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Collection on Henry Agard Wallace

 Collection
Identifier: MS0192

  • Staff Only

Scope and Contents

The Henry Agard Wallace Collection contains three series of records: Official Communications; Clippings; and Oral History, Volumes 2 and 3. The bulk of the items are dated 1933-1940, when Wallace served as Secretary of Agriculture. However, there are clippings from as early as 1921 when he served as editor for Wallaces' Farmer, and from 1940-1943 during his Vice Presidency.

Before the National Agricultural Library (NAL) accessioned the collection, most of the speeches and press releases were numbered in pencil and inventoried. A copy of the inventory is included in Series I. According to this inventory, the current collection of speeches and press releases is incomplete. The clippings were cataloged as part of the Bureau of Agricultural Economics' Pamphlet Collection. All red pencil markings and stamps were added prior to NAL accession. There is also a folder of editorial abstracts compiled from Wallaces' Farmer and Wallaces' Farmer and Homestead from 1921-1933 when Henry A. Wallace was editor. A note in the collection indicates that Wallace requested that this compilation be made. The two volumes of The Reminiscences of Henry Agard Wallace have been marked and corrected in pencil, presumably by him. Corrections made include the insertion of names and background information, as well as a few typographical corrections. Pages with corrections are listed in the Series Description on page 7 of this finding aid.

The Henry Agard Wallace Collection contains records relating to agricultural policy in the 1930s. Topics of interest in this collection include: the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933, with the subsequent actions taken regarding this Act (including the Supreme Court case and the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938); the Soil and Domestic Allotment Act of 1936; the initiation of school lunch and school milk programs; and political and social happenings in Washington, DC, during the 1930s. Individual records of interest include Secretary Wallace's speech to the New York Times National Book Fair (November 4, 1937) with a deleted paragraph that was leaked to the press and published by the Washington Daily News (November 5, 1937), and a newspaper photograph of the 1935 Harvard University honorary degree recipients, including Wallace and Albert Einstein (New York Times, June 21, 1935).

Dates

  • Creation: 1933-1942
  • Creation: Majority of material found within 1933-1940

Conditions Governing Access

Biographical Sketch

Henry A. (Henry Agard) Wallace (1888-1965) was associate editor (1910-1924) and editor (1924-1929) of Wallaces' Farmer, editor (1929-1933) of The Iowa Homestead and Wallaces' Farmer, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (1933-1940), Vice President of the U.S. (1941-45), U.S. Secretary of Commerce (1945-1946), and editor of The New Republic (1946-1948). He was the son of Henry Cantwell Wallace, who served as the seventh U.S. Secretary of Agriculture.

Biographical / Historical

Henry Agard Wallace was born in Adair County, Iowa, on October 7, 1888, to Henry Cantwell and Carrie (Brodhead) Wallace. He received a bachelor of science in animal husbandry at Iowa State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts in 1910 and was well-known as an agricultural economist. He served as editor of his family's weekly farm journal, Wallaces' Farmer (later Wallaces' Farmer and Homestead) from 1921-1933.

In 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed Wallace Secretary of Agriculture. As Secretary, he proposed and presided over New Deal-era agriculture programs, including:

The Agricultural Adjustment Acts of 1933 and 1938, which encouraged farmers to voluntarily reduce planted acreage and imposed taxes and controls to eliminate agricultural surpluses. The ever-normal granary plan, which created a grain storage program to protect against price gouging in drought years. The Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act of 1936, which subsidized participating farmers for planting soil-conserving crops, such as grasses and legumes. During his tenure, Wallace also encouraged implementation of drought relief plans, food distribution efforts, and food assistance programs, such as the school lunch and school milk programs and the food stamp program. He expanded the United States Department of Agriculture's research in studying plant and animal breeding.

In 1940, President Roosevelt recommended to the Democratic convention that Wallace be his vice presidential running-mate. Wallace resigned his post as Secretary of Agriculture, and upon winning the election, became Vice President of the United States. He served in that position from 1941-1944. He was appointed Secretary of Commerce by Roosevelt in 1945 and resigned from that post in September 1946. Wallace was the presidential candidate for the Progressive Party in 1948 before retiring from public life.

Wallace authored or co-authored at least 16 books. While Secretary of Agriculture, he published America Must Choose (1934); Statesmanship and Religion (1934); New Frontiers (1934); Whose Constitution? (1936); Technology, Corporations, and the General Welfare (1937); Paths to Plenty (1938; 1940 revised and renamed Price of Freedom); and The American Choice (1940). Wallace received honorary degrees from Iowa State College, Washington and Jefferson College, Drake University, University of Arizona at Tucson, Columbia University, Harvard University, and Louisiana State University at Baton Rouge.

Wallace married Ilo Browne in 1914 and had three children. He died in Danbury, Connecticut on November 18, 1965.

Total Size of Collection

1 records_box

3 letter_document_box

3 legal_document_box

4.25 Linear Feet (6 boxes (Total number of boxes from Access record does not agree with box subtotals))

Language of Materials

English

Content Description

The Henry Agard Wallace Collection in Special Collections of the National Agricultural Library occupies eight linear feet, consisting of eight document boxes and four flat pamphlet boxes. The inclusive dates of the collection are 1921-1943, with the bulk of the records from 1933-1940, during Wallace's tenure as Secretary of Agriculture. The collection was originally housed in the library of the Bureau of Agricultural Economics. The Collection on Henry Agard Wallace includes press releases of addresses and statements made by Wallace while he was U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (1933-1940) and newspaper clippings about Wallace while he was secretary and during his first year as Vice President of the United States. There is also a copy of the typescript, "The Reminiscences of Henry Agard Wallace," Volume 2, 1935-1939, pages 310-643, and Volume 3, January-March 1940, pages 644-991. Wallace penciled notes on several pages of the typescript. The typescript was published and is owned by the Library of Congress.

Related Materials

See also the Clarence Joseph Enzler Papers, collection number MS 265.

Bibliography

Related Collections at National Agricultural Library:

Beaty, Layne R., Papers, 1926-1979. Manuscript Collection 17.

USDA History Collection. (Series I, II, VII, IX). Manuscript collection 182.

Wallace, Henry Cantwell, Papers. (Henry C. Wallace, Henry A. Wallace's father, was Secretary of Agriculture from 1921 to 1924.) Manuscript Collection 108.

Warren, Donald Cameron, Papers. American Poultry Historical Society Collection. Manuscript Collection 193.

Related Collections at Other Institutions:

The Papers of Henry A. Wallace, donated by him and his family are held at the University of Iowa Libraries Special Collections Department. These include personal papers and research materials. The online Collection Guide is available at: http://collguides.lib.uiowa.edu/?MSC0177.

The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) houses photographs from USDA events in Record Group 16: "Records of the Office of the Secretary of Agriculture" The finding aid is located at: http://research.archives.gov/description/345 NARA also houses photographic collections from Wallace's tenures as Vice President and Secretary of Commerce.

The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library contains a number of collections relating to Henry A. Wallace. The online finding aids catalog may be found at https://fdrlibrary.org/

The Library of Congress houses an archival manuscript collection of the "Papers of Henry A. Wallace, 1931-1945 (bulk 1941-1945)" (mm 78044487). The complete three-volume work, The Reminiscences of Henry Agard Wallace, is in the Library's book and microfilm collection.

Sources Used:

United States, Agricultural History Branch. Century of Service: The First 100 Years of the United States Department of Agriculture. (Washington, DC: Centennial Committee, USDA, 1963).

Rogers, Earl M., ed. and Dunlap, Leslie W. "Guide to a Microfilm Edition of the Henry A. Wallace Papers at The University of Iowa." (Iowa City: University of Iowa Libraries, 1974).

"Wallace, Henry Agard." National Cyclopedia of American Biography, Vol. 53. (New York: James T. White & Company, 1971) 15-17.

For further research on Henry Agard Wallace:

Blum, John Morton, ed. The Price of Vision: The Diary of Henry A. Wallace, 1942-1946. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1973).

National Agricultural Library. "Henry A. Wallace References Outside the USDA History Collection." http://www.nal.usda.gov/exhibits/speccoll/exhibits/show/usda-history-collection/reference-pages/henry-agard-wallace

Schlesinger, Jr., Arthur M. The Age of Roosevelt: The Coming of the New Deal. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1958).
Status
Completed
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
Undetermined
Script of description
Code for undetermined script

Repository Details

Part of the National Agricultural Library Special Collections Repository

Contact:
National Agricultural Library
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