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  1. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (July 5, 1902 – February 27, 1985) was an American politician. He was a member of the Republican Party. He served as an ambassador of the United States to West Germany, South Vietnam, and to the United Nations. In 1960, he was Richard Nixon 's running mate in the 1960 presidential election. They lost to John F. Kennedy.

  2. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (Nahant, 5 de julho de 1902 – Beverly, 27 de fevereiro de 1985) foi um senador, embaixador e político candidato a Vice-Presidente dos Estados Unidos. Biografia [ editar | editar código-fonte ]

  3. On May 12, 1850, Republican statesman and noted historian Henry Cabot Lodge was born in Boston, Massachusetts. One of the first students at Harvard to graduate with a Ph.D. in history and government (1876), Lodge represented his home state in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1887 to 1893, and in the Senate from 1893 to 1924.

  4. Lodge, “New Immigration Laws Needed,” The Laster, 15 December 1888, Scrapbook, 1887–90, Lodge Papers, MHS. Lodge’s speeches explicitly link the tariff to immigration restriction, with strong response from audiences. See Lodge, “At the Harvard Meeting in Tremont Tempe, Speech of Hon. Henry Cabot Lodge,” 2 November 1888, Lodge Papers ...

  5. 14 de mar. de 2017 · March 14, 2017. Dr. Henry S. Lodge, whose series of health-advice books, “Younger Next Year,” written with his patient Chris Crowley, sold in the millions, died on Friday in Manhattan. He was ...

  6. Henry Cabot Lodge. Henry Cabot Lodge. (1850-1924) Statesman. Lodge began his career in Congress in 1887, armed with all the confidence that his distinguished New England ancestry, Harvard education, and wide circle of influential friends could bestow. A power in the Senate and in the Republican Party, he was noted for his scorn of the alliance ...

  7. Classic Senate Speeches. February 28, 1919. On February 28, 1919, Senator Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts began an assault on President Woodrow Wilson's proposal to establish a League of Nations that ultimately culminated in the Senate's rejection of the Treaty of Versailles. Long after Congress agreed to a joint resolution declaring the end ...