How Did Eisenhower's Influence On D-Day

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Dwight Eisenhower was in the military during the bombing of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, which is when the U.S entered World War 2. He was a Chief of Staff of the U.S Army and was also named Supreme Commander of the allied forces in Western Europe and of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization later on. On June 6,1944, also known as D-Day, he lead a massive invasion towards the Nazi in Europe. The body of water the he crossed on D-Day was the English Channel. On May 8, 1945 was the date the the allied forces had victory in Europe which Eisenhower was a part of. He entered the military in 1942 and resigned from the military on May 31, 1952. Three days later Eisenhower announced that he would be running for president. His campaign slogan was “I like Ike.” He was a Republican candidate. He was president during the Brown vs. Board of Education in 1954. Dwight D. Eisenhower was president from January 20, 1953 to January 20, 1961. He served two-terms and his vice president was Richard Nixon. I did think the museum was very …show more content…
Also they do a lot of paperwork and work on funding for schools and just receive phone calls and all that good stuff. I'm not the sure what they do except maybe have meetings and discussions in laws or bills or other important work on our state and other state departments. To me the Capitol was a very nice place and everything was so shiny. My favorite part was probably see a picture of the real John Brown. I also read under the statues and it was walking about time capsules which I found very interesting and confusing. I like the capitol because it looks like everything was made out of gold, copper, and marble of the floors. I got to admit I was terrified going to the very top of the capitol and looking down. There was 296 steps which I found