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_Born in Scotland in 1929, Harry Benson became a photographer after World War II. Benson came to international fame photographing the Beatles in 1964, and later captured memorable photos of
Muhammad Ali, President John F. Kennedy, President Ronald Reagan, Martin Luther King Jr., Winston Churchill and other global giants. His work has appeared in _Life, Vanity Fair _and _The New
Yorker_ and he is the subject of the documentary _Harry Benson: Shoot First._ Benson recalls Richard Nixon’s resignation 50 years ago, and the now-famous photograph of the president and
First Lady Pat Nixon on that day he’ll never forget._ I went to the Glasgow School of Art in Scotland, and photography seemed like a natural way to go. In a way, photography was simple. I
photograph what I see, and what I see should inform. I never said no to a job. I did any job that came along, because you never know when you would get a good picture. I covered the Royals a
lot, and I photographed every president starting with Eisenhower. Each of them was different, just as every era of each presidency was different. They are human beings. You look for that
center, and that center is where they show their emotions. The photographer keeps their image alive. Nixon was always very emotional, and I knew how to get close to him. When you travel with
the president all over America and Europe, you photograph him as you see him. I had photographed him crying before. The reporters were all cynical about him, but the photographers I am
aware of thought he was a decent guy, because he treated us decently. He would call me up at the end of the day sometimes and say, “You didn’t seem quite happy. Did you get anything you
wanted today?” I was with him all the time, and he seemed to know just how to give a photographer a good photograph. Harry Benson in 1959. Express Newspapers via AP Images On this day, I was
going into an unfortunate situation. I turned up outside Nixon’s door unannounced, and they put me in this little room to wait. He knew why I was there, and he let me in. Watergate had been
building up for so long. When Nixon came into the East Room in the White House, he was smiling and putting his arm around people, acting as if nothing was going on. He was basically saying
goodbye to his staff. [Nixon announced his resignation on August 8, 1974, to take effect at noon the following day. On August 9, he spoke from the East Room to thank his Cabinet, aides and
staff in his final White House speech. “We leave with high hopes, in good spirit, and with deep humility,” Nixon said, “and with very much gratefulness in our hearts.”] Harry Benson told
AARP in 2017: During Nixon’s poignant farewell speech to his staff, Mrs. Nixon and the family stood strong, but her eyes told the story. Reporter Helen Thomas whispered to me, “Look at this
woman. She’s amazing, just amazing.” Harry Benson While he was speaking, I tried to get as close to him as I could without being objectionable. There was so much melancholy in his face and
in his voice. And then there was the First Lady. A White House correspondent named Helen Thomas turned to me and said, “Look at this woman. She’s amazing, just amazing.” She never got good
press. People called Pat Nixon “Plastic Pat” because they thought she had no facial expressions, but I found her to be the opposite. She went through a lot of [expletive]! Now here she was,
watching her husband go through this humiliation. She was really a decent woman and it was amazing watching her. I maneuvered myself to get her in the shot.