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  1. Mission & Vision. The Stimson Center promotes international security and shared prosperity through applied research and independent analysis, global engagement, and policy innovation. Innovative Ideas. Changing the World. For three decades, Stimson has been a leading voice on urgent global issues. Founded in the twilight years of the Cold War ...

  2. Welcome to Henry L. Stimson Middle School, part of the South Huntington Union Free School District and home of the Stimson Wildcats! We pride ourselves on providing a safe, robust and engaging learning environment that respects the needs of every student. The staff at Stimson Middle School provide innovative experiences that encourage all ...

  3. 1. Aug. 1993 · This is a strange book that, though not entirely without merit, lacks clear purpose and coherent organization. Though one might reasonably gather from the title that this would be Henry Stimson’s account of his role in implementing U.S. policy in Nicaragua in the 1920s, the material written by that patrician-diplomat himself actually accounts for only three short chapters (54 pages) in a 268 ...

  4. Henry L. Stimson was the first child of Candace Wheeler and Lewis Atterbury Stimson. Lewis Stimson, a graduate of Yale, served in the Union Army in the Civil War and then joined his father's banking firm in New York. He married “Cannie” Wheeler in Paris in 1866 and Henry, nicknamed Harry or Hal, was born on September 21, 1867.

  5. 5. Juli 2023 · Henry Lewis Stimson, born in New York City 21 September 1867, graduated from Yale in 1888. After graduate work and law school at Harvard, he entered the law firm headed by Elihu Root in 1891 and two years later became a partner. In 1906 President Theodore Roosevelt appointed him U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York. Here he made a distinguished record prosecuting antitrust cases ...

  6. 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.

  7. Harper’s Magazine THE DECISION TO USE THE ATOMIC BOMB HENRY L. STIMSON Henry L. Stimson, Secretary of War 1911–13, Secretary of State 1929–33, Secretary of War 1940–45, was the man who had to make the recommendation to the President. In recent months there has been much comment about the decision to use atomic bombs in […]