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Frank Knox

William Franklin Knox (January 1, 1874 – April 28, 1944) was an American politician, soldier, newspaper editor, and publisher. He was also the Republican vice presidential candidate in 1936, and Secretary of the Navy under Franklin D. Roosevelt during most of World War II. On December 7, 1941, Knox, flanked by his assistant John O’Keefe, walked into Roosevelt's White House study around 1:30 pm EST, and announced that Japan had attacked Pearl Harbor.

Frank Knox
Knox, c. 1940s
47th United States Secretary of the Navy
In office
July 11, 1940 – April 28, 1944
PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt
Preceded byCharles Edison
Succeeded byJames Forrestal
Personal details
Born
William Franklin Knox

(1874-01-01)January 1, 1874
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedApril 28, 1944(1944-04-28) (aged 70)
Washington, DC, U.S.
Resting placeArlington National Cemetery
Political partyRepublican
SpouseAnnie Reid
EducationAlma College (BA)
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/serviceUnited States Army
Years of service1898
1917–1919
RankColonel
Battles/warsSpanish–American War
 • Battle of Las Guasimas
 • Battle of San Juan Hill
World War I

Born in Boston, he attended Alma College and served with the Rough Riders during the Spanish–American War. After the war, he became a newspaper editor in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and state chairman of the Republican Party. He was a leading supporter of Theodore Roosevelt, the Progressive candidate for president in 1912. He advocated U.S. entrance into World War I and served as an artillery officer in France. The 1936 Republican National Convention nominated a ticket of Alf Landon and Knox, and they were defeated by Roosevelt and John Nance Garner in the 1936 election.

After World War II broke out in 1939, Knox supported aid to the Allies. In 1940, Roosevelt appointed him as Secretary of the Navy in hopes of building bipartisan support. Knox brought in James Forrestal as the under secretary. They presided over a massive naval buildup, but were dissatisfied by the confused chain of command in Hawaii. After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Knox brought in a much more aggressive admiral, Ernest J. King. Roosevelt worked closely with King, and largely neglected Knox. During the war, Knox continued his supervision of the Chicago Daily News, while Forrestal expanded his role and supervised the nonmilitary aspects of the department in terms of contracts and recruitment.[1] Knox served as secretary of the Navy until his death in 1944, when Forrestal replaced him.

Early life

William Franklin Knox was born in Boston, Massachusetts. His parents were both Canadian; his mother, Sarah C. (Barnard), was from Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, and his father, William Edwin Knox, was from New Brunswick.[2] When he was nine, his family moved to Grand Rapids, Michigan, where his father ran a grocery store. He attended Alma College in Michigan, where he was a member of the Zeta Sigma fraternity. He left in his senior year to join the US Army for the Spanish–American War. He later supplemented his studies with additional readings and coursework, and the college's board of trustees awarded him a Bachelor of Arts degree as a member of the class of 1898.[3]

He served in Cuba with Theodore Roosevelt's famous Rough Riders, the First Volunteer Cavalry Regiment.[4] He was a member of Troop D commanded by Captain Robert Huston. As a member of D Troop, Knox fought in Cuba at the Battle of Las Guasimas, and the Battle of San Juan Hill.[5]

Newspapers and politics

 
Admiral Harold R. Stark and Secretary Knox reading on a train in England in 1943

After the war, Knox became a newspaper reporter in Grand Rapids, which was the beginning of a career that included ownership of several papers. He changed his first name to Frank around 1900. He was state chairman of the Michigan Republican Party. In 1912, he was a key organizer for the presidential ambitions of Theodore Roosevelt.[6][7]

In late 1912, Knox helped found the Manchester Leader in New Hampshire. It was financed by Governor Robert P. Bass, a member of the Progressive or Bull Moose Party). The newspaper was so successful that Knox bought out the Manchester Union. The two newspapers merged under the banner of the Union-Leader Corporation July 1913. Both papers espoused a moderate Republican, probusiness stance.

During World War I, Knox was an advocate of U.S military preparedness and then of participation in the war. When the U.S. declared war on Germany in 1917, he rejoined the Army. He reached the rank of Colonel and served as an artillery officer in France. After the war he returned to the newspaper business.

In 1931, Frank Knox became publisher and part owner of the Chicago Daily News. In the 1936 election, he was the Republican nominee for vice president under Alf Landon. Landon, Knox, and former President Herbert Hoover were the only supporters of Theodore Roosevelt in 1912 who were later named to a Republican ticket. They lost in a landslide, winning just Maine and Vermont against the Democratic ticket of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Vice President John Nance Garner.

World War II

 
Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter administers the oath of office to Knox as Secretary of the Navy at the White House, as President Franklin D. Roosevelt looks on. (July 11, 1940)

During World War II, Knox again was an advocate of preparedness.[8] As an internationalist, he supported aid to the Allies and opposed isolationism. In July 1940, he became secretary of the Navy under Roosevelt, part of the Democratic president's effort to build bipartisan support for his foreign and defense policies following the defeat of France. Knox carried out Roosevelt's plan to expand the US Navy into a force capable of fighting in both the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans. Knox was mentioned by name in Adolf Hitler's speech of December 11, 1941, in which Hitler asked for a German declaration of war against the United States.

When a new naval officer on Knox's staff told him, "I'm no New Dealer," Knox replied, "I fought the President with every resource at my command. But now I've squared my politics with my conscience and I'm proud to serve under such a great man. At that," Knox added, "it's a good thing to have a couple of fellows around here who aren't New Dealers!"[9] He traveled extensively to Navy installations worldwide.

Internment of Japanese Americans

Knox had called for the internment of Japanese Americans as early as 1933,[10] and he continued to do so in his new position. Shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor, he visited Hawaii to investigate the sabotage that he believed to have taken place there. Upon his return, he issued a public statement that "the most effective Fifth Column work of the entire war was done in Hawaii with the exception of Norway," and he accused Japanese Hawaiians of impeding US defense efforts in a report to the President. Although the FBI and military intelligence later disproved those claims, Knox continued to push for the internment of Japanese Americans and barred them from service in the Navy during the war.[11]

Death

Following a brief series of heart attacks, Secretary Knox died in Washington, DC, on April 28, 1944, while still in office. He was buried on May 1, 1944, at Arlington National Cemetery, in Arlington, Virginia.[12]

Posthumous honors and memorials

The Gearing-class destroyer USS Frank Knox (DD-742), commissioned in December 1944, was named in his honor.[13][14]

On May 31, 1945 he received posthumously the Medal for Merit from President Harry S. Truman.[15] He also received the Spanish Campaign Medal and the World War I Victory Medal for his previous military service.

In 1948, his widow, Annie Reid Knox (1875-1958) endowed the Frank Knox Memorial Fellowships, which allow scholars from Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the Union of South Africa, and the United Kingdom to pursue graduate study at Harvard University, or by recent graduates of Harvard to travel and research in the countries of the British Commonwealth of Nations.[4]

Frank Knox School on the grounds of the Patuxent River Naval Air Station was named for him.

See also

References

  1. ^ Lobdell, 1980.
  2. ^ J. Ernest Kerr, Imprint of the Maritimes, 1959, Boston: Christopher Publishing, p. 123
  3. ^ Fuller, George Newman; Beeson, Lewis (1986). Michigan History. Vol. 70–71. Lansing, MI: Michigan History Division, Michigan Department of State. p. 36.
  4. ^ a b "Who is Frank Knox?", Harvard University.
  5. ^ Theodore Roosevelt (1899). "Troop D Muster". Charles Scribner's Sons. Retrieved 2012-11-14.
  6. ^ Geoffrey Cowan, Let the people rule: Theodore Roosevelt and the birth of the presidential primary (WW Norton & Company, 2016) pp. 50, 127-133.
  7. ^ Steven Macdonald Mark, "An American Interventionist: Frank Knox and United States Foreign Relations' (University of Maryland, College Park ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1977.7730543) pp 32-55..
  8. ^ Herman, Arthur. Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II, pp. 125–27, 141, 143, 155, 241. New York: Random House, ISBN 978-1-4000-6964-4.
  9. ^ Gunther, John (1950). Roosevelt in Retrospect. Harper & Brothers. p. 35.
  10. ^ Robinson, Greg. By Order of the President: FDR and the Internment of Japanese Americans (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2001), p. 77.
  11. ^ Niiya, Brian. "Frank Knox". Densho Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2014-10-29.
  12. ^ "Burial Detail: Knox, Frank (Section 2, Grave 4961)". ANC Explorer. Arlington National Cemetery. (Official website).
  13. ^ "Frank Knox (1874–1944)", Online Library of Selected Images, NHC.
  14. ^ "USS Frank Knox", USN Ships, NHC.
  15. ^ Sec. of War Henry Stimson's diary and papers May 31, 1945 – June 6, 1945

Sources

This article incorporates text in the public domain from the United States Department of the Navy.
  • Beasley, Norman. Frank Knox, American: a short biography (1936) online
  • Jordan, Jonathan W., American Warlords: How Roosevelt's High Command Led America to Victory in World War II (NAL/Caliber 2015).
  • Lobdell, George H. "Frank Knox, 11 July 1940–28 April 1944." in Paolo E. Coletta, ed. American Secretaries of the Navy, Volume II, 1913-1972 (1980) pp 677-728
  • Lobdell, George Henry, Jr. "A Biography of Frank Knox" (PhD dissertation, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1954. 0009101).
  • Mark, Steven Macdonald." An American Interventionist: Frank Knox and United States Foreign Relations' (PhD dissertation, University of Maryland, College Park ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1977. 7730543).

External links

  • . Online Library of Selected Images. Naval Historical Center, Department of the Navy. Archived from the original on 3 March 2009. Retrieved 2007-12-29.
  • . USN Ships. Naval Historical Center, Department of the Navy. Archived from the original on 2009-04-22. Retrieved 2007-12-29.
  • . The Frank Knox Memorial Fellowships. Harvard University. Archived from the original on 2007-12-18. Retrieved 2007-12-29.
Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for Vice President of the United States
1936
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by United States Secretary of the Navy
1940–1944
Succeeded by

frank, knox, cricketer, cricketer, william, franklin, knox, january, 1874, april, 1944, american, politician, soldier, newspaper, editor, publisher, also, republican, vice, presidential, candidate, 1936, secretary, navy, under, franklin, roosevelt, during, mos. For the cricketer see Frank Knox cricketer William Franklin Knox January 1 1874 April 28 1944 was an American politician soldier newspaper editor and publisher He was also the Republican vice presidential candidate in 1936 and Secretary of the Navy under Franklin D Roosevelt during most of World War II On December 7 1941 Knox flanked by his assistant John O Keefe walked into Roosevelt s White House study around 1 30 pm EST and announced that Japan had attacked Pearl Harbor Frank KnoxKnox c 1940s47th United States Secretary of the NavyIn office July 11 1940 April 28 1944PresidentFranklin D RooseveltPreceded byCharles EdisonSucceeded byJames ForrestalPersonal detailsBornWilliam Franklin Knox 1874 01 01 January 1 1874Boston Massachusetts U S DiedApril 28 1944 1944 04 28 aged 70 Washington DC U S Resting placeArlington National CemeteryPolitical partyRepublicanSpouseAnnie ReidEducationAlma College BA Military serviceAllegiance United StatesBranch serviceUnited States ArmyYears of service18981917 1919RankColonelBattles warsSpanish American War Battle of Las Guasimas Battle of San Juan HillWorld War IBorn in Boston he attended Alma College and served with the Rough Riders during the Spanish American War After the war he became a newspaper editor in Grand Rapids Michigan and state chairman of the Republican Party He was a leading supporter of Theodore Roosevelt the Progressive candidate for president in 1912 He advocated U S entrance into World War I and served as an artillery officer in France The 1936 Republican National Convention nominated a ticket of Alf Landon and Knox and they were defeated by Roosevelt and John Nance Garner in the 1936 election After World War II broke out in 1939 Knox supported aid to the Allies In 1940 Roosevelt appointed him as Secretary of the Navy in hopes of building bipartisan support Knox brought in James Forrestal as the under secretary They presided over a massive naval buildup but were dissatisfied by the confused chain of command in Hawaii After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor Knox brought in a much more aggressive admiral Ernest J King Roosevelt worked closely with King and largely neglected Knox During the war Knox continued his supervision of the Chicago Daily News while Forrestal expanded his role and supervised the nonmilitary aspects of the department in terms of contracts and recruitment 1 Knox served as secretary of the Navy until his death in 1944 when Forrestal replaced him Contents 1 Early life 2 Newspapers and politics 3 World War II 3 1 Internment of Japanese Americans 4 Death 5 Posthumous honors and memorials 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksEarly life EditWilliam Franklin Knox was born in Boston Massachusetts His parents were both Canadian his mother Sarah C Barnard was from Charlottetown Prince Edward Island and his father William Edwin Knox was from New Brunswick 2 When he was nine his family moved to Grand Rapids Michigan where his father ran a grocery store He attended Alma College in Michigan where he was a member of the Zeta Sigma fraternity He left in his senior year to join the US Army for the Spanish American War He later supplemented his studies with additional readings and coursework and the college s board of trustees awarded him a Bachelor of Arts degree as a member of the class of 1898 3 He served in Cuba with Theodore Roosevelt s famous Rough Riders the First Volunteer Cavalry Regiment 4 He was a member of Troop D commanded by Captain Robert Huston As a member of D Troop Knox fought in Cuba at the Battle of Las Guasimas and the Battle of San Juan Hill 5 Newspapers and politics Edit Admiral Harold R Stark and Secretary Knox reading on a train in England in 1943 After the war Knox became a newspaper reporter in Grand Rapids which was the beginning of a career that included ownership of several papers He changed his first name to Frank around 1900 He was state chairman of the Michigan Republican Party In 1912 he was a key organizer for the presidential ambitions of Theodore Roosevelt 6 7 In late 1912 Knox helped found the Manchester Leader in New Hampshire It was financed by Governor Robert P Bass a member of the Progressive or Bull Moose Party The newspaper was so successful that Knox bought out the Manchester Union The two newspapers merged under the banner of the Union Leader Corporation July 1913 Both papers espoused a moderate Republican probusiness stance During World War I Knox was an advocate of U S military preparedness and then of participation in the war When the U S declared war on Germany in 1917 he rejoined the Army He reached the rank of Colonel and served as an artillery officer in France After the war he returned to the newspaper business In 1931 Frank Knox became publisher and part owner of the Chicago Daily News In the 1936 election he was the Republican nominee for vice president under Alf Landon Landon Knox and former President Herbert Hoover were the only supporters of Theodore Roosevelt in 1912 who were later named to a Republican ticket They lost in a landslide winning just Maine and Vermont against the Democratic ticket of President Franklin D Roosevelt and Vice President John Nance Garner World War II Edit Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter administers the oath of office to Knox as Secretary of the Navy at the White House as President Franklin D Roosevelt looks on July 11 1940 During World War II Knox again was an advocate of preparedness 8 As an internationalist he supported aid to the Allies and opposed isolationism In July 1940 he became secretary of the Navy under Roosevelt part of the Democratic president s effort to build bipartisan support for his foreign and defense policies following the defeat of France Knox carried out Roosevelt s plan to expand the US Navy into a force capable of fighting in both the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans Knox was mentioned by name in Adolf Hitler s speech of December 11 1941 in which Hitler asked for a German declaration of war against the United States When a new naval officer on Knox s staff told him I m no New Dealer Knox replied I fought the President with every resource at my command But now I ve squared my politics with my conscience and I m proud to serve under such a great man At that Knox added it s a good thing to have a couple of fellows around here who aren t New Dealers 9 He traveled extensively to Navy installations worldwide Internment of Japanese Americans Edit Knox had called for the internment of Japanese Americans as early as 1933 10 and he continued to do so in his new position Shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor he visited Hawaii to investigate the sabotage that he believed to have taken place there Upon his return he issued a public statement that the most effective Fifth Column work of the entire war was done in Hawaii with the exception of Norway and he accused Japanese Hawaiians of impeding US defense efforts in a report to the President Although the FBI and military intelligence later disproved those claims Knox continued to push for the internment of Japanese Americans and barred them from service in the Navy during the war 11 Death EditFollowing a brief series of heart attacks Secretary Knox died in Washington DC on April 28 1944 while still in office He was buried on May 1 1944 at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington Virginia 12 Posthumous honors and memorials EditThe Gearing class destroyer USS Frank Knox DD 742 commissioned in December 1944 was named in his honor 13 14 On May 31 1945 he received posthumously the Medal for Merit from President Harry S Truman 15 He also received the Spanish Campaign Medal and the World War I Victory Medal for his previous military service In 1948 his widow Annie Reid Knox 1875 1958 endowed the Frank Knox Memorial Fellowships which allow scholars from Australia Canada New Zealand the Union of South Africa and the United Kingdom to pursue graduate study at Harvard University or by recent graduates of Harvard to travel and research in the countries of the British Commonwealth of Nations 4 Frank Knox School on the grounds of the Patuxent River Naval Air Station was named for him See also EditList of U S political appointees who crossed party lines Ed J Davenport handled public relations for Frank Knox 1929 32References Edit Lobdell 1980 J Ernest Kerr Imprint of the Maritimes 1959 Boston Christopher Publishing p 123 Fuller George Newman Beeson Lewis 1986 Michigan History Vol 70 71 Lansing MI Michigan History Division Michigan Department of State p 36 a b Who is Frank Knox Harvard University Theodore Roosevelt 1899 Troop D Muster Charles Scribner s Sons Retrieved 2012 11 14 Geoffrey Cowan Let the people rule Theodore Roosevelt and the birth of the presidential primary WW Norton amp Company 2016 pp 50 127 133 Steven Macdonald Mark An American Interventionist Frank Knox and United States Foreign Relations University of Maryland College Park ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 1977 7730543 pp 32 55 Herman Arthur Freedom s Forge How American Business Produced Victory in World War II pp 125 27 141 143 155 241 New York Random House ISBN 978 1 4000 6964 4 Gunther John 1950 Roosevelt in Retrospect Harper amp Brothers p 35 Robinson Greg By Order of the President FDR and the Internment of Japanese Americans Cambridge Harvard University Press 2001 p 77 Niiya Brian Frank Knox Densho Encyclopedia Retrieved 2014 10 29 Burial Detail Knox Frank Section 2 Grave 4961 ANC Explorer Arlington National Cemetery Official website Frank Knox 1874 1944 Online Library of Selected Images NHC USS Frank Knox USN Ships NHC Sec of War Henry Stimson s diary and papers May 31 1945 June 6 1945Sources EditThis article incorporates text in the public domain from the United States Department of the Navy Beasley Norman Frank Knox American a short biography 1936 online Jordan Jonathan W American Warlords How Roosevelt s High Command Led America to Victory in World War II NAL Caliber 2015 Lobdell George H Frank Knox 11 July 1940 28 April 1944 in Paolo E Coletta ed American Secretaries of the Navy Volume II 1913 1972 1980 pp 677 728 Lobdell George Henry Jr A Biography of Frank Knox PhD dissertation University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 1954 0009101 Mark Steven Macdonald An American Interventionist Frank Knox and United States Foreign Relations PhD dissertation University of Maryland College Park ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 1977 7730543 External links Edit Frank Knox 1874 1944 47th Secretary of the Navy 11 July 1940 28 April 1944 Online Library of Selected Images Naval Historical Center Department of the Navy Archived from the original on 3 March 2009 Retrieved 2007 12 29 USS Frank Knox DD 742 later DDR 742 and DD 742 1944 1971 USN Ships Naval Historical Center Department of the Navy Archived from the original on 2009 04 22 Retrieved 2007 12 29 Who was Frank Knox The Frank Knox Memorial Fellowships Harvard University Archived from the original on 2007 12 18 Retrieved 2007 12 29 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frank Knox Party political officesPreceded byCharles Curtis Republican nominee for Vice President of the United States1936 Succeeded byCharles L McNaryPolitical officesPreceded byCharles Edison United States Secretary of the Navy1940 1944 Succeeded byJames Forrestal Portals Biography Politics World War I World War II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frank Knox amp oldid 1146837320, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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