Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Hace 2 días · Harold L. Ickes earned a reputation, one he carefully nurtured, as scrupulously honest in administering public affairs, as well as being a fighter. Ickes was indeed honest, but he was also self righteous, vain, controlling and craved power. Ickes was appointed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to serve as Secretary of the Interior and he was ...

  2. Harold Ickes. Born. March 15 1874. Died. February 3 1952. Birth Location. Hollidaysburg, PA. As secretary of the interior from 1933 to 1946, Harold Ickes (1874–1952) was a key architect of liberal principles through the depression and World War II. A staunch advocate for civil rights, he opposed the mass exclusion and incarceration of ...

  3. Harold Ickes. Born March 15, 1874. Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania. Died February 3, 1952. Olney, Maryland. Public administrator. In May 1941 President Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882 – 1945; served 1933 – 45; see entry) designated his trusted adviser, Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes, to be the national coordinator for ensuring the military ...

  4. Harold L. Ickes and the National Park Service by Barry Mackintosh In 1933, President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt sought to balance his cabinet by nominating a Republican sup­ porter to be secretary of the interior. Senators Hiram Johnson of California and Bronson Cutting of New Mexico both turned him down, preferring to remain in the Senate.1

  5. Harold McEwen Ickes ( / ˈɪkiːz /; born September 4, 1939) is the former White House Deputy Chief of Staff for President Bill Clinton. He was a leading figure in the Clinton administration's healthcare reform initiative. [1] Ickes is the son of Harold L. Ickes, who was Secretary of the Interior under Franklin D. Roosevelt .

  6. Harold L. Ickes. Self: World Leaders on Peace and Democracy. Harold L. Ickes was born on 15 March 1874 in Frankstown, Pennsylvania, USA. He was married to Jane Dahlman and Anna Wilmarth Thompson .

  7. Ickes, Harold. As secretary of the interior under President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harold L. Ickes (1874-1952) repeatedly found himself at odds with the president over U.S. policy toward Europe’s Jews. A draft of a speech by Ickes condemning the 1938 Kristallnacht pogrom in Germany was censored by the president himself, who insisted that he ...