The Hopkins touch : Harry Hopkins and the forging of the alliance to defeat Hitler

"Franklin Roosevelt's friend and advisor Harry Hopkins, an Iowan social worker who became the president's political "point man" during World War II, was one of the most improbable and important political operators of the twentieth century. Having gained Roosevelt's trust assisting on campaigns and leading relief and jobs programs - including the WPA - during the 1930s, Hopkins helped the president confront the growing threat, and later the reality, of war. From the beginning, Hopkins grasped that the key to victory was the creation and maintenance of an Allied coalition of military power sustained by economic cooperation. He acted as the self-described "catalytic agent" between the Allied leaders, meeting frequently with Churchill and Stalin both before and long after Pearl Harbor and coordinating the $50 billion Lend-Lease program. David Roll's portrait of Hopkins discusses his early life and career, but emphasizes his role alongside FDR (and later Truman) in World War II, making use of previously private diaries and letters."--pub. desc.

Location
Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Frankfurt am Main
ISBN
9780199891955
0199891958
Dimensions
25 cm
Extent
510, [16] S.
Language
Englisch
Notes
Ill., Kt.
Literaturangaben

Keyword
Hopkins, Harry Lloyd
Geschichte 1939-1945
Außenpolitik
USA

Event
Veröffentlichung
(where)
Oxford, New York, NY
(who)
Oxford Univ. Press
(when)
2013
Creator

Table of contents
Rights
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Last update
11.03.2025, 11:54 AM CET

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Associated

Time of origin

  • 2013

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