Frank Pace
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Frank Pace, Jr. (July 5, 1912 - January 8, 1988) was a United States public official and business executive.
Pace was born in Little Rock, Arkansas, and attended The Hill School, Pottstown, Pennsylvania. In 1933 he graduated from Princeton University, and in 1936 from Harvard University.
Pace entered public service in 1936 as an assistant district attorney in Arkansas. He moved onto the Arkansas Revenue Department in 1938. In 1942 he was commissioned into the United States Army as a second lieutenant where he served until 1945 in the Air Transport Command, Army Air Corps.
After leaving the Army in 1945 he returned to public service as an assistant to the United States Attorney General, then later as executive assistant to the Postmaster General. He then moved in 1948 to the Bureau of the Budget, first as assistant director and then as director.
On April 12, 1950 he was appointed Secretary of the Army, where he served until January 20, 1953. He went on to serve as chief executive officer of General Dynamics Corporation from 1953 until 1962. He was selected as the administrator-designate of the Emergency Transport Agency; part of a secret group created by President Eisenhower in 1958 that would serve in the event of a national emergency that became known as the Eisenhower Ten.
Pace was the first chairman of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, from 1968 until 1972.
Pace appeared on the cover of Time magazine on January 20, 1958.
Pace died in Greenwich, Connecticut on January 8, 1988, aged 75.
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Preceded by Gordon Gray |
United States Secretary of the Army April 1950–January 1953 |
Succeeded by Robert TenBroek Stevens |
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