Henry A
@33rd Vice President of the U.s.a, Family and Life
Henry A
Henry A. Wallace born at
In 1914, Wallace married Ilo Browne, and the couple had three children together. In 1926, Wallace founded the highly successful Hi-Bred Corn Company with financial help from his wife.
Wallace suffered from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in his last years and died on November 18, 1965, in Danbury, Connecticut. His body was cremated at Grace Cemetery in Bridgeport, Connecticut, and the ashes were buried in Glendale Cemetery, Des Moines, Iowa.
Henry Agard Wallace was born on October 7, 1888, in, Iowa, U.S., to Henry Cantwell Wallace, a farmer, newspaper editor, and author who later became the Secretary of Agriculture, and his wife, May Brodhead, a deeply religious woman, trained in music and art.
In 1910, Wallace completed his graduation from Iowa State College with a degree in animal husbandry. Thereafter, he began working for Wallaces’ Farmer, a family-owned paper founded by his father and grandfather.
From 1910 to 1924, Wallace worked on the editorial staff of the publication in Des Moines. Subsequently, he became the chief editor of the magazine, a position in which he served until 1929.
Henry A. Wallace’s family constantly supported the Republican Party but Wallace was subsequently disappointed with the party over its farm policies and highly protectionist tariff policies. As a result, he parted ways with the party in 1928.
Later, Wallace joined the Democratic Party, and played a crucial role in the Democrats victory in conservative state of Iowa in the 1932 elections. The victory in Iowa was significant because Democratic Party went to 1932 elections and with a radical New Deal program to tackle the Great Depression and Iowa was considered to be a conservative state.
Upon noticing his contribution in Democratic Party’s success and his expertise in agriculture, Wallace was selected for the post of Secretary of Agriculture during Roosevelt’s first two terms. From 1933 to 1940, Wallace served as the United States Secretary of Agriculture in President Roosevelt’s administration.
In 1940, when Roosevelt decide to run for a third presidential term, he chose Wallace as his running mate.Subsequently, Wallace was elected and became the 33rd vice president of the United States in the Democratic administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt, serving until 1945.
As Vice President of the United States, Wallace became the President’s goodwill diplomat to Latin America, traveling to Siberia and China. When the United States entered World War II, Wallace managed several additional emergency duties, particularly in national economic affairs.
Wallace was an agrarian expert and his experiments with higher-yielding corn strains gave rise to major advances in plant genetics and subsequently, he industrialized it into a highly profitable hybrid-corn business.
As Secretary of Agriculture, he formulated and administered New Deal legislation, particularly the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933. It was designed to advance and stabilize farm prices, conserve soil, stock reserves, and regulate production, and Wallace was successful in shaping the government’s farm policy.