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  1. Henry A. Wallace letter to President Truman Creator Wallace, Henry Agard Date Created and/or Issued July 23, 1946 Contributing Institution Hoover Institution Collection Hoover Institution Digital Collections Rights Information Please contact the contributing institution for more information regarding the copyright status of this object. Type ...

  2. Henry Wallace (1888–1965) was President Roosevelt’s Vice President and also served as his Secretary of Agriculture. He was Secretary of Commerce under President Truman until Truman fired him in 1946 for publicly disagreeing with Truman’s approach to the Soviet Union. Wallace ran for President in 1948 as the Progressive Party nominee.

  3. Letter to Secretary Wallace Requesting a Study of the Patent Laws. April 26, 1945. [Released April 26, 1945. Dated April 20, 1945] My dear Mr. Secretary: Much has lately been said and written to suggest that the patent statutes do not in all. respects serve the constitutional purpose to promote the progress of science and useful arts, and.

  4. I am sending you a copy of a letter, together with certain documents, which I recently received from Mr. Henry A. Wallace. These papers deal with the facts of Mr. Wallace's trip to the Far East in 1944, and the part played by his advisers on that trip. These papers deal with certain matters which may be of interest to the Senate and its Committees.

  5. Item Title Henry A. Wallace letter to President Truman Collection Title Robert D. Murphy papers. Creator Wallace, Henry Agard (1888-1965) Date Created July 23, 1946.

  6. Terms in this set (5) What is most clearly the purpose of Henry Wallace's letter to President Truman? To make the case that a military buildup in the name of containment is unwarranted. Based on the ideas expressed in the excerpt of Henry Wallace's letter to President Truman, which of the following policies would Wallace most likely support?

  7. Document Set 2: Truman’s Conflicts with Wallace. Cover Page to Speech from Secretary of Commerce Henry Wallace to Truman, July 23, 1946; Memo to Mr. Clifford, September 18, 1946; Longhand Notes of President Harry S. Truman, September 16 & 19, 1946; Charlie Ross' Recollection of Meeting Between Henry Wallace & Harry Truman, September 20, 1946