American History 102:  Civil War to the Present

Stanley K. Schultz, Instructor
William P. Tishler, Producer

Who's Who in American History

Dwight Eisenhower

Military leader, President (1890-1969). 

     Born in Texas, he graduated from West Point in 1915.  Over the next 25 years, he served at posts around the world and steadily rose through the Army ranks.  When the United States entered World War II after Pearl Harbor, Eisenhower became one of the Allies' foremost military strategists.  As commander of U.S. forces in Europe, he planned the invasions of Northern Africa (1942), Sicily and Italy (1943).  Promoted to Allied commander in chief, he directed the Normandy invasion (June 1944) and the brutal year-long campaign through Europe which led to the German surrender.  In December, 1944, the Army made him a five-star general, its highest rank.

Ike and Brothers
'Ike' and four brothers proudly exhibit muskies and northern pike caught on Wisconsin Lake
Image Copyright 1998 State Historical Society of Wisconsin
 

     After the war, he briefly headed the U.S. occupation forces in Germany, then returned to Washington to serve as Army chief of staff.  In 1948, he retired from active military duty and became president of Columbia University.  Two years later, he returned to military leadership as commander of NATO forces in Europe.  In 1952, both political parties courted the extremely popular war hero as a possible presidential candidate.  He opted to run as a Republican, easily won the election and served two terms.  As President, he forged a quick truce in the Korean War in 1953 and later pursued international disarmament agreements, albeit with little success.  He also adopted a hardline anti-communist stance, using military aid and occasionally U.S. troops to counter Soviet expansionism and to undermine leftist movements around the world.  In domestic policy, he strove to remain nonpartisan and exerted little direction. 

SOURCES:  Webster's American Biographies; Cambridge Dictionary of American Biography.  

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Last updated Tuesday, November 18, 1998