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  1. Henry A. Wallace

    Henry A. Wallace

    Vice president of the United States from 1941 to 1945

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  1. Earl Browder, [2] American communist and General Secretary of the Communist Party USA from 1934 to 1945. Paul Burns** [2] [4] Sylvia Callen ** [2] Virginius Frank Coe [2] Lona Cohen ** [2] Morris Cohen **, [2] Communist Party USA & Portland Spy Ring member who was courier for Manhattan Project physicist Theodore Hall.

  2. Apr 8, 2024 · New book by eminent historian casts shadow on legacy of Iowa's Henry A. Wallace. Drawing on what he says are previously undisclosed Soviet records, an award-winning historian asserts in a new book ...

  3. In the end, Wallace’s Progressives gained just 2.37 percent of the popular vote, while it would later be revealed that Harry Dexter White, Wallace’s proposed Vice President, was a Soviet spy.

    • henry a. wallace communist spy1
    • henry a. wallace communist spy2
    • henry a. wallace communist spy3
    • henry a. wallace communist spy4
    • henry a. wallace communist spy5
  4. BUSCH / Henry A. Wallace and the End of the Popular Front 713. lace from 1945 through the election of 1948. The hammer of his research falls. heaviest on Wallace and those who have maintained that Communists played. only a minor role in his campaign, but the book approaches the question with complexity.

  5. CWIHP is pleased to announce the addition of new documents to its online Digital Archive with an introduction by Vadim Birstein, biologist and historian. In CWIHP e-Dossier no. 34, newly translated documents reveal the Soviet perspective on Vice President Henry A. Wallace's 1944 trip to the Soviet Far East.

  6. Henry Wallace is the most important, and certainly the most fascinating, almost-president in American history. As FDR’s third-term vice president, and a hero to many progressives, he lost his ...

  7. The Idea of. in McCarthy-Era Politics By Richard M. Fried n Sunday, January 29, 1950, former Vice President Henry A. Wallace made a mysterious telephone call to Joseph E. Davies. Just fourteen months after he had challenged Truman for the White House in 1948, the agitated Wallace insisted he must see the man he had so roundly denounced.