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  1. Thomas E. Dewey entering a voting booth on Nov. 2, 1948. As the returns rolled in on election night, Truman took a narrow lead, but political commentators still believed that Dewey would ultimately win. Emblematic of this was the Chicago Daily Tribune ’s decision to distribute a paper with the famous headline “Dewey Defeats Truman.”.

  2. 17. Sept. 2012 · Thomas E. Dewey and his times by Richard Norton Smith. Publication date 1982 Topics Cultural Literacy and Humanities, Reading Level-Adult Publisher Simon and Schuster Collection internetarchivebooks; inlibrary; printdisabled Contributor I ...

  3. de.wikipedia.org › wiki › DeweyDewey – Wikipedia

    Thomas E. Dewey (Thomas Edmund Dewey; 1902–1971), US-amerikanischer Jurist und Politiker (Republikanische Partei) Tommy Dewey (Thomas R. Dewey; * 1978), US-amerikanischer Schauspieler, Produzent und Drehbuchautor; Travis Dewey (* 1971), US-amerikanischer Musiker, siehe Pirate Shantyman and his Bonnie Lass; Fiktive Charaktere:

  4. Thomas E. Dewey. On March 24, 1902, in Owosso, Michigan, Thomas Edmund Dewey was born above his grandfather’s general store, the son of the local newspaper publisher, George M. and homemaker Annie (Thomas) Dewey. His perfect attendance, from kindergarten through graduation from high school in 1919, was characteristic of the tenacity and ...

  5. Richard Norton Smith. Simon and Schuster, 1982 - Biography & Autobiography - 703 pages. Thomas E. Dewey, unfortunately, is probably best remembered by most Americans as the little fellow who lost the 1948 Presidential election to Harry S. Truman in one of the greatest upsets in American history. But thanks to the work of Richard Norton Smith ...

  6. On the eve of the balloting at the Republican National Convention, Governor Thomas E. Dewey and Mrs. Frances E. Dewey, with their sons Thomas, 15 (left) and John, 12, sit for an informal portrait in their suite at the Bellevue-Stratford.

  7. Abstract. This chapter identifies twin foreign policy influences on the 1944 election. The first and most straightforward was that the United States was, like m