On February 6, 1911, Ronald
Wilson Reagan was born to Nelle and John
Reagan in Tampico, Illinois. He attended
high school in nearby Dixon and then worked
his way through Eureka College. There, he
studied economics and sociology, played on
the football team, and acted in school plays.
Upon graduation, he became a radio sports
announcer. A screen test in 1937 won him
a contract in Hollywood. During the next
two decades he appeared in 53 films.
From his first marriage to actress Jane
Wyman, he had two children, Maureen and Michael.
Maureen passed away in 2001. In 1952 he married
Nancy Davis, who was also an actress, and
they had two children, Patricia Ann and Ronald
Prescott.
As president of the Screen Actors Guild,
Ronald Reagan became embroiled in disputes
over the issue of Communism in the film industry;
his political views shifted from liberal
to conservative. He toured the country as
a television host, becoming a spokesman for
conservatism. In 1966 he was elected Governor
of California by a margin of a million votes;
he was re-elected in 1970.
Ronald Reagan won the Republican Presidential
nomination in 1980 and chose as his running
mate former Texas Congressman and United
Nations Ambassador George Bush. Voters troubled
by inflation and by the year-long confinement
of Americans in Iran swept the Republican
ticket into office. Reagan won 489 electoral
votes to 49 for President Jimmy Carter.
On January 20, 1981, Ronald Reagan took
office. Only 69 days later he was shot by
a would-be assassin, but quickly recovered
and returned to duty. His grace and wit during
the dangerous incident caused his popularity
to soar.
Ronald Reagan obtained legislation to stimulate
economic growth, curb inflation, increase
employment, and strengthen national defense.
He embarked upon a course of cutting taxes
and Government expenditures, refusing to
deviate from it when the strengthening of
defence forces led to a large deficit.
A renewal of national self-confidence by
1984 helped Reagan and Bush win a second
term with an unprecedented number of electoral
votes. Their victory turned away Democratic
challengers Walter F. Mondale and Geraldine
Ferraro.
In 1986 President Ronald Reagan obtained
an overhaul of the income tax code, which
eliminated many deductions and exempted millions
of people with low incomes. At the end of
his administration, the Nation was enjoying
its longest recorded period of peacetime
prosperity without recession or depression.
In foreign policy, President Ronald Reagan
sought to achieve "peace through strength." During
his two terms he increased defence spending
35 percent, but sought to improve relations
with the Soviet Union. In dramatic meetings
with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, he
negotiated a treaty that would eliminate
intermediate-range nuclear missiles. Reagan
declared war against international terrorism,
sending American bombers against Libya after
evidence came out that Libya was involved
in an attack on American soldiers in a West
Berlin nightclub.
By ordering naval escorts in the Persian
Gulf, he maintained the free flow of oil
during the Iran-Iraq war. In keeping with
the Reagan Doctrine, he gave support to anti-Communist
insurgencies in Central America, Asia, and
Africa.
Ronald Reagan died June 2004 in California. |