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Henry A. Wallace

Henry Agard Wallace (October 7, 1888 – November 18, 1965) was an American politician, journalist, farmer, and businessman who served as the 33rd vice president of the United States under President Franklin D. Roosevelt. He served as the 11th U.S. Secretary of Agriculture and the 10th U.S. Secretary of Commerce. He was the nominee of the new Progressive Party in the 1948 presidential election.

Henry A. Wallace
Official portrait, c. 1941–1945
33rd Vice President of the United States
In office
January 20, 1941 – January 20, 1945
PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt
Preceded byJohn Nance Garner
Succeeded byHarry S. Truman
10th United States Secretary of Commerce
In office
March 2, 1945 – September 20, 1946
President
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt
  • Harry S. Truman
Preceded byJesse H. Jones
Succeeded byW. Averell Harriman
Chair of the Supply Priorities and Allocations Board
In office
August 28, 1941 – January 16, 1942
PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byOffice abolished
Chair of the Board of Economic Warfare
In office
July 2, 1940 – July 15, 1943
PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byOffice abolished
11th United States Secretary of Agriculture
In office
March 4, 1933 – September 4, 1940
PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt
Preceded byArthur M. Hyde
Succeeded byClaude R. Wickard
Personal details
Born
Henry Agard Wallace

(1888-10-07)October 7, 1888
Orient, Iowa, U.S.
DiedNovember 18, 1965(1965-11-18) (aged 77)
Danbury, Connecticut, U.S.
Resting placeGlendale Cemetery
Political party
Other political
affiliations
Progressive "Bull Moose" (1912)
Spouse
(m. 1914)
Children3
Parent
EducationIowa State University (BS)
Signature

The oldest son of Henry C. Wallace, who served as U.S. Secretary of Agriculture from 1921 to 1924, Henry A. Wallace was born in rural Iowa in 1888. After graduating from Iowa State University in 1910, he worked as a writer and editor for his family's farm journal, Wallaces' Farmer. He also founded the Hi-Bred Corn Company, a hybrid corn company that became extremely successful. Wallace displayed intellectual curiosity about a wide array of subjects, including statistics and economics, and explored various religious and spiritual movements, including Theosophy. After his father's death in 1924, Wallace drifted away from the Republican Party; he supported Democratic nominee Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1932 presidential election.

Wallace served as Secretary of Agriculture under Roosevelt from 1933 to 1940. He strongly supported the New Deal and presided over a major shift in federal agricultural policy, implementing measures designed to curtail agricultural surpluses and to ameliorate rural poverty. Roosevelt overcame strong opposition from conservative leaders in the Democratic Party and had Wallace nominated for vice president at the 1940 Democratic National Convention. The Roosevelt-Wallace ticket won the 1940 presidential election. At the 1944 Democratic National Convention, conservative party leaders defeated Wallace's bid for renomination, placing Missouri Senator Harry S. Truman on the Democratic ticket instead. In early 1945, Roosevelt appointed Wallace as Secretary of Commerce.

Roosevelt died in April 1945 and Truman succeeded him as president. Wallace continued to serve as Secretary of Commerce until September 1946, when he was fired by Truman for delivering a speech urging conciliatory policies toward the Soviet Union.[1] Wallace and his supporters then established the nationwide Progressive Party and launched a third-party campaign for president. The Progressive platform called for conciliatory policies toward the USSR, desegregation of public schools, racial and gender equality, a national health-insurance program, and other left-wing policies. Accusations of Communist influence followed, and Wallace's association with controversial Theosophist figure Nicholas Roerich undermined his campaign; he received just 2.4% of the popular vote. Wallace broke with the Progressive Party in 1950 over the Korean War, and in a 1952 article he called the Soviet Union "utterly evil". Turning his attention back to agricultural innovation, he became a highly successful businessman. He specialized in developing and marketing hybrid seed corn and improved chickens before his death in 1965 of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).

Early life and education

Henry Agard Wallace was born on October 7, 1888, on a farm near Orient, Iowa, to Henry Cantwell Wallace and his wife, May.[2] Wallace had two younger brothers and three younger sisters.[3] His paternal grandfather, "Uncle Henry" Wallace, was a prominent landowner, newspaper editor, Republican activist, and Social Gospel advocate in Adair County, Iowa. Uncle Henry's father, John Wallace, was an Ulster-Scots immigrant from the village Kilrea in County Londonderry, Ireland, who arrived in Philadelphia in 1823.[4] May (née Broadhead) was born in New York City but was raised by an aunt in Muscatine, Iowa, after her parents' death.[5]

Wallace's family moved to Ames, Iowa, in 1892 and to Des Moines, Iowa, in 1896. In 1894, the Wallaces established an agricultural newspaper, Wallace's Farmer.[6] It became extremely successful and made the family wealthy and politically influential.[7] Wallace took a strong interest in agriculture and plants from a young age and befriended African-American botanist George Washington Carver, with whom he frequently discussed plants and other subjects.[8] Wallace was particularly interested in corn, Iowa's key crop. In 1904, he devised an experiment that disproved agronomist Perry Greeley Holden's assertion that the most aesthetically pleasing corn would produce the greatest yield.[9] Wallace graduated from West High School in 1906 and enrolled in Iowa State College later that year, majoring in animal husbandry. He joined the Hawkeye Club, a fraternal organization, and spent much of his free time continuing to study corn.[10] He also organized a political club to support Gifford Pinchot, a Progressive Republican who was head of the United States Forest Service.[11]

Journalist and farmer

 
Wallace's father, Henry Cantwell Wallace, served as secretary of agriculture from 1921 to his death in 1924.

Wallace became a full-time writer and editor for Wallace's Farmer after graduating from college in 1910. He was deeply interested in using mathematics and economics in agriculture and learned calculus as part of an effort to understand hog prices.[12] He also wrote an influential article with pioneering statistician George W. Snedecor on computational methods for correlations and regressions.[13] After his grandfather died in 1916, Wallace and his father became the coeditors of Wallace's Farmer.[14] In 1921, Wallace assumed leadership of the paper after his father accepted an appointment as Secretary of Agriculture under President Warren G. Harding.[15] His uncle lost ownership of the paper in 1932 during the Great Depression, and Wallace stopped serving as editor in 1933.[16]

In 1914, Wallace and his wife purchased a farm near Johnston, Iowa; they initially attempted to combine corn production with dairy farming, but later turned their full attention to corn.[17] Influenced by Edward Murray East, Wallace focused on producing hybrid corn, developing a variety called Copper Cross. In 1923, he reached the first-ever contract for hybrid seed production, agreeing to grant the Iowa Seed Company the sole right to grow and sell Copper Cross corn.[18] In 1926, he co-founded the Hi-Bred Corn Company to develop and produce hybrid corn. It initially turned only a small profit, but eventually became a massive financial success.[19]

Early political involvement

During World War I, Wallace and his father helped the United States Food Administration (USFA) develop policies to increase hog production.[20] After USFA director Herbert Hoover abandoned the hog production policies the Wallaces favored, the elder Wallace joined an effort to deny Hoover the presidential nomination at the 1920 Republican National Convention. Partly in response to Hoover, Wallace published Agricultural Prices, in which he advocated government policies to control agricultural prices.[21] He also warned farmers of an imminent price collapse after the war. Wallace's prediction proved accurate: a farm crisis extended into the 1920s. Reflecting a broader decrease in agricultural prices, the corn prices fell from $1.68 per bushel in 1918 to $0.42 per bushel in 1921.[22] Wallace proposed various remedies to combat the farm crisis, which he believed stemmed primarily from overproduction. Among his proposed policies was the "ever-normal granary": the government buys and stores agricultural surpluses when agricultural prices are low and sells them when they are high.[23]

Both Wallaces backed the McNary–Haugen Farm Relief Bill, which would have required the federal government to market and export agricultural surpluses in foreign markets. The bill was defeated in large part because of the opposition of President Calvin Coolidge, who became president after Harding's death in 1923.[24] Wallace's father died in October 1924, and in the November 1924 presidential election, Henry Wallace voted for the Progressive nominee, Robert La Follette.[25] Due, in part, to Wallace's continued lobbying, Congress passed the McNary–Haugen bill in 1927 and 1928, but Coolidge vetoed the bill both times.[26] Dissatisfied with both major party candidates in the 1928 presidential election, Wallace tried to get Illinois Governor Frank Lowden to run for president. He ultimately supported Democratic nominee Al Smith, but Hoover won a landslide victory.[27][28] The onset of the Great Depression during Hoover's administration devastated Iowa farmers as farm income fell by two-thirds from 1929 to 1932.[29] In the 1932 presidential election, Wallace campaigned for Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt, who favored the agricultural policies of Wallace and economist M. L. Wilson. He did not formally register as a Democrat until 1936.[30]

Secretary of Agriculture

After Roosevelt won the 1932 presidential election, he appointed Wallace as secretary of agriculture.[31] Despite his past affiliation with the Republican Party, Wallace strongly supported Roosevelt and his New Deal domestic program, and became a registered member of the Democratic Party in 1936.[32] Upon taking office, Wallace appointed Rexford Tugwell, a member of Roosevelt's "Brain Trust" of important advisers, as his deputy secretary. Though Roosevelt was initially focused primarily on addressing the banking crisis, Wallace and Tugwell convinced him of the necessity of quickly passing major agricultural reforms.[33] Roosevelt, Wallace, and House Agriculture Committee Chairman John Marvin Jones rallied congressional support around the Agricultural Adjustment Act, which established the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA).[34] The AAA's aim was to raise prices for commodities through artificial scarcity by using a system of "domestic allotments" that set the total output of agricultural products. It paid land owners subsidies to leave some of their land idle.[35] Farm income increased significantly in the first three years of the New Deal, as prices for commodities rose.[36] After the Agricultural Adjustment Act passed, Agriculture became the federal government's largest department.[37]

The Supreme Court struck down the Agricultural Adjustment Act in the 1936 case United States v. Butler. Wallace strongly disagreed with the Court's holding that agriculture was a "purely local activity" and thus could not be regulated by the federal government, saying, "were agriculture truly a local matter in 1936, as the Supreme Court says it is, half of the people of the United States would quickly starve."[38] He quickly proposed a new agriculture program designed to satisfy the Supreme Court's objections; under the new program, the federal government would reach rental agreements with farmers to plant green manure rather than crops like corn and wheat. Less than two months after the Supreme Court decided United States v. Butler, Roosevelt signed the Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act of 1936 into law.[39] In the 1936 presidential election, Wallace was an important surrogate in Roosevelt's campaign.[40]

In 1935, Wallace fired general counsel Jerome Frank and some other Agriculture Department officials who sought to help Southern sharecroppers by issuing a reinterpretation of the Agricultural Adjustment Act.[41] He became more committed to aiding sharecroppers and other groups of impoverished farmers during a trip to the South in late 1936, after which he wrote, "I have never seen among the peasantry of Europe poverty so abject as that which exists in this favorable cotton year in the great cotton states." He helped lead passage of the Bankhead–Jones Farm Tenant Act of 1937, which authorized the federal government to issue loans to tenant farmers so that they could purchase land and equipment. The law also established the Farm Security Administration,[a] which was charged with ameliorating rural poverty, within the Agriculture Department.[42] The failure of Roosevelt's Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937 (the "court-packing plan"), the onset of the Recession of 1937–38, and a wave of strikes led by John L. Lewis badly damaged the Roosevelt administration's ability to pass major legislation after 1936.[43] Nonetheless, Wallace helped lead passage of the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938, which implemented Wallace's ever-normal granary plan.[44] Between 1932 and 1940, the Agriculture Department grew from 40,000 employees and an annual budget of $280 million to 146,000 employees and an annual budget of $1.5 billion.[45]

A Republican wave in the 1938 elections effectively brought an end to the New Deal legislative program, and the Roosevelt administration increasingly focused on foreign policy.[46] Unlike many Midwestern progressives, Wallace supported internationalist policies, such as Secretary of State Cordell Hull's efforts to lower tariffs.[47] He joined Roosevelt in attacking the aggressive actions of Nazi Germany and the Empire of Japan, and in one speech derided Nazi eugenics as a "mumbo-jumbo of dangerous nonsense."[48] After World War II broke out in September 1939, Wallace supported Roosevelt's program of military buildup and, anticipating hostilities with Germany, pushed for initiatives like a synthetic rubber program and closer trade relations with Latin American countries.[49]

Vice presidency (1941–1945)

Election of 1940

 
1940 electoral vote results

As Roosevelt refused to commit to either retiring or seeking reelection[b] during his second term, supporters of Wallace and other leading Democrats such as Vice President John Nance Garner and Postmaster General James Farley laid the groundwork for a presidential campaign in the 1940 election.[50] After the outbreak of World War II in Europe in September 1939, Wallace publicly endorsed a third term for Roosevelt.[51] Though Roosevelt never declared his candidacy, the 1940 Democratic National Convention nominated him for president.[52] Shortly after being nominated, Roosevelt told party leaders that he insisted on Wallace for vice president. A recent convert to the Democratic Party, Wallace was not popular among its leaders and had never been tested in an election.[53] But he had a strong base of support among farmers, had been a loyal lieutenant to Roosevelt in domestic and foreign policy, and was in good health.[54][55] Roosevelt convinced James F. Byrnes, Paul V. McNutt, and other contenders for the vice-presidential nomination to support Wallace, but conservative Democrats rallied around the candidacy of Speaker of the House William B. Bankhead. Eventually, Wallace won the nomination by a wide margin.[56]

Though many Democrats were disappointed by Wallace's nomination, it was generally well received by newspapers. Arthur Krock of The New York Times wrote that Wallace was "able, thoughtful, honorable–the best of the New Deal type."[57] Wallace left office as Secretary of Agriculture in September 1940, and was succeeded by Undersecretary of Agriculture Claude R. Wickard.[58] The Roosevelt campaign settled on a strategy of keeping Roosevelt largely out of the fray of the election, leaving most of the campaigning to Wallace and other surrogates. Wallace was dispatched to the Midwest, giving speeches in states like Iowa, Illinois, and Missouri. He made foreign affairs the main focus of his campaigning, telling one audience that "the replacement of Roosevelt ... would cause [Adolf] Hitler to rejoice."[59] Both campaigns predicted a close election, but Roosevelt won 449 of the 531 electoral votes and the popular vote by nearly ten points.[60] After the election, Wallace toured Mexico as a goodwill ambassador, delivering a well-received speech regarding Pan-Americanism and Roosevelt's Good Neighbor policy. Upon his return, Wallace convinced the Rockefeller Foundation to establish an agricultural experiment center in Mexico, the first of many such centers the Rockefeller Foundation and the Ford Foundation established.[61][c]

Tenure

 
Wallace in 1940

Wallace was sworn in as vice president on January 20, 1941. He quickly grew frustrated with his ceremonial role as the presiding officer of the United States Senate, the one duty the Constitution assigns the vice president.[63] In July 1941, Roosevelt named Wallace chairman of the Board of Economic Warfare (BEW)[d] and of the Supply Priorities and Allocations Board (SPAB).[65] These appointments gave him a voice in organizing national mobilization for war. One journalist noted that Roosevelt made Wallace the first "Vice President to work really as the number two man in government–a conception of the vice presidency popularly held but never realized."[66] Reflecting Wallace's role in organizing mobilization efforts, many journalists began calling him the "Assistant President."[67][68] Wallace was also named to the Top Policy Group, which advised Roosevelt on the development of nuclear weapons, an initiative Wallace supported. He did not hold any official role in the subsequent Manhattan Project, which developed the first nuclear weapons, but he was informed of its progress.[69]

The Century of the Common Man (excerpt)

"Some have spoken of the "American Century." I say that the century on which we are entering—the century which will come into being after this war—can be and must be the century of the common man.

Perhaps it will be America's opportunity to—to support the Freedom[s] and Duties by which the common man must live. Everywhere, the common man must learn to build his own industries with his own hands in practical fashion. Everywhere, the common man must learn to increase his productivity so that he and his children can eventually pay to the world community all that they have received. No nation will have the God-given right to exploit other nations. Older nations will have the privilege to help younger nations get started on the path to industrialization, but there must be neither military nor economic imperialism."[70]

Economic conditions became chaotic, and Roosevelt decided new leadership was needed.[71] In early 1942 he established the War Production Board with businessman Donald Nelson in charge as Wallace became a minor member of the War Production Board. He continued to serve as head of the BEW, which was now far less important: it was now charged with importing the raw materials such as rubber necessary for war production.[72][73] Wallace struggled to carve out authority for the BEW, demanding that American purchases in Latin America raise the standard of living of the workers. In the process he clashed privately with Secretary of State Cordell Hull, who opposed American interference in another state's internal affairs. The national media dramatically covered Wallace's public battle with Jesse H. Jones, the Secretary of Commerce who was also in charge of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC), which paid the purchases bills BEW made.[74] Roosevelt's standard strategy for executive management was to give two different people the same role, expecting controversy would result. He wanted the agencies' heads to bring the controversy to him so he could make the decision.[75] On August 21, 1942, Roosevelt explicitly wrote to all his department heads that disagreements "should not be publicly aired, but are to be submitted to me by the appropriate heads of the conflicting agencies." Anyone going public had to resign.[76] Wallace denounced Jones for blocking funding for purchases of raw materials in Latin America needed for the war effort. Jones called on Congress and the public for help, calling Wallace a liar. According to James MacGregor Burns, Jones, a leader of Southern conservative Democrats, was "taciturn, shrewd, practical, cautious". Wallace, deeply distrusted by Democratic party leaders, was the "hero of the Lib Labs, dreamy, utopian, even mystical, yet with his own bent for management and power." On July 15, 1943, Roosevelt stripped both men of their roles in the matter. BEW was reorganized as the Office of Economic Warfare, and put under Leo Crowley. The loss of the BEW was a major blow to Wallace's prestige. He now had no agency and a weak political base on the left wing of the Democratic Party. But he still had visibility, ambition and an articulate voice, and remained a loyal Roosevelt supporter. He was not renominated for vice president but in 1945 Roosevelt fired Jones and made Wallace Secretary of Commerce.[77][78]

On May 8, 1942, Wallace delivered what became his best-remembered speech, known for containing the phrase "the Century of the Common Man". He cast World War II as a war between a "free world" and a "slave world," and held that "peace must mean a better standard of living for the common man, not merely in the United States and England, but also in India, Russia, China, and Latin America–not merely in the United Nations, but also in Germany and Italy and Japan". Some conservatives disliked the speech, but it was translated into 20 languages and millions of copies were distributed around the world.[79]

In early 1943, Wallace was dispatched on a goodwill tour of Latin America; he made 24 stops across Central America and South America. Partly due to his ability to deliver speeches in Spanish, Wallace received a warm reception; one State Department official said, "never in Chilean history has any foreigner ever been received with such extravagance and evidently sincere enthusiasm". During his trip, several Latin American countries declared war against Germany.[80] Back home, Wallace continued to deliver speeches, saying after the Detroit race riot of 1943, "we cannot fight to crush Nazi brutality abroad and condone race riots at home".[81] Though Congress largely blocked Roosevelt's domestic agenda, Wallace continued to call for progressive programs; one newspaper wrote that "the New Deal today is Henry Wallace ... the New Deal banner in his hands is not yet furled".[82] Wallace was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1943.[83]

"The American people have always had guts and always will have." — Henry A. Wallace [84]

In mid-1944, Wallace toured the Soviet Union and China.[85] The USSR presented its American guests with a fully sanitized version of labor camps in Magadan and Kolyma, claiming that all the workers were volunteers.[86] Wallace was impressed by the camp at Magadan, describing it as a "combination Tennessee Valley Authority and Hudson's Bay Company".[87][e] He received a warm reception in the Soviet Union, but was largely unsuccessful in his efforts to negotiate with Chinese leader Chiang Kai-shek.[88]

Election of 1944

After the abolition of the BEW, speculation began as to whether Roosevelt would drop Wallace from the ticket in the 1944 election.[89] Gallup polling published in March 1944 showed that Wallace was clearly the most popular choice for vice president among Democrats, and many journalists predicted that he would win renomination.[90] As Roosevelt was in declining health, party leaders expected that the party's vice-presidential nominee would eventually succeed Roosevelt,[91] and Wallace's many enemies within the Democratic Party organized to ensure his removal.[92] Much of the opposition to Wallace stemmed from his open denunciation of racial segregation in the South,[91] but others were concerned by Wallace's unorthodox religious views and pro-Soviet statements.[93] Shortly before the 1944 Democratic National Convention, party leaders such as Robert E. Hannegan and Edwin W. Pauley convinced Roosevelt to sign a document expressing support for either Associate Justice William O. Douglas or Senator Harry S. Truman for the vice-presidential nomination. Nonetheless, Wallace got Roosevelt to send a public letter to the convention chairman in which he wrote, "I personally would vote for [Wallace's] renomination if I were a delegate to the convention".[94]

With Roosevelt not committed to keeping or dropping Wallace, the vice-presidential balloting turned into a battle between those who favored Wallace and those who favored Truman.[95] Wallace did not have an effective organization to support his candidacy, though allies like Calvin Benham Baldwin, Claude Pepper, and Joseph F. Guffey pressed for him. Truman, meanwhile, was reluctant to put forward his own candidacy, but Hannegan[f] and Roosevelt convinced him to run.[97] At the convention, Wallace galvanized supporters with a well-received speech in which he lauded Roosevelt and argued that "the future belongs to those who go down the line unswervingly for the liberal principles of both political democracy and economic democracy regardless of race, color, or religion".[98] After Roosevelt delivered his acceptance speech, the crowd began chanting for the nomination of Wallace, but Samuel D. Jackson adjourned the convention for the day before Wallace supporters could call for the beginning of vice presidential balloting.[99] Party leaders worked furiously to line up support for Truman overnight, but Wallace received 429 1/2 votes (589 were needed for nomination) on the first ballot for vice president and Truman 319 1/2, with the rest going to various favorite son candidates. On the second ballot, many delegates who had voted for favorite sons shifted into Truman's camp, giving him the nomination.[100]

On January 20, 1945, Wallace swore in Truman as his vice-presidential successor.[101]

Secretary of Commerce (1945–1946)

 
Secretary of Commerce Henry Wallace

Wallace believed that Democratic party leaders had unfairly stolen the vice-presidential nomination from him, but he supported Roosevelt in the 1944 presidential election. Hoping to mend ties with Wallace, Roosevelt offered him any position in the Cabinet other than secretary of state, and Wallace asked to replace Jones as secretary of commerce.[102] In that position, Wallace expected to play a key role in the economy's postwar transition.[103] In January 1945, with the end of Wallace's vice presidency, Roosevelt nominated Wallace for secretary of commerce.[104] The nomination prompted an intense debate, as many senators objected to his support for liberal policies designed to boost wages and employment.[105] Conservatives failed to block the nomination, but Senator Walter F. George led passage of a measure removing the Reconstruction Finance Corporation from the Commerce Department.[106] After Roosevelt signed George's bill, Wallace was confirmed by a vote of 56 to 32 on March 1, 1945.[107]

Roosevelt died on April 12, 1945, and was succeeded by Truman.[108] Truman quickly replaced most other senior Roosevelt appointees,[g] but retained Wallace, who remained very popular with liberal Democrats.[110] The discontent of liberal leaders strengthened Wallace's position in the Cabinet; Truman privately stated that the two most important members of his "political team" were Wallace and Eleanor Roosevelt.[111] As secretary of commerce, Wallace advocated a "middle course" between the planned economy of the Soviet Union and the laissez-faire economics that had dominated the United States before the Great Depression. With his congressional allies, he led passage of the Employment Act of 1946. Conservatives blocked the inclusion of a measure providing for full employment, but the act established the Council of Economic Advisers and the Joint Economic Committee to study economic matters.[112] Wallace's proposal to establish international control over nuclear weapons was not adopted, but he did help pass the Atomic Energy Act of 1946, which established the United States Atomic Energy Commission to oversee domestic development of nuclear power.[113]

World War II ended in September 1945 with the Surrender of Japan, and relations with the USSR became a central matter of foreign policy. Various issues, including the fate of European and Asian postwar governments and the administration of the United Nations, had already begun to strain the wartime alliance between the Soviet Union and the United States.[114] Critics of the USSR objected to the oppressive satellite states it had established in Eastern Europe and Soviet involvement in the Greek Civil War and the Chinese Civil War. In February 1946, George F. Kennan laid out the doctrine of containment, which called for the United States to resist the spread of Communism.[115] Wallace feared that confrontational policies toward the Soviet Union would eventually lead to war, and urged Truman to "allay any reasonable Russian grounds for fear, suspicion, and distrust".[116] Historian Tony Judt wrote in Postwar that Wallace's "distaste for American involvement with Britain and Europe was widely shared across the political spectrum".[117]

Though Wallace was dissatisfied with Truman's increasingly confrontational policies toward the Soviet Union, he remained an integral part of Truman's Cabinet during the first half of 1946.[118] He broke with administration policies in September 1946 when he delivered a speech in which he stated that "we should recognize that we have no more business in the political affairs of Eastern Europe than Russia has in the political affairs of Latin America, Western Europe and the United States". Wallace's speech was booed by the pro-Soviet crowd he delivered it to and even more strongly criticized by Truman administration officials and leading Republicans like Robert A. Taft and Arthur Vandenberg.[119] Truman stated that Wallace's speech did not represent administration policy but merely Wallace's personal views, and on September 20 he demanded and received Wallace's resignation.[120]

1948 presidential election

Shortly after leaving office, Wallace became the editor of The New Republic, a progressive magazine.[121] He also helped establish the Progressive Citizens of America (PCA), a progressive political organization that called for good relations with the Soviet Union and more liberal programs at home. Though not a member of the PCA, Wallace was widely regarded as the organization's leader and was criticized for the PCA's acceptance of Communist members. In response to the creation of the PCA, anti-Communist liberals established a rival group, Americans for Democratic Action (ADA), which explicitly rejected any association with Communism.[122] Wallace strongly criticized the president in early 1947 after Truman promulgated the Truman Doctrine to oppose Communist threats to Greece and Turkey. Wallace also opposed Truman's Executive Order 9835, which began a purge of government workers affiliated Communist groups deemed to be subversive.[123] He initially favored the Marshall Plan, but later opposed it because he believed the program should have been administered through the United Nations.[124] Wallace and the PCA were scrutinized by the FBI and the House Un-American Activities Committee, both of which sought to uncover evidence of Communist influence.[125]

Many in the PCA favored the establishment of a third party, but other longtime Wallace allies warned him against leaving the Democratic Party.[126] On December 29, 1947, Wallace launched a third party campaign, declaring, "we have assembled a Gideon's Army, small in number, powerful in conviction ... We face the future unfettered, unfettered by any principal but the general welfare".[127] He was backed by many Hollywood and Broadway celebrities, and intellectuals. Among his prominent supporters were Rexford Tugwell, Congressmen Vito Marcantonio and Leo Isacson, musicians Paul Robeson and Pete Seeger, and future presidential nominee George McGovern.[128] Calvin Baldwin became Wallace's campaign manager and took charge of fundraising and ensuring that Wallace appeared on as many state ballots as possible.[129] Wallace's first choice for running mate, Claude Pepper, refused to leave the Democratic Party, but Democratic Senator Glen H. Taylor of Idaho agreed to serve as Wallace's running mate.[130] Wallace accepted the endorsement of the American Communist Party, stating, "I'm not following their line. If they want to follow my line, I say God bless 'em".[131] Truman responded to Wallace's left-wing challenge by pressing for liberal domestic policies, while pro-ADA liberals like Hubert Humphrey, Robert F. Wagner, and James Roosevelt linked Wallace to the Soviet Union and the Communist Party.[132] Many Americans came to see Wallace as a fellow traveler to Communists, a view that was reinforced by Wallace's refusal to condemn the 1948 Czechoslovak coup d'état.[133] In early 1948, the CIO and the AFL both rejected Wallace, with the AFL denouncing him as a "front, spokesman, and apologist for the Communist Party".[134] With Wallace's foreign policy views overshadowing his domestic policy views, many liberals who had previously favored his candidacy returned to the Democratic fold.[135]

Wallace embarked on a nationwide speaking tour to support his candidacy, encountering resistance in both the North and South.[136] He openly defied the Jim Crow regime in the South, refusing to speak before segregated audiences.[137] Time magazine, which opposed Wallace's candidacy, described him as "ostentatiously" riding through the towns and cities of the segregated South "with his Negro secretary beside him".[138] A barrage of eggs and tomatoes were hurled at Wallace and struck him and his campaign members during the tour. State authorities in Virginia sidestepped enforcing their own segregation laws by declaring Wallace's campaign gatherings private parties.[139] The Pittsburgh Press began publishing the names of known Wallace supporters. Scores of Wallace supporters in colleges and high schools lost their positions.[140]

With strong financial support from Anita McCormick Blaine, Wallace exceeded fundraising goals, and appeared on the ballot of every state except for Oklahoma, Nebraska, and Illinois.[141] The campaign distributed 25 million copies of 140 fliers and pamphlets. Nevertheless, Gallup polls showed support for Wallace falling from 7% in December 1947 to 5% in June 1948. He was endorsed by only two newspapers: the Communist Daily Worker in New York and The Gazette and Daily in York, Pennsylvania. Some in the press began to speculate that Wallace would drop out of the race.[142]

Wallace's supporters held a national convention in Philadelphia in July, formally establishing a new Progressive Party.[143][h] The party platform addressed a wide array of issues, and included support for the desegregation of public schools, gender equality, a national health insurance program, free trade, and public ownership of large banks, railroads, and power utilities.[145][i] Another part of the platform stated, "responsibility for ending the tragic prospect of war is a joint responsibility of the Soviet Union and the United States".[147] During the convention, Wallace faced questioning regarding letters he had written to guru Nicholas Roerich; his refusal to comment on the letters was widely criticized.[148] Wallace was further damaged days after the convention when Whittaker Chambers and Elizabeth Bentley testified before the House Un-American Activities Committee that several government officials associated with Wallace (including Alger Hiss and John Abt) were Communist infiltrators.[149] Meanwhile, many Southern Democrats, outraged by the Democratic Party's pro-civil rights plank, bolted the party and nominated Strom Thurmond for president. With the Democrats badly divided, Republicans were confident that Republican nominee Thomas Dewey would win the election.[150] Wallace himself predicted that Truman would be "the worst defeated candidate in history".[151]

Though polls consistently showed him losing the race, Truman ran an effective campaign against Dewey and the conservative 80th United States Congress. He ultimately defeated Dewey in both the popular and electoral vote.[152] Wallace won just 2.38 percent of the nationwide popular vote, and failed to carry any state. His best performance was in New York, where he won eight percent of the vote. Just one of the party's congressional candidates, incumbent Congressman Vito Marcantonio, won election.[153] Though Wallace and Thurmond probably took many voters from Truman, their presence in the race may have boosted the president's overall appeal by casting him as the candidate of the center-left.[154] In response to the election results, Wallace stated, "Unless this bi-partisan foreign policy of high prices and war is promptly reversed, I predict that the Progressive Party will rapidly grow into the dominant party. ... To save the peace of the world the Progressive Party is more needed than ever before".[153]

Historians Edward Schapsmeier and Frederick Schapsmeier argue:[155]

The Progressive party stood for one thing and Wallace another. Actually the party organization was controlled from the outset by those representing the radical left and not liberalism per se. This made it extremely easy for Communists and fellow travelers to infiltrate into important positions within the party machinery. Once this happened, party stands began to resemble a party line. Campaign literature, speech materials, and campaign slogans sounded strangely like echoes of what Moscow wanted to hear. As if wearing moral blinkers, Wallace increasingly became an imperceptive ideologue. Words were uttered by Wallace that did not sound like him, and his performance took on a strange Jekyll and Hyde quality—one moment he was a peace protagonist and the next a propaganda parrot for the Kremlin.

Later politics

Wallace initially remained active in politics following the 1948 campaign, and he delivered the keynote address at the 1950 Progressive National Convention. In early 1949, Wallace testified before Congress in the hope of preventing the ratification of the North Atlantic Treaty, which established the NATO alliance between the United States, Canada, and several European countries.[156] He became increasingly critical of the Soviet Union after 1948, and he resigned from the Progressive Party in August 1950 due to his support for the UN intervention in the Korean War.[157] After leaving the Progressive Party, Wallace endured what biographers John Culver and John Hyde describe as a "long, slow decline into obscurity marked by a certain acceptance of his outcast status".[158]

In the early 1950s, he spent much of his time rebutting attacks by prominent public figures like General Leslie Groves, who claimed to have stopped providing Wallace with information regarding the Manhattan Project because he considered Wallace to be a security risk. In 1951, Wallace appeared before Congress to deny accusations that in 1944 he had encouraged a coalition between Chiang Kai-shek and the Chinese Communists.[159] In 1952, he published an article, "Where I Was Wrong," in which he repudiated his earlier foreign policy positions and declared the Soviet Union to be "utterly evil".[67][160] Wallace did not endorse a candidate in the 1952 presidential election, but in the 1956 presidential election he endorsed incumbent Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower over Democratic nominee Adlai Stevenson. Wallace, who maintained a correspondence with Eisenhower, described Eisenhower as "utterly sincere" in his efforts for peace.[161] Wallace also began a correspondence with Vice President Richard Nixon, but he declined to endorse either Nixon or Democratic nominee John F. Kennedy in the 1960 presidential election. Though Wallace criticized Kennedy's farm policy during the 1960 campaign, Kennedy invited Wallace to his 1961 inauguration, the first presidential inauguration Wallace had attended since 1945. Wallace later wrote Kennedy, "at no time in our history have so many tens of millions of people been so completely enthusiastic about an inaugural address as about yours". In 1962, he delivered a speech commemorating the centennial anniversary of the establishment of the Department of Agriculture.[162] He also began a correspondence with President Lyndon B. Johnson regarding methods to alleviate rural poverty, though privately he criticized Johnson's escalation of American involvement in the Vietnam War.[163] In the 1964 election, Wallace returned to the Democratic fold, supporting Johnson over Republican nominee Barry Goldwater.[164] Due to declining health, he made his last public appearance that year; in one of his last speeches, he stated, "We lost Cuba in 1959 not only because of Castro but also because we failed to understand the needs of the farmer in the back country of Cuba from 1920 onward. ... The common man is on the march, but it is up to the uncommon men of education and insight to lead that march constructively".[165]

Business success

Wallace continued to co-own and take an interest in the company he had established, Pioneer Hi-Bred (formerly the Hi-Bred Corn Company), and he established an experimental farm at his New York estate. He focused much of his efforts on the study of chickens, and Pioneer Hi-Bred's chickens at one point produced three-quarters of all commercially sold eggs worldwide. He also wrote or co-wrote several works on agriculture, including a book on the history of corn.[166]

Illness and death

Wallace was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) in 1964, at the age of 76. He consulted numerous specialists and tried various methods of treating the disease, stating, "I look on myself as an ALS guinea-pig, willing to try almost anything".[167] He died in Danbury, Connecticut, on November 18, 1965, at the age of 77.[168] His remains were cremated and the ashes interred in Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines, Iowa.[169] Due to his successful business career and investments, he left an estate valued at tens of millions of dollars.[170]

Family

In 1913, Wallace met Ilo Browne, the daughter of a successful businessman from Indianola, Iowa.[171] Wallace and Browne married on May 20, 1914, and had three children.[168] Henry Browne was born in 1915, Robert Browne was born in 1918, and Jean Browne was born in 1920.[172] Wallace and his family lived in Des Moines until Wallace accepted appointment as secretary of agriculture, at which point they began living in an apartment at Wardman Park in Washington, D.C.[173] In 1945, Wallace and his wife purchased a 115-acre farm near South Salem, New York known as Farvue.[174] Ilo was supportive of her husband's career and enjoyed serving as Second Lady of the United States from 1941 to 1945, though she was uncomfortable with many of Wallace's Progressive supporters during his 1948 presidential campaign.[175] Wallace and Ilo remained married until his death in 1965; she lived until 1981. In 1999, Wallace's three children sold their shares in Pioneer Hi-Bred to DuPont for well over $1 billion.[172] Wallace's grandson, Scott Wallace, won the Democratic nomination for Pennsylvania's 1st congressional district in the 2018 elections. He was defeated by Republican incumbent, Brian Fitzpatrick, in the general election.[176]

Mysticism and Roerich controversy

 
Wallace associated with controversial émigré Russian Theosophist Nicholas Roerich

Wallace was raised a Calvinist but showed an interest in other religious teachings during his life.[68] He was deeply interested in religion from a young age, reading works by authors like Ralph Waldo Emerson, Ralph Waldo Trine, and William James, whose The Varieties of Religious Experience had a particularly strong impact on Wallace.[177] After his grandfather's death in 1916, he left the Presbyterian Church and became increasingly interested in mysticism. He later said, "I know I am often called a mystic, and in the years following my leaving the United Presbyterian Church I was probably a practical mystic… I'd say I was a mystic in the sense that George Washington Carver was – who believed God was in everything and therefore, if you went to God, you could find the answers". Wallace began regularly attending meetings of the pantheistic Theosophical Society, and, in 1925, he helped organize the Des Moines parish of the Liberal Catholic Church.[178] Wallace left the Liberal Catholic Church in 1930 and joined the Episcopal Church, but he continued to be interested in various mystic groups and individuals.[179]

Among those who Wallace corresponded with were author George William Russell,[180] astrologer L. Edward Johndro, and Edward Roos, who took on the persona of a Native American medicine man.[181] In the early 1930s, Wallace began corresponding with Nicholas Roerich, a prominent Russian émigré, artist, peace activist, and Theosophist.[182] With Wallace's support, Roerich was appointed to lead a federal expedition to the Gobi Desert to collect drought-resistant grasses.[183] Roerich's expedition ended in a public fiasco, and Roerich fled to India after the Internal Revenue Service launched a tax investigation.[184]

The letters that Wallace wrote to Roerich from 1933 to 1934 were eventually acquired by Republican newspaper publisher Paul Block.[185] The Republicans threatened to reveal to the public what they characterized as Wallace's bizarre religious beliefs before the November 1940 elections but were deterred when the Democrats countered by threatening to release information about Republican candidate Wendell Willkie's rumored extramarital affair with the writer Irita Van Doren.[186] The contents of the letters did become public seven years later, in the winter of 1947, when right-wing columnist Westbrook Pegler published what were purported to be extracts from them as evidence that Wallace was a "messianic fumbler", and "off-center mentally". During the 1948 campaign Pegler and other hostile reporters, including H. L. Mencken, aggressively confronted Wallace on the subject at a public meeting in Philadelphia in July. Wallace declined to comment, accusing the reporters of being Pegler's stooges.[187] Many press outlets were critical of Wallace's association with Roerich; one newspaper mockingly wrote that if Wallace became president "we shall get in tune with the Infinite, vibrate in the correct plane, outstare the Evil Eye, reform the witches, overcome all malicious spells and ascend the high road to health and happiness".[188]

Henry Wallace reportedly dabbled in Zoroastrianism and Buddhism.[189][190][191][192]

Legacy

During his time in the Roosevelt administration, Wallace became a controversial figure, attracting a mix of praise and criticism for various actions.[193][68] He remains a controversial figure today.[194][195][196] Historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. pronounced Wallace to be both "an incorrigibly naive politician" and "the best secretary of agriculture the country has ever had".[197] Journalist Peter Beinart writes that Wallace's "naive faith in U.S.-Soviet cooperation" damaged his legacy. Historian Andrew Seal lauds Wallace for his focus on combating both economic and racial inequality.[195] Wallace's vision of the "Century of the Common Man," which denied American exceptionalism in foreign policy, continues to influence the foreign policy of individuals like Bernie Sanders.[198] In 2013, historian Thomas W. Devine wrote that "newly available Soviet sources do confirm Wallace's position that Moscow's behavior was not as relentlessly aggressive as many believed at the time". Yet Devine also writes that "enough new information has come to light to cast serious doubt both on Wallace's benign attitude toward Stalin's intentions and on his dark, conspiratorial view of the Truman administration".[199]

Alex Ross of The New Yorker writes, "with the exception of Al Gore, Wallace remains the most famous almost-president in American history".[67] Journalist Jeff Greenfield writes that the 1944 Democratic National Convention was one of the most important political events of the twentieth century, since the leading contenders for the nomination might have governed in vastly different ways.[91] In The Untold History of the United States, Oliver Stone argues that, had Wallace become president in 1945, "there might have been no atomic bombings, no nuclear arms race, and no Cold War".[200][201] By contrast, Ron Capshaw of the conservative National Review argues that a President Wallace would have practiced a policy of appeasement that would have allowed the spread of Communism into countries like Iran, Greece, and Italy.[202]

The Henry A. Wallace Beltsville Agricultural Research Center in Beltsville, Maryland, the largest agricultural research complex in the world, is named for him. Wallace founded the Wallace Genetic Foundation to support agricultural research. His son, Robert, founded the Wallace Global Fund to support sustainable development.[194] A speech Wallace delivered in 1942 inspired Aaron Copland to compose Fanfare for the Common Man.[67] The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum's grounds in Hyde Park, New York, include the Henry A. Wallace Visitor and Education Center at its north end.

Books

  • Agricultural Prices (1920)
  • Corn and Corn-Growing with E. N. Bressman (1923)
  • When to feed corn, when to sell it (1923)
  • Correlation and machine calculation with George W. Snedecor (1925)
  • New administration and farm relief (1933)
  • America must choose (1934)
  • Charted course toward stable prosperity (1934)
  • New frontiers (1934)
  • Research and adjustment march together (1934)
  • Statesmanship and religion (1934)
  • Working together in the corn-hog program (1934)
  • Cooperation: the dominant economic idea of the future (1936)
  • Whose Constitution? An inquiry into the general welfare (1936)
  • Technology, corporations, and the general welfare (1937)
  • Paths to plenty (1938)
  • American choice (1940)
  • Price of freedom (1940)
    • Preço da liberdade (1942)
  • Pan American friendship (1941)
  • ¿Que hara Norteamérica? (1941)
  • Después de la guerra debe comenzar el siglo del hombre del pueblo (1942)
  • Price of free world victory (1942)
    • Precio de la victoria (1942)
  • Why did God make America? (1942)
  • America's part in world reconstruction (1943)
  • Century of the Common Man (1943)[203][204]
    • Century of the common man (UK) (1944)
  • Christian bases of world order (1943)
  • Discursos pronunciados en Lima (1943)
  • Ideales comunes (1943)
  • New world theme: The price of free world victory (1943)
  • Democracy first: What we fight for (1944)
  • Our job in the Pacific (1944)
  • Sixty million jobs (1945)
    • Arbeit für sechzig Millionen Menschen (1946)
    • Ocupación para sesenta millones (1946)
    • Lavoro per tutti (1946)
    • Hua-lai-shih ti hu shêng (1947)
  • Era del popolo (1946)
  • Fight for peace (1946)
  • Soviet Asia mission Andrew J. Steiger (1946)
    • Ma mission en Asie soviétique (1947)
    • Sondermission in Sowjet-Asien und China (1947)
    • Misiya v Savetska Aziya (1948)
  • Toward world peace (1948)
    • Naar wereldvrede (1948)
    • Vers la paix (1948)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The Farm Security Administration succeeded the Resettlement Administration, which had been an independent agency.
  2. ^ The Twenty-second Amendment, ratified in 1951, would later prevent presidents from running for a third term.
  3. ^ Norman Borlaug would later credit Wallace as a key initiator of the Green Revolution.[62]
  4. ^ The BEW was originally known as the Economic Defense Board[64]
  5. ^ Wallace later regretted his praise of the camp at Magadan, writing in 1952 that he "had not the slightest idea when I visited Magadan that this ... was also the center for administering the labor of both criminals and those suspected of political disloyalty".[87]
  6. ^ Hannegan later stated that he would like his tombstone to read, "here lies the man who stopped Henry Wallace from becoming President of the United States".[96]
  7. ^ After the resignation of Harold L. Ickes in February 1946, Wallace was the lone remaining holdover from Roosevelt's Cabinet.[109]
  8. ^ The party was influenced by, and took the same name as, defunct parties that had backed Theodore Roosevelt (in 1912) and Robert La Follette (in 1924).[144]
  9. ^ Wallace did not dictate the party platform, and he personally opposed public ownership of banks, railroads, and utilities.[146]

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Sources

  • Culver, John C.; Hyde, John (2000). American Dreamer: A Life of Henry A. Wallace. W. W. Norton. ISBN 0-393-04645-1.
  • Devine, Thomas W. (2013). Henry Wallace's 1948 Presidential Campaign and the Future of Postwar Liberalism. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1469602035.; online review
  • Donovan, Robert J. (1977). Conflict and Crisis: the Presidency of Harry S. Truman, 1945–1948. University of Missouri Press. ISBN 978-0393056365.
  • Karabell, Zachary (2007). The Last Campaign: How Harry Truman Won the 1948 Election. Knopf Doubleday. ISBN 9780307428868.
  • Kennedy, David M. (1999). Freedom from Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929–1945. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195038347.
  • Malsberger, John William (2000). From Obstruction to Moderation: The Transformation of Senate Conservatism, 1938–1952. Susquehanna University Press. ISBN 978-1575910260.
  • Nichols, John (2020). The Fight for the Soul of the Democratic Party: The Enduring Legacy of Henry Wallace's Anti-Fascist, Anti-Racist Politics. Verso Books. ISBN 978-1788737401.
  • Patterson, James T. (1996). Grand Expectations: The United States, 1945–1974. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199743957.
  • Schapsmeier, Edward L.; Schapsmeier, Frederick H. (1968). Henry A. Wallace in Iowa: The Agrarian Years, 1910–1940. Iowa University Press. ISBN 978-0813817415.
  • Schapsmeier, Edward L.; Schapsmeier, Frederick H. (1970). Prophet in Politics: Henry A. Wallace and the War Years, 1940–1965. Iowa University Press. ISBN 9780813812953.

Further reading

Secondary sources

  • Busch, Andrew E. "Last Gasp: Henry A. Wallace and the End of the Popular Front." (2014) 42#4: 712-717. online
  • Herman, Arthur (2012). Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II. Random House. ISBN 978-1400069644.
  • Janeway, Eliot. The Struggle for Survival: A Chronicle of Economic Mobilization in World War II (Yale University Press. 1951). online
  • Jordan, David M. (2011). FDR, Dewey, and the Election of 1944. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0253356833.
  • Leebaert, Derek. Unlikely Heroes: Franklin Roosevelt, His Four Lieutenants, and the World They Made (2023); on Perkins, Ickes, Wallace and Hopkins.
  • Lord, Russell (1947). The Wallaces of Iowa. Houghton-Mifflin. A Life-in-America prize book. OCLC 475422.
  • MacDonald, Dwight (1948). Henry Wallace: The Man and the Myth. Vanguard Press. OCLC 597926.; ridicules and debunks Wallace. online
  • Markowitz, Norman D. (1973). The Rise and Fall of the People's Century: Henry A. Wallace and American Liberalism, 1941–1948. Free Press. ISBN 978-0029200902.
  • Maze, John; White, Graham (1995). Henry A. Wallace: His Search for a New World Order. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0807821893.
  • McCoy, Donald R. (1984). The Presidency of Harry S. Truman. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0700602520.
  • Pietrusza, David (2011). 1948: Harry Truman's Improbable Victory and the Year that Changed America. Union Square Press. ISBN 978-1402767487.
  • Shimamoto, Mayako (2016). Henry A. Wallace's Criticism of America's Atomic Monopoly, 1945-1948. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 978-1443899512.
  • Schapsmeier, Edward L., and Frederick H. Schapsmeier. "Henry A. Wallace: Agrarian Idealist or Agricultural Realist?" Agricultural History 41.2 (1967): 127-138 online.
  • Schapsmeier, Edward L. and Frederick H. Schapsmeier. "Henry A Wallace: New Deal Philosopher." Historian 32.2 (1970): 177-190. online
  • Schmidt, Karl M. (1960). Henry A. Wallace, Quixotic Crusade 1948. Syracuse University Press. ISBN 0815600208.
  • Timmons, Bascom N. Jesse H. Jones, the man and the statesman (1951) online ch 29 on feud with Wallace.
  • Walker, J. Samuel (1976). Henry A. Wallace and American Foreign Policy. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0837187747. online
  • Walton, Richard J. Henry Wallace, Harry Truman, and the Cold War (1976) online
  • Witcover, Jules (2014). The American Vice Presidency: From Irrelevance to Power. Smithsonian Institution. ISBN 978-1588344724.

Bibliography: Works by Wallace

Books

  • Agricultural Prices (1920)
  • Corn and Growing Corn (1937), with Earl N. Bressman.
  • When to Feed Corn, When to Sell It (1923)
  • New Administration and Farm Relief (1933)
  • Charted Course Toward Stable Prosperity (1934)
  • New Frontiers (1934)
  • America Must Choose (1934)
  • Statesmanship and Religion (1934)
  • Whose Constitution? An Inquiry Into the General Welfare (1936)
  • The Century of the Common Man (1943) Illustrations by Hugo Gellert. Foreword by Carl Sandburg.
Hugo Gellert created a series of twenty silk screen prints to be used as artwork. The original prints are now in the digital collection at the Whitney Museum of American Art.[1]
  • Democracy Reborn (1944)
  • Sixty Million Jobs (1945)
  • Soviet Asia Mission (1946)
  • Toward World Peace (1948)
  • Where I Was Wrong (1952)
  • The Price of Vision: The Diary of Henry A. Wallace 1942–1946 (1973), edited by John Morton Blum.

Articles and essays

Pamphlets

  • Cooperation: The Dominant Economic Idea of the Future. New York: Cooperative League (1936). OCLC 25488777. 16 p.

Book contributions

Published addresses

  • Agricultural Price Outlook (1923).
An address to the 28th annual meeting of the Illinois Farmers' Institute in Belleville, Illinois, on February 21, 1923. Published by the Illinois Farmers' Institute.
"Remarks by Hon. H.A. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture, delivered in the Department of Agriculture period of the National Farm and Home Hour, broadcast by 50 associate N.B.C. radio stations, Thursday, May 10, 1934."
"Adapted in the Division of Information from an address by Henry A. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture, before the annual meeting of the National Cooperative Milk Producers' Federation at Baltimore, Md., November 2, 1931."
  • Technology, Corporations, and the General Welfare (1937)
Speech delivered on June 24, 1937. Published by the University of North Carolina Press.
  • An American Income for Cotton (1938)
"Adapted from an address by Henry A. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture, before a meeting of farmers, A.A.A. committeemen, and others, at Fort Worth, Texas, September 30, 1938."
"A speech delivered May 8, 1942 articulating the goals of the war for the allies."[2]
"An address delivered May 8, 1942 to the members and guests of the Free World Association at a dinner at the Hotel Commodore in New York. Published in collaboration with the Free World Movement."
  • The Century of the Common Man (1942)
A speech delivered November 8, 1942, at the Congress of American-Soviet Friendship Mass Meeting in New York. He further expanded on the subject since his delivery of a similar speech earlier that year.[2]
  • America Tomorrow (1943)
An address delivered July 25, 1943, at the Mass Meeting of Labor and Civic Organizations in Detroit, Michigan.

External links


Political offices
Preceded by United States Secretary of Agriculture
1933–1940
Succeeded by
Preceded by Vice President of the United States
1941–1945
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Secretary of Commerce
1945–1946
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Vice President of the United States
1940
Succeeded by
New political party Progressive nominee for President of the United States
1948
Succeeded by
Preceded by American Labor nominee for President of the United States
Endorsed

1948
  1. ^ Gellert, Hugo. Whitney Museum of American Art, accessed May 8, 2021. Archived from the original.
  2. ^ a b Wallace, Henry A. The Century of the Common Man. New York: International Workers Order, 1943. Full text available at Florida International University.

henry, wallace, other, people, with, similar, names, henry, wallace, henry, agard, wallace, october, 1888, november, 1965, american, politician, journalist, farmer, businessman, served, 33rd, vice, president, united, states, under, president, franklin, rooseve. For other people with similar names see Henry Wallace Henry Agard Wallace October 7 1888 November 18 1965 was an American politician journalist farmer and businessman who served as the 33rd vice president of the United States under President Franklin D Roosevelt He served as the 11th U S Secretary of Agriculture and the 10th U S Secretary of Commerce He was the nominee of the new Progressive Party in the 1948 presidential election Henry A WallaceOfficial portrait c 1941 194533rd Vice President of the United StatesIn office January 20 1941 January 20 1945PresidentFranklin D RooseveltPreceded byJohn Nance GarnerSucceeded byHarry S Truman10th United States Secretary of CommerceIn office March 2 1945 September 20 1946PresidentFranklin D RooseveltHarry S TrumanPreceded byJesse H JonesSucceeded byW Averell HarrimanChair of the Supply Priorities and Allocations BoardIn office August 28 1941 January 16 1942PresidentFranklin D RooseveltPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byOffice abolishedChair of the Board of Economic WarfareIn office July 2 1940 July 15 1943PresidentFranklin D RooseveltPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byOffice abolished11th United States Secretary of AgricultureIn office March 4 1933 September 4 1940PresidentFranklin D RooseveltPreceded byArthur M HydeSucceeded byClaude R WickardPersonal detailsBornHenry Agard Wallace 1888 10 07 October 7 1888Orient Iowa U S DiedNovember 18 1965 1965 11 18 aged 77 Danbury Connecticut U S Resting placeGlendale CemeteryPolitical partyRepublican 1909 1924 Progressive 1924 1932 Democratic 1932 1947 1964 1965 Progressive 1948 1950 Other politicalaffiliationsProgressive Bull Moose 1912 SpouseIlo Browne m 1914 wbr Children3ParentHenry Cantwell Wallace father EducationIowa State University BS SignatureThe oldest son of Henry C Wallace who served as U S Secretary of Agriculture from 1921 to 1924 Henry A Wallace was born in rural Iowa in 1888 After graduating from Iowa State University in 1910 he worked as a writer and editor for his family s farm journal Wallaces Farmer He also founded the Hi Bred Corn Company a hybrid corn company that became extremely successful Wallace displayed intellectual curiosity about a wide array of subjects including statistics and economics and explored various religious and spiritual movements including Theosophy After his father s death in 1924 Wallace drifted away from the Republican Party he supported Democratic nominee Franklin D Roosevelt in the 1932 presidential election Wallace served as Secretary of Agriculture under Roosevelt from 1933 to 1940 He strongly supported the New Deal and presided over a major shift in federal agricultural policy implementing measures designed to curtail agricultural surpluses and to ameliorate rural poverty Roosevelt overcame strong opposition from conservative leaders in the Democratic Party and had Wallace nominated for vice president at the 1940 Democratic National Convention The Roosevelt Wallace ticket won the 1940 presidential election At the 1944 Democratic National Convention conservative party leaders defeated Wallace s bid for renomination placing Missouri Senator Harry S Truman on the Democratic ticket instead In early 1945 Roosevelt appointed Wallace as Secretary of Commerce Roosevelt died in April 1945 and Truman succeeded him as president Wallace continued to serve as Secretary of Commerce until September 1946 when he was fired by Truman for delivering a speech urging conciliatory policies toward the Soviet Union 1 Wallace and his supporters then established the nationwide Progressive Party and launched a third party campaign for president The Progressive platform called for conciliatory policies toward the USSR desegregation of public schools racial and gender equality a national health insurance program and other left wing policies Accusations of Communist influence followed and Wallace s association with controversial Theosophist figure Nicholas Roerich undermined his campaign he received just 2 4 of the popular vote Wallace broke with the Progressive Party in 1950 over the Korean War and in a 1952 article he called the Soviet Union utterly evil Turning his attention back to agricultural innovation he became a highly successful businessman He specialized in developing and marketing hybrid seed corn and improved chickens before his death in 1965 of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ALS Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Journalist and farmer 3 Early political involvement 4 Secretary of Agriculture 5 Vice presidency 1941 1945 5 1 Election of 1940 5 2 Tenure 5 3 Election of 1944 6 Secretary of Commerce 1945 1946 7 1948 presidential election 8 Later politics 9 Business success 9 1 Illness and death 10 Family 11 Mysticism and Roerich controversy 12 Legacy 13 Books 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 Sources 18 Further reading 18 1 Secondary sources 19 Bibliography Works by Wallace 19 1 Books 19 2 Articles and essays 19 3 Pamphlets 20 External linksEarly life and education EditHenry Agard Wallace was born on October 7 1888 on a farm near Orient Iowa to Henry Cantwell Wallace and his wife May 2 Wallace had two younger brothers and three younger sisters 3 His paternal grandfather Uncle Henry Wallace was a prominent landowner newspaper editor Republican activist and Social Gospel advocate in Adair County Iowa Uncle Henry s father John Wallace was an Ulster Scots immigrant from the village Kilrea in County Londonderry Ireland who arrived in Philadelphia in 1823 4 May nee Broadhead was born in New York City but was raised by an aunt in Muscatine Iowa after her parents death 5 Wallace s family moved to Ames Iowa in 1892 and to Des Moines Iowa in 1896 In 1894 the Wallaces established an agricultural newspaper Wallace s Farmer 6 It became extremely successful and made the family wealthy and politically influential 7 Wallace took a strong interest in agriculture and plants from a young age and befriended African American botanist George Washington Carver with whom he frequently discussed plants and other subjects 8 Wallace was particularly interested in corn Iowa s key crop In 1904 he devised an experiment that disproved agronomist Perry Greeley Holden s assertion that the most aesthetically pleasing corn would produce the greatest yield 9 Wallace graduated from West High School in 1906 and enrolled in Iowa State College later that year majoring in animal husbandry He joined the Hawkeye Club a fraternal organization and spent much of his free time continuing to study corn 10 He also organized a political club to support Gifford Pinchot a Progressive Republican who was head of the United States Forest Service 11 Journalist and farmer Edit Wallace s father Henry Cantwell Wallace served as secretary of agriculture from 1921 to his death in 1924 Wallace became a full time writer and editor for Wallace s Farmer after graduating from college in 1910 He was deeply interested in using mathematics and economics in agriculture and learned calculus as part of an effort to understand hog prices 12 He also wrote an influential article with pioneering statistician George W Snedecor on computational methods for correlations and regressions 13 After his grandfather died in 1916 Wallace and his father became the coeditors of Wallace s Farmer 14 In 1921 Wallace assumed leadership of the paper after his father accepted an appointment as Secretary of Agriculture under President Warren G Harding 15 His uncle lost ownership of the paper in 1932 during the Great Depression and Wallace stopped serving as editor in 1933 16 In 1914 Wallace and his wife purchased a farm near Johnston Iowa they initially attempted to combine corn production with dairy farming but later turned their full attention to corn 17 Influenced by Edward Murray East Wallace focused on producing hybrid corn developing a variety called Copper Cross In 1923 he reached the first ever contract for hybrid seed production agreeing to grant the Iowa Seed Company the sole right to grow and sell Copper Cross corn 18 In 1926 he co founded the Hi Bred Corn Company to develop and produce hybrid corn It initially turned only a small profit but eventually became a massive financial success 19 Early political involvement EditDuring World War I Wallace and his father helped the United States Food Administration USFA develop policies to increase hog production 20 After USFA director Herbert Hoover abandoned the hog production policies the Wallaces favored the elder Wallace joined an effort to deny Hoover the presidential nomination at the 1920 Republican National Convention Partly in response to Hoover Wallace published Agricultural Prices in which he advocated government policies to control agricultural prices 21 He also warned farmers of an imminent price collapse after the war Wallace s prediction proved accurate a farm crisis extended into the 1920s Reflecting a broader decrease in agricultural prices the corn prices fell from 1 68 per bushel in 1918 to 0 42 per bushel in 1921 22 Wallace proposed various remedies to combat the farm crisis which he believed stemmed primarily from overproduction Among his proposed policies was the ever normal granary the government buys and stores agricultural surpluses when agricultural prices are low and sells them when they are high 23 Both Wallaces backed the McNary Haugen Farm Relief Bill which would have required the federal government to market and export agricultural surpluses in foreign markets The bill was defeated in large part because of the opposition of President Calvin Coolidge who became president after Harding s death in 1923 24 Wallace s father died in October 1924 and in the November 1924 presidential election Henry Wallace voted for the Progressive nominee Robert La Follette 25 Due in part to Wallace s continued lobbying Congress passed the McNary Haugen bill in 1927 and 1928 but Coolidge vetoed the bill both times 26 Dissatisfied with both major party candidates in the 1928 presidential election Wallace tried to get Illinois Governor Frank Lowden to run for president He ultimately supported Democratic nominee Al Smith but Hoover won a landslide victory 27 28 The onset of the Great Depression during Hoover s administration devastated Iowa farmers as farm income fell by two thirds from 1929 to 1932 29 In the 1932 presidential election Wallace campaigned for Democrat Franklin D Roosevelt who favored the agricultural policies of Wallace and economist M L Wilson He did not formally register as a Democrat until 1936 30 Secretary of Agriculture EditSee also First and second terms of the presidency of Franklin D Roosevelt After Roosevelt won the 1932 presidential election he appointed Wallace as secretary of agriculture 31 Despite his past affiliation with the Republican Party Wallace strongly supported Roosevelt and his New Deal domestic program and became a registered member of the Democratic Party in 1936 32 Upon taking office Wallace appointed Rexford Tugwell a member of Roosevelt s Brain Trust of important advisers as his deputy secretary Though Roosevelt was initially focused primarily on addressing the banking crisis Wallace and Tugwell convinced him of the necessity of quickly passing major agricultural reforms 33 Roosevelt Wallace and House Agriculture Committee Chairman John Marvin Jones rallied congressional support around the Agricultural Adjustment Act which established the Agricultural Adjustment Administration AAA 34 The AAA s aim was to raise prices for commodities through artificial scarcity by using a system of domestic allotments that set the total output of agricultural products It paid land owners subsidies to leave some of their land idle 35 Farm income increased significantly in the first three years of the New Deal as prices for commodities rose 36 After the Agricultural Adjustment Act passed Agriculture became the federal government s largest department 37 The Supreme Court struck down the Agricultural Adjustment Act in the 1936 case United States v Butler Wallace strongly disagreed with the Court s holding that agriculture was a purely local activity and thus could not be regulated by the federal government saying were agriculture truly a local matter in 1936 as the Supreme Court says it is half of the people of the United States would quickly starve 38 He quickly proposed a new agriculture program designed to satisfy the Supreme Court s objections under the new program the federal government would reach rental agreements with farmers to plant green manure rather than crops like corn and wheat Less than two months after the Supreme Court decided United States v Butler Roosevelt signed the Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act of 1936 into law 39 In the 1936 presidential election Wallace was an important surrogate in Roosevelt s campaign 40 In 1935 Wallace fired general counsel Jerome Frank and some other Agriculture Department officials who sought to help Southern sharecroppers by issuing a reinterpretation of the Agricultural Adjustment Act 41 He became more committed to aiding sharecroppers and other groups of impoverished farmers during a trip to the South in late 1936 after which he wrote I have never seen among the peasantry of Europe poverty so abject as that which exists in this favorable cotton year in the great cotton states He helped lead passage of the Bankhead Jones Farm Tenant Act of 1937 which authorized the federal government to issue loans to tenant farmers so that they could purchase land and equipment The law also established the Farm Security Administration a which was charged with ameliorating rural poverty within the Agriculture Department 42 The failure of Roosevelt s Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937 the court packing plan the onset of the Recession of 1937 38 and a wave of strikes led by John L Lewis badly damaged the Roosevelt administration s ability to pass major legislation after 1936 43 Nonetheless Wallace helped lead passage of the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938 which implemented Wallace s ever normal granary plan 44 Between 1932 and 1940 the Agriculture Department grew from 40 000 employees and an annual budget of 280 million to 146 000 employees and an annual budget of 1 5 billion 45 A Republican wave in the 1938 elections effectively brought an end to the New Deal legislative program and the Roosevelt administration increasingly focused on foreign policy 46 Unlike many Midwestern progressives Wallace supported internationalist policies such as Secretary of State Cordell Hull s efforts to lower tariffs 47 He joined Roosevelt in attacking the aggressive actions of Nazi Germany and the Empire of Japan and in one speech derided Nazi eugenics as a mumbo jumbo of dangerous nonsense 48 After World War II broke out in September 1939 Wallace supported Roosevelt s program of military buildup and anticipating hostilities with Germany pushed for initiatives like a synthetic rubber program and closer trade relations with Latin American countries 49 Vice presidency 1941 1945 EditElection of 1940 Edit 1940 electoral vote results As Roosevelt refused to commit to either retiring or seeking reelection b during his second term supporters of Wallace and other leading Democrats such as Vice President John Nance Garner and Postmaster General James Farley laid the groundwork for a presidential campaign in the 1940 election 50 After the outbreak of World War II in Europe in September 1939 Wallace publicly endorsed a third term for Roosevelt 51 Though Roosevelt never declared his candidacy the 1940 Democratic National Convention nominated him for president 52 Shortly after being nominated Roosevelt told party leaders that he insisted on Wallace for vice president A recent convert to the Democratic Party Wallace was not popular among its leaders and had never been tested in an election 53 But he had a strong base of support among farmers had been a loyal lieutenant to Roosevelt in domestic and foreign policy and was in good health 54 55 Roosevelt convinced James F Byrnes Paul V McNutt and other contenders for the vice presidential nomination to support Wallace but conservative Democrats rallied around the candidacy of Speaker of the House William B Bankhead Eventually Wallace won the nomination by a wide margin 56 Though many Democrats were disappointed by Wallace s nomination it was generally well received by newspapers Arthur Krock of The New York Times wrote that Wallace was able thoughtful honorable the best of the New Deal type 57 Wallace left office as Secretary of Agriculture in September 1940 and was succeeded by Undersecretary of Agriculture Claude R Wickard 58 The Roosevelt campaign settled on a strategy of keeping Roosevelt largely out of the fray of the election leaving most of the campaigning to Wallace and other surrogates Wallace was dispatched to the Midwest giving speeches in states like Iowa Illinois and Missouri He made foreign affairs the main focus of his campaigning telling one audience that the replacement of Roosevelt would cause Adolf Hitler to rejoice 59 Both campaigns predicted a close election but Roosevelt won 449 of the 531 electoral votes and the popular vote by nearly ten points 60 After the election Wallace toured Mexico as a goodwill ambassador delivering a well received speech regarding Pan Americanism and Roosevelt s Good Neighbor policy Upon his return Wallace convinced the Rockefeller Foundation to establish an agricultural experiment center in Mexico the first of many such centers the Rockefeller Foundation and the Ford Foundation established 61 c Tenure Edit See also Third and fourth terms of the presidency of Franklin D Roosevelt Wallace in 1940 Wallace was sworn in as vice president on January 20 1941 He quickly grew frustrated with his ceremonial role as the presiding officer of the United States Senate the one duty the Constitution assigns the vice president 63 In July 1941 Roosevelt named Wallace chairman of the Board of Economic Warfare BEW d and of the Supply Priorities and Allocations Board SPAB 65 These appointments gave him a voice in organizing national mobilization for war One journalist noted that Roosevelt made Wallace the first Vice President to work really as the number two man in government a conception of the vice presidency popularly held but never realized 66 Reflecting Wallace s role in organizing mobilization efforts many journalists began calling him the Assistant President 67 68 Wallace was also named to the Top Policy Group which advised Roosevelt on the development of nuclear weapons an initiative Wallace supported He did not hold any official role in the subsequent Manhattan Project which developed the first nuclear weapons but he was informed of its progress 69 The Century of the Common Man excerpt Some have spoken of the American Century I say that the century on which we are entering the century which will come into being after this war can be and must be the century of the common man Perhaps it will be America s opportunity to to support the Freedom s and Duties by which the common man must live Everywhere the common man must learn to build his own industries with his own hands in practical fashion Everywhere the common man must learn to increase his productivity so that he and his children can eventually pay to the world community all that they have received No nation will have the God given right to exploit other nations Older nations will have the privilege to help younger nations get started on the path to industrialization but there must be neither military nor economic imperialism 70 Economic conditions became chaotic and Roosevelt decided new leadership was needed 71 In early 1942 he established the War Production Board with businessman Donald Nelson in charge as Wallace became a minor member of the War Production Board He continued to serve as head of the BEW which was now far less important it was now charged with importing the raw materials such as rubber necessary for war production 72 73 Wallace struggled to carve out authority for the BEW demanding that American purchases in Latin America raise the standard of living of the workers In the process he clashed privately with Secretary of State Cordell Hull who opposed American interference in another state s internal affairs The national media dramatically covered Wallace s public battle with Jesse H Jones the Secretary of Commerce who was also in charge of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation RFC which paid the purchases bills BEW made 74 Roosevelt s standard strategy for executive management was to give two different people the same role expecting controversy would result He wanted the agencies heads to bring the controversy to him so he could make the decision 75 On August 21 1942 Roosevelt explicitly wrote to all his department heads that disagreements should not be publicly aired but are to be submitted to me by the appropriate heads of the conflicting agencies Anyone going public had to resign 76 Wallace denounced Jones for blocking funding for purchases of raw materials in Latin America needed for the war effort Jones called on Congress and the public for help calling Wallace a liar According to James MacGregor Burns Jones a leader of Southern conservative Democrats was taciturn shrewd practical cautious Wallace deeply distrusted by Democratic party leaders was the hero of the Lib Labs dreamy utopian even mystical yet with his own bent for management and power On July 15 1943 Roosevelt stripped both men of their roles in the matter BEW was reorganized as the Office of Economic Warfare and put under Leo Crowley The loss of the BEW was a major blow to Wallace s prestige He now had no agency and a weak political base on the left wing of the Democratic Party But he still had visibility ambition and an articulate voice and remained a loyal Roosevelt supporter He was not renominated for vice president but in 1945 Roosevelt fired Jones and made Wallace Secretary of Commerce 77 78 On May 8 1942 Wallace delivered what became his best remembered speech known for containing the phrase the Century of the Common Man He cast World War II as a war between a free world and a slave world and held that peace must mean a better standard of living for the common man not merely in the United States and England but also in India Russia China and Latin America not merely in the United Nations but also in Germany and Italy and Japan Some conservatives disliked the speech but it was translated into 20 languages and millions of copies were distributed around the world 79 In early 1943 Wallace was dispatched on a goodwill tour of Latin America he made 24 stops across Central America and South America Partly due to his ability to deliver speeches in Spanish Wallace received a warm reception one State Department official said never in Chilean history has any foreigner ever been received with such extravagance and evidently sincere enthusiasm During his trip several Latin American countries declared war against Germany 80 Back home Wallace continued to deliver speeches saying after the Detroit race riot of 1943 we cannot fight to crush Nazi brutality abroad and condone race riots at home 81 Though Congress largely blocked Roosevelt s domestic agenda Wallace continued to call for progressive programs one newspaper wrote that the New Deal today is Henry Wallace the New Deal banner in his hands is not yet furled 82 Wallace was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1943 83 The American people have always had guts and always will have Henry A Wallace 84 In mid 1944 Wallace toured the Soviet Union and China 85 The USSR presented its American guests with a fully sanitized version of labor camps in Magadan and Kolyma claiming that all the workers were volunteers 86 Wallace was impressed by the camp at Magadan describing it as a combination Tennessee Valley Authority and Hudson s Bay Company 87 e He received a warm reception in the Soviet Union but was largely unsuccessful in his efforts to negotiate with Chinese leader Chiang Kai shek 88 Election of 1944 Edit See also 1944 Democratic Party vice presidential candidate selection After the abolition of the BEW speculation began as to whether Roosevelt would drop Wallace from the ticket in the 1944 election 89 Gallup polling published in March 1944 showed that Wallace was clearly the most popular choice for vice president among Democrats and many journalists predicted that he would win renomination 90 As Roosevelt was in declining health party leaders expected that the party s vice presidential nominee would eventually succeed Roosevelt 91 and Wallace s many enemies within the Democratic Party organized to ensure his removal 92 Much of the opposition to Wallace stemmed from his open denunciation of racial segregation in the South 91 but others were concerned by Wallace s unorthodox religious views and pro Soviet statements 93 Shortly before the 1944 Democratic National Convention party leaders such as Robert E Hannegan and Edwin W Pauley convinced Roosevelt to sign a document expressing support for either Associate Justice William O Douglas or Senator Harry S Truman for the vice presidential nomination Nonetheless Wallace got Roosevelt to send a public letter to the convention chairman in which he wrote I personally would vote for Wallace s renomination if I were a delegate to the convention 94 With Roosevelt not committed to keeping or dropping Wallace the vice presidential balloting turned into a battle between those who favored Wallace and those who favored Truman 95 Wallace did not have an effective organization to support his candidacy though allies like Calvin Benham Baldwin Claude Pepper and Joseph F Guffey pressed for him Truman meanwhile was reluctant to put forward his own candidacy but Hannegan f and Roosevelt convinced him to run 97 At the convention Wallace galvanized supporters with a well received speech in which he lauded Roosevelt and argued that the future belongs to those who go down the line unswervingly for the liberal principles of both political democracy and economic democracy regardless of race color or religion 98 After Roosevelt delivered his acceptance speech the crowd began chanting for the nomination of Wallace but Samuel D Jackson adjourned the convention for the day before Wallace supporters could call for the beginning of vice presidential balloting 99 Party leaders worked furiously to line up support for Truman overnight but Wallace received 429 1 2 votes 589 were needed for nomination on the first ballot for vice president and Truman 319 1 2 with the rest going to various favorite son candidates On the second ballot many delegates who had voted for favorite sons shifted into Truman s camp giving him the nomination 100 On January 20 1945 Wallace swore in Truman as his vice presidential successor 101 Secretary of Commerce 1945 1946 EditSee also Presidency of Harry S Truman Secretary of Commerce Henry Wallace Wallace believed that Democratic party leaders had unfairly stolen the vice presidential nomination from him but he supported Roosevelt in the 1944 presidential election Hoping to mend ties with Wallace Roosevelt offered him any position in the Cabinet other than secretary of state and Wallace asked to replace Jones as secretary of commerce 102 In that position Wallace expected to play a key role in the economy s postwar transition 103 In January 1945 with the end of Wallace s vice presidency Roosevelt nominated Wallace for secretary of commerce 104 The nomination prompted an intense debate as many senators objected to his support for liberal policies designed to boost wages and employment 105 Conservatives failed to block the nomination but Senator Walter F George led passage of a measure removing the Reconstruction Finance Corporation from the Commerce Department 106 After Roosevelt signed George s bill Wallace was confirmed by a vote of 56 to 32 on March 1 1945 107 Roosevelt died on April 12 1945 and was succeeded by Truman 108 Truman quickly replaced most other senior Roosevelt appointees g but retained Wallace who remained very popular with liberal Democrats 110 The discontent of liberal leaders strengthened Wallace s position in the Cabinet Truman privately stated that the two most important members of his political team were Wallace and Eleanor Roosevelt 111 As secretary of commerce Wallace advocated a middle course between the planned economy of the Soviet Union and the laissez faire economics that had dominated the United States before the Great Depression With his congressional allies he led passage of the Employment Act of 1946 Conservatives blocked the inclusion of a measure providing for full employment but the act established the Council of Economic Advisers and the Joint Economic Committee to study economic matters 112 Wallace s proposal to establish international control over nuclear weapons was not adopted but he did help pass the Atomic Energy Act of 1946 which established the United States Atomic Energy Commission to oversee domestic development of nuclear power 113 World War II ended in September 1945 with the Surrender of Japan and relations with the USSR became a central matter of foreign policy Various issues including the fate of European and Asian postwar governments and the administration of the United Nations had already begun to strain the wartime alliance between the Soviet Union and the United States 114 Critics of the USSR objected to the oppressive satellite states it had established in Eastern Europe and Soviet involvement in the Greek Civil War and the Chinese Civil War In February 1946 George F Kennan laid out the doctrine of containment which called for the United States to resist the spread of Communism 115 Wallace feared that confrontational policies toward the Soviet Union would eventually lead to war and urged Truman to allay any reasonable Russian grounds for fear suspicion and distrust 116 Historian Tony Judt wrote in Postwar that Wallace s distaste for American involvement with Britain and Europe was widely shared across the political spectrum 117 Though Wallace was dissatisfied with Truman s increasingly confrontational policies toward the Soviet Union he remained an integral part of Truman s Cabinet during the first half of 1946 118 He broke with administration policies in September 1946 when he delivered a speech in which he stated that we should recognize that we have no more business in the political affairs of Eastern Europe than Russia has in the political affairs of Latin America Western Europe and the United States Wallace s speech was booed by the pro Soviet crowd he delivered it to and even more strongly criticized by Truman administration officials and leading Republicans like Robert A Taft and Arthur Vandenberg 119 Truman stated that Wallace s speech did not represent administration policy but merely Wallace s personal views and on September 20 he demanded and received Wallace s resignation 120 1948 presidential election EditFurther information Progressive Party United States 1948 Cold War McCarthyism and Soviet espionage in the United States Shortly after leaving office Wallace became the editor of The New Republic a progressive magazine 121 He also helped establish the Progressive Citizens of America PCA a progressive political organization that called for good relations with the Soviet Union and more liberal programs at home Though not a member of the PCA Wallace was widely regarded as the organization s leader and was criticized for the PCA s acceptance of Communist members In response to the creation of the PCA anti Communist liberals established a rival group Americans for Democratic Action ADA which explicitly rejected any association with Communism 122 Wallace strongly criticized the president in early 1947 after Truman promulgated the Truman Doctrine to oppose Communist threats to Greece and Turkey Wallace also opposed Truman s Executive Order 9835 which began a purge of government workers affiliated Communist groups deemed to be subversive 123 He initially favored the Marshall Plan but later opposed it because he believed the program should have been administered through the United Nations 124 Wallace and the PCA were scrutinized by the FBI and the House Un American Activities Committee both of which sought to uncover evidence of Communist influence 125 Many in the PCA favored the establishment of a third party but other longtime Wallace allies warned him against leaving the Democratic Party 126 On December 29 1947 Wallace launched a third party campaign declaring we have assembled a Gideon s Army small in number powerful in conviction We face the future unfettered unfettered by any principal but the general welfare 127 He was backed by many Hollywood and Broadway celebrities and intellectuals Among his prominent supporters were Rexford Tugwell Congressmen Vito Marcantonio and Leo Isacson musicians Paul Robeson and Pete Seeger and future presidential nominee George McGovern 128 Calvin Baldwin became Wallace s campaign manager and took charge of fundraising and ensuring that Wallace appeared on as many state ballots as possible 129 Wallace s first choice for running mate Claude Pepper refused to leave the Democratic Party but Democratic Senator Glen H Taylor of Idaho agreed to serve as Wallace s running mate 130 Wallace accepted the endorsement of the American Communist Party stating I m not following their line If they want to follow my line I say God bless em 131 Truman responded to Wallace s left wing challenge by pressing for liberal domestic policies while pro ADA liberals like Hubert Humphrey Robert F Wagner and James Roosevelt linked Wallace to the Soviet Union and the Communist Party 132 Many Americans came to see Wallace as a fellow traveler to Communists a view that was reinforced by Wallace s refusal to condemn the 1948 Czechoslovak coup d etat 133 In early 1948 the CIO and the AFL both rejected Wallace with the AFL denouncing him as a front spokesman and apologist for the Communist Party 134 With Wallace s foreign policy views overshadowing his domestic policy views many liberals who had previously favored his candidacy returned to the Democratic fold 135 Wallace embarked on a nationwide speaking tour to support his candidacy encountering resistance in both the North and South 136 He openly defied the Jim Crow regime in the South refusing to speak before segregated audiences 137 Time magazine which opposed Wallace s candidacy described him as ostentatiously riding through the towns and cities of the segregated South with his Negro secretary beside him 138 A barrage of eggs and tomatoes were hurled at Wallace and struck him and his campaign members during the tour State authorities in Virginia sidestepped enforcing their own segregation laws by declaring Wallace s campaign gatherings private parties 139 The Pittsburgh Press began publishing the names of known Wallace supporters Scores of Wallace supporters in colleges and high schools lost their positions 140 With strong financial support from Anita McCormick Blaine Wallace exceeded fundraising goals and appeared on the ballot of every state except for Oklahoma Nebraska and Illinois 141 The campaign distributed 25 million copies of 140 fliers and pamphlets Nevertheless Gallup polls showed support for Wallace falling from 7 in December 1947 to 5 in June 1948 He was endorsed by only two newspapers the Communist Daily Worker in New York and The Gazette and Daily in York Pennsylvania Some in the press began to speculate that Wallace would drop out of the race 142 Wallace s supporters held a national convention in Philadelphia in July formally establishing a new Progressive Party 143 h The party platform addressed a wide array of issues and included support for the desegregation of public schools gender equality a national health insurance program free trade and public ownership of large banks railroads and power utilities 145 i Another part of the platform stated responsibility for ending the tragic prospect of war is a joint responsibility of the Soviet Union and the United States 147 During the convention Wallace faced questioning regarding letters he had written to guru Nicholas Roerich his refusal to comment on the letters was widely criticized 148 Wallace was further damaged days after the convention when Whittaker Chambers and Elizabeth Bentley testified before the House Un American Activities Committee that several government officials associated with Wallace including Alger Hiss and John Abt were Communist infiltrators 149 Meanwhile many Southern Democrats outraged by the Democratic Party s pro civil rights plank bolted the party and nominated Strom Thurmond for president With the Democrats badly divided Republicans were confident that Republican nominee Thomas Dewey would win the election 150 Wallace himself predicted that Truman would be the worst defeated candidate in history 151 Though polls consistently showed him losing the race Truman ran an effective campaign against Dewey and the conservative 80th United States Congress He ultimately defeated Dewey in both the popular and electoral vote 152 Wallace won just 2 38 percent of the nationwide popular vote and failed to carry any state His best performance was in New York where he won eight percent of the vote Just one of the party s congressional candidates incumbent Congressman Vito Marcantonio won election 153 Though Wallace and Thurmond probably took many voters from Truman their presence in the race may have boosted the president s overall appeal by casting him as the candidate of the center left 154 In response to the election results Wallace stated Unless this bi partisan foreign policy of high prices and war is promptly reversed I predict that the Progressive Party will rapidly grow into the dominant party To save the peace of the world the Progressive Party is more needed than ever before 153 Historians Edward Schapsmeier and Frederick Schapsmeier argue 155 The Progressive party stood for one thing and Wallace another Actually the party organization was controlled from the outset by those representing the radical left and not liberalism per se This made it extremely easy for Communists and fellow travelers to infiltrate into important positions within the party machinery Once this happened party stands began to resemble a party line Campaign literature speech materials and campaign slogans sounded strangely like echoes of what Moscow wanted to hear As if wearing moral blinkers Wallace increasingly became an imperceptive ideologue Words were uttered by Wallace that did not sound like him and his performance took on a strange Jekyll and Hyde quality one moment he was a peace protagonist and the next a propaganda parrot for the Kremlin Later politics EditWallace initially remained active in politics following the 1948 campaign and he delivered the keynote address at the 1950 Progressive National Convention In early 1949 Wallace testified before Congress in the hope of preventing the ratification of the North Atlantic Treaty which established the NATO alliance between the United States Canada and several European countries 156 He became increasingly critical of the Soviet Union after 1948 and he resigned from the Progressive Party in August 1950 due to his support for the UN intervention in the Korean War 157 After leaving the Progressive Party Wallace endured what biographers John Culver and John Hyde describe as a long slow decline into obscurity marked by a certain acceptance of his outcast status 158 In the early 1950s he spent much of his time rebutting attacks by prominent public figures like General Leslie Groves who claimed to have stopped providing Wallace with information regarding the Manhattan Project because he considered Wallace to be a security risk In 1951 Wallace appeared before Congress to deny accusations that in 1944 he had encouraged a coalition between Chiang Kai shek and the Chinese Communists 159 In 1952 he published an article Where I Was Wrong in which he repudiated his earlier foreign policy positions and declared the Soviet Union to be utterly evil 67 160 Wallace did not endorse a candidate in the 1952 presidential election but in the 1956 presidential election he endorsed incumbent Republican President Dwight D Eisenhower over Democratic nominee Adlai Stevenson Wallace who maintained a correspondence with Eisenhower described Eisenhower as utterly sincere in his efforts for peace 161 Wallace also began a correspondence with Vice President Richard Nixon but he declined to endorse either Nixon or Democratic nominee John F Kennedy in the 1960 presidential election Though Wallace criticized Kennedy s farm policy during the 1960 campaign Kennedy invited Wallace to his 1961 inauguration the first presidential inauguration Wallace had attended since 1945 Wallace later wrote Kennedy at no time in our history have so many tens of millions of people been so completely enthusiastic about an inaugural address as about yours In 1962 he delivered a speech commemorating the centennial anniversary of the establishment of the Department of Agriculture 162 He also began a correspondence with President Lyndon B Johnson regarding methods to alleviate rural poverty though privately he criticized Johnson s escalation of American involvement in the Vietnam War 163 In the 1964 election Wallace returned to the Democratic fold supporting Johnson over Republican nominee Barry Goldwater 164 Due to declining health he made his last public appearance that year in one of his last speeches he stated We lost Cuba in 1959 not only because of Castro but also because we failed to understand the needs of the farmer in the back country of Cuba from 1920 onward The common man is on the march but it is up to the uncommon men of education and insight to lead that march constructively 165 Business success EditWallace continued to co own and take an interest in the company he had established Pioneer Hi Bred formerly the Hi Bred Corn Company and he established an experimental farm at his New York estate He focused much of his efforts on the study of chickens and Pioneer Hi Bred s chickens at one point produced three quarters of all commercially sold eggs worldwide He also wrote or co wrote several works on agriculture including a book on the history of corn 166 Illness and death Edit Wallace was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ALS in 1964 at the age of 76 He consulted numerous specialists and tried various methods of treating the disease stating I look on myself as an ALS guinea pig willing to try almost anything 167 He died in Danbury Connecticut on November 18 1965 at the age of 77 168 His remains were cremated and the ashes interred in Glendale Cemetery in Des Moines Iowa 169 Due to his successful business career and investments he left an estate valued at tens of millions of dollars 170 Family EditIn 1913 Wallace met Ilo Browne the daughter of a successful businessman from Indianola Iowa 171 Wallace and Browne married on May 20 1914 and had three children 168 Henry Browne was born in 1915 Robert Browne was born in 1918 and Jean Browne was born in 1920 172 Wallace and his family lived in Des Moines until Wallace accepted appointment as secretary of agriculture at which point they began living in an apartment at Wardman Park in Washington D C 173 In 1945 Wallace and his wife purchased a 115 acre farm near South Salem New York known as Farvue 174 Ilo was supportive of her husband s career and enjoyed serving as Second Lady of the United States from 1941 to 1945 though she was uncomfortable with many of Wallace s Progressive supporters during his 1948 presidential campaign 175 Wallace and Ilo remained married until his death in 1965 she lived until 1981 In 1999 Wallace s three children sold their shares in Pioneer Hi Bred to DuPont for well over 1 billion 172 Wallace s grandson Scott Wallace won the Democratic nomination for Pennsylvania s 1st congressional district in the 2018 elections He was defeated by Republican incumbent Brian Fitzpatrick in the general election 176 Mysticism and Roerich controversy Edit Wallace associated with controversial emigre Russian Theosophist Nicholas Roerich Wallace was raised a Calvinist but showed an interest in other religious teachings during his life 68 He was deeply interested in religion from a young age reading works by authors like Ralph Waldo Emerson Ralph Waldo Trine and William James whose The Varieties of Religious Experience had a particularly strong impact on Wallace 177 After his grandfather s death in 1916 he left the Presbyterian Church and became increasingly interested in mysticism He later said I know I am often called a mystic and in the years following my leaving the United Presbyterian Church I was probably a practical mystic I d say I was a mystic in the sense that George Washington Carver was who believed God was in everything and therefore if you went to God you could find the answers Wallace began regularly attending meetings of the pantheistic Theosophical Society and in 1925 he helped organize the Des Moines parish of the Liberal Catholic Church 178 Wallace left the Liberal Catholic Church in 1930 and joined the Episcopal Church but he continued to be interested in various mystic groups and individuals 179 Among those who Wallace corresponded with were author George William Russell 180 astrologer L Edward Johndro and Edward Roos who took on the persona of a Native American medicine man 181 In the early 1930s Wallace began corresponding with Nicholas Roerich a prominent Russian emigre artist peace activist and Theosophist 182 With Wallace s support Roerich was appointed to lead a federal expedition to the Gobi Desert to collect drought resistant grasses 183 Roerich s expedition ended in a public fiasco and Roerich fled to India after the Internal Revenue Service launched a tax investigation 184 The letters that Wallace wrote to Roerich from 1933 to 1934 were eventually acquired by Republican newspaper publisher Paul Block 185 The Republicans threatened to reveal to the public what they characterized as Wallace s bizarre religious beliefs before the November 1940 elections but were deterred when the Democrats countered by threatening to release information about Republican candidate Wendell Willkie s rumored extramarital affair with the writer Irita Van Doren 186 The contents of the letters did become public seven years later in the winter of 1947 when right wing columnist Westbrook Pegler published what were purported to be extracts from them as evidence that Wallace was a messianic fumbler and off center mentally During the 1948 campaign Pegler and other hostile reporters including H L Mencken aggressively confronted Wallace on the subject at a public meeting in Philadelphia in July Wallace declined to comment accusing the reporters of being Pegler s stooges 187 Many press outlets were critical of Wallace s association with Roerich one newspaper mockingly wrote that if Wallace became president we shall get in tune with the Infinite vibrate in the correct plane outstare the Evil Eye reform the witches overcome all malicious spells and ascend the high road to health and happiness 188 Henry Wallace reportedly dabbled in Zoroastrianism and Buddhism 189 190 191 192 Legacy EditDuring his time in the Roosevelt administration Wallace became a controversial figure attracting a mix of praise and criticism for various actions 193 68 He remains a controversial figure today 194 195 196 Historian Arthur M Schlesinger Jr pronounced Wallace to be both an incorrigibly naive politician and the best secretary of agriculture the country has ever had 197 Journalist Peter Beinart writes that Wallace s naive faith in U S Soviet cooperation damaged his legacy Historian Andrew Seal lauds Wallace for his focus on combating both economic and racial inequality 195 Wallace s vision of the Century of the Common Man which denied American exceptionalism in foreign policy continues to influence the foreign policy of individuals like Bernie Sanders 198 In 2013 historian Thomas W Devine wrote that newly available Soviet sources do confirm Wallace s position that Moscow s behavior was not as relentlessly aggressive as many believed at the time Yet Devine also writes that enough new information has come to light to cast serious doubt both on Wallace s benign attitude toward Stalin s intentions and on his dark conspiratorial view of the Truman administration 199 Alex Ross of The New Yorker writes with the exception of Al Gore Wallace remains the most famous almost president in American history 67 Journalist Jeff Greenfield writes that the 1944 Democratic National Convention was one of the most important political events of the twentieth century since the leading contenders for the nomination might have governed in vastly different ways 91 In The Untold History of the United States Oliver Stone argues that had Wallace become president in 1945 there might have been no atomic bombings no nuclear arms race and no Cold War 200 201 By contrast Ron Capshaw of the conservative National Review argues that a President Wallace would have practiced a policy of appeasement that would have allowed the spread of Communism into countries like Iran Greece and Italy 202 The Henry A Wallace Beltsville Agricultural Research Center in Beltsville Maryland the largest agricultural research complex in the world is named for him Wallace founded the Wallace Genetic Foundation to support agricultural research His son Robert founded the Wallace Global Fund to support sustainable development 194 A speech Wallace delivered in 1942 inspired Aaron Copland to compose Fanfare for the Common Man 67 The Franklin D Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum s grounds in Hyde Park New York include the Henry A Wallace Visitor and Education Center at its north end Books EditAgricultural Prices 1920 Corn and Corn Growing with E N Bressman 1923 When to feed corn when to sell it 1923 Correlation and machine calculation with George W Snedecor 1925 New administration and farm relief 1933 America must choose 1934 Charted course toward stable prosperity 1934 New frontiers 1934 Research and adjustment march together 1934 Statesmanship and religion 1934 Working together in the corn hog program 1934 Cooperation the dominant economic idea of the future 1936 Whose Constitution An inquiry into the general welfare 1936 Technology corporations and the general welfare 1937 Paths to plenty 1938 American choice 1940 Price of freedom 1940 Preco da liberdade 1942 Pan American friendship 1941 Que hara Norteamerica 1941 Despues de la guerra debe comenzar el siglo del hombre del pueblo 1942 Price of free world victory 1942 Precio de la victoria 1942 Why did God make America 1942 America s part in world reconstruction 1943 Century of the Common Man 1943 203 204 Century of the common man UK 1944 Christian bases of world order 1943 Discursos pronunciados en Lima 1943 Ideales comunes 1943 New world theme The price of free world victory 1943 Democracy first What we fight for 1944 Our job in the Pacific 1944 Sixty million jobs 1945 Arbeit fur sechzig Millionen Menschen 1946 Ocupacion para sesenta millones 1946 Lavoro per tutti 1946 Hua lai shih ti hu sheng 1947 Era del popolo 1946 Fight for peace 1946 Soviet Asia mission Andrew J Steiger 1946 Ma mission en Asie sovietique 1947 Sondermission in Sowjet Asien und China 1947 Misiya v Savetska Aziya 1948 Toward world peace 1948 Naar wereldvrede 1948 Vers la paix 1948 See also Edit Biography portal Politics portal Liberalism portal Religion portal Agriculture portalHistory of left wing politics in the United States Honeydew melon apparently first introduced to China by H A Wallace and still known there as the Wallace melon 205 206 Bailan melon one of the most famous Chinese melon cultivars bred from the Wallace melon Notes Edit The Farm Security Administration succeeded the Resettlement Administration which had been an independent agency The Twenty second Amendment ratified in 1951 would later prevent presidents from running for a third term Norman Borlaug would later credit Wallace as a key initiator of the Green Revolution 62 The BEW was originally known as the Economic Defense Board 64 Wallace later regretted his praise of the camp at Magadan writing in 1952 that he had not the slightest idea when I visited Magadan that this was also the center for administering the labor of both criminals and those suspected of political disloyalty 87 Hannegan later stated that he would like his tombstone to read here lies the man who stopped Henry Wallace from becoming President of the United States 96 After the resignation of Harold L Ickes in February 1946 Wallace was the lone remaining holdover from Roosevelt s Cabinet 109 The party was influenced by and took the same name as defunct parties that had backed Theodore Roosevelt in 1912 and Robert La Follette in 1924 144 Wallace did not dictate the party platform and he personally opposed public ownership of banks railroads and utilities 146 References Edit Henry Agard Wallace 33rd Vice President 1941 1945 Senate gov Senate Historical Office May 5 2017 Archived from the original on March 25 2019 Retrieved March 25 2019 Edward L Schapsmeier and Frederick H Schapsmeier Henry A Wallace in Iowa The Agrarian Years 1910 1940 1968 p 17 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 23 24 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 3 10 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 9 10 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 11 17 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 21 22 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 13 14 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 26 29 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 29 34 Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 37 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 37 39 Wallace Henry Agard Snedecor George Waddel 1925 Correlation and Machine Calculation Iowa State College Bulletin 35 Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 42 44 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 53 55 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 92 93 110 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 40 41 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 67 70 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 82 83 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 46 48 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 50 52 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 52 53 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 56 59 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 62 63 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 64 65 71 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 84 85 Chiles Robert Spring 2016 Courting the Farm Vote on the Northern Plains Presidential Candidate Al Smith Governor Walter Maddock and the Ambivalent Politics of 1928 North Dakota History 81 1 23 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 86 87 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 99 100 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 102 104 164 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 105 107 Kennedy 1999 p 457 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 113 114 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 115 119 Ronald L Heinemann Depression and New Deal in Virginia 1983 p 107 Anthony Badger The New Deal The Depression Years 1933 1940 2002 p 89 153 57 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 120 122 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 157 160 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 160 161 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 163 167 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 154 157 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 169 171 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 174 176 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 178 179 Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 237 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 185 186 192 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 191 192 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 193 194 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 206 207 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 179 180 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 200 201 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 213 217 H W Brands Traitor to his class the privileged life and radical presidency of Franklin Delano Roosevelt 2008 pp 556 557 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 209 217 218 Kennedy 1999 pp 457 458 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 218 223 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 223 225 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 225 226 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 231 236 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 244 245 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 246 251 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 250 251 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 251 254 Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 269 Arthur 2012 pp 152 153 155 162 164 196 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 256 258 a b c d Ross Alex October 14 2013 Uncommon Man The New Yorker a b c Hatfield Mark O Henry Agard Wallace 1941 45 PDF Vice Presidents of the United States U S Government Printing Office Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved January 11 2019 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 266 268 Henry A Wallace The Century of the Common Man American Rhetoric Online Speech Bank Retrieved January 11 2019 Jean Edward Smith FDR 2007 p 570 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 269 271 Donald G Stevens Organizing for Economic Defense Henry Wallace and the Board of Economic Warfare s Foreign Policy Initiatives 1942 Presidential Studies Quarterly 26 4 1996 1126 1139 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 271 273 James MacGregor Burns Roosevelt The soldier of freedom 1940 1945 1970 p 348 Letter in Jesse H Jones Fifty Billion Dollars My 13 years with the RFC 1932 1945 1951 pp 505 506 Burns Roosevelt The soldier of freedom pp 341 342 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 308 315 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 275 279 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 296 300 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 310 311 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 322 324 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved April 13 2023 Henry A Wallace The Century of the Common Man American Rhetoric Online Speech Bank Retrieved October 11 2022 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 330 331 Tim Tzouliadis 2008 The Forsaken The Penguin Press 2008 pp 217 226 ISBN 978 1 59420 168 4 a b Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 339 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 333 335 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 317 318 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 324 325 a b c Greenfield Jeff July 10 2016 The Year the Veepstakes Really Mattered Politico Retrieved January 12 2019 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 340 342 Helling Dave July 18 2016 1944 Democratic Convention Choosing not just a VP candidate but a president in waiting The Kansas City Star Retrieved January 12 2019 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 345 352 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 352 353 Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 365 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 357 359 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 359 361 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 362 364 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 364 366 Oath of office of the vice president of the United States Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 367 373 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 379 380 Donovan 1977 p 113 Malsberger 2000 p 131 Malsberger 2000 pp 131 132 Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 384 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 385 387 Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 411 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 388 390 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 408 409 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 395 396 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 404 406 427 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 396 398 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 411 412 Patterson 1996 p 124 Judt Tony 2005 Postwar A History of Europe Since 1945 The Penguin Press p 110 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 409 417 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 420 422 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 422 426 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 431 432 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 433 435 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 436 438 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 451 453 457 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 446 450 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 452 454 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 456 457 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 481 484 485 488 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 460 461 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 462 463 Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 452 464 466 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 465 466 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 464 473 474 Karabell 2007 p 68 Patterson 1996 p 157 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 467 469 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 493 494 National Affairs Eggs in the Dust Time September 13 1948 Archived from the original on February 16 2007 Retrieved January 17 2009 Am I in America Time September 6 1948 Archived from the original on February 1 2009 Retrieved January 17 2009 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 468 469 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 498 499 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 478 497 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 480 486 Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 486 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 480 481 Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 481 Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 487 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 482 484 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 491 493 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 478 480 Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 500 Patterson 1996 pp 159 162 a b Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 500 502 Patterson 1996 p 162 Schapsmeier and Schapsmeier Schapsmeier and Schapsmeier Henry A Wallace of Iowa The Agrarian Years 1910 1940 1970 p 181 online review Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 503 506 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 505 507 509 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 510 511 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 512 517 Wallace Henry A September 7 1952 Where I Was Wrong This Week Retrieved July 16 2021 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 521 522 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 522 524 Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 529 Henry A Wallace is Dead at 77 The New York Times TimesMachine November 19 1965 Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 527 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 517 510 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 527 529 a b Southwick 1998 p 620 Wallace Henry Agard 1888 1965 Biographical Dictionary of the United States Congress 1774 Present Washington D C United States Congress Retrieved June 1 2018 The ex wife of former Vice President Henry A Wallace s UPI Retrieved August 19 2018 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 39 40 a b Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 49 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 187 188 256 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 402 403 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 187 188 496 497 Otterbein Holly McDaniel Justine McCrystal Laura November 7 2018 Republican Brian Fitzpatrick wins Pa s First Congressional District defies Dem tide Philly com Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 31 32 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 77 79 Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 96 Culver amp Hyde 2000 p 39 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 96 97 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 130 32 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 135 37 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 143 44 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 231 33 The religion of Henry A Wallace U S Vice President Adherents Archived from the original on February 15 2006 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Westbrook Pegler July 27 1948 In Which Our Hero Beards Guru Wallace In His Own Den As Pegler Sees It column The Evening Independent St Peteresburg FL Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 483 84 Price Catherine March 16 2015 The Vitamin Complex Oneworld ISBN 978 1 78074 347 9 Carruthers Susan L 2013 Review of The Untold History of the United States The Journal of American History 100 3 924 29 doi 10 1093 jahist jat536 ISSN 0021 8723 JSTOR 44308919 Cutler Jacqueline November 9 2012 Oliver Stone delves into America s Untold History Daily Herald Retrieved December 29 2019 Jewett Andrew 2013 The Social Sciences Philosophy and the Cultural Turn in the 1930s USDA Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences 49 4 396 427 doi 10 1002 jhbs 21629 ISSN 1520 6696 PMID 23982926 Culver amp Hyde 2000 pp 312 a b Gross Daniel January 8 2004 Seed Money Slate Retrieved January 12 2019 a b Seal Andrew June 8 2018 What a former vice president can teach Democrats about racial and economic inequality Washington Post Retrieved January 1 2019 Hornaday Ann November 11 2012 Oliver Stone s Untold History of the United States Facts through a new lens Washington Post Retrieved January 12 2019 Schlesinger Arthur Jr March 12 2000 Who Was Henry A Wallace Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 12 2019 Beinart Peter October 15 2018 Bernie Sanders Offers a Foreign Policy for the Common Man The Atlantic Retrieved January 12 2019 Devine 2013 p xiv Wiener John November 14 2012 Oliver Stone s Untold History The Nation Retrieved January 12 2019 Goldman Andrew November 22 2012 Oliver Stone Rewrites History Again The New York Times Retrieved January 11 2019 Capshaw Ron April 4 2015 Henry Wallace Unsung Hero of the Left National Review Retrieved January 12 2019 Wallace Henry A 1943 Century of the Common Man Two Speeches by Henry A Wallace Hugo Gellert illustrator International Workers Order Retrieved January 26 2020 Wallace Henry A 1943 Century of the Common Man Two Speeches by Henry A Wallace Hugo Gellert illustrator International Workers Order Retrieved January 26 2020 Dirlik Arif Wilson Rob 1995 Asia Pacific as space of cultural production Durham N C Duke University Press ISBN 0 8223 1643 9 A Guide to the Barbarian Vegetables of China Archived March 14 2016 at the Wayback Machine Lucky Peach June 30 2015Sources EditCulver John C Hyde John 2000 American Dreamer A Life of Henry A Wallace W W Norton ISBN 0 393 04645 1 Devine Thomas W 2013 Henry Wallace s 1948 Presidential Campaign and the Future of Postwar Liberalism University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 1469602035 online review Donovan Robert J 1977 Conflict and Crisis the Presidency of Harry S Truman 1945 1948 University of Missouri Press ISBN 978 0393056365 Karabell Zachary 2007 The Last Campaign How Harry Truman Won the 1948 Election Knopf Doubleday ISBN 9780307428868 Kennedy David M 1999 Freedom from Fear The American People in Depression and War 1929 1945 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195038347 Malsberger John William 2000 From Obstruction to Moderation The Transformation of Senate Conservatism 1938 1952 Susquehanna University Press ISBN 978 1575910260 Nichols John 2020 The Fight for the Soul of the Democratic Party The Enduring Legacy of Henry Wallace s Anti Fascist Anti Racist Politics Verso Books ISBN 978 1788737401 Patterson James T 1996 Grand Expectations The United States 1945 1974 Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199743957 Schapsmeier Edward L Schapsmeier Frederick H 1968 Henry A Wallace in Iowa The Agrarian Years 1910 1940 Iowa University Press ISBN 978 0813817415 Schapsmeier Edward L Schapsmeier Frederick H 1970 Prophet in Politics Henry A Wallace and the War Years 1940 1965 Iowa University Press ISBN 9780813812953 Further reading EditSecondary sources Edit Busch Andrew E Last Gasp Henry A Wallace and the End of the Popular Front 2014 42 4 712 717 onlineBusch Andrew 2012 Truman s Triumphs The 1948 Election and the Making of Postwar America University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0700618675 Conant Jennet 2008 The Irregulars Roald Dahl and the British Spy Ring in Wartime Washington Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0743294584 Dunn Susan 2013 1940 FDR Willkie Lindbergh Hitler the Election amid the Storm Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300190861 Ferrell Robert H 1994 Choosing Truman The Democratic Convention of 1944 University of Missouri Press ISBN 978 0826209481 Hamby Alonzo L Sixty Million Jobs and the People s Revolution The Liberals the New Deal and World War II Historian 30 4 1968 578 598 onlineHerman Arthur 2012 Freedom s Forge How American Business Produced Victory in World War II Random House ISBN 978 1400069644 Janeway Eliot The Struggle for Survival A Chronicle of Economic Mobilization in World War II Yale University Press 1951 onlineJordan David M 2011 FDR Dewey and the Election of 1944 Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253356833 Leebaert Derek Unlikely Heroes Franklin Roosevelt His Four Lieutenants and the World They Made 2023 on Perkins Ickes Wallace and Hopkins Lord Russell 1947 The Wallaces of Iowa Houghton Mifflin A Life in America prize book OCLC 475422 MacDonald Dwight 1948 Henry Wallace The Man and the Myth Vanguard Press OCLC 597926 ridicules and debunks Wallace online Markowitz Norman D 1973 The Rise and Fall of the People s Century Henry A Wallace and American Liberalism 1941 1948 Free Press ISBN 978 0029200902 Maze John White Graham 1995 Henry A Wallace His Search for a New World Order University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0807821893 McCoy Donald R 1984 The Presidency of Harry S Truman University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0700602520 Pietrusza David 2011 1948 Harry Truman s Improbable Victory and the Year that Changed America Union Square Press ISBN 978 1402767487 Shimamoto Mayako 2016 Henry A Wallace s Criticism of America s Atomic Monopoly 1945 1948 Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 978 1443899512 Schapsmeier Edward L and Frederick H Schapsmeier Henry A Wallace Agrarian Idealist or Agricultural Realist Agricultural History 41 2 1967 127 138 online Schapsmeier Edward L and Frederick H Schapsmeier Henry A Wallace New Deal Philosopher Historian 32 2 1970 177 190 onlineSchmidt Karl M 1960 Henry A Wallace Quixotic Crusade 1948 Syracuse University Press ISBN 0815600208 Timmons Bascom N Jesse H Jones the man and the statesman 1951 online ch 29 on feud with Wallace Walker J Samuel 1976 Henry A Wallace and American Foreign Policy Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0837187747 online Walton Richard J Henry Wallace Harry Truman and the Cold War 1976 online Witcover Jules 2014 The American Vice Presidency From Irrelevance to Power Smithsonian Institution ISBN 978 1588344724 Bibliography Works by Wallace EditBooks Edit Agricultural Prices 1920 Corn and Growing Corn 1937 with Earl N Bressman When to Feed Corn When to Sell It 1923 New Administration and Farm Relief 1933 Charted Course Toward Stable Prosperity 1934 New Frontiers 1934 America Must Choose 1934 Statesmanship and Religion 1934 Whose Constitution An Inquiry Into the General Welfare 1936 The Century of the Common Man 1943 Illustrations by Hugo Gellert Foreword by Carl Sandburg Hugo Gellert created a series of twenty silk screen prints to be used as artwork The original prints are now in the digital collection at the Whitney Museum of American Art 1 dd Democracy Reborn 1944 Sixty Million Jobs 1945 Soviet Asia Mission 1946 Toward World Peace 1948 Where I Was Wrong 1952 The Price of Vision The Diary of Henry A Wallace 1942 1946 1973 edited by John Morton Blum Articles and essays Edit Correlation and Machine Calculation with George W Snedecor Iowa State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts Official Publication Vol 23 No 35 January 28 1925 American Agriculture and World Markets Foreign Affairs Vol 12 No 2 January 1934 pp pp 216 230 doi 10 2307 20030579 JSTOR 20030579 The World Cotton Drama Foreign Affairs Vol 13 No 4 July 1935 pp 543 556 doi 10 2307 20020214 JSTOR 20020214 Pamphlets Edit Cooperation The Dominant Economic Idea of the Future New York Cooperative League 1936 OCLC 25488777 16 p Book contributions Foreword to A Pasture Handbook U S Department of Agriculture April 1934 Introduction to Brant Irving Storm Over the Constitution Democracy Turns to Federalism by Irving Brant Bobbs Merrill 1936 Foreword to America s Thought Police Record of the Un American Activities Commission Civil Rights Congress October 1947 Published addresses Agricultural Price Outlook 1923 An address to the 28th annual meeting of the Illinois Farmers Institute in Belleville Illinois on February 21 1923 Published by the Illinois Farmers Institute dd Working Together in the Corn hog Program 1934 Remarks by Hon H A Wallace Secretary of Agriculture delivered in the Department of Agriculture period of the National Farm and Home Hour broadcast by 50 associate N B C radio stations Thursday May 10 1934 dd The Dairyman s Place in Farm Solidarity 1937 Adapted in the Division of Information from an address by Henry A Wallace Secretary of Agriculture before the annual meeting of the National Cooperative Milk Producers Federation at Baltimore Md November 2 1931 dd Technology Corporations and the General Welfare 1937 Speech delivered on June 24 1937 Published by the University of North Carolina Press dd An American Income for Cotton 1938 Adapted from an address by Henry A Wallace Secretary of Agriculture before a meeting of farmers A A A committeemen and others at Fort Worth Texas September 30 1938 dd An American Income for Wheat 1938 The Century of the Common Man 1942 A speech delivered May 8 1942 articulating the goals of the war for the allies 2 dd The Price of Free World Victory 1942 An address delivered May 8 1942 to the members and guests of the Free World Association at a dinner at the Hotel Commodore in New York Published in collaboration with the Free World Movement dd The Century of the Common Man 1942 A speech delivered November 8 1942 at the Congress of American Soviet Friendship Mass Meeting in New York He further expanded on the subject since his delivery of a similar speech earlier that year 2 dd America Tomorrow 1943 An address delivered July 25 1943 at the Mass Meeting of Labor and Civic Organizations in Detroit Michigan dd External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Henry Wallace Wikiquote has quotations related to Henry A Wallace United States Congress Henry A Wallace id W000077 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress The Wallace Global Fund Works by Henry A Wallace at The Online Books Page Selected works by Henry A Wallace at The New Deal Network As delivered transcript and complete audio of Wallace s 1942 The Century of the Common Man Address Henry A Wallace Collection digitized at University of Iowa Library Searchable index of Wallace papers at the Library of Congress Franklin D Roosevelt Library and the University of Iowa Henry A Wallace Agricultural Pioneer Visionary and Leader Iowa Pathways education site of Iowa Public Television The Life of Henry A Wallace 1888 1965 on website of The Wallace Center for Agricultural and Environmental Policy at Winrock International A film clip Longines Chronoscope with Henry A Wallace December 28 1951 is available at the Internet Archive A film clip Longines Chronoscope with Henry Agard Wallace October 17 1952 is available at the Internet Archive Is There Any Wallace Left in the Democratic Party Archived September 12 2014 at the Wayback Machine The Real News TRNN Scott Wallace grandson of Henry A Wallace interviewed by Paul Jay video FBI file on Henry Wallace The Country Life Center location of The Wallace Centers of Iowa birthplace farm of Henry A Wallace Museum and gardens Political officesPreceded byArthur M Hyde United States Secretary of Agriculture1933 1940 Succeeded byClaude R WickardPreceded byJohn Nance Garner Vice President of the United States1941 1945 Succeeded byHarry S TrumanPreceded byJesse H Jones United States Secretary of Commerce1945 1946 Succeeded byW Averell HarrimanParty political officesPreceded byJohn Nance Garner Democratic nominee for Vice President of the United States1940 Succeeded byHarry S TrumanNew political party Progressive nominee for President of the United States1948 Succeeded byVincent HallinanPreceded byFranklin D Roosevelt American Labor nominee for President of the United StatesEndorsed1948 Gellert Hugo The Century of the Common Man Two Speeches by Henry A Wallace Whitney Museum of American Art accessed May 8 2021 Archived from the original a b Wallace Henry A The Century of the Common Man New York International Workers Order 1943 Full text available at Florida International University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry A Wallace amp oldid 1149914122, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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