus Burrus (background, second from left) in the north lobby of the Truman Library.