Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Henry A. Wallace Beltsville Agricultural Research Center (BARC), also known as the National Agricultural Research Center, [3] is a unit of the United States Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research Service. It is located in unincorporated Prince George's County, Maryland, [4] with sections within the Beltsville census-designated place.
Henry Agard Wallace was born on October 7, 1888, on a farm near Orient, Iowa, to Henry Cantwell Wallace and his wife, Carrie May Brodhead. [2] Wallace had two younger brothers and three younger sisters. [ 3 ]
The main library is housed in the Abraham Lincoln Building, a seventeen-story facility on the grounds of the Henry A. Wallace Beltsville Agricultural Research Center in Beltsville, Maryland. NAL also used to operate a Washington, D.C., branch known as the DC Reference Center, which was located in the USDA's South Building. [12]
The Wallace House at 756 16th St. in Sherman Hill was the home of Henry A. Wallace's grandfather, the first of three Henry Wallaces who were influential in Iowa agriculture and politics.
Wallace Center, which was founded in 1983 as the Institute for Alternative Agriculture. Today, the Wallace Center (now named for former Secretary of Agriculture, Henry A. Wallace) brings together diverse people and ideas to co-create solutions that build healthy farms, equitable economies, and resilient food systems. The organization strives to ...
The state will buy a Park Avenue office building on the south side of Des Moines and will vacate the glass-tinted, problem-plagued Wallace Building. Iowa Capitol complex's Henry A. Wallace ...
The Wallace's moved into this house on the corner of 16th and Center Streets when they moved to Des Moines in 1892. Josephine continued to live in the house until 1923. The Wallace family continued to own the house until 1940. By the 1950s the house was divided into 11 apartments and continued to serve this purpose until the early 1970s.
Henry or Harry Wallace may refer to: Henry A. Wallace (1888–1965), U.S. vice president 1941–1945, presidential candidate for the Progressive Party 1948 Henry A. Wallace Beltsville Agricultural Research Center