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  1. Dec 9, 2012 · Below is a representative excerpt from Macdonald’s book Henry Wallace: the Man and the Myth, published in 1948, before Wallace announced his third-party candidacy. The text of the book amplifies articles from Politics. A preview of the Stone and Kuznick book is available in Google Books. • • • Henry Wallace: the Man and the Myth (excerpt)

  2. Henry Agard Wallace (7. lokakuuta 1888 – 18. marraskuuta 1965) oli yhdysvaltalainen poliitikko. Wallace aloitti uransa republikaanina , mutta siirtyi sittemmin demokraatteihin ja vielä edelleen Edistyspuolueeseen (Progressive Party) vuonna 1948 ennen vetäytymistään politiikasta.

  3. Several significant works on post-1945 American politics have dealt with the career of Henry A. Wallace. These studies have tended to depict Wallace as a one-dimensional character, either a fuzzy-minded idealist influenced and manipulated by Communists and fellow travelers or a wise and dedicated apostle of peace fighting a losing battle to prevent the Cold War.

  4. Henry A. Wallace was the 33rd Vice President of the United States under Franklin D. Roosevelt. He also served the Roosevelt administration as Secretary of Agriculture and Secretary of Commerce, and he championed the New Deal, which launched many of the economic programs and infrastructure we use today.

  5. May 3, 2021 · Henry A. Wallace was born on 7th October, 1888 in Adair County, Iowa. After finishing his studies at Iowa State University he started working on his grandfather's journal, Wallaces' Farmer. His father, Henry C. Wallace was the Secretary of Agriculture from 1921-24 under Warren Harding and Calvin Coolidge and Henry would go on to be President Roosevelt’s vice president from 1940 to 1944.

  6. The "Century of the Common Man" Speech (1942) Wallace, H. A. (1942). “Century of the Common Man.” Retrieved from American Rhetoric. Free World Association dinner.

  7. Henry Agard Wallace was born on October 7, 1888, near Orient, Iowa. He shared a name with his grandfather and father as well as their prominence as agricultural leaders. His grandfather was a former Presbyterian minister who edited the Iowa Homestead and converted a small farm journal into Wallace's Farmer , an agricultural newsletter widely read throughout the Midwest.