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- Miller Center - Ronald Reagan
- Official Site of Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Institute
- American Heritage - Reagan and the Iran-Contra Affair
- Public Broadcasting Service - American Experience - Biography of Ronald Reagan
- BBC - You're Dead To Me - Ramesses the Great
- Spartacus Educational - Biography of Ronald Reagan
Ronald Reagan
When was Ronald Reagan born?
Ronald Reagan was born on February 6, 1911, in Tampico,Illinois.
When did Ronald Reagan die?
Ronald Reagan died on June 5, 2004, inLos Angeles,California.
Where did Ronald Reagan go to school?
Ronald Reagan attended Eureka College in Eureka, Illinois, where he playedgridiron football and was active in the drama society but earned only passing grades. A popular student, he was elected class president in his senior year.
What was Ronald Reagan best known for?
Ronald Reagan rose to prominence initially as a film actor, appearing in more than 50films, notably includingKnute Rockne—All American (1940),Kings Row (1942), andThe Hasty Heart (1950). Reagan later served as governor of California from 1967 to 1975, before being elected the 40thpresident of theUnited States in 1980.
How did Ronald Reagan change the world?
Ronald Reagan is largely credited with the demise ofSovietcommunism during the 1980s. As president, he worked to reduce the threat ofwar between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R., to convince Soviet leaders that cooperation with the U.S. would serve Soviet interests, and to encourage openness anddemocracy in the U.S.S.R.
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Ronald Reagan (born February 6, 1911, Tampico,Illinois, U.S.—died June 5, 2004, Los Angeles, California) was the 40thpresident of theUnited States (1981–89), noted for hisconservativeRepublicanism, hisfervent anticommunism, and his appealing personal style, characterized by a jaunty affability and folksy charm. The onlymovieactor ever to becomepresident, he had a remarkable skill as an orator that earned him the title “the Great Communicator.” His policies have been credited with contributing to thedemise ofSovietcommunism.
Early life and acting career
Ronald Reagan was the second child of John Edward (“Jack”) Reagan, a struggling shoe salesman, and Nelle Wilson Reagan. Reagan’s nickname, “Dutch,” derived from his father’s habit of referring to his infant son as his “fat little Dutchman.” After several years of moving from town to town—made necessary in part because of Jack Reagan’salcoholism, which made it difficult for him to hold a job—the family settled inDixon, Illinois, in 1920. Despite their near poverty and his father’s drinking problem, Reagan later recalled his childhood in Dixon as the happiest period of his life. AtEureka College in Eureka, Illinois, Reagan playedfootball and was active in the drama society but earned only passing grades. A popular student, he was elected class president in his senior year. Graduating in 1932 with abachelor’s degree in economics and sociology, he decided to enter radio broadcasting. He landed a job as a sportscaster at station WOC inDavenport, Iowa, by delivering entirely from memory an exciting play-by-play description of a Eureka College football game. Later he moved to station WHO inDes Moines, where, as sportscaster “Dutch Reagan,” he became popular throughout the state for his broadcasts ofChicago Cubs baseball games. Because the station could not afford to send him toWrigley Field inChicago, Reagan was forced toimprovise a running account of the games based on sketchy details delivered over a teletype machine.
In 1937 Reagan followed the Cubs to their spring training camp in southernCalifornia, a trip he undertook partly in order to try his hand at movieacting. After a successful screen test atWarner Brothers, he was soon typecast in a series of mostly B movies as a sincere, wholesome, easygoing “good guy.” (As many observers have noted, the characters that Reagan portrayed in the movies were remarkably like Reagan himself.) During the next 27 years, he appeared in more than 50 films, notably includingKnute Rockne—All American (1940),Kings Row (1942), andThe Hasty Heart (1950). In 1938, while filmingBrother Rat, Reagan became engaged to his costarJane Wyman, and the couple married inHollywood two years later. They had a daughter, Maureen, in 1941 and adopted a son, Michael, a few days after his birth in 1945. Their marriage ended in divorce in 1948. Reagan was the first president to have been divorced.
Commissioned a cavalry officer at the outbreak ofWorld War II, Reagan was assigned to an army film unit based inLos Angeles, where he spent the rest of the war making training films. Although he never left thecountry and never saw combat, he and Wyman cooperated with the efforts of Warner Brothers to portray him as a real soldier to the public, and in newsreels and magazine photos he acted out scenes of “going off to war” and “coming home on leave.” After leaving Hollywood, Reagan became known for occasionally telling stories about his past—including stories about his happiness at “coming back from the war”—that were actually based on fictional episodes in movies. Some of Reagan’s detractors pointed to such lapses to suggest that he lacked a basic interest in the truth and that he had trouble distinguishing between reality and fantasy.
Reagan had absorbed the liberalDemocratic opinions of his father and became a great admirer ofFranklin Roosevelt after hiselection in 1932. Reagan’s father eventually found work as an administrator in aNew Deal office established in the Dixon area, a fact that Reagan continued to appreciate even after his political opinion of Roosevelt had dramatically changed.

From 1947 to 1952 Reagan served as president of the union of movie actors, the Screen Actors Guild. He fought againstcommunist infiltration in the guild, crossing picket lines to break the sometimes violent strikes. (Such violence andchaos wereabhorrent to Reagan, and, when police and students clashed in Berkeley in May 1969, Reagan, as governor of California, called out theNational Guard to restore order.) Much to the disgust of union members, he testified as a friendly witness before theHouse Un-American Activities Committee and cooperated in theblacklisting of actors, directors, and writers suspected of leftist sympathies. Although Reagan was still a Democrat at the time (he campaigned forHarry Truman in the presidential election of 1948), his political opinions were gradually growing more conservative. After initially supporting Democratic senatorial candidateHelen Douglas in 1950, he switched hisallegiance to RepublicanRichard Nixon midway through the campaign. He supported RepublicanDwight Eisenhower in the presidential elections of 1952 and 1956, and in 1960 he delivered 200 speeches in support of Nixon’s campaign for president against DemocratJohn F. Kennedy. He officially changed his party affiliation to Republican in 1962.
Reagan metNancy Davis (Nancy Reagan), a relatively unknown actress, at a dinner party in 1949, and the two were married in a simple ceremony in 1952, at which actorWilliam Holden was best man. The Reagans appeared together in the war movieHell Cats of the Navy in 1957. Nancy Reagan’s conservative political views encouraged her husband’s drift to the right.
- In full:
- Ronald Wilson Reagan
- Died:
- June 5, 2004,Los Angeles,California (aged 93)
- Political Affiliation:
- Republican Party
- Notable Family Members:
- spouseJane Wyman
- spouseNancy Reagan
- Role In:
- Cold War
- Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty
- Iran-Contra Affair
- Korean Air Lines flight 007
- United States presidential election of 1952
- United States presidential election of 1956
- United States presidential election of 1960
- United States presidential election of 1964
- West Berlin discothèque bombing
- Economic Recovery Tax Act
- Libya bombings of 1986
- Reykjavík summit of 1986
- Tax Reform Act

After his acting career began to decline in the 1950s, Reagan became the host of a television drama series,General Electric Theater, as well as spokesman for theGeneral Electric Company. In the lattercapacity he toured GE plants around the country, delivering inspirational speeches with a generally conservative, pro-business message. Eventually, however, his speeches became too controversial for the company’s taste, and he was fired as both spokesman and television host in 1962.























