| The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07. |
| |
| Ickes, Harold LeClaire |
| |
| |
( k´ z) (KEY) , 18741952, American statesman, b. Blair co., Pa. As a Chicago newspaper reporter and later as a lawyer, he became interested in local reform politics. Originally a Republican, he joined (1912) the Progressive party and became that partys state leader, but he returned to the Republican party in 1916. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt appointed (1933) Ickes secretary of the Interior and also made him head of the Public Works Administration (PWA). During World War II he was also administrator in control of the countrys fuel resources. Ickes came into frequent conflict with business interests both as a conservationist and because of the public programs he set up. On the other hand he was criticized for spending PWA money too slowly to make an immediate impact on the Depression. President Harry Truman accepted Ickess resignation (1946) from the cabinet in an argument over Trumans nomination of Edwin W. Pauley, an oil executive, as undersecretary of the Navy. Ickess reputation for outspoken bluntness is upheld by his New Democracy (1934) and The Autobiography of a Curmudgeon (1943). His Secret Diary (3 vol., 195354, repr. 1974) provides a valuable view of the Roosevelt presidency and the New Deal. | 1 | | See biography by T. H. Watkins (1990); study by G. White and J. Maze (1985). | 2 |
| |
| | | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2007 Columbia University Press. |
|
|