Henry lewis stimson biography

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  • Henry Stimson

    Henry Stimson’s Timeline

    1867 Sep 21st Born in New York City.

    1888 Received B.A. from Yale University.

    1890 Received J.D. from Harvard University.

    1911 May 22nd1913 Mar 4th Appointed Secretary of War by President William Howard Taft.

    1929 Mar 28th1933 Mar 4th Appointed Secretary of State by President Herbert Hoover.

    1940 Jul 10th1945 Sep 21st Appointed Secretary of War by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

    1941 Nov Informed of the atomic bomb project when he was appointed to the Top Policy Group, which would control the project.

    1943 May 1st1945 Sep 21st Supervised and directed the Manhattan Project.

    1945 Apr 25th Delivered first full briefing about the atomic bomb to President Harry Truman.

    1945 May Appointed chair of the Interim Committee by President Harry Truman.

    1945 May 30th Rules out Kyoto, the ancient capital of Japan, as a target for atomic attack.

    1950 Oct 20th Died in Huntington, New York.

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  • Biographies of the Secretaries of State: Henry Lewis Stimson (1867–1950)

    Influence in American Diplomacy

    Stimson succeeded Frank Kellogg as Secretary of State only a few days after the U.S. Senate had ratified the Kellogg-Briand Pact. He attempted during his tenure to save that pact, but commented in 1933 that "the situation in the world seemed to me like the unfolding of a great Greek tragedy, where we could see the march of events and know what ought to be done, but seemed to be powerless to prevent its marching to its grim conclusion."

    He headed the U.S. delegation to the London Naval Conference in 1930, which succeeded in limiting the naval race among the largest naval powers, although Japan would withdraw from the agreement in 1935. He also led the U.S. delegation to the Geneva Disarmament Conference in 1932.

    Upon Japan’s occupation of Manchuria in 1931, Stimson articulated what later became known as the "Stimson Doctrine," that the United States would recognize no diminution of U.S. treaty rights brought about by aggression. He also attempted, unsuccessfully, to limit the economic effects of war debts, but was thwarted by the U.S. Congress’ adoption of the Hawley-Smoot Tariff.

    Henry L. Stimson (1940–1945)

    Henry Lewis Stimson was born in New York on September 21, 1867, and attended college at Yale University (1884-1888) and Harvard Law School (1888-1890). Stimson went to work at the law firm of Root and Clark beginning in 1891 and later established a law partnership with Bronson Winthrop in 1899.

    He was a candidate for the governorship of New York in 1910 and gained national prominence when he was appointed by President William Howard Taft to replace Jacob Dickinson as secretary of war in 1911; Stimson remained in that post until the end of Taft's term in 1913. He then filled delegate positions in 1915 and 1916, attending both the New York state constitutional convention and the Republican National Convention from New York, respectively. Stimson participated in World War I, fighting as a colonel with the 305th Field Artillery in France. Thereafter, he would be known as "Colonel Stimson." He would then become presidential emissary to Nicaragua in 1927 and serve as governor general of the Philippines between 1927 and 1929.

    President Herbert Hoover made him secretary of state, and Stimson would serve in that capacity for the entirety of the Hoover administration (1929-1933). In 1932, Stimson and Hoover articulated what has come to be known as the "Stimson Doctrine," an assertion of nonrecognition of territorial gains taken by force, following Japanese aggression in Manchuria in 1931.

    Stimson returned to his law practice following his time in the Hoover cabinet, but would reenter the cabinet once again during World War II, having been appointed secretary of war by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in July 1940. He remained in that post until September 1945. Henry L. Stimson died on Long Island, New York, on October 20, 1950.

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