Cover image for Baruch
Baruch
Title:
Baruch
Author:
Baruch, Bernard M. (Bernard Mannes), 1870-1965 author.
Publication Information:
New York : Holt, 1957-1960.
Physical Description:
2 volumes : illustrations, portraits ; 22 cm
Summary:
Volume 1: My Own Story. Bernard M. Baruch -- one of the most remarkable men of our time -- was an office boy at nineteen, a Wall Street partner at twenty-five, and a millionaire before he was thirty-five. For some men this success would mark the climax of a career; for Baruch it was only the beginning of a still greater one. In the fifty years since he made his first fortune, Bernard Baruch has been a trusted counselor of Presidents, an adviser on social and economic reforms, a statesman who has worked with two political parties and won the respect of both. In this, the first volume of his memoirs, Mr. Baruch analyzes his personal philosophy and shows how it helped him solve the many problems that confronted him in his public life as chairman of the War Industries Board during World War I and as United States representative on the United Nations Atomic Energy Commission. Informal yet penetrating, intimate yet never losing sight of major events and issues, Baruch: My Own Story is infused with the remarkable personality of a truly distinguished American. - BN Publishing.

Volume 2: The Public Years. In this remarkable book -- the second and final volume of Bernard M. Baruch's memoirs -- America's Elder Statesman recalls the exciting role he played for nearly fifty years in national and international affairs. A magnificent successor to My Own Story, Baruch's first volume of memoirs, The Public Years is infused with the wisdom and warmth of one of the great personalities of our time. Mr. Baruch begins this book with his departure from Wall Street, after an astounding career in finance, to enter public life. He tells of the problems that confronted him as Chairman of thhe War Industries Board during World War One, and of his role as an adviser to Woodrow Wilson in the shaping of the Treaty of Versailles. He describes the political wars of the 1920s, and discusses with candor the prominent personalities of that time. Of particular interest are Mr. Baruch's observations on the stock market crash of 1929, the great depression, and the New Deal. With a perspective born of deep experience in social and economic affairs, he analyzes the changes in American life that have accompanied the decline of laissez faire. Here, as elsewhere in this book, he is concerned with mistakes as well as achievements, and with parallels between the present and the past. In the tumultuous years since Bernard Baruch first entered public life, he has been intimately involved with most of the crucial issues of our time. In the 1930s. as Germany's power grew, he was among the first to attempt to awaken America to the threat of war. During the Second World War he was instrumental in guiding our program for defense. After the war, as American representative on the United Nations Atomic Energy Commission, he presented this nation's plan for atomic control. In discussing the momentous developments of this century, Mr. Baruch draws revealing portraits of many of the famous men he has known, men whose influence helped shape our world. Woodrow Wilson, Clemenceau, Lloyd George; Coolidge and Hoover; Winston Churchill and F.D.R.; Truman and Eisenhower -- these are but a few of the major figures who appear in The Public Years, a truly absorbing memoir that is rich in detail, candid, and profound. - Jacket flap.
General Note:
Includes index.

Vol. 2 published by Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
Language:
English
Contents:
v. 1. My own story. A Confederate surgeon -- Some colonial ancestors -- A country boy -- The big city -- College days -- Looking for a job -- Learning the hard way -- I get married -- My first big deal -- I make a mistake -- When panic strikes -- Some Waldorf characters -- My big disappointment in life -- A turning point -- With the Guggenheims -- Searching for rubber -- Copper for America -- J.P. Morgan declines to gamble -- My investment policy -- Hobcaw balcony -- The negro progresses -- The years ahead -- v. 2. The public years. Discontent with Wall Street -- America goes to war -- The Advisory Commission -- The War Industries Board -- Some Washington friends -- The Paris Peace Conference -- The Big Three -- The fight for the League -- The farmers' plight -- Democrats in defeat -- The Harding-Coolidge years -- The defeat of Al Smith -- The great crash -- F.D.R. and the New Deal -- The fight for preparedness -- War production problems -- Plans for reconversion -- Mission to London -- Control of atomic energy -- The Cold War -- The world we face.
Format :
Book