CHARLES E. "ENGINE CHARLIE" WILSON - AUTOGRAPHED SIGNED PHOTOGRAPH - HFSID 177357
Sale Price $238.00
Reg. $280.00
CHARLES E. "ENGINE CHARLIE" WILSON
Official U.S. Army photograph of "Engine Charlie" as the Secretary of
Defense, signed in black ink (3½x4½)
Photograph signed: "C.E. Wilson". B/w, 3½x4½. Official U.S.
Army photograph with mimeographed caption on verso. Taken in Washington, D.C.
in January 1955; the caption identifies Wilson as the Secretary of
Defense. Charles E. Wilson (1890-1961) was the U.S. Secretary of
Defense under President Dwight D. Eisenhower from 1953-1957. Noted for
cutting the defense budget in the wake of the Korean War, Wilson, who had
a degree in electrical engineering, had previously worked at the Westinghouse
Electric Company, where he supervised the engineering of electrical
equipment for automobiles, and, during WWI, the development of dynamotors and
radio generators for the U.S. Army and Navy. In 1919, he joined a subsidiary of
General Motors, and by 1941, he was President of General Motors. Wilson
directed the company's huge defense production effort during WWII,
earning a U.S. Medal of Merit in 1946. His large stock holdings in
General Motors caused a controversy during Wilson's confirmation hearings before
the U.S. Senate, but, after selling his stock, he was finally approved by a vote
of 77 to six. During his tenure, Wilson and Eisenhower reorganized the
Department of Defense and introduced the "New Look" defense concept, which
included greater reliance on nuclear weapons, the elevation of strategic air
power, cuts in conventional ground forces, an expanded program of continental
defense and modernization and enlargement of reserve forces. After stepping down
from office on October 8, 1957, less than a year after the start of Eisenhower's
second term, Wilson returned to Michigan, where he devoted his time to business
and his family. Wilson had been nicknamed "Engine Charlie" to
distinguish him from another Charles E. Wilson (nicknamed "Electric
Charlie") who had headed the Office of Defense Mobilization under President
Harry S Truman and was CEO of General Electric. Surface creases and striations
across image, slightly crack image at lower right corner. Corners and edges
slightly worn. Paper loss on corners on verso. Otherwise, fine
condition.
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