fbpx
Wikipedia

Dean Acheson

Dean Gooderham Acheson (pronounced /ˈæɪsən/ ATCH-iss-ən;[1] April 11, 1893 – October 12, 1971) was an American statesman and lawyer. As the 51st U.S. Secretary of State, he set the foreign policy of the Harry S. Truman administration from 1949 to 1953. He was also Truman's main foreign policy advisor from 1945 to 1947, especially regarding the Cold War. Acheson helped design the Truman Doctrine and the Marshall Plan, as well as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. He was in private law practice from July 1947 to December 1948.[2] After 1949 Acheson came under partisan political attack from Republicans led by Senator Joseph McCarthy over Truman's policy toward the People's Republic of China.

Dean Acheson
51st United States Secretary of State
In office
January 21, 1949 – January 20, 1953
PresidentHarry S. Truman
Preceded byGeorge C. Marshall
Succeeded byJohn Foster Dulles
14th United States Under Secretary of State
In office
August 16, 1945 – June 30, 1947
PresidentHarry S. Truman
Preceded byJoseph Grew
Succeeded byRobert A. Lovett
Assistant Secretary of State for Congressional Relations and International Conferences
In office
December 20, 1944 – August 15, 1945
PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt
Harry S. Truman
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byErnest A. Gross (Legislative Affairs)
Dean Rusk (International Organization Affairs)
Personal details
Born
Dean Gooderham Acheson

(1893-04-11)April 11, 1893
Middletown, Connecticut, U.S.
DiedOctober 12, 1971(1971-10-12) (aged 78)
Sandy Spring, Maryland, U.S.
Resting placeOak Hill Cemetery
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse
(m. 1917)
Children3, including David
EducationYale University (BA)
Harvard University (LLB)
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/serviceUnited States National Guard
Battles/warsWorld War I

As a private citizen in 1968 he counseled President Lyndon B. Johnson to negotiate for peace with North Vietnam. During the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, President John F. Kennedy called upon Acheson for advice, bringing him into the executive committee (ExComm), a strategic advisory group.

Early life and education

Dean Gooderham Acheson was born in Middletown, Connecticut, on April 11, 1893. His father, Edward Campion Acheson, was an English-born Canadian (immigrated to Canada in 1881) who became a Church of England priest after graduating from Wycliffe College. He moved to the U.S., eventually becoming Bishop of Connecticut. His mother, Eleanor Gertrude (Gooderham), was a Canadian-born descendant of William Gooderham, Sr. (1790–1881), a founder of the Gooderham and Worts Distillery of Toronto. Like his father, Acheson was a staunch Democrat and opponent of prohibition.

Acheson attended Groton School and Yale College (1912–1915), where he joined Scroll and Key Society, was elected to Phi Beta Kappa,[3] and was a brother of the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity (Phi chapter). At Groton and Yale he had the reputation of a partier and prankster; he was somewhat aloof but still popular with his classmates. Acheson's well-known, reputed arrogance—he disdained the curriculum at Yale because it focused on memorizing subjects already known—was apparent early. At Harvard Law School from 1915 to 1918, however, he was swept away by the intellect of professor Felix Frankfurter and finished fifth in his class.[4]

Personal life

On May 15, 1917, while serving in the National Guard, Acheson married Alice Caroline Stanley (August 12, 1895 – January 20, 1996). She loved painting and politics and served as a stabilizing influence throughout their enduring marriage; they had three children: David Campion Acheson, Jane Acheson Brown and Mary Eleanor Acheson Bundy.

Career

A new tradition of bright law students clerking for the U.S. Supreme Court had been begun by Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis. Acheson clerked for him for two terms from 1919 to 1921. Frankfurter and Brandeis were close associates, and future Supreme Court Justice Frankfurter suggested that Brandeis take on Acheson.[5]

Throughout his long career, Acheson displayed:

exceptional intellectual power and purpose, and tough inner fiber. He projected the long lines and aristocratic bearing of the thoroughbred horse, a self-assured grace, an acerbic elegance of mind, and a charm whose chief attraction was perhaps its penetrating candor....[He] was swift-flowing and direct.... Acheson was perceived as an 18th century rationalist ready to apply an irreverent wit to matters public and private.[6]

Economic diplomacy

A lifelong Democrat, Acheson worked at a law firm in Washington, Covington & Burling, often dealing with international legal issues before Franklin Delano Roosevelt appointed him Undersecretary of the Treasury in March 1933. When Secretary William H. Woodin fell ill, Acheson suddenly found himself acting secretary despite his ignorance of finance. Because of his opposition to FDR's plan to deflate the dollar by controlling gold prices (thus creating inflation), he was forced to resign in November 1933. He resumed his law practice.[7]

World War II

Brought back as assistant secretary of state on February 1, 1941, Acheson implemented much of Roosevelt's economic policy of aiding Great Britain and harming the Axis Powers.[8] Acheson implemented the Lend-Lease policy that helped re-arm Great Britain and the American/British/Dutch oil embargo that cut off 95 percent of Japanese oil supplies and escalated the crisis with Japan in 1941.[9] Roosevelt froze all Japanese assets merely to disconcert them. He did not intend the flow of oil to Japan to cease. The president then departed Washington for Newfoundland to meet with Churchill. While he was gone Acheson used those frozen assets to deny Japan oil. Upon the president's return, he decided it would appear weak and appeasing to reverse the de facto oil embargo.[10]

In 1944, Acheson attended the Bretton Woods Conference as the head delegate from the State Department. At this conference the post-war international economic structure was designed. It was the birthplace of the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, the last of which would evolve into the World Trade Organization.

Cold War diplomacy

 
Acheson sworn into office as Secretary of State, by Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson, (January 21, 1949)

Later, in 1945, Harry S. Truman selected Acheson as the Undersecretary of the United States Department of State; he retained this position working under Secretaries of State Edward Stettinius, Jr., James F. Byrnes, and George Marshall. As late as 1946 Acheson sought détente with the Soviet Union. In 1946, as chairman of a special committee to prepare a plan for the international control of atomic energy, he wrote the Acheson–Lilienthal report. At first Acheson was conciliatory towards Joseph Stalin.

The Soviet Union's attempts at regional hegemony in Eastern Europe and in Turkey and Iran changed Acheson's thinking. From this point forward, one historian writes, "Acheson was more than 'present at the creation' of the Cold War; he was a primary architect."[11] Acheson often was acting secretary during the secretary's frequent overseas trips, and during this period he cemented a close relationship with President Truman. Acheson devised the policy and wrote Truman's 1947 request to Congress for aid to Greece and Turkey, a speech which stressed the dangers of totalitarianism (but did not name the Soviet Union) and marked the fundamental change in American foreign policy that became known as the Truman Doctrine.[12]

On June 30, 1947, Acheson received the Medal for Merit from President Truman.[13]

 
Acheson (fifth from right) as Secretary of State at a meeting of the Truman cabinet, August 25, 1950; President Truman is fourth from right

The White Paper Defense

During the summer of 1949, after the unexpected Democratic victory in the 1948 elections did not quiet the question "Who Lost China?", Acheson had the State Department produce a study of recent Sino-American relations. The document known officially as United States Relations with China with Special Reference to the Period 1944–1949, which later was simply called the China White Paper, attempted to dismiss any misinterpretations of Chinese and American diplomacy toward each other.[14] Published during the height of Mao Zedong's takeover, the 1,054-page document argued that American intervention in China was doomed to failure. Although Acheson and Truman had hoped that the study would dispel rumors and conjecture, the documents helped to convince many critics that the administration had indeed failed to check the spread of communism in China.[15]

Korean War

Acheson's speech on January 12, 1950, before the National Press Club[16] did not mention the Korea Peninsula and Formosa (Taiwan) as part of the all-important "defense perimeter" of the United States. Since the war in Korea broke out on June 25, just a few months later, critics, especially in South Korea, took Acheson's statements to mean that the United States support for the new Syngman Rhee government in South Korea would be limited and that the speech provided Stalin and Kim Il Sung with a "green light" to believe the U.S. would not intervene if they invaded the South. When Soviet archives opened in the 1980s, however, research found that the speech had little if any impact on Communist decision for war in Korea.[17]

The "loss of China" attacks

With the Communist victory in the Chinese Civil war, China switched from a close friend of the U.S. to a bitter enemy—the two powers were at war in Korea by 1950. Critics blamed Acheson for what they called the "loss of China" and launched several years of organized opposition to Acheson's tenure; Acheson ridiculed his opponents and called this period in his outspoken memoirs "The Attack of the Primitives". Although he maintained his role as a firm anti-communist, he was attacked by various anti-communists for not taking a more active role in attacking communism abroad and domestically, rather than hew to his policy of containment of communist expansion. Both he and Secretary of Defense George Marshall came under attack from men such as Joseph McCarthy; Acheson became a byword to some Americans, who tried to equate containment with appeasement. Congressman Richard Nixon, who later as president would call on Acheson for advice, ridiculed "Acheson's College of Cowardly Communist Containment". This criticism grew very loud after Acheson refused to "turn his back on Alger Hiss" when the latter was accused of being a Communist spy, and convicted of perjury for denying he was a spy.[18]

Later life and death

 
The gravesite of Dean Acheson in Oak Hill Cemetery.

He retired on January 20, 1953, the last day of the Truman administration, and served on the Yale board of trustees along with Senator Robert A. Taft, one of his sharpest critics. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1955.[19]

Acheson returned to his private law practice. Although his official governmental career was over, his influence was not. He was ignored by the Eisenhower administration but headed up Democratic policy groups in the late 1950s. Much of President John F. Kennedy's flexible response policies came from the position papers drawn up by this group.[which?]

Acheson's law offices were strategically located a few blocks from the White House and he accomplished much out of office. He became an unofficial advisor to the Kennedy and Johnson administrations. During the Cuban Missile Crisis, for example, he was dispatched by Kennedy to France to brief French President Charles de Gaulle and gain his support for the United States blockade. Acheson so strongly opposed the final decision merely to blockade that he resigned from the executive committee.[20]

During the 1960s, he was a leading member of a bipartisan group of establishment elders known as the Wise Men, who initially supported the Vietnam War. As secretary of state, Acheson had supported the French efforts to control Indochina as the necessary price for French support of NATO, and to contain communism. By 1968, however, his viewpoint had changed. President Johnson asked Acheson to reassess American military policy, and he concluded that military victory was impossible. He advised Johnson to pull out as quickly as possible, to avoid a deepening division inside the Democratic Party. Johnson took Acheson's advice, in terms of de-escalating the war, and deciding not to run for reelection. Acheson distrusted Hubert Humphrey, and supported Richard Nixon for president in 1968. He provided advice to the Nixon administration through Henry Kissinger, focusing on NATO and on African affairs. He broke with Nixon in 1970 with the incursion into Cambodia.[21][22]

In 1964, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, with Distinction. In 1970, he won the Pulitzer Prize for History for his memoirs of his tenure in the State Department, Present at the Creation: My Years in the State Department. The Modern Library placed the book at No. 47 on its top 100 non-fiction books of the 20th century.[23]

At 6:00 p.m. on October 12, 1971, Acheson died of a massive stroke, at his farm home in Sandy Spring, Maryland, at the age of 78. His body was found slumped over his desk in his study.[24] Acheson was interred in Oak Hill Cemetery in Georgetown, Washington, DC.[25][26]

He had a son, David C. Acheson (father of Eleanor D. Acheson), and two daughters, Jane Acheson Brown and Mary Acheson Bundy, wife of William Bundy.[24]

In media

Acheson was portrayed by John Dehner in the 1974 television docudrama, The Missiles of October.

In the 2000 film Thirteen Days, Acheson was played by Len Cariou.

Publications

Articles

  • “Summary of Attorney General’s Committee Report”. American Bar Association Journal, Vol. 27, No. 3 (March 1941), pp. 143–146.
  • “Mr. Justice Brandeis”. Harvard Law Review, Vol. 55, No. 2 (December 1941), pp. 191–192.
  • “Text of the United States Note to the Soviet Union concerning the Question of the Turkish Straits, August 19, 1946”. Middle East Journal, Vol. 1, No. 1 (January 1947), pp. 88–89.
  • “Statement on India by Dean Acheson, Acting U. S. Secretary of State, December 3, 1946”. Middle East Journal, Vol. 1, No. 2 (April 1947), p. 209.
  • “The Need and the Lack”. The American Scholar, Vol. 17, No. 4 (Autumn 1948), pp. 476–477.
  • “Abwehr von Aggressionen”. Ost-Probleme, Vol. 2, No. 39 (September 28, 1950), p. 1240.
  • “Proklamation des Nationalen Notstands in USA”. Ost-Probleme, Vol. 3, No. 1 (January 6, 1951), p. 31. Co-authored with Harry S. Truman.
  • “The Development of the International Community.” Proceedings of the American Society of International Law at Its Annual Meeting (1921–1969), Vol. 46 (April 24–26, 1952), pp. 18–25.
  • “The Illusion of Disengagement”. Foreign Affairs, Vol. 36, No. 3 (April 1958), pp. 371–382.
  • “Felix Frankfurter”. Harvard Law Review, Vol. 76, No. 1 (November 1962), pp. 14–16.
  • “The Practice of Partnership”. Foreign Affairs, Vol. 41, No. 2 (January 1963), pp. 247–260.
  • “The Cuban Quarantine”. Proceedings of the American Society of International Law at Its Annual Meeting (1921–1969), Vol. 57, Law and Conflict: Changing Patterns and Contemporary Challenges (April 25–27, 1963), pp. 9–18. Co-authored by Quincy Wright & Abram Chayes.
  • “Europe: Decision or Drift”. Foreign Affairs, Vol. 44, No. 2 (January 1966), pp. 198–205.
  • “The Lawyer’s Path to Peace”. The Virginia Quarterly Review, Vol. 42, No. 3 (Summer 1966), pp. 337–348.
  • “The Arrogance of International Lawyers”. The International Lawyer, Vol. 2, No. 4 (July 1968), pp. 591–600.
  • “Removing the Shadow Cast on the Courts”. American Bar Association Journal, Vol. 55, No. 10 (October 1969), pp. 919–922.
  • “The Eclipse of the State Department”. Foreign Affairs, Vol. 49, No. 4 (July 1971), pp. 593–606.
  • “How Containment Worked”. Foreign Policy, No. 7 (Summer 1972), pp. 41–53. Co-authored with Chalmers M. Roberts, W. Averell Harriman & Arthur Krock.

Book reviews

  • “Review of The Labor Law of Maryland, by Malcolm H. Lauchheimer”. Harvard Law Review, Vol. 33, No. 2 (December 1919), pp. 329–332. Full text available on JSTOR.
  • “Review of Shaping the Future: Foreign Policy in an Age of Transition, by Robert R. Bowie”. Political Science Quarterly, Vol. 79, No. 3 (September 1964), pp. 435–436.

References

  1. ^ . Oxford Learner's Dictionary. Archived from the original on October 30, 2012. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  2. ^ Beisner, pp. 79, 83
  3. ^ Brennan, Elizabeth A., Clarage, Elizabeth C.Who's Who of Pulitzer Prize Winners, Greenwood, 1999, p. 290
  4. ^ David S. McClellan, Dean Acheson: The State Department Years (1976) pp 8–12
  5. ^ Beisner (2006)
  6. ^ Townsend Hoopes, "God and John Foster Dulles" Foreign Policy No. 13 (Winter, 1973-1974), pp. 154-177 at p 162
  7. ^ Acheson explained his opposition to this plan, and described his experience as Treasury Undersecretary in the chapter "Brief Encounter — With FDR" in his 1965 memoir Morning and Noon (pp. 161–194).
  8. ^ Perlmutter, Oscar William (1961). "Acheson and the Diplomacy of World War II". The Western Political Quarterly. 14 (4): 896–911. doi:10.2307/445090. JSTOR 445090.
  9. ^ Irvine H. Anderson, Jr., "The 1941 De Facto Embargo on Oil to Japan: A Bureaucratic Reflex," Pacific Historical Review, Vol. 44, No. 2. (May 1975), pp. 201–231. in JSTOR
  10. ^ Jean Edward Smith, FDR (Random House, 2007), p 517.
  11. ^ Randall Bennett Woods, "The Good Shepherd," Reviews in American History, Volume 35, Number 2, June 2007, pp. 284–288
  12. ^ Frazier 1999
  13. ^ . The American Presidency Project. June 30, 1947. Archived from the original on August 14, 2018. Retrieved November 6, 2011.
  14. ^ Robert Garson, The United States and China since 1949, (1994) pp. 27–33
  15. ^ Lewis McCarroll Purifoy, Harry Truman's China policy: McCarthyism and the diplomacy of hysteria, 1947-1951 (1976) pp. 125–150
  16. ^ "Excerpts". Retrieved December 30, 2017.
  17. ^ Matray (2002), p. 55.
  18. ^ Robert L. Beisner (2009). Dean Acheson: A Life in the Cold War. Oxford University Press. pp. 334, 349. ISBN 9780195382488.
  19. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter A" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved April 1, 2011.
  20. ^ Douglas Brinkley, Dean Acheson: The Cold War Years, 1953-71 (1992).
  21. ^ Robert L. Beisner, Dean Acheson: a life in the Cold war (2009) pp 620-41.
  22. ^ Gregory T. D'Auria, "Present at the rejuvenation: the association of Dean Acheson and Richard Nixon." Presidential Studies Quarterly 18 (1989): 393-412.
  23. ^ Search for a Title or Author. "100 Best Nonfiction « Modern Library". Randomhouse.com. Retrieved December 9, 2012. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  24. ^ a b "Dean Acheson Dies on His Farm at 78". The New York Times. October 13, 1971.
  25. ^ Resting Places: The Burial Places of 14,000 Famous Persons, by Scott Wilson
  26. ^ "Oak Hill Cemetery, Georgetown, D.C. (Chapel) - Chapel Lot 18" (PDF). Oak Hill Cemetery. (PDF) from the original on March 2, 2022. Retrieved August 17, 2022.

Further reading

External video
  Presentation by James Chace on Acheson: The Secretary of State Who Created the American World, September 16, 1998, C-SPAN
  • "Dean Gooderham Acheson." Dictionary of American Biography (1994) online
  • Beisner, Robert L. Dean Acheson: A Life in the Cold War. (New York: OUP USA, 2006), 800 pages; a standard scholarly biography. online
  • Beisner, Robert L. "Patterns of Peril: Dean Acheson Joins the Cold Warriors, 1945–46". Diplomatic History, 20#3 (1996), pp. 321–355. ISSN 0145-2096.
  • Beisner, Robert L. “SHAFR Presidential Address: The Secretary, the Spy, and the Sage Dean Acheson, Alger Hiss, and George Kennan”. Diplomatic History, Vol. 27, No. 1 (January 2003), pp. 1–14.
  • Brinkley, Douglas. Dean Acheson: The Cold War Years, 1953–71. (1992) 429 pages. online
  • Brinkley, Douglas, ed. Dean Acheson and the Making of U.S. Foreign Policy. (1993) 271 pages. online
  • Brinkley, Douglas. “Dean Acheson and the 'Special Relationship': The West Point Speech of December 1962”. The Historical Journal, 33#3 (September 1990), pp. 599–608.
  • Chace, James. Acheson: The Secretary of State Who Created the American World. (Harvard University Press, 1998), ISBN 0-674-00081-1. online
  • Fletcher, Luke. "The Collapse of the Western World: Acheson, Nitze, and the NSC 68/Rearmament Decision." Diplomatic History, 40#4 (2016), pp. 750–777.
  • Frazier, Robert. "Acheson and the Formulation of the Truman Doctrine". Journal of Modern Greek Studies, Vol. 17, No. 2 (1999), pp. 229–251. ISSN 0738-1727 in Project Muse
  • Garson, Robert. The United States and China since 1949: A Troubled Affair. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, Madison (1994), pp. 27–33 ISBN 0-8386-3610-1
  • Goulden, Joseph C. The Superlawyers: The Small and Powerful World of the Great Washington Law Firms. (New York: Weybright and Talley, 1971)
  • Harper, John Lamberton. American Visions of Europe: Franklin D. Roosevelt, George F. Kennan, and Dean G. Acheson. Cambridge University Press (1994), 378 pages.
  • Hopkins, Michael F. "President Harry Truman's Secretaries of State: Stettinius, Byrnes, Marshall and Acheson." Journal of Transatlantic Studies, 6#3 (2008), pp. 290–304.
  • Hopkins, Michael F. Dean Acheson and the Obligations of Power (Rowman & Littlefield, 2017). 289 pages. excerpt
  • Hopkins, Michael F. "Dean Acheson, Bretton Woods and the American Role in the International Economy." in Global Perspectives on the Bretton Woods Conference and the Post-War World Order (Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, 2017).
  • Isaacson, Walter, and Evan Thomas. The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made. (1997), 864 pages. – Covers Acheson and colleagues Charles E. Bohlen, W. Averell Harriman, George Kennan, Robert Lovett, and John J. McCloy. online
  • Leffler, Melvyn P. "Strategy, Diplomacy, and the Cold War: the United States, Turkey, and NATO, 1945–1952". Journal of American History, 71#4 (1985), pp. 807–825.
  • McGlothlen, Ronald L. Controlling the Waves: Dean Acheson and US Foreign Policy in Asia (1993) online
  • McLellan, David S. Dean Acheson: The State Department Years. (New York: Dodd Mead & Co, 1976), 466 pages. online
  • McMahon, Robert J. Dean Acheson and the Creation of an American World Order (Washington: Potomac, 2009), 257 pages. online
  • McNay, John T. Acheson and Empire: The British Accent in American Foreign Policy (2001) online
  • Matray, James I. (2002). "Dean Acheson's National Press Club Speech Reexamined". Journal of Conflict Studies. 22#1: 28–55.
  • Merrill, Dennis. "The Truman Doctrine: Containing Communism and Modernity". Presidential Studies Quarterly, 36#1 (2006), pp. 27–37.online
  • Offner, Arnold A. "'Another Such Victory': President Truman, American Foreign Policy, and the Cold War". Diplomatic History, 23#2 (1999), pp. 127–155.
  • Offner, Arnold A. Another Such Victory: President Truman and the Cold War. (2002) 640 pages. – Highly negative. excerpts and text search
  • Perlmutter, Oscar William. "The 'Neo-Realism' of Dean Acheson". The Review of Politics, 26#1 (January 1964), pp. 100–123.
  • Perlmutter, Oscar William. "Acheson and the Diplomacy of World War II". The Western Political Quarterly, 14#4 (December 1961), pp. 896–911.
  • Purifoy, Lewis McCarroll. Harry Truman's China Policy. (New York: Franklin Watts, 1976), pp. 125–150. ISBN 0-531-05386-5.
  • Smith, Gaddis. Dean Acheson (1972), major scholarly biography online
  • Spalding, Elizabeth Edwards. The First Cold Warrior: Harry Truman, Containment, and the Remaking of Liberal Internationalism. (2006) excerpt
  • Steil, Benn. The Marshall Plan: Dawn of the Cold War (2018) 608pp. excerpt
  • Stupak, Ronald J. The shaping of foreign policy; the role of the Secretary of State as seen by Dean Acheson (1969) online
  • Wells, Samuel F. "Dean Acheson Leads The Defense Of Europe." in Fearing the Worst (Columbia UP, 2019). 269-303.

Primary sources

  • Acheson, Dean. A Democrat Looks at His Party (1955)
  • Acheson, Dean. A Citizen Looks at Congress (1957)
  • Acheson, Dean. Sketches from Life of Men I Have Known (1961)
  • Acheson, Dean (1965). Morning and Noon: A Memoir. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. online
  • Acheson, Dean. Present at the Creation (1969) online
  • Acheson, Dean. The Korean War (1971)
  • Acheson, Dean (1971). Fragments of My Fleece. New York: Norton. ISBN 9780393086447. 222 pages.
  • McLellan, David S., and David C. Acheson, eds. Among Friends: Personal Letters of Dean Acheson (1980)
  • Truman, Harry S. and Dean Acheson. Affection and trust: the personal correspondence of Harry S. Truman and Dean Acheson, 1953-1971 (2010) online

External links

  • Work on Acheson's Role in Designing the Foreign Policy Stance of the Democratic Party after the 1952 election.
  • Annotated bibliography for Dean Acheson from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues August 28, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  • FOIA FBI file at Internet Archive

dean, acheson, dean, gooderham, acheson, pronounced, atch, april, 1893, october, 1971, american, statesman, lawyer, 51st, secretary, state, foreign, policy, harry, truman, administration, from, 1949, 1953, also, truman, main, foreign, policy, advisor, from, 19. Dean Gooderham Acheson pronounced ˈ ae tʃ ɪ s en ATCH iss en 1 April 11 1893 October 12 1971 was an American statesman and lawyer As the 51st U S Secretary of State he set the foreign policy of the Harry S Truman administration from 1949 to 1953 He was also Truman s main foreign policy advisor from 1945 to 1947 especially regarding the Cold War Acheson helped design the Truman Doctrine and the Marshall Plan as well as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization He was in private law practice from July 1947 to December 1948 2 After 1949 Acheson came under partisan political attack from Republicans led by Senator Joseph McCarthy over Truman s policy toward the People s Republic of China Dean Acheson51st United States Secretary of StateIn office January 21 1949 January 20 1953PresidentHarry S TrumanPreceded byGeorge C MarshallSucceeded byJohn Foster Dulles14th United States Under Secretary of StateIn office August 16 1945 June 30 1947PresidentHarry S TrumanPreceded byJoseph GrewSucceeded byRobert A LovettAssistant Secretary of State for Congressional Relations and International ConferencesIn office December 20 1944 August 15 1945PresidentFranklin D RooseveltHarry S TrumanPreceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byErnest A Gross Legislative Affairs Dean Rusk International Organization Affairs Personal detailsBornDean Gooderham Acheson 1893 04 11 April 11 1893Middletown Connecticut U S DiedOctober 12 1971 1971 10 12 aged 78 Sandy Spring Maryland U S Resting placeOak Hill CemeteryWashington D C U S Political partyDemocraticSpouseAlice Stanley m 1917 wbr Children3 including DavidEducationYale University BA Harvard University LLB Military serviceAllegiance United StatesBranch serviceUnited States National GuardBattles warsWorld War IAs a private citizen in 1968 he counseled President Lyndon B Johnson to negotiate for peace with North Vietnam During the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 President John F Kennedy called upon Acheson for advice bringing him into the executive committee ExComm a strategic advisory group Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Personal life 3 Career 3 1 Economic diplomacy 3 2 World War II 3 3 Cold War diplomacy 3 4 The White Paper Defense 3 5 Korean War 3 6 The loss of China attacks 4 Later life and death 5 In media 6 Publications 6 1 Articles 6 2 Book reviews 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 Primary sources 9 External linksEarly life and education EditDean Gooderham Acheson was born in Middletown Connecticut on April 11 1893 His father Edward Campion Acheson was an English born Canadian immigrated to Canada in 1881 who became a Church of England priest after graduating from Wycliffe College He moved to the U S eventually becoming Bishop of Connecticut His mother Eleanor Gertrude Gooderham was a Canadian born descendant of William Gooderham Sr 1790 1881 a founder of the Gooderham and Worts Distillery of Toronto Like his father Acheson was a staunch Democrat and opponent of prohibition Acheson attended Groton School and Yale College 1912 1915 where he joined Scroll and Key Society was elected to Phi Beta Kappa 3 and was a brother of the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity Phi chapter At Groton and Yale he had the reputation of a partier and prankster he was somewhat aloof but still popular with his classmates Acheson s well known reputed arrogance he disdained the curriculum at Yale because it focused on memorizing subjects already known was apparent early At Harvard Law School from 1915 to 1918 however he was swept away by the intellect of professor Felix Frankfurter and finished fifth in his class 4 Personal life EditOn May 15 1917 while serving in the National Guard Acheson married Alice Caroline Stanley August 12 1895 January 20 1996 She loved painting and politics and served as a stabilizing influence throughout their enduring marriage they had three children David Campion Acheson Jane Acheson Brown and Mary Eleanor Acheson Bundy Career EditA new tradition of bright law students clerking for the U S Supreme Court had been begun by Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis Acheson clerked for him for two terms from 1919 to 1921 Frankfurter and Brandeis were close associates and future Supreme Court Justice Frankfurter suggested that Brandeis take on Acheson 5 Throughout his long career Acheson displayed exceptional intellectual power and purpose and tough inner fiber He projected the long lines and aristocratic bearing of the thoroughbred horse a self assured grace an acerbic elegance of mind and a charm whose chief attraction was perhaps its penetrating candor He was swift flowing and direct Acheson was perceived as an 18th century rationalist ready to apply an irreverent wit to matters public and private 6 Economic diplomacy Edit A lifelong Democrat Acheson worked at a law firm in Washington Covington amp Burling often dealing with international legal issues before Franklin Delano Roosevelt appointed him Undersecretary of the Treasury in March 1933 When Secretary William H Woodin fell ill Acheson suddenly found himself acting secretary despite his ignorance of finance Because of his opposition to FDR s plan to deflate the dollar by controlling gold prices thus creating inflation he was forced to resign in November 1933 He resumed his law practice 7 World War II Edit Brought back as assistant secretary of state on February 1 1941 Acheson implemented much of Roosevelt s economic policy of aiding Great Britain and harming the Axis Powers 8 Acheson implemented the Lend Lease policy that helped re arm Great Britain and the American British Dutch oil embargo that cut off 95 percent of Japanese oil supplies and escalated the crisis with Japan in 1941 9 Roosevelt froze all Japanese assets merely to disconcert them He did not intend the flow of oil to Japan to cease The president then departed Washington for Newfoundland to meet with Churchill While he was gone Acheson used those frozen assets to deny Japan oil Upon the president s return he decided it would appear weak and appeasing to reverse the de facto oil embargo 10 In 1944 Acheson attended the Bretton Woods Conference as the head delegate from the State Department At this conference the post war international economic structure was designed It was the birthplace of the International Monetary Fund the World Bank and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade the last of which would evolve into the World Trade Organization Cold War diplomacy Edit Further information Foreign policy of the Harry S Truman administration and Origins of the Cold War Acheson sworn into office as Secretary of State by Chief Justice Fred M Vinson January 21 1949 Later in 1945 Harry S Truman selected Acheson as the Undersecretary of the United States Department of State he retained this position working under Secretaries of State Edward Stettinius Jr James F Byrnes and George Marshall As late as 1946 Acheson sought detente with the Soviet Union In 1946 as chairman of a special committee to prepare a plan for the international control of atomic energy he wrote the Acheson Lilienthal report At first Acheson was conciliatory towards Joseph Stalin The Soviet Union s attempts at regional hegemony in Eastern Europe and in Turkey and Iran changed Acheson s thinking From this point forward one historian writes Acheson was more than present at the creation of the Cold War he was a primary architect 11 Acheson often was acting secretary during the secretary s frequent overseas trips and during this period he cemented a close relationship with President Truman Acheson devised the policy and wrote Truman s 1947 request to Congress for aid to Greece and Turkey a speech which stressed the dangers of totalitarianism but did not name the Soviet Union and marked the fundamental change in American foreign policy that became known as the Truman Doctrine 12 On June 30 1947 Acheson received the Medal for Merit from President Truman 13 Acheson fifth from right as Secretary of State at a meeting of the Truman cabinet August 25 1950 President Truman is fourth from right The White Paper Defense Edit During the summer of 1949 after the unexpected Democratic victory in the 1948 elections did not quiet the question Who Lost China Acheson had the State Department produce a study of recent Sino American relations The document known officially as United States Relations with China with Special Reference to the Period 1944 1949 which later was simply called the China White Paper attempted to dismiss any misinterpretations of Chinese and American diplomacy toward each other 14 Published during the height of Mao Zedong s takeover the 1 054 page document argued that American intervention in China was doomed to failure Although Acheson and Truman had hoped that the study would dispel rumors and conjecture the documents helped to convince many critics that the administration had indeed failed to check the spread of communism in China 15 Korean War Edit Acheson s speech on January 12 1950 before the National Press Club 16 did not mention the Korea Peninsula and Formosa Taiwan as part of the all important defense perimeter of the United States Since the war in Korea broke out on June 25 just a few months later critics especially in South Korea took Acheson s statements to mean that the United States support for the new Syngman Rhee government in South Korea would be limited and that the speech provided Stalin and Kim Il Sung with a green light to believe the U S would not intervene if they invaded the South When Soviet archives opened in the 1980s however research found that the speech had little if any impact on Communist decision for war in Korea 17 The loss of China attacks Edit With the Communist victory in the Chinese Civil war China switched from a close friend of the U S to a bitter enemy the two powers were at war in Korea by 1950 Critics blamed Acheson for what they called the loss of China and launched several years of organized opposition to Acheson s tenure Acheson ridiculed his opponents and called this period in his outspoken memoirs The Attack of the Primitives Although he maintained his role as a firm anti communist he was attacked by various anti communists for not taking a more active role in attacking communism abroad and domestically rather than hew to his policy of containment of communist expansion Both he and Secretary of Defense George Marshall came under attack from men such as Joseph McCarthy Acheson became a byword to some Americans who tried to equate containment with appeasement Congressman Richard Nixon who later as president would call on Acheson for advice ridiculed Acheson s College of Cowardly Communist Containment This criticism grew very loud after Acheson refused to turn his back on Alger Hiss when the latter was accused of being a Communist spy and convicted of perjury for denying he was a spy 18 Later life and death Edit The gravesite of Dean Acheson in Oak Hill Cemetery He retired on January 20 1953 the last day of the Truman administration and served on the Yale board of trustees along with Senator Robert A Taft one of his sharpest critics He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1955 19 Acheson returned to his private law practice Although his official governmental career was over his influence was not He was ignored by the Eisenhower administration but headed up Democratic policy groups in the late 1950s Much of President John F Kennedy s flexible response policies came from the position papers drawn up by this group which Acheson s law offices were strategically located a few blocks from the White House and he accomplished much out of office He became an unofficial advisor to the Kennedy and Johnson administrations During the Cuban Missile Crisis for example he was dispatched by Kennedy to France to brief French President Charles de Gaulle and gain his support for the United States blockade Acheson so strongly opposed the final decision merely to blockade that he resigned from the executive committee 20 During the 1960s he was a leading member of a bipartisan group of establishment elders known as the Wise Men who initially supported the Vietnam War As secretary of state Acheson had supported the French efforts to control Indochina as the necessary price for French support of NATO and to contain communism By 1968 however his viewpoint had changed President Johnson asked Acheson to reassess American military policy and he concluded that military victory was impossible He advised Johnson to pull out as quickly as possible to avoid a deepening division inside the Democratic Party Johnson took Acheson s advice in terms of de escalating the war and deciding not to run for reelection Acheson distrusted Hubert Humphrey and supported Richard Nixon for president in 1968 He provided advice to the Nixon administration through Henry Kissinger focusing on NATO and on African affairs He broke with Nixon in 1970 with the incursion into Cambodia 21 22 In 1964 he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom with Distinction In 1970 he won the Pulitzer Prize for History for his memoirs of his tenure in the State Department Present at the Creation My Years in the State Department The Modern Library placed the book at No 47 on its top 100 non fiction books of the 20th century 23 At 6 00 p m on October 12 1971 Acheson died of a massive stroke at his farm home in Sandy Spring Maryland at the age of 78 His body was found slumped over his desk in his study 24 Acheson was interred in Oak Hill Cemetery in Georgetown Washington DC 25 26 He had a son David C Acheson father of Eleanor D Acheson and two daughters Jane Acheson Brown and Mary Acheson Bundy wife of William Bundy 24 In media EditAcheson was portrayed by John Dehner in the 1974 television docudrama The Missiles of October In the 2000 film Thirteen Days Acheson was played by Len Cariou Publications EditArticles Edit Summary of Attorney General s Committee Report American Bar Association Journal Vol 27 No 3 March 1941 pp 143 146 Mr Justice Brandeis Harvard Law Review Vol 55 No 2 December 1941 pp 191 192 Text of the United States Note to the Soviet Union concerning the Question of the Turkish Straits August 19 1946 Middle East Journal Vol 1 No 1 January 1947 pp 88 89 Statement on India by Dean Acheson Acting U S Secretary of State December 3 1946 Middle East Journal Vol 1 No 2 April 1947 p 209 The Need and the Lack The American Scholar Vol 17 No 4 Autumn 1948 pp 476 477 Abwehr von Aggressionen Ost Probleme Vol 2 No 39 September 28 1950 p 1240 Proklamation des Nationalen Notstands in USA Ost Probleme Vol 3 No 1 January 6 1951 p 31 Co authored with Harry S Truman The Development of the International Community Proceedings of the American Society of International Law at Its Annual Meeting 1921 1969 Vol 46 April 24 26 1952 pp 18 25 The Illusion of Disengagement Foreign Affairs Vol 36 No 3 April 1958 pp 371 382 Felix Frankfurter Harvard Law Review Vol 76 No 1 November 1962 pp 14 16 The Practice of Partnership Foreign Affairs Vol 41 No 2 January 1963 pp 247 260 The Cuban Quarantine Proceedings of the American Society of International Law at Its Annual Meeting 1921 1969 Vol 57 Law and Conflict Changing Patterns and Contemporary Challenges April 25 27 1963 pp 9 18 Co authored by Quincy Wright amp Abram Chayes Europe Decision or Drift Foreign Affairs Vol 44 No 2 January 1966 pp 198 205 The Lawyer s Path to Peace The Virginia Quarterly Review Vol 42 No 3 Summer 1966 pp 337 348 The Arrogance of International Lawyers The International Lawyer Vol 2 No 4 July 1968 pp 591 600 Removing the Shadow Cast on the Courts American Bar Association Journal Vol 55 No 10 October 1969 pp 919 922 The Eclipse of the State Department Foreign Affairs Vol 49 No 4 July 1971 pp 593 606 How Containment Worked Foreign Policy No 7 Summer 1972 pp 41 53 Co authored with Chalmers M Roberts W Averell Harriman amp Arthur Krock Book reviews Edit Review of The Labor Law of Maryland by Malcolm H Lauchheimer Harvard Law Review Vol 33 No 2 December 1919 pp 329 332 Full text available on JSTOR Review of Shaping the Future Foreign Policy in an Age of Transition by Robert R Bowie Political Science Quarterly Vol 79 No 3 September 1964 pp 435 436 References Edit Dean Acheson Oxford Learner s Dictionary Archived from the original on October 30 2012 Retrieved January 22 2013 Beisner pp 79 83 Brennan Elizabeth A Clarage Elizabeth C Who s Who of Pulitzer Prize Winners Greenwood 1999 p 290 David S McClellan Dean Acheson The State Department Years 1976 pp 8 12 Beisner 2006 Townsend Hoopes God and John Foster Dulles Foreign Policy No 13 Winter 1973 1974 pp 154 177 at p 162 Acheson explained his opposition to this plan and described his experience as Treasury Undersecretary in the chapter Brief Encounter With FDR in his 1965 memoir Morning and Noon pp 161 194 Perlmutter Oscar William 1961 Acheson and the Diplomacy of World War II The Western Political Quarterly 14 4 896 911 doi 10 2307 445090 JSTOR 445090 Irvine H Anderson Jr The 1941 De Facto Embargo on Oil to Japan A Bureaucratic Reflex Pacific Historical Review Vol 44 No 2 May 1975 pp 201 231 in JSTOR Jean Edward Smith FDR Random House 2007 p 517 Randall Bennett Woods The Good Shepherd Reviews in American History Volume 35 Number 2 June 2007 pp 284 288 Frazier 1999 Citation Accompanying Medal for Merit Awarded to Dean Acheson The American Presidency Project June 30 1947 Archived from the original on August 14 2018 Retrieved November 6 2011 Robert Garson The United States and China since 1949 1994 pp 27 33 Lewis McCarroll Purifoy Harry Truman s China policy McCarthyism and the diplomacy of hysteria 1947 1951 1976 pp 125 150 Excerpts Retrieved December 30 2017 Matray 2002 p 55 Robert L Beisner 2009 Dean Acheson A Life in the Cold War Oxford University Press pp 334 349 ISBN 9780195382488 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter A PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved April 1 2011 Douglas Brinkley Dean Acheson The Cold War Years 1953 71 1992 Robert L Beisner Dean Acheson a life in the Cold war 2009 pp 620 41 Gregory T D Auria Present at the rejuvenation the association of Dean Acheson and Richard Nixon Presidential Studies Quarterly 18 1989 393 412 Search for a Title or Author 100 Best Nonfiction Modern Library Randomhouse com Retrieved December 9 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help a b Dean Acheson Dies on His Farm at 78 The New York Times October 13 1971 Resting Places The Burial Places of 14 000 Famous Persons by Scott Wilson Oak Hill Cemetery Georgetown D C Chapel Chapel Lot 18 PDF Oak Hill Cemetery Archived PDF from the original on March 2 2022 Retrieved August 17 2022 Further reading EditExternal video Presentation by James Chace on Acheson The Secretary of State Who Created the American World September 16 1998 C SPAN Dean Gooderham Acheson Dictionary of American Biography 1994 online Beisner Robert L Dean Acheson A Life in the Cold War New York OUP USA 2006 800 pages a standard scholarly biography online Beisner Robert L Patterns of Peril Dean Acheson Joins the Cold Warriors 1945 46 Diplomatic History 20 3 1996 pp 321 355 ISSN 0145 2096 Beisner Robert L SHAFR Presidential Address The Secretary the Spy and the Sage Dean Acheson Alger Hiss and George Kennan Diplomatic History Vol 27 No 1 January 2003 pp 1 14 Brinkley Douglas Dean Acheson The Cold War Years 1953 71 1992 429 pages online Brinkley Douglas ed Dean Acheson and the Making of U S Foreign Policy 1993 271 pages online Brinkley Douglas Dean Acheson and the Special Relationship The West Point Speech of December 1962 The Historical Journal 33 3 September 1990 pp 599 608 Chace James Acheson The Secretary of State Who Created the American World Harvard University Press 1998 ISBN 0 674 00081 1 online Fletcher Luke The Collapse of the Western World Acheson Nitze and the NSC 68 Rearmament Decision Diplomatic History 40 4 2016 pp 750 777 Frazier Robert Acheson and the Formulation of the Truman Doctrine Journal of Modern Greek Studies Vol 17 No 2 1999 pp 229 251 ISSN 0738 1727 in Project Muse Garson Robert The United States and China since 1949 A Troubled Affair Fairleigh Dickinson University Press Madison 1994 pp 27 33 ISBN 0 8386 3610 1 Goulden Joseph C The Superlawyers The Small and Powerful World of the Great Washington Law Firms New York Weybright and Talley 1971 Harper John Lamberton American Visions of Europe Franklin D Roosevelt George F Kennan and Dean G Acheson Cambridge University Press 1994 378 pages Hopkins Michael F President Harry Truman s Secretaries of State Stettinius Byrnes Marshall and Acheson Journal of Transatlantic Studies 6 3 2008 pp 290 304 Hopkins Michael F Dean Acheson and the Obligations of Power Rowman amp Littlefield 2017 289 pages excerpt Hopkins Michael F Dean Acheson Bretton Woods and the American Role in the International Economy in Global Perspectives on the Bretton Woods Conference and the Post War World Order Palgrave Macmillan Cham 2017 Isaacson Walter and Evan Thomas The Wise Men Six Friends and the World They Made 1997 864 pages Covers Acheson and colleagues Charles E Bohlen W Averell Harriman George Kennan Robert Lovett and John J McCloy online Leffler Melvyn P Strategy Diplomacy and the Cold War the United States Turkey and NATO 1945 1952 Journal of American History 71 4 1985 pp 807 825 McGlothlen Ronald L Controlling the Waves Dean Acheson and US Foreign Policy in Asia 1993 online McLellan David S Dean Acheson The State Department Years New York Dodd Mead amp Co 1976 466 pages online McMahon Robert J Dean Acheson and the Creation of an American World Order Washington Potomac 2009 257 pages online McNay John T Acheson and Empire The British Accent in American Foreign Policy 2001 online Matray James I 2002 Dean Acheson s National Press Club Speech Reexamined Journal of Conflict Studies 22 1 28 55 Merrill Dennis The Truman Doctrine Containing Communism and Modernity Presidential Studies Quarterly 36 1 2006 pp 27 37 online Offner Arnold A Another Such Victory President Truman American Foreign Policy and the Cold War Diplomatic History 23 2 1999 pp 127 155 Offner Arnold A Another Such Victory President Truman and the Cold War 2002 640 pages Highly negative excerpts and text search Perlmutter Oscar William The Neo Realism of Dean Acheson The Review of Politics 26 1 January 1964 pp 100 123 Perlmutter Oscar William Acheson and the Diplomacy of World War II The Western Political Quarterly 14 4 December 1961 pp 896 911 Purifoy Lewis McCarroll Harry Truman s China Policy New York Franklin Watts 1976 pp 125 150 ISBN 0 531 05386 5 Smith Gaddis Dean Acheson 1972 major scholarly biography online Spalding Elizabeth Edwards The First Cold Warrior Harry Truman Containment and the Remaking of Liberal Internationalism 2006 excerpt Steil Benn The Marshall Plan Dawn of the Cold War 2018 608pp excerpt Stupak Ronald J The shaping of foreign policy the role of the Secretary of State as seen by Dean Acheson 1969 online Wells Samuel F Dean Acheson Leads The Defense Of Europe in Fearing the Worst Columbia UP 2019 269 303 Primary sources Edit Acheson Dean A Democrat Looks at His Party 1955 Acheson Dean A Citizen Looks at Congress 1957 Acheson Dean Sketches from Life of Men I Have Known 1961 Acheson Dean 1965 Morning and Noon A Memoir Boston Houghton Mifflin Company online Acheson Dean Present at the Creation 1969 online Acheson Dean The Korean War 1971 Acheson Dean 1971 Fragments of My Fleece New York Norton ISBN 9780393086447 222 pages McLellan David S and David C Acheson eds Among Friends Personal Letters of Dean Acheson 1980 Truman Harry S and Dean Acheson Affection and trust the personal correspondence of Harry S Truman and Dean Acheson 1953 1971 2010 onlineExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dean Acheson Wikiquote has quotations related to Dean Acheson Work on Acheson s Role in Designing the Foreign Policy Stance of the Democratic Party after the 1952 election Annotated bibliography for Dean Acheson from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues Archived August 28 2006 at the Wayback Machine FOIA FBI file at Internet ArchivePolitical officesNew office Assistant Secretary of State for Congressional Relations and International Conferences1944 1945 Succeeded byErnest A Grossas Assistant Secretary of State for Legislative AffairsSucceeded byDean Ruskas Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization AffairsPreceded byJoseph Grew United States Under Secretary of State1945 1947 Succeeded byRobert A LovettPreceded byGeorge Marshall United States Secretary of State1949 1953 Succeeded byJohn Foster Dulles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dean Acheson amp oldid 1154033594, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.