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Dwight
D. Eisenhower
Dwight David "Ike" Eisenhower was the 34th
(1953-1961) President of the United States, supreme
commander of Allied Forces, during the latter part of
World War II, and the General of the United States Army.
He also served as president of Columbia University from
June 7, 1948 - 1952.
Table of contents
1 Military career
2 Eisenhower in politics
3 Early life and family
4 Military career
5 Supreme Court appointments
Military career
His first distinctive work involved exploring the
feasibility of crossing the North American continent with
modern mechanised equipment, shortly after World War I.
After 1941, he was chosen, over thousands of potential
officer candidates, to an assignment as Chief of the War
Plans Division (February 1942) and rose from that post to
become the US commander of the European theater, by June
1942. He was overall commander for the North African
landings in November of that year, and in February 1943,
took command of Allied forces in North Africa.
On December 24, 1943, after the
successful invasion of Sicily in July and Italy in
September, he was appointed supreme commander of the
Allied Expeditionary Forces.
When World War II was over, General Eisenhower became
head of the military occupation government of Germany
(See: Allied Control Council).
As the Army's Chief of Staff, he advocated merger of the
Army, Navy, and Air Force into a single military force.
Eisenhower in politics
For the 1948 election, Harry S. Truman secretly told
Eisenhower that if he ran for president as a Democrat,
Truman would be his running mate and Eisenhower would be
a sure win. He refused because he did not want to be
president. For the 1952 election, he was approached
again, this time by both the Democrats and the
Republicans. Eisenhower still refused, because he did not
consider himself a politician. But he changed his mind
when "I Like Ike" clubs started popping up all
over the country. Eisenhower had never even voted for
president before, and had no political affiliation. He
ran for the Republicans because he was a strong believer
in the two-party system, and there had not been a
Republican president in over twenty years.
During his campaign Eisenhower never mentioned his main
competitor, Adlai Stevenson, by name. Instead he mostly
criticized the ways of Truman, the incumbent Democratic
president. This strategy worked - Eisenhower won the
election with 442 electoral votes, against Stevenson's
89. Though he had never held public office, he had had
links with the Washington system between the wars in his
aide de camp capacity. In addition, he was considered a
war hero, and so he had a good image.
As a a moderate Republican, he was able to garner votes
across the political spectrum. This method allowed him to
get along well with the mostly Democratic senate, and it
made him very popular during his presidency. On the other
hand, when his terms were over he was greatly criticized
for his politics.
Although he had no sympathy for the African American
civil rights movement, Eisenhower sent federal troops to
Little Rock High School after Governor Orval Faubus
attempted to defy a Supreme Court ruling that ordered the
desegregation of all public schhols.
Eisenhower was also strongly criticized for not taking a
public stand against Senator Joseph McCarthy's
anti-communist actions, although he privately hated him,
particularly for McCarthy's attack on his friend and
World War II colleague, Secretary of State General George
Marshall. He did, in fact, also help fan the flames of
the red scare (which was associated with McCarthyism) on
April 7, 1954 when he gave his "domino theory"
speech during a news conference. That theory was that
every nation that falls to communism could cause other
nations to follow suit.
Eisenhower endorsed the United States Interstate highway
Act, in 1956. It was the largest American public works
program in history, providing a 41,000-mile highway
system. Eisenhower had been impressed during the war with
the German Autobahns and also recalled his own
involvement in a military convoy in 1919 that took 62
days to cross the United States.
Another achievement was a twenty percent increase in
family income during his presidency, which he was very
proud of. He added a tenth cabinet position -- the
Department of Health, Education, and Welfare -- and he
gave all of the cabinet members more responsibilities in
their areas, letting them take a lot of praise and glory.
And he achieved a balanced budget three of the years that
he was president.
During his campaign he promised to stop the Korean War,
and it was one of the first things he accomplished as
president. He flew to Korea and implied in a show of
brinkmanship that he would spread the war to mainland
China, and bring in nuclear weapons. This was effective
and a cease-fire was signed in 1953. He signed defense
treaties with South Korea and the Republic of China
(after his state visit to Taipei in 1960), and entered
SEATO, which was an alliance with Asian countries to try
and stop the communist-run People's Republic of China. He
severed diplomatic relations with Cuba. Eisenhower was
very concerned about Communism, which may be the reason
he did not speak out against McCarthy. He formulated the
Eisenhower Doctrine, which helped justify US involvement
in Lebanon during his second term. He resisted entreaties
to get involved in Vietnam on the advice of General
Matthew Ridgway who gave him a comprehensive estimate of
the massive commitment that would have been required. He
was also concerned about too much war: in farewell
address, he warned against the "military-industrial
complex".
There were high tensions in the Middle East, particularly
between Israel and Egypt. The British and French sided
with Israel, and they attacked Egypt. Then Egypt tried to
get the Soviet Union to help, and the Soviet Union
threatened that they would. Eisenhower did not want the
conflict to turn into the third World War, and he
demanded that the United Nations replace the force of
England and France. Britain agreed to withdraw, and the
crisis was ended. The US did not become involved in any
major military conflicts during his administration.
Eisenhower left an interesting legacy. He was very
popular during his presidency, but soon after it ended
historians rated him as one of the worst presidents in
history. This was mainly because of his reluctance to
help desegregation and to stop McCarthyism. Also, he made
the nuclear arms race much worse, with continuous
threats. But in a recent poll of historians, he was rated
number eleven. This is because people understand his
presidency differently now. They realize that he played
up the cabinet's accomplishments and played down his own
purposely. He wanted to spread the responsibility around,
so that it was possible to get more done. They also
remember that he accomplished the Interstate Highway Act
and kept defense spending very low.
Early life and family
Eisenhower was born in Denison, Texas, as the third of
David Jacob and Ida Elizabeth Stover Eisenhower's seven
sons. The family moved to Abilene, Kansas, in 1892.
Eisenhower graduated from Abilene High School in 1909 and
he worked at Belle Springs Creamery from 1909-11.
Eisenhower married Mamie Geneva Doud, of Denver, Colorado
on July 1, 1916. He had two children:
Doud Dwight (September 24, 1917 - January 2, 1921)
John Sheldon Doud (August 3, 1922)
The Eisenhower Presidential Library is located in
Abilene, Kansas. Eisenhower and his wife are buried in a
small chapel there (the Place of Meditation).
Military career
June 14, 1911 -- attends United States Military Academy,
West Point, New York
June 12, 1915 -- graduates
September 1915 -- commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant
September 1915 - February 1918 -- Serves in the Infantry
July 1, 1916 -- promoted to 1st Lieutenant
May 15, 1917 -- promoted to Captain
Fort Sam Houston, Texas
Camp Wilson, Texas
Leon Springs, Texas
Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia
February 1918 - January 1922 -- serves with the Tank
Corps
June 17, 1918 -- promoted to Major (temporary)
October 14, 1918 -- promoted to Lieutenant Colonel
(temporary)
July 7 - September 6, 1919 -- volunteers as observer
during the First Transcontinental Motor Convoy
June 30, 1920 -- reverted to the rank of Captain
July 2, 1920 -- promoted to Major
Camp Meade, Maryland
Camp Colt, Pennsylvania
Camp Dix, New Jersey
Fort Benning, Georgia
Fort Meade, Maryland
January 1922 - September 1924 -- Executive officer to
General Conner -- Camp Gaillard, Panama Canal Zone
September 1924 - August 1925 -- various assignments in
Maryland and Colorado
August 19, 1925 -- attends the Command and General Staff
School, Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas
June 18, 1926, graduates first in a class of 245
August 1926 - January 1927 -- Battalion Commander, 24th
Infantry Regiment, Fort Benning, Georgia
January - August 1927 -- at American Battle Monuments
Commission writing a guidebook to World War I
battlefields, directed by General Pershing
July 1928 - September 1929 -- In charge of guidebook
revision and the European office, Paris, France
August 27, 1927 -- attends the Army War College,
Washington, D.C
June 30, 1928 -- graduates
November 1929 -- February 1933 -- Executive Officer to
Assistant Secretary of War George V. Moseley, Washington,
D.C
February 1933 - September 1935 -- Chief Military Aide to
the US Army Chief of Staff General MacArthur
September 1935 - December 1939 -- Assistant Military
Advisor to the Philippine Commonwealth under General
MacArthur
July 1, 1936 -- Promoted to Lieutenant Colonel, July 1,
1936.
February 1940 - November 1940
Assigned briefly to General Clinton, Commander of 15th
Infantry Regiment, Fort Ord, California
Assigned to Fort Lewis, Washington was a regimental
executive
November 1940 - March 1941 -- Chief of Staff to General
Thompson, Commander of 3rd Division, Fort Lewis
March 1941 - June 1941 -- Chief of Staff to General
Joyce, Commander of 9th Army Corps, Fort Lewis
March 11 -- promoted to Colonel (temporary)
June 1941 - December 1941 -- Chief of Staff to General
Kreuger, Commander of 3rd Army, Fort Sam Houston, Texas
September 29 -- promoted to Brigadier General (temporary)
December 1941 - June 1942 -- Assigned to the General
Staff, Washington, D.C
December 1941 -- Deputy Chief in charge of Pacific
Defenses, under Chief of the War Plans Division, General
Gerow
February 1942 -- Chief of the War Plans Division
April 1942 -- Assistant Chief of Staff in charge of the
Operations Division, under Chief of Staff General
Marshall
March 27 -- promoted to Major General (temporary)
May 1942 -- Mission to increase cooperation amongst
Allies, London, England
June 1942 -- Commanding General, European Theater of
Operations, London, England
July 7, 1942 -- promoted to Lieutenant General
(temporary)
November 1942 -- Commander-in-Chief, Allied Forces, North
Africa
February 11, 1943 -- promoted to General
August 30, 1943 -- promoted to Major General (permanent)
December 1943 -- Supreme Commander, Allied Expeditionary
Force
June 6, 1944 -- Commander, Allied Forces, Normandy
Invasion
December 20, 1944 -- Promoted to General of the Army
May 8, 1945 -- Military Governor, US Occupied Zone,
Frankfurt, Germany
November 19, 1945 -- Chief of Staff of the United States
Army
December 16, 1950 -- Supreme Allied Commander, North
Atlantic Treaty Organization
May 31, 1952 -- retired from active service
July 1952 -- resigns commission
Supreme Court appointments
Earl Warren - Chief Justice - 1953
John Marshall Harlan - 1955
William J. Brennan, Jr - 1956
Charles Evan Whittaker - 1957
Potter Stewart - 1958
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