Wadsworth was a member of the
New York State Assembly (Livingston Co.) in
1932,
1933,
1934,
1935,
1936,
1937,
1938,
1939–40 and
1941. He resigned his seat in 1941. Wadsworth was medically unfit for
World War II because of an injured leg, but aided the war effort as an assistant manager at the
Curtiss-Wright Corporation plant in
Buffalo, New York. In 1950, he became deputy administrator of the civil defense office for the
National Security Resources Board, which drafted many of the
civil defense plans that were prepared at the height of the
Cold War. From 1953 to 1960, Wadsworth was Deputy Chief of the U.S. delegation to the United Nations. He was appointed
United States Ambassador to the United Nations by
President Eisenhower, and he served from 1960 to 1961. On May 5, 1965,
President Johnson appointed Wadsworth to the
Federal Communications Commission, and he served until October 31, 1969. Wadsworth left the FCC to join the American team negotiating a charter for the International Telecommunications Satellite Consortium (
Intelsat). ==Personal life==