This Biography is about one of the best Writer Arthur M.Schlesinger,Jr.including his Height, weight,Age & Other Detail…
Biography Of Arthur M.Schlesinger,Jr. | |
Real Name | Arthur M.Schlesinger,Jr. |
Profession | Historians, Writers |
Nick Name | Arthur Bancroft Schlesinger |
Nationality | American |
Religion | Unitarian |
Personal life of Arthur M.Schlesinger,Jr. | |
Born on | 15 October 1917 |
Birthday | 15th October |
Died At Age | 89 |
Sun Sign | Libra |
Born in | Columbus |
Died on | 28 February 2007 |
Place of death | Manhattan |
Ideology | Democrats |
Family Background of Arthur M.Schlesinger,Jr. | |
Father | Arthur M. Schlesinger |
Mother | Elizabeth Harriet |
Spouses/Partners | Alexandra Emmet (m. 1971-2007), Marian Cannon (m. 1940-1970) |
Children | Robert Schlesinger, tephen Schlesinger, Peter Allan |
Education | Harvard University, Phillips Exeter Academy, University of Cambridge |
Awards | 1946 – Pulitzer Prize
1958 – Bancroft Prize 1958 – Francis Parkman Prize 1966 – National Book Award 1966 – Pulitzer Prize for 1979 – National Book Award 1998 – National Humanities Medal 2003 – Four Freedoms Award 2006 – Paul Peck Award 2006 – Medal Awarded |
Personal Fact of Arthur M.Schlesinger,Jr. | |
An American historian, educator and public official, Arthur M Schlesinger was one of the influential personalities, who explored the history of 20th-century American liberalism. A graduate from Harvard University, he started his career working in the Office of the Strategic Services. It was while working at the OSS that he pursued a literary career side by side and came out with the work, The Age of Jackson, for which he received a Pulitzer Prize. Politically active, he started off by working as a speechwriter for Adlai Stevenson and soon became an ardent supporter of the Kennedy administration. During the John F Kennedy’s regime, he held prestigious position as a special assistant to the President. Later on, he wrote a book which gave a detailed account of the Kennedy Administration and his service as an adviser. Titled A Thousand Days, the book earned him a second Pulitzer Prize. He also continued to serve as an academician – working as the Albert Schweitzer Professor of the Humanities at The Graduate Center of The City University of New York until 1994. |
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