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Learn
about President Eisenhower |
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Bringing to the Presidency his prestige as commanding
general of the victorious forces in Europe during World War II,
Dwight D. Eisenhower obtained a truce in Korea and worked incessantly
during his two terms to ease the tensions of the Cold War. He pursued
the moderate policies of "Modern Republicanism," pointing out as
he left office, "America is today the strongest, most influential,
and most productive nation in the world."
President Eishenhower was born in Texas in 1890.
He was brought up in Abilene, Kansas. Eisenhower was the third of
seven sons and excelled in sports in high school, and received an
appointment to West Point. Living in Texas as a second lieutenant,
he met Mamie Geneva Doud who he married in 1916.
In his early Army career, he excelled in staff
assignments, serving under Generals John J. Pershing, Douglas MacArthur,
and Walter Krueger. After Pearl Harbor, General George C. Marshall
called him to Washington for a war plans assignment. He commanded
the Allied Forces landing in North Africa in November 1942, on D-Day
in 1944. He was Supreme Commander of the troops invading France.
After the war, he became President of Columbia University,
then took leave to assume supreme command over the new NATO forces
being assembled in 1951. Republican emissaries to his headquarters
near Paris persuaded him to run for President in 1952.
Negotiating from military strength, he tried to
reduce the strains of the Cold War. In 1953, the signing of a truce
brought an armed peace along the border of South Korea. The death
of Stalin the same year caused shifts in relations with Russia.
New Russian leaders consented to a peace treaty
neutralizing Austria. Meanwhile, both Russia and the United States
had developed hydrogen bombs. With the threat of such destructive
force hanging over the world, Eisenhower, with the leaders of the
British, French, and Russian governments, met at Geneva in July
1955.
The President proposed that the United States and
Russia exchange blueprints of each other's military establishments
and "provide within our countries facilities for aerial photography
to the other country." The Russians greeted the proposal with silence,
but were so cordial throughout the meetings that tensions relaxed.
Suddenly, in September 1955, Eisenhower suffered
a heart attack in Denver, Colorado. After seven weeks he left the
hospital, and in February 1956 doctors reported his recovery. In
November he was elected for his second term.
Eisenhower concentrated on maintaining world peace.
He watched with pleasure the development of his "atoms for peace"
program--the loan of American uranium to "have not" nations for
peaceful purposes.
Before he left office in January 1961, for his farm
in Gettysburg, he urged the necessity of maintaining an adequate
military strength, but cautioned that vast, long-continued military
expenditures could breed potential dangers to our way of life. He
concluded with a prayer for peace "in the goodness of time." Both
themes remained timely and urgent when he died, after a long illness,
on March 28, 1969.
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