Available Formats
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.: The Remarkable Life of FDR's Secretary of the Treasury
By (Author) Herbert Levy
Skyhorse Publishing
Skyhorse Publishing
16th June 2015
United States
General
Non Fiction
Biography: adventurers and explorers
973.917092
Paperback
572
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 30mm
794g
Henry Morgenthau, Jr. was a young man living in an interesting political and social atmosphere. Surrounded by people who viewed the world through a Social Darwinist lens, and grappling with his identity as an American Jew during the atrocities of WWII in Europe, Henry Morgenthau, Jr. played an integral role as Roosevelts secretary of the treasury during a tough economic and political time.
Henry Morgenthau, Jr. explores the life of this native New Yorker, growing up in a business-minded family, spending most of his teenage years at boarding school, and feeling isolated from his peers. Morgenthau found true passion in farming, and it served him well during the years that FDR was governor of New York and again after Morgenthaus retirement from political life. Morgenthau established not only a working relationship with FDR during his presidency, but also a personal relationship, one that allowed him some freedom of expression in what he viewed as a sometimes intolerant era.
Herbert Levy has done extensive research at the archives in Hyde Park to include many of Morgenthaus personal letters in this in-depth account of the man who crafted a controversial plan for the reconstitution of Germany. This book explores the complex and oftentimes frustrating world in which Morgenthau was forced to live and illuminates his odyssey as a Roosevelt technocrat.
Herbert Levy was born in Brooklyn, New York, and served in the US Navy Reserve during WWII. After the war, he obtained a law degree and worked for the Department of Housing and Urban Development for more than twenty-five years. He later worked as an administrative law judge for the State of New York, retiring in 2006. Hes written articles for the Journal of Housing and the New York State Bar Journal, and served as editor for Alexander Kraushars book, Jacob Frank: The End to the Sabbataian Heresy.