Bruce Fairchild Barton was an American author, advertising executive, and Republican politician.
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Bruce Fairchild Barton was an American author, advertising executive, and Republican politician.
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Bruce Barton represented Manhattan in the U S House of Representatives from 1937 to 1941.
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Bruce Barton was born in Robbins, Tennessee in 1886, the son of a Congregational clergyman.
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Bruce Barton grew up in various places throughout the U S, including the metro Chicago area.
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Bruce Barton's father, William E Barton, was a prolific writer and a devout Christian pastor serving the First Congregational Church for over 20 years.
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Bruce Barton's mother, Esther Treat Bushnell, was an elementary school teacher who was descended from a number of colonial Connecticut leaders including Francis Bushnell, Robert Treat, and John Davenport.
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Bruce Barton's parents took in a boy by the name of Webster Betty, in addition to an African-American girl named Rebecca, whose mother had asked Bruce Barton's parents to take care of her.
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Bruce Barton helped run his uncle's maple syrup business, which became successful with his contributions.
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Bruce Barton first enrolled in Berea College during 1903 and later transferred to Amherst College in Massachusetts, where he graduated in 1907.
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Bruce Barton is credited with naming General Motors and General Electric .
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Bruce Barton was a member of the Peabody Awards Board of Jurors from 1940 to 1942.
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Bruce Barton had projected many Christian Biblical themes throughout his works completed within his varied writing career, due in part to his own strong religious convictions.
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Bruce Barton depicts Jesus as a "strong magnetic" executive businessman, similar to himself.
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Pease disagreed with that hostile portrayal and instead argued that Bruce Barton was a leader of the liberal wing of the Republican Party, urging that it broaden its appeal to reach the working man in the average voter.
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Bruce Barton helped secure the Republican nomination for liberal Wendell Willkie in 1940.
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Bruce Barton died at his home at 117 East 55th Street in New York City in 1967.
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Bruce Barton's brother, who owned half of the cow, is a missionary in Africa.
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