Ronald Reagan was the 40th President of the United States of America. He lead our country from 1981-1989. During his presidency he built up a stronger economy, helped more U.S. citizens get jobs, create the military into the strongest in the world, and he helped guide the Cold War between America and the Soviet Union to an end. He was nicknamed “The Great Communicator” because of his great skills as an orator. For his whole life Ronald Reagan worked hard to be successful, and that’s exactly who he was; a successful man who left a great impact on America. Ronald Wilson Reagan was born February 6, 1911, in Tampico, Illinois, a small town about ninety miles west of Chicago. He was the second son born to his hardworking devoted mother, Nelle …show more content…
He was starting to have ideas, however, that would eventually lead him in other directions. From 1947 to 1952, Reagan served as the President of the Screen Actors Guild, an American labor union which represented over 100,000 film and television principal and background performers worldwide. Nancy Reagan, Ronald Reagan’s second wife, was his partner in politics. She came from a family of wealthy Republicans who loved to talk politics. In 1959, Reagan spoke out against communism. In 1962, he officially changed his party affiliation to …show more content…
He achieved several of these tasks, however not right away. By 1981, unemployment rates were just over seven percent and then increased to ten percent. But by 1984, in his second term, he passed a major tax-reform bill that decreased those rates to five percent and inflation was reduced. Another one of Ronald Reagan’s great achievements as president was the treaty he passed with the Soviet Union in 1987. The treaty banned certain kinds of nuclear weapons. While in office, Reagan worked with other heads of the state to reduce Cold War tensions. He met with Soviet leaders in several historic summit meetings. His actions and policies contributed to the collapse of the Communist governments in Eastern Europe shortly after his second term ended. In 1989, Ronald Reagan, now eighty years old, retired from the office and went back to his ranch in California along with his