president
dwight d.
eisenhower
thirty-fourth
president of
the united
states
interesting
facts
President
Eisenhowever
was an avid
golf player.
He would
practice his
putting skills
in the white
house lawn. He
also banned
all squirrels.
quote
"There must be
no second
class citizens
in this
country."
Dwight D.
Eisenhower
1952 Stump
Speech --
Excerpt
(2:48). (AU)
(WAV)
Inaugural
Address
First
Inaugural
Address
Second
Inaugural
Address
biography
The name
Eisenhower
comes from
German words
meaning a kind
of ironworker.
The
president's
father, David
Eisenhower,
was descended
from German
immigrants who
had settled in
Pennsylvania
during the
1730s. In 1878
the family
moved to
Abilene, Kan.
The
president's
mother, Ida
Elizabeth
(Stover)
Eisenhower,
had moved from
Virginia to
Kansas in
1883.
Eisenhower's
parents met at
a United
Brethren
school in
Lecompton,
Kan. They were
married in
1885. A few
years later
David
Eisenhower
moved his
family from
Abilene to
Denison, Tex.
There Dwight
was born Oct.
14, 1890. Two
years later
the family
returned to
Abilene.
The future
president,
with his
brothers
Arthur, Edgar,
Roy, Earl, and
Milton, grew
up on the old
homestead of
his
grandfather
Jacob
Eisenhower. In
1947 this home
became a
national
shrine. Family
souvenirs and
papers are
housed in the
Eisenhower
Foundation
Museum, opened
at Abilene in
1954.
During his
school days
young Dwight
was usually
called Ike by
his friends.
The nickname
stayed with
him throughout
his life.
Ike's favorite
school
subjects were
English,
history, and
geometry. In
sports he
starred in
both
basketball and
football.
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, 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.
"I like Ike"
was an
irresistible
slogan;
Eisenhower won
a sweeping
victory.
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.
In domestic
policy the
President
pursued a
middle course,
continuing
most of the
New Deal and
Fair Deal
programs,
emphasizing a
balanced
budget. As
desegregation
of schools
began, he sent
troops into
Little Rock,
Arkansas, to
assure
compliance
with the
orders of a
Federal court;
he also
ordered the
complete
desegregation
of the Armed
Forces. "There
must be no
second class
citizens in
this country,"
he wrote.
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.
