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Joseph McCarthy

Joseph Raymond McCarthy (November 14, 1908 – May 2, 1957) was an American politician who served as a Republican U.S. Senator from the state of Wisconsin from 1947 until his death in 1957. Beginning in 1950, McCarthy became the most visible public face of a period in the United States in which Cold War tensions fueled fears of widespread communist subversion.[1] He is known for alleging that numerous communists and Soviet spies and sympathizers had infiltrated the United States federal government, universities, film industry,[2][3] and elsewhere. Ultimately, he was censured for refusing to cooperate with, and abusing members of, the committee established to investigate whether or not he should be censured. The term "McCarthyism", coined in 1950 in reference to McCarthy's practices, was soon applied to similar anti-communist activities. Today, the term is used more broadly to mean demagogic, reckless, and unsubstantiated accusations, as well as public attacks on the character or patriotism of political opponents.[4][5]

Joseph McCarthy
McCarthy in 1954
United States Senator
from Wisconsin
In office
January 3, 1947 – May 2, 1957
Preceded byRobert M. La Follette Jr.
Succeeded byWilliam Proxmire
Chair of Senate Government Operations Committee
In office
January 3, 1953 – January 3, 1955
Preceded byJohn L. McClellan
Succeeded byJohn L. McClellan
Judge of the Wisconsin Circuit Court
for the 10th Circuit
In office
January 1, 1940 – January 3, 1947
Preceded byEdgar Werner
Succeeded byMichael Eberlein
Personal details
Born
Joseph Raymond McCarthy

(1908-11-14)November 14, 1908
Grand Chute, Wisconsin, U.S.
DiedMay 2, 1957(1957-05-02) (aged 48)
Bethesda, Maryland, U.S.
Resting placeSaint Mary's Cemetery
Political party
Spouse
Jean Kerr
(m. 1953)
Children1 (adopted)
EducationMarquette University (LLB)
Signature
Military service
AllegianceUnited States
Branch/serviceUnited States Marine Corps
Years of service1942–1945 (Marine Corps)
1946–1957 (Reserve)
RankLieutenant Colonel
Battles/warsWorld War II
AwardsDistinguished Flying Cross
Air Medal (5)

Born in Grand Chute, Wisconsin, McCarthy commissioned into the Marine Corps in 1942, where he served as an intelligence briefing officer for a dive bomber squadron. Following the end of World War II, he attained the rank of major. He volunteered to fly twelve combat missions as a gunner-observer. These missions were generally safe, and after one where he was allowed to shoot as much ammunition as he wanted to, mainly at coconut trees, he acquired the nickname "Tail-Gunner Joe". Some of his claims of heroism were later shown to be exaggerated or falsified, leading many of his critics to use "Tail-Gunner Joe" as a term of mockery.[6][7][8]

McCarthy successfully ran for the U.S. Senate in 1946, defeating Robert M. La Follette Jr. After three largely undistinguished years in the Senate, McCarthy rose suddenly to national fame in February 1950, when he asserted in a speech that he had a list of "members of the Communist Party and members of a spy ring" who were employed in the State Department.[9] In succeeding years after his 1950 speech, McCarthy made additional accusations of Communist infiltration into the State Department, the administration of President Harry S. Truman, the Voice of America, and the U.S. Army. He also used various charges of communism, communist sympathies, disloyalty, or sex crimes to attack a number of politicians and other individuals inside and outside of government.[10] This included a concurrent "Lavender Scare" against suspected homosexuals; as homosexuality was prohibited by law at the time, it was also perceived to increase a person's risk for blackmail.[11]

With the highly publicized Army–McCarthy hearings of 1954, and following the suicide of Wyoming Senator Lester C. Hunt that same year,[12] McCarthy's support and popularity faded. On December 2, 1954, the Senate voted to censure Senator McCarthy by a vote of 67–22, making him one of the few senators ever to be disciplined in this fashion. He continued to speak against communism and socialism until his death at the age of 48 at Bethesda Naval Hospital in Bethesda, Maryland, on May 2, 1957. His death certificate listed the cause of death as "Hepatitis, acute, cause unknown".[13] Doctors had not previously reported him to be in critical condition.[14] Some biographers say this was caused or exacerbated by alcoholism.[15]

McCarthy is the last Republican to have held, or won election to, Wisconsin's Class I Senate seat.

Early life and education

McCarthy was born in 1908 on a farm in Grand Chute, Wisconsin, the fifth of nine children.[16][17] His mother, Bridget McCarthy (nee Tierney), was from County Tipperary, Ireland. His father, Timothy McCarthy, was born in the United States, the son of an Irish father and a German mother. McCarthy dropped out of junior high school at age 14 to help his parents manage their farm. He entered Little Wolf High School, in Manawa, Wisconsin, when he was 20 and graduated in one year.[18]

He attended Marquette University from 1930 to 1935. McCarthy worked his way through college by coaching, boxing etc.[clarification needed] He first studied electrical engineering for two years, then law, and received a Bachelor of Laws degree in 1935 from Marquette University Law School in Milwaukee.[19]

Career

McCarthy was admitted to the bar in 1935. While working at a law firm in Shawano, Wisconsin, he launched an unsuccessful campaign for district attorney as a Democrat in 1936. During his years as an attorney, McCarthy made money on the side by gambling.[20]

In 1939, McCarthy had better success when he ran for the nonpartisan elected post of 10th District circuit judge.[21][22] McCarthy became the youngest circuit judge in the state's history by defeating incumbent Edgar V. Werner, who had been a judge for 24 years.[23] In the campaign, McCarthy lied about Werner's age of 66, claiming that he was 73, and so allegedly too old and infirm to handle the duties of his office.[24] Writing of Werner in Reds: McCarthyism In Twentieth-Century America, Ted Morgan wrote: "Pompous and condescending, he (Werner) was disliked by lawyers. His judgements had often been reversed by the Wisconsin Supreme Court, and he was so inefficient that he had piled up a huge backlog of cases."[25]

McCarthy's judicial career attracted some controversy because of the speed with which he dispatched many of his cases as he worked to clear the heavily backlogged docket he had inherited from Werner.[26] Wisconsin had strict divorce laws, but when McCarthy heard divorce cases, he expedited them whenever possible, and he made the needs of children involved in contested divorces a priority.[27] When it came to other cases argued before him, McCarthy compensated for his lack of experience as a jurist by demanding and relying heavily upon precise briefs from the contesting attorneys. The Wisconsin Supreme Court reversed a low percentage of the cases he heard,[28] but he was also censured in 1941 for having lost evidence in a price fixing case.[29]

Military service

 
Joseph McCarthy in his U.S. Marine Corps uniform

In 1942, shortly after the U.S. entered World War II, McCarthy joined the United States Marine Corps, despite the fact that his judicial office exempted him from military service.[30] His college education qualified him for a direct commission, and he entered the Marines as a first lieutenant.[31]

According to Morgan, writing in Reds, McCarthy's friend and campaign manager, attorney and judge Urban P. Van Susteren, had applied for active duty in the U.S. Army Air Forces in early 1942, and advised McCarthy: "Be a hero—join the Marines."[32][33] When McCarthy seemed hesitant, Van Susteren asked, "You got shit in your blood?"[34]

 
McCarthy receiving his DFC and Air Medal from Colonel John R. Lanigan, commanding officer of Fifth Marine Reserve District, December 1952

He served as an intelligence briefing officer for a dive bomber squadron VMSB-235 in the Solomon Islands and Bougainville for 30 months (August 1942 – February 1945), and held the rank of captain by the time he resigned his commission in April 1945. He volunteered to fly twelve combat missions as a gunner-observer. These missions were generally safe, and after one where he was allowed to shoot as much ammunition as he wanted to, mainly at coconut trees, he acquired the nickname "Tail-Gunner Joe".[35] McCarthy remained in the Marine Corps Reserve after the war, attaining the rank of lieutenant colonel.[36][37]

He later falsely claimed participation in 32 aerial missions in order to qualify for a Distinguished Flying Cross and multiple awards of the Air Medal, which the Marine Corps chain of command decided to approve in 1952 because of his political influence.[38][39] McCarthy also publicized a letter of commendation which he claimed had been signed by his commanding officer and Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, then Chief of Naval Operations.[40][41] However, his commander revealed that McCarthy had written this letter himself, probably while preparing award citations and commendation letters as an additional duty, and that he had signed his commander's name, after which Nimitz signed it during the process of just signing numerous other such letters.[42][41] A "war wound"—a badly broken leg—that McCarthy made the subject of varying stories involving airplane crashes or anti-aircraft fire had in fact happened aboard ship during a raucous celebration for sailors crossing the equator for the first time.[43][44][45] Because of McCarthy's various lies about his military heroism, his "Tail-Gunner Joe" nickname was sarcastically used as a term of mockery by his critics.[6][7][8]

McCarthy campaigned for the Republican Senate nomination in Wisconsin while still on active duty in 1944 but was defeated by Alexander Wiley, the incumbent. After he left the Marines in April 1945, five months before the end of the Pacific war in September 1945, McCarthy was reelected unopposed to his circuit court position. He then began a much more systematic campaign for the 1946 Republican Senate primary nomination, with support from Thomas Coleman, the Republican Party's political boss in Wisconsin. In this race, he was challenging three-term senator Robert M. La Follette Jr., founder of the Wisconsin Progressive Party and son of the celebrated Wisconsin governor and senator Robert M. La Follette Sr.

Senate campaign

In his campaign, McCarthy attacked La Follette for not enlisting during the war, although La Follette had been 46 when Pearl Harbor was bombed. He also claimed La Follette had made huge profits from his investments while he, McCarthy, had been away fighting for his country. In fact, McCarthy had invested in the stock market himself during the war, netting a profit of $42,000 in 1943 (over $604,000 in 2017 dollars). Where McCarthy got the money to invest in the first place remains a mystery. La Follette's investments consisted of partial interest in a radio station, which earned him a profit of $47,000 over two years.[46]

According to Jack Anderson and Ronald W. May,[47] McCarthy's campaign funds, much of them from out of state, were ten times more than La Follette's and McCarthy's vote benefited from a Communist Party vendetta against La Follette. The suggestion that La Follette had been guilty of war profiteering was deeply damaging, and McCarthy won the primary nomination 207,935 votes to 202,557. It was during this campaign that McCarthy started publicizing his war-time nickname "Tail-Gunner Joe", using the slogan, "Congress needs a tail-gunner". Journalist Arnold Beichman later stated that McCarthy "was elected to his first term in the Senate with support from the Communist-controlled United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers, CIO", which preferred McCarthy to the anti-communist Robert M. La Follette.[48] In the general election against Democratic opponent Howard J. McMurray, McCarthy won 61.2% to Democrat McMurray's 37.3%, and thus joined Senator Wiley, whom he had challenged unsuccessfully two years earlier, in the Senate.

1946 Wisconsin U.S. Senate election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Joseph McCarthy 620,430 61.2
Democratic Howard McMurray 378,772 37.3
Total votes 999,202 98.5
Republican hold

Personal life

In 1950, McCarthy assaulted journalist Drew Pearson in the cloakroom at the Sulgrave Club, reportedly kneeing him in the groin. McCarthy, who admitted the assault, claimed he merely "slapped" Pearson.[49] In 1952, using rumors collected by Pearson as well as other sources, Nevada publisher Hank Greenspun wrote that McCarthy was a frequent patron at the White Horse Inn, a Milwaukee gay bar, and cited his involvement with young men. Greenspun named some of McCarthy's alleged lovers, including Charles E. Davis, an ex-Communist and "confessed homosexual" who claimed that he had been hired by McCarthy to spy on U.S. diplomats in Switzerland.[50][51]

McCarthy's FBI file also contains numerous allegations, including a 1952 letter from an Army lieutenant who said, "When I was in Washington some time ago, [McCarthy] picked me up at the bar in the Wardman [Hotel] and took me home, and while I was half-drunk he committed sodomy on me." J. Edgar Hoover conducted a perfunctory investigation of the Senator's alleged sexual assault; Hoover's approach was that "homosexuals are very bitter against Senator McCarthy for his attack upon those who are supposed to be in the Government."[52][53]

Although some notable McCarthy biographers have rejected these rumors,[54] others have suggested that he may have been blackmailed. During the early 1950s, McCarthy launched a series of attacks on the CIA, claiming it had been infiltrated by communist agents. Allen Dulles, who suspected McCarthy was using information supplied by Hoover, refused to cooperate. According to the historian David Talbot, Dulles also compiled a "scandalous" intimate dossier on the Senator's personal life and used the homosexual stories to take him down.[55]

In any event, McCarthy did not sue Greenspun for libel. (He was told that if the case went ahead he would be compelled to take the witness stand and to refute the charges made in the affidavit of the young man, which was the basis for Greenspun's story.) In 1953, he married Jean Fraser Kerr, a researcher in his office. In January 1957, McCarthy and his wife adopted an infant with the help of Roy Cohn's close friend Cardinal Spellman. They named the baby girl Tierney Elizabeth McCarthy.[56]

United States Senate

Senator McCarthy's first three years in the Senate were unremarkable.[57] McCarthy was a popular speaker, invited by many different organizations, covering a wide range of topics. His aides and many in the Washington social circle described him as charming and friendly, and he was a popular guest at cocktail parties. He was far less well liked among fellow senators, however, who found him quick-tempered and prone to impatience and even rage. Outside of a small circle of colleagues, he was soon an isolated figure in the Senate.[58]

McCarthy was active in labor-management issues, with a reputation as a moderate Republican. He fought against continuation of wartime price controls, especially on sugar. His advocacy in this area was associated by critics with a $20,000 personal loan McCarthy received from a Pepsi bottling executive, earning the Senator the derisive nickname "The Pepsi-Cola Kid".[59] McCarthy supported the Taft–Hartley Act over Truman's veto, angering labor unions in Wisconsin but solidifying his business base.[60]

Malmedy massacre trial

In an incident for which he would be widely criticized, McCarthy lobbied for the commutation of death sentences given to a group of Waffen-SS soldiers convicted of war crimes for carrying out the 1944 Malmedy massacre of American prisoners of war. McCarthy was critical of the convictions because the German soldiers' confessions were allegedly obtained through torture during the interrogations. He argued that the U.S. Army was engaged in a coverup of judicial misconduct, but never presented any evidence to support the accusation.[61] Shortly after this, a 1950 poll of the Senate press corps voted McCarthy "the worst U.S. senator" currently in office.[62] McCarthy biographer Larry Tye has written that antisemitism may have factored into McCarthy's outspoken views on Malmedy. Although he had substantial Jewish support, notably Lewis Rosenstiel of Schenley Industries, Rabbi Benjamin Schultz of the American Jewish League Against Communism, and the columnist George Sokolsky, who convinced him to hire Roy Cohn and G. David Schine,[63] McCarthy frequently used anti-Jewish slurs. He also received enthusiastic support from antisemitic politicians including Ku Klux Klansman Wesley Swift, and according to friends would display his copy of Mein Kampf, stating, "That’s the way to do it."[64] Tye cites three quotes from European historian Steven Remy, chief Malmedy prosecutor COL Burton Ellis JAG USA, and massacre victim and survivor Virgil P. Laru, Jr:

Both willfully clueless and supremely self-confident, McCarthy impeded but did not derail a truly fair and balanced investigation of the Malmedy affair, — Steven Remy[64]

It beats the hell out of me why everyone tries so hard to show that the prosecution[s] were insidious, underhanded, unethical, immoral and God knows what monsters, that unfairly convicted a group of whiskerless Sunday school boys. — Burton Ellis[64]

I have seen persons bent on murdering me, persons who murdered my companions, defended by a United States senator. … I charge that this action of Senator McCarthy’s became the basis for the Communist propaganda in western Germany, designed to discredit the American armed forces and American justice. — Virgil P. Lary, Jr[64]

"Enemies within"

McCarthy experienced a meteoric rise in national profile beginning on February 9, 1950, when he gave a Lincoln Day speech to the Republican Women's Club of Wheeling, West Virginia. His words in the speech are a matter of some debate, as no audio recording was saved. However, it is generally agreed that he produced a piece of paper that he claimed contained a list of known Communists working for the State Department. McCarthy is usually quoted to have said: "The State Department is infested with communists. I have here in my hand a list of 205—a list of names that were made known to the Secretary of State as being members of the Communist Party and who nevertheless are still working and shaping policy in the State Department."[65][66]

There is some dispute about whether or not McCarthy actually gave the number of people on the list as being "205" or "57". In a later telegram to President Truman, and when entering the speech into the Congressional Record, he used the number 57.[67] The origin of the number 205 can be traced: in later debates on the Senate floor, McCarthy referred to a 1946 letter that then–Secretary of State James Byrnes sent to Congressman Adolph J. Sabath. In that letter, Byrnes said State Department security investigations had resulted in "recommendation against permanent employment" for 284 persons, and that 79 of these had been removed from their jobs; this left 205 still on the State Department's payroll. In fact, by the time of McCarthy's speech only about 65 of the employees mentioned in the Byrnes letter were still with the State Department, and all of these had undergone further security checks.[68]

At the time of McCarthy's speech, communism was a significant concern in the United States. This concern was exacerbated by the actions of the Soviet Union in Eastern Europe, the victory of the communists in the Chinese Civil War, the Soviets' development of a nuclear weapon the year before, and by the contemporary controversy surrounding Alger Hiss and the confession of Soviet spy Klaus Fuchs. With this background and due to the sensational nature of McCarthy's charge against the State Department, the Wheeling speech soon attracted a flood of press interest in McCarthy's claim.[69][70]

Tydings Committee

McCarthy himself was taken aback by the massive media response to the Wheeling speech, and he was accused of continually revising both his charges and figures. In Salt Lake City, Utah, a few days later, he cited a figure of 57, and in the Senate on February 20, 1950, he claimed 81.[71] During a five-hour speech,[72] McCarthy presented a case-by-case analysis of his 81 "loyalty risks" employed at the State Department. It is widely accepted that most of McCarthy's cases were selected from the so-called "Lee list", a report that had been compiled three years earlier for the House Appropriations Committee. Led by a former Federal Bureau of Investigation agent named Robert E. Lee, the House investigators had reviewed security clearance documents on State Department employees, and had determined that there were "incidents of inefficiencies"[73] in the security reviews of 108 employees. McCarthy hid the source of his list, stating that he had penetrated the "iron curtain" of State Department secrecy with the aid of "some good, loyal Americans in the State Department".[74] In reciting the information from the Lee list cases, McCarthy consistently exaggerated, representing the hearsay of witnesses as facts and converting phrases such as "inclined towards Communism" to "a Communist".[75]

 

In response to McCarthy's charges, the Senate voted unanimously to investigate, and the Tydings Committee hearings were called.[76] This was a subcommittee of the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations set up in February 1950 to conduct "a full and complete study and investigation as to whether persons who are disloyal to the United States are, or have been, employed by the Department of State".[77] Many Democrats were incensed at McCarthy's attack on the State Department of a Democratic administration, and had hoped to use the hearings to discredit him. The Democratic chairman of the subcommittee, Senator Millard Tydings, was reported to have said, "Let me have him [McCarthy] for three days in public hearings, and he'll never show his face in the Senate again."[78]

During the hearings, McCarthy made charges against nine specific people: Dorothy Kenyon, Esther Brunauer, Haldore Hanson, Gustavo Durán, Owen Lattimore, Harlow Shapley, Frederick Schuman, John S. Service, and Philip Jessup. They all had previously been the subject of charges of varying worth and validity. Owen Lattimore became a particular focus of McCarthy's, who at one point described him as a "top Russian spy".

From its beginning, the Tydings Committee was marked by intense partisan infighting. Its final report, written by the Democratic majority, concluded that the individuals on McCarthy's list were neither Communists nor pro-communist, and said the State Department had an effective security program. The Tydings Report labeled McCarthy's charges a "fraud and a hoax", and described them as using incensing rhetoric -- saying that the result of McCarthy's actions was to "confuse and divide the American people ... to a degree far beyond the hopes of the Communists themselves". Republicans were outraged by the Democratic response. They responded to the report's rhetoric in kind, with William E. Jenner stating that Tydings was guilty of "the most brazen whitewash of treasonable conspiracy in our history".[79] The full Senate voted three times on whether to accept the report, and each time the voting was precisely divided along party lines.[80]

Fame and notoriety

 
Herbert Block, who signed his work "Herblock", coined the term "McCarthyism" in this cartoon in the March 29, 1950, Washington Post.

From 1950 onward, McCarthy continued to exploit the fear of Communism and to press his accusations that the government was failing to deal with Communism within its ranks. McCarthy also began investigations into homosexuals working in the foreign policy bureaucracy, who were considered prime candidates for blackmail by the Soviets.[81] These accusations received wide publicity, increased his approval rating, and gained him a powerful national following.

In Congress, there was little doubt that homosexuals did not belong in sensitive government positions.[81] Since the late 1940s, the government had been dismissing about five homosexuals a month from civilian posts; by 1954, the number had grown twelve-fold.[82] As historian David M. Barrett would write, "Mixed in with the hysterics were some logic, though: homosexuals faced condemnation and discrimination, and most of them—wishing to conceal their orientation—were vulnerable to blackmail."[83] Director of Central Intelligence Roscoe Hillenkoetter was called to Congress to testify on homosexuals being employed at the CIA. He said, "The use of homosexuals as a control mechanism over individuals recruited for espionage is a generally accepted technique which has been used at least on a limited basis for many years." As soon as the DCI said these words, his aide signaled to take the remainder of the DCI's testimony off the record. Political historian David Barrett uncovered Hillenkoetter's notes, which reveal the remainder of the statement: "While this agency will never employ homosexuals on its rolls, it might conceivably be necessary, and in the past has actually been valuable, to use known homosexuals as agents in the field. I am certain that if Joseph Stalin or a member of the Politburo or a high satellite official were known to be a homosexual, no member of this committee or of the Congress would balk against our use of any technique to penetrate their operations ... after all, intelligence and espionage is, at best, an extremely dirty business."[84] The senators reluctantly agreed the CIA had to be flexible.[85]

McCarthy's methods also brought on the disapproval and opposition of many. Barely a month after McCarthy's Wheeling speech, the term "McCarthyism" was coined by Washington Post cartoonist Herbert Block. Block and others used the word as a synonym for demagoguery, baseless defamation, and mudslinging. Later, it would be embraced by McCarthy and some of his supporters. "McCarthyism is Americanism with its sleeves rolled," McCarthy said in a 1952 speech, and later that year, he published a book titled McCarthyism: The Fight For America.

McCarthy sought to discredit his critics and political opponents by accusing them of being Communists or communist sympathizers. In the 1950 Maryland Senate election, McCarthy campaigned for John Marshall Butler in his race against four-term incumbent Millard Tydings, with whom McCarthy had been in conflict during the Tydings Committee hearings. In speeches supporting Butler, McCarthy accused Tydings of "protecting Communists" and "shielding traitors". McCarthy's staff was heavily involved in the campaign and collaborated in the production of a campaign tabloid that contained a composite photograph doctored to make it appear that Tydings was in intimate conversation with Communist leader Earl Russell Browder.[86][87][88] A Senate subcommittee later investigated this election and referred to it as "a despicable, back-street type of campaign", as well as recommending that the use of defamatory literature in a campaign be made grounds for expulsion from the Senate.[89] The pamphlet was clearly labeled a composite. McCarthy said it was "wrong" to distribute it; though staffer Jean Kerr thought it was fine. After he lost the election by almost 40,000 votes, Tydings claimed foul play.

In addition to the Tydings–Butler race, McCarthy campaigned for several other Republicans in the 1950 elections, including Everett Dirksen against Democratic incumbent and Senate Majority Leader Scott W. Lucas. Dirksen, and indeed all the candidates McCarthy supported, won their elections, and those he opposed lost. The elections, including many that McCarthy was not involved in, were an overall Republican sweep. Although his impact on the elections was unclear, McCarthy was credited as a key Republican campaigner. He was now regarded as one of the most powerful men in the Senate and was treated with new-found deference by his colleagues.[90] In the 1952 Senate elections McCarthy was returned to his Senate seat with 54.2% of the vote, compared to Democrat Thomas Fairchild's 45.6%. As of 2020, McCarthy is the last Republican to win Wisconsin's Class 1 Senate seat.

1952 Wisconsin U.S. Senate election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Joseph McCarthy 870,444 54.2
Democratic Thomas E. Fairchild 731,402 45.6
Total votes 1,601,846 99.8
Republican hold

McCarthy and the Truman administration

McCarthy and President Truman clashed often during the years both held office. McCarthy characterized Truman and the Democratic Party as soft on, or even in league with, Communists, and spoke of the Democrats' "twenty years of treason". Truman, in turn, once referred to McCarthy as "the best asset the Kremlin has", calling McCarthy's actions an attempt to "sabotage the foreign policy of the United States" in a cold war and comparing it to shooting American soldiers in the back in a hot war.[91] It was the Truman Administration's State Department that McCarthy accused of harboring 205 (or 57 or 81) "known Communists". Truman's Secretary of Defense, George Marshall, was the target of some of McCarthy's most vitriolic rhetoric. Marshall had been Army Chief of Staff during World War II and was also Truman's former Secretary of State. Marshall was a highly respected general and statesman, remembered today as the architect of victory and peace, the latter based on the Marshall Plan for post-war reconstruction of Europe, for which he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1953. McCarthy made a lengthy speech on Marshall, later published in 1951 as a book titled America's Retreat From Victory: The Story of George Catlett Marshall. Marshall had been involved in American foreign policy with China, and McCarthy charged that Marshall was directly responsible for the loss of China to Communism. In the speech McCarthy also implied that Marshall was guilty of treason;[92] declared that "if Marshall were merely stupid, the laws of probability would dictate that part of his decisions would serve this country's interest";[92] and most famously, accused him of being part of "a conspiracy so immense and an infamy so black as to dwarf any previous venture in the history of man".[92]

During the Korean War, when Truman dismissed General Douglas MacArthur, McCarthy charged that Truman and his advisors must have planned the dismissal during late-night sessions when "they've had time to get the President cheerful" on bourbon and Bénédictine. McCarthy declared, "The son of a bitch should be impeached."[93]

Support from Roman Catholics and the Kennedy family

One of the strongest bases of anti-Communist sentiment in the United States was the Catholic community, which constituted over 20% of the national vote. McCarthy identified himself as Catholic, and although the great majority of Catholics were Democrats, as his fame as a leading anti-Communist grew, he became popular in Catholic communities across the country, with strong support from many leading Catholics, diocesan newspapers, and Catholic journals.[94] At the same time, some Catholics opposed McCarthy, notably the anti-Communist author Father John Francis Cronin and the influential journal Commonweal.[95]

McCarthy established a bond with the powerful Kennedy family, which had high visibility among Catholics. McCarthy became a close friend of Joseph P. Kennedy Sr., himself a fervent anti-Communist, and he was also a frequent guest at the Kennedy compound in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts. He dated two of Kennedy's daughters, Patricia and Eunice.[96][97] It has been stated that McCarthy was godfather to Robert F. Kennedy's first child, Kathleen Kennedy. This claim has been acknowledged by Robert's wife and Kathleen's mother Ethel,[98] though Kathleen later claimed that she looked at her christening certificate and that her actual godfather was Manhattanville College of the Sacred Heart professor Daniel Walsh.[98]

Robert Kennedy was chosen by McCarthy to be a counsel for his investigatory committee, but he resigned after six months due to disagreements with McCarthy and Committee Counsel Roy Marcus Cohn. Joseph Kennedy had a national network of contacts and became a vocal supporter, building McCarthy's popularity among Catholics and making sizable contributions to McCarthy's campaigns.[99] The Kennedy patriarch hoped that one of his sons would be president. Mindful of the anti-Catholic prejudice which Al Smith faced during his 1928 campaign for that office, Joseph Kennedy supported McCarthy as a national Catholic politician who might pave the way for a younger Kennedy's presidential candidacy.

Unlike many Democrats, John F. Kennedy, who served in the Senate with McCarthy from 1953 until the latter's death in 1957, never attacked McCarthy. McCarthy did not campaign for Kennedy's 1952 opponent, Republican incumbent Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., due to his friendship with the Kennedys[100] and, reportedly, a $50,000 donation from Joseph Kennedy. Lodge lost despite Eisenhower winning the state in the presidential election.[101] When a speaker at a February 1952 final club dinner stated that he was glad that McCarthy had not attended Harvard College, an angry Kennedy jumped up, denounced the speaker, and left the event.[102] When Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. asked Kennedy why he avoided criticizing McCarthy, Kennedy responded by saying, "Hell, half my voters in Massachusetts look on McCarthy as a hero".[101]

McCarthy and Eisenhower

 
Dwight D. Eisenhower, 34th President of the United States

During the 1952 presidential election, the Eisenhower campaign toured Wisconsin with McCarthy. In a speech delivered in Green Bay, Eisenhower declared that while he agreed with McCarthy's goals, he disagreed with his methods. In draft versions of his speech, Eisenhower had also included a strong defense of his mentor, George Marshall, which was a direct rebuke of McCarthy's frequent attacks. However, under the advice of conservative colleagues who were fearful that Eisenhower could lose Wisconsin if he alienated McCarthy supporters, he deleted this defense from later versions of his speech.[103][104] The deletion was discovered by William H. Laurence, a reporter for The New York Times, and featured on its front page the next day. Eisenhower was widely criticized for giving up his personal convictions, and the incident became the low point of his campaign.[103]

With his victory in the 1952 presidential race, Dwight Eisenhower became the first Republican president in 20 years. The Republican party also held a majority in the House of Representatives and the Senate. After being elected president, Eisenhower made it clear to those close to him that he did not approve of McCarthy and he worked actively to diminish his power and influence. Still, he never directly confronted McCarthy or criticized him by name in any speech, thus perhaps prolonging McCarthy's power by giving the impression that even the President was afraid to criticize him directly. Oshinsky disputes this, stating that "Eisenhower was known as a harmonizer, a man who could get diverse factions to work toward a common goal. ... Leadership, he explained, meant patience and conciliation, not 'hitting people over the head.'"[105]

McCarthy won reelection in 1952 with 54% of the vote, defeating former Wisconsin State Attorney General Thomas E. Fairchild but, as stated above, badly trailing a Republican ticket which otherwise swept the state of Wisconsin; all the other Republican winners, including Eisenhower himself, received at least 60% of the Wisconsin vote.[106] Those who expected that party loyalty would cause McCarthy to tone down his accusations of Communists being harbored within the government were soon disappointed. Eisenhower had never been an admirer of McCarthy, and their relationship became more hostile once Eisenhower was in office. In a November 1953 speech that was carried on national television, McCarthy began by praising the Eisenhower Administration for removing "1,456 Truman holdovers who were ... gotten rid of because of Communist connections and activities or perversion." He then went on to complain that John Paton Davies Jr. was still "on the payroll after eleven months of the Eisenhower Administration," even though Davies had actually been dismissed three weeks earlier, and repeated an unsubstantiated accusation that Davies had tried to "put Communists and espionage agents in key spots in the Central Intelligence Agency." In the same speech, he criticized Eisenhower for not doing enough to secure the release of missing American pilots shot down over China during the Korean War.[107] By the end of 1953, McCarthy had altered the "twenty years of treason" catchphrase he had coined for the preceding Democratic administrations and began referring to "twenty-one years of treason" to include Eisenhower's first year in office.[108]

As McCarthy became increasingly combative towards the Eisenhower Administration, Eisenhower faced repeated calls that he confront McCarthy directly. Eisenhower refused, saying privately "nothing would please him [McCarthy] more than to get the publicity that would be generated by a public repudiation by the President."[109] On several occasions Eisenhower is reported to have said of McCarthy that he did not want to "get down in the gutter with that guy."[110]

Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations

With the beginning of his second term as senator in 1953, McCarthy was made chairman of the Senate Committee on Government Operations. According to some reports, Republican leaders were growing wary of McCarthy's methods and gave him this relatively mundane panel rather than the Internal Security Subcommittee—the committee normally involved with investigating Communists—thus putting McCarthy "where he can't do any harm", in the words of Senate Majority Leader Robert A. Taft.[111] However, the Committee on Government Operations included the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, and the mandate of this subcommittee was sufficiently flexible to allow McCarthy to use it for his own investigations of Communists in the government. McCarthy appointed Roy Cohn as chief counsel and 27-year-old Robert F. Kennedy as an assistant counsel to the subcommittee. Later, McCarthy also hired Gerard David Schine, heir to a hotel-chain fortune, on the recommendation of George Sokolsky.[63]

This subcommittee would be the scene of some of McCarthy's most publicized exploits. When the records of the closed executive sessions of the subcommittee under McCarthy's chairmanship were made public in 2003–04,[112] Senators Susan Collins and Carl Levin wrote the following in their preface to the documents:

Senator McCarthy's zeal to uncover subversion and espionage led to disturbing excesses. His browbeating tactics destroyed careers of people who were not involved in the infiltration of our government. His freewheeling style caused both the Senate and the Subcommittee to revise the rules governing future investigations, and prompted the courts to act to protect the Constitutional rights of witnesses at Congressional hearings. ... These hearings are a part of our national past that we can neither afford to forget nor permit to re-occur.[113]

The subcommittee first investigated allegations of Communist influence in the Voice of America, at that time administered by the State Department's United States Information Agency. Many VOA personnel were questioned in front of television cameras and a packed press gallery, with McCarthy lacing his questions with hostile innuendo and false accusations.[114] A few VOA employees alleged Communist influence on the content of broadcasts, but none of the charges were substantiated. Morale at VOA was badly damaged, and one of its engineers committed suicide during McCarthy's investigation. Ed Kretzman, a policy advisor for the service, would later comment that it was VOA's "darkest hour when Senator McCarthy and his chief hatchet man, Roy Cohn, almost succeeded in muffling it."[114]

The subcommittee then turned to the overseas library program of the International Information Agency. Cohn toured Europe examining the card catalogs of the State Department libraries looking for works by authors he deemed inappropriate. McCarthy then recited the list of supposedly pro-communist authors before his subcommittee and the press. The State Department bowed to McCarthy and ordered its overseas librarians to remove from their shelves "material by any controversial persons, Communists, fellow travelers, etc." Some libraries went as far as burning the newly-forbidden books.[115] Shortly after this, in one of his public criticisms of McCarthy, President Eisenhower urged Americans: "Don't join the book burners. ... Don't be afraid to go in your library and read every book."[116]

Soon after receiving the chair to the Subcommittee on Investigations, McCarthy appointed J. B. Matthews as staff director of the subcommittee. One of the nation's foremost anti-communists, Matthews had formerly been staff director for the House Un-American Activities Committee. The appointment became controversial when it was learned that Matthews had recently written an article titled "Reds and Our Churches",[117][118] which opened with the sentence, "The largest single group supporting the Communist apparatus in the United States is composed of Protestant Clergymen." A group of senators denounced this "shocking and unwarranted attack against the American clergy" and demanded that McCarthy dismiss Matthews. McCarthy initially refused to do this. As the controversy mounted, however, and the majority of his own subcommittee joined the call for Matthews's ouster, McCarthy finally yielded and accepted his resignation. For some McCarthy opponents, this was a signal defeat of the senator, showing he was not as invincible as he had formerly seemed.[119]

Investigating the army

In autumn 1953, McCarthy's committee began its ill-fated inquiry into the United States Army. This began with McCarthy opening an investigation into the Army Signal Corps laboratory at Fort Monmouth. McCarthy, newly married to Jean Kerr, cut short his honeymoon to open the investigation. He garnered some headlines with stories of a dangerous spy ring among the army researchers, but after weeks of hearings, nothing came of his investigations.[120] Unable to expose any signs of subversion, McCarthy focused instead on the case of Irving Peress, a New York dentist who had been drafted into the army in 1952 and promoted to major in November 1953. Shortly thereafter it came to the attention of the military bureaucracy that Peress, who was a member of the left-wing American Labor Party, had declined to answer questions about his political affiliations on a loyalty-review form. Peress's superiors were therefore ordered to discharge him from the army within 90 days. McCarthy subpoenaed Peress to appear before his subcommittee on January 30, 1954. Peress refused to answer McCarthy's questions, citing his rights under the Fifth Amendment. McCarthy responded by sending a message to Secretary of the Army Robert T. Stevens, demanding that Peress be court-martialed. On that same day, Peress asked for his pending discharge from the army to be effected immediately, and the next day Brigadier General Ralph W. Zwicker, his commanding officer at Camp Kilmer in New Jersey, gave him an honorable separation from the army. At McCarthy's encouragement, "Who promoted Peress?" became a rallying cry among many anti-communists and McCarthy supporters. In fact, and as McCarthy knew, Peress had been promoted automatically through the provisions of the Doctor Draft Law, for which McCarthy had voted.[121]

Army–McCarthy hearings

Early in 1954, the U.S. Army accused McCarthy and his chief counsel, Roy Cohn, of improperly pressuring the army to give favorable treatment to G. David Schine, a former aide to McCarthy and a friend of Cohn's, who was then serving in the army as a private.[122] McCarthy claimed that the accusation was made in bad faith, in retaliation for his questioning of Zwicker the previous year. The Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, usually chaired by McCarthy himself, was given the task of adjudicating these conflicting charges. Republican senator Karl Mundt was appointed to chair the committee, and the Army–McCarthy hearings convened on April 22, 1954.[123]

 
McCarthy chats with Roy Cohn (right) at the Army-McCarthy hearings.

The army consulted with an attorney familiar with McCarthy to determine the best approach to attacking him. Based on his recommendation, it decided not to pursue McCarthy on the issue of communists in government: "The attorney feels it is almost impossible to counter McCarthy effectively on the issue of kicking Communists out of Government, because he generally has some basis, no matter how slight, for his claim of Communist connection."[43]

The hearings lasted for 36 days and were broadcast on live television by ABC and DuMont, with an estimated 20 million viewers. After hearing 32 witnesses and two million words of testimony, the committee concluded that McCarthy himself had not exercised any improper influence on Schine's behalf, but that Cohn had engaged in "unduly persistent or aggressive efforts". The committee also concluded that Army Secretary Robert Stevens and Army Counsel John Adams "made efforts to terminate or influence the investigation and hearings at Fort Monmouth", and that Adams "made vigorous and diligent efforts" to block subpoenas for members of the Army Loyalty and Screening Board "by means of personal appeal to certain members of the [McCarthy] committee".[124]

Of far greater importance to McCarthy than the committee's inconclusive final report was the negative effect that the extensive exposure had on his popularity. Many in the audience saw him as bullying, reckless, and dishonest, and the daily newspaper summaries of the hearings were also frequently unfavorable.[125][126] Late in the hearings, Senator Stuart Symington made an angry and prophetic remark to McCarthy. Upon being told by McCarthy that "You're not fooling anyone", Symington replied: "Senator, the American people have had a look at you now for six weeks; you're not fooling anyone, either."[127] In Gallup polls of January 1954, 50% of those polled had a positive opinion of McCarthy. In June, that number had fallen to 34%. In the same polls, those with a negative opinion of McCarthy increased from 29% to 45%.[128]

An increasing number of Republicans and conservatives were coming to see McCarthy as a liability to the party and to anti-communism. Congressman George H. Bender noted, "There is a growing impatience with the Republican Party. McCarthyism has become a synonym for witch-hunting, Star Chamber methods, and the denial of ... civil liberties."[129] Frederick Woltman, a reporter with a long-standing reputation as a staunch anti-communist, wrote a five-part series of articles criticizing McCarthy in the New York World-Telegram. He stated that McCarthy "has become a major liability to the cause of anti-communism", and accused him of "wild twisting of facts and near-facts [that] repels authorities in the field".[130][131]

 
Joseph N. Welch (left) being questioned by Senator McCarthy, June 9, 1954.

The most famous incident in the hearings was an exchange between McCarthy and the army's chief legal representative, Joseph Nye Welch. On June 9, 1954,[132] the 30th day of the hearings, Welch challenged Roy Cohn to provide U.S. Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr. with McCarthy's list of 130 Communists or subversives in defense plants "before the sun goes down". McCarthy stepped in and said that if Welch was so concerned about persons aiding the Communist Party, he should check on a man in his Boston law office named Fred Fisher, who had once belonged to the National Lawyers Guild, a progressive lawyers' association.[133] In an impassioned defense of Fisher, Welch responded, "Until this moment, Senator, I think I never really gauged your cruelty or your recklessness ..." When McCarthy resumed his attack, Welch interrupted him: "Let us not assassinate this lad further, Senator. You've done enough. Have you no sense of decency, Sir, at long last? Have you left no sense of decency?" When McCarthy once again persisted, Welch cut him off and demanded the chairman "call the next witness". At that point, the gallery erupted in applause and a recess was called.[134]

Edward R. Murrow, See It Now

 
Edward R. Murrow, pioneer in broadcast journalism.

Even before McCarthy's clash with Welch in the hearings, one of the most prominent attacks on McCarthy's methods was an episode of the television documentary series See It Now, hosted by journalist Edward R. Murrow, which was broadcast on March 9, 1954. Titled "A Report on Senator Joseph R. McCarthy", the episode consisted largely of clips of McCarthy speaking. In these clips, McCarthy accuses the Democratic party of "twenty years of treason", describes the American Civil Liberties Union as "listed as 'a front for, and doing the work of', the Communist Party",[135] and berates and harangues various witnesses, including General Zwicker.[136]

In his conclusion, Murrow said of McCarthy:

No one familiar with the history of this country can deny that congressional committees are useful. It is necessary to investigate before legislating, but the line between investigating and persecuting is a very fine one, and the junior Senator from Wisconsin has stepped over it repeatedly. His primary achievement has been in confusing the public mind, as between the internal and the external threats of Communism. We must not confuse dissent with disloyalty. We must remember always that accusation is not proof and that conviction depends upon evidence and due process of law. We will not walk in fear, one of another. We will not be driven by fear into an age of unreason, if we dig deep in our history and our doctrine, and remember that we are not descended from fearful men—not from men who feared to write, to speak, to associate and to defend causes that were, for the moment, unpopular.

This is no time for men who oppose Senator McCarthy's methods to keep silent, or for those who approve. We can deny our heritage and our history, but we cannot escape responsibility for the result. There is no way for a citizen of a republic to abdicate his responsibilities. As a nation we have come into our full inheritance at a tender age. We proclaim ourselves, as indeed we are, the defenders of freedom, wherever it continues to exist in the world, but we cannot defend freedom abroad by deserting it at home.

The actions of the junior Senator from Wisconsin have caused alarm and dismay amongst our allies abroad, and given considerable comfort to our enemies. And whose fault is that? Not really his. He didn't create this situation of fear; he merely exploited it—and rather successfully. Cassius was right: "The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves."[137]

The following week, See It Now ran another episode critical of McCarthy, this one focusing on the case of Annie Lee Moss, an African-American army clerk who was the target of one of McCarthy's investigations. The Murrow shows, together with the televised Army–McCarthy hearings of the same year, were the major causes of a nationwide popular opinion backlash against McCarthy,[138] in part because for the first time his statements were being publicly challenged by noteworthy figures. To counter the negative publicity, McCarthy appeared on See It Now on April 6, 1954, and made a number of charges against the popular Murrow, including the accusation that he colluded with VOKS, the "Russian espionage and propaganda organization".[139] This response did not go over well with viewers, and the result was a further decline in McCarthy's popularity.[citation needed]

"Joe Must Go" recall attempt

On March 18, 1954, Sauk-Prairie Star editor Leroy Gore of Sauk City, Wisconsin urged the recall of McCarthy in a front-page editorial that ran alongside a sample petition that readers could fill out and mail to the newspaper. A Republican and former McCarthy supporter, Gore cited the senator with subverting President Eisenhower's authority, disrespecting Wisconsin's own Gen. Ralph Wise Zwicker and ignoring the plight of Wisconsin dairy farmers faced with price-slashing surpluses.[140]

Despite critics' claims that a recall attempt was foolhardy, the "Joe Must Go" movement caught fire and was backed by a diverse coalition including other Republican leaders, Democrats, businessmen, farmers and students. Wisconsin's constitution stipulates the number of signatures needed to force a recall election must exceed one-quarter the number of voters in the most recent gubernatorial election, requiring the anti-McCarthy movement to gather some 404,000 signatures in sixty days. With little support from organized labor or the state Democratic Party, the roughly organized recall effort attracted national attention, particularly during the concurrent Army-McCarthy hearings.[citation needed]

Following the deadline of June 5, the final number of signatures was never determined because the petitions were sent out of state to avoid a subpoena from Sauk County district attorney Harlan Kelley, an ardent McCarthy supporter who was investigating the leaders of the recall campaign on the grounds that they had violated Wisconsin's Corrupt Practices Act. Chicago newspapermen later tallied 335,000 names while another 50,000 were said to be hidden in Minneapolis, with other lists buried on Sauk County farms.[140]

Public opinion

McCarthy's Support in Gallup Polls[141]
Date Favorable No Opinion Unfavorable Net Favorable
1952 August 15 63 22 −7
1953 April 19 59 22 −3
1953 June 35 35 30 +5
1953 August 34 24 42 −8
1954 January 50 21 29 +21
1954 March 46 18 36 +10
1954 April 38 16 46 −8
1954 May 35 16 49 −14
1954 June 34 21 45 −11
1954 August 36 13 51 −15
1954 November 35 19 46 −11

Censure and the Watkins Committee

 
Senator Ralph Flanders, who introduced the resolution calling for McCarthy to be censured

Several members of the U.S. Senate had opposed McCarthy well before 1953. Senator Margaret Chase Smith, a Maine Republican, was the first. She delivered her "Declaration of Conscience" speech on June 1, 1950, calling for an end to the use of smear tactics, without mentioning McCarthy or anyone else by name. Only six other Republican senators—Wayne Morse, Irving Ives, Charles W. Tobey, Edward John Thye, George Aiken, and Robert C. Hendrickson—agreed to join her in condemning McCarthy's tactics. McCarthy referred to Smith and her fellow senators as "Snow White and the six dwarfs".[142]

On March 9, 1954, Vermont Republican senator Ralph E. Flanders gave a humor-laced speech on the Senate floor, questioning McCarthy's tactics in fighting communism, likening McCarthyism to "house-cleaning" with "much clatter and hullabaloo". He recommended that McCarthy turn his attention to the worldwide encroachment of Communism outside North America.[143][144] In a June 1 speech, Flanders compared McCarthy to Adolf Hitler, accusing him of spreading "division and confusion" and saying, "Were the Junior Senator from Wisconsin in the pay of the Communists he could not have done a better job for them."[145] On June 11, Flanders introduced a resolution to have McCarthy removed as chair of his committees. Although there were many in the Senate who believed that some sort of disciplinary action against McCarthy was warranted, there was no clear majority supporting this resolution. Some of the resistance was due to concern about usurping the Senate's rules regarding committee chairs and seniority. Flanders next introduced a resolution to censure McCarthy. The resolution was initially written without any reference to particular actions or misdeeds on McCarthy's part. As Flanders put it, "It was not his breaches of etiquette, or of rules or sometimes even of laws which is so disturbing," but rather his overall pattern of behavior. Ultimately a "bill of particulars" listing 46 charges was added to the censure resolution. A special committee, chaired by Senator Arthur Vivian Watkins, was appointed to study and evaluate the resolution. This committee opened hearings on August 31.[146]

After two months of hearings and deliberations, the Watkins Committee recommended that McCarthy be censured on two of the 46 counts: his contempt of the Subcommittee on Rules and Administration, which had called him to testify in 1951 and 1952, and his abuse of General Zwicker in 1954. The Zwicker count was dropped by the full Senate on the grounds that McCarthy's conduct was arguably "induced" by Zwicker's own behavior. In place of this count, a new one was drafted regarding McCarthy's statements about the Watkins Committee itself.[147]

The two counts on which the Senate ultimately voted were:

  • That McCarthy had "failed to co-operate with the Sub-committee on Rules and Administration", and "repeatedly abused the members who were trying to carry out assigned duties ..."
  • That McCarthy had charged "three members of the [Watkins] Select Committee with 'deliberate deception' and 'fraud' ... that the special Senate session ... was a 'lynch party'", and had characterized the committee "as the 'unwitting handmaiden', 'involuntary agent' and 'attorneys in fact' of the Communist Party", and had "acted contrary to senatorial ethics and tended to bring the Senate into dishonor and disrepute, to obstruct the constitutional processes of the Senate, and to impair its dignity".[148]

On December 2, 1954, the Senate voted to "condemn" McCarthy on both counts by a vote of 67 to 22.[149] The Democrats present unanimously favored condemnation and the Republicans were split evenly. The only senator not on record was John F. Kennedy, who was hospitalized for back surgery; Kennedy never indicated how he would have voted.[150] Immediately after the vote, Senator H. Styles Bridges, a McCarthy supporter, argued that the resolution was "not a censure resolution" because the word "condemn" rather than "censure" was used in the final draft. The word "censure" was then removed from the title of the resolution, though it is generally regarded and referred to as a censure of McCarthy, both by historians[151] and in Senate documents.[152] McCarthy himself said, "I wouldn't exactly call it a vote of confidence." He added, "I don't feel I've been lynched."[153]Indiana Senator William E. Jenner, one of McCarthy's friends and fellow Republicans likened McCarthy's conduct, however, to that of "the kid who came to the party and peed in the lemonade."[154]

Final years

 
Harry J. Anslinger criticized and supplied McCarthy's morphine addiction

After his condemnation and censure, Joseph McCarthy continued to perform his senatorial duties for another two and a half years. His career as a major public figure, however, had been ruined. His colleagues in the Senate avoided him; his speeches on the Senate floor were delivered to a near-empty chamber or they were received with intentional and conspicuous displays of inattention.[155] The press that had once recorded his every public statement now ignored him, and outside speaking engagements dwindled almost to nothing. Eisenhower, finally freed of McCarthy's political intimidation, quipped to his Cabinet that McCarthyism was now "McCarthywasm".[156]

Still, McCarthy continued to rail against Communism. He warned against attendance at summit conferences with "the Reds", saying that "you cannot offer friendship to tyrants and murderers ... without advancing the cause of tyranny and murder."[157] He declared that "co-existence with Communists is neither possible nor honorable nor desirable. Our long-term objective must be the eradication of Communism from the face of the earth." In one of his final acts in the Senate, McCarthy opposed President Eisenhower's nomination to the Supreme Court of William J. Brennan, after reading a speech Brennan had given shortly beforehand in which he characterized McCarthy's anti-Communist investigations as "witch hunts". McCarthy's opposition failed to gain any traction, however, and he was the only senator to vote against Brennan's confirmation.[158]

McCarthy's biographers agree that he was a changed man, for the worse, after the censure; declining both physically and emotionally, he became a "pale ghost of his former self", in the words of Fred J. Cook.[159] It was reported that McCarthy suffered from cirrhosis of the liver and was frequently hospitalized for alcohol abuse. Numerous eyewitnesses, including Senate aide George Reedy and journalist Tom Wicker, reported finding him drunk in the Senate. Journalist Richard Rovere (1959) wrote:

He had always been a heavy drinker, and there were times in those seasons of discontent when he drank more than ever. But he was not always drunk. He went on the wagon (for him this meant beer instead of whiskey) for days and weeks at a time. The difficulty toward the end was that he couldn't hold the stuff. He went to pieces on his second or third drink, and he did not snap back quickly.[160]

McCarthy had also become addicted to morphine. Harry J. Anslinger, head of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, became aware of McCarthy's addiction in the 1950s, and demanded he stop using the drug. McCarthy refused.[161] In Anslinger's memoir, The Murderers, McCarthy is anonymously quoted as saying:

I wouldn't try to do anything about it, Commissioner ... It will be the worse for you ... and if it winds up in a public scandal and that should hurt this country, I wouldn't care […] The choice is yours.[161]

Anslinger decided to give McCarthy access to morphine in secret from a pharmacy in Washington, DC. The morphine was paid for by the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, right up to McCarthy's death. Anslinger never publicly named McCarthy, and he threatened, with prison, a journalist who had uncovered the story.[161] However, McCarthy's identity was known to Anslinger's agents, and journalist Maxine Cheshire confirmed his identity with Will Oursler, co-author of The Murderers, in 1978.[161][162]

Death

 
Tombstone of Joseph McCarthy with the Fox River in the background

McCarthy died in the Bethesda Naval Hospital on Thursday, May 2, 1957, at the age of 48. His death certificate listed the cause of death as "Hepatitis, acute, cause unknown"; previously doctors had not reported him to be in critical condition. It was hinted in the press that he died of alcoholism (cirrhosis of the liver), an estimation that is now accepted by modern biographers.[15] Thomas C. Reeves argues that he effectively committed suicide.[163] He was given a state funeral that was attended by 70 senators, and a Solemn Pontifical Requiem Mass was celebrated before more than 100 priests and 2,000 others at Washington's St. Matthew's Cathedral. Thousands of people viewed his body in Washington. He was buried in St. Mary's Parish Cemetery, Appleton, Wisconsin, where more than 17,000 people filed through St. Mary's Church in order to pay him their last respects.[164] Three senators—George W. Malone, William E. Jenner, and Herman Welker—had flown from Washington to Appleton on the plane that carried McCarthy's casket. Robert F. Kennedy attended the funeral in Wisconsin. McCarthy was survived by his wife, Jean, and their adopted daughter, Tierney.

In the summer of 1957, a special election was held in order to fill McCarthy's seat. In the primaries, voters in both parties turned away from McCarthy's legacy. The Republican primary was won by Governor Walter J. Kohler Jr., who called for a clean break from McCarthy's approach; he defeated former Congressman Glenn Robert Davis, who charged that Eisenhower was soft on Communism. The Democratic candidate, William Proxmire, called the late McCarthy "a disgrace to Wisconsin, to the Senate, and to America." On August 27, Proxmire won the election, serving in the seat for 32 years.[165]

Legacy

William Bennett, former Reagan Administration Secretary of Education, summed up his perspective in his 2007 book America: The Last Best Hope:

The cause of anti-communism, which united millions of Americans and which gained the support of Democrats, Republicans and independents, was undermined by Sen. Joe McCarthy ... McCarthy addressed a real problem: disloyal elements within the U.S. government. But his approach to this real problem was to cause untold grief to the country he claimed to love ... Worst of all, McCarthy besmirched the honorable cause of anti-communism. He discredited legitimate efforts to counter Soviet subversion of American institutions.[166]

House Un-American Activities Committee

McCarthy's hearings are often incorrectly conflated with the hearings of the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). HUAC is best known for its investigations of Alger Hiss and the Hollywood film industry, which led to the blacklisting of hundreds of actors, writers, and directors. HUAC was a House committee, and as such it had no formal connection to McCarthy, who served in the Senate, although the existence of the House Un-American Activities Committee thrived in part as a result of McCarthy's activities. HUAC was active for 37 years (1938–1975).[167]

In popular culture

From the start of his notoriety, McCarthy served as a favorite subject for political cartoonists. He was traditionally depicted in a negative light, normally pertaining to McCarthyism and his accusations. Herblock's cartoon that coined the term McCarthyism appeared less than two months after the senator's now famous February 1950 speech in Wheeling, West Virginia.

In 1951, Ray Bradbury published "The Fireman", an allegory on suppression of ideas. This served as the basis for Fahrenheit 451 published in 1953.[168][169] Bradbury said that he wrote Fahrenheit 451 because of his concerns at the time (during the McCarthy era) about the threat of book burning in the United States.[170] Bob Hope was one of the first comedians to make jokes about McCarthy. During his 1952 Christmas show, Hope made a joke about Santa Claus writing to let Joe McCarthy know he was going to wear his red suit despite the Red Scare. Hope continued to offer McCarthy jokes as they were well received by most people, although he did receive some hate mail.

In 1953, the popular daily comic strip Pogo introduced the character Simple J. Malarkey, a pugnacious and conniving wildcat with an unmistakable physical resemblance to McCarthy. After a worried Rhode Island newspaper editor protested to the syndicate that provided the strip, creator Walt Kelly began depicting the Malarkey character with a bag over his head, concealing his features. The explanation was that Malarkey was hiding from a Rhode Island Red hen, a clear reference to the controversy over the Malarkey character.[171] In 1953, playwright Arthur Miller published The Crucible, suggesting the Salem witch trials were analogous to McCarthyism.[172]

As his fame grew, McCarthy increasingly became the target of ridicule and parody. He was impersonated by nightclub and radio impressionists and was satirized in Mad magazine, on The Red Skelton Show, and elsewhere. Several comedy songs lampooning the senator were released in 1954, including "Point of Order" by Stan Freberg and Daws Butler, "Senator McCarthy Blues" by Hal Block, and unionist folk singer Joe Glazer's "Joe McCarthy's Band", sung to the tune of "McNamara's Band". Also in 1954, the radio comedy team Bob and Ray parodied McCarthy with the character "Commissioner Carstairs" in their soap opera spoof "Mary Backstayge, Noble Wife". That same year, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation radio network broadcast a satire, The Investigator, whose title character was a clear imitation of McCarthy. A recording of the show became popular in the United States, and was reportedly played by President Eisenhower at cabinet meetings.[173] The 1953 short story Mr. Costello, Hero by Theodore Sturgeon was described by noted journalist and author Paul Williams as "the all-time great story about Senator Joseph McCarthy, who he was and how he did what he did."[174]

Post-censure reaction

Mr. Costello, Hero was adapted in 1958 by X Minus One into a radio teleplay and broadcast on July 3, 1956.[175] While the radio adaptation retains much of the story, it completely remakes the narrator and in fact gives him a line spoken in the original by Mr. Costello himself, thus changing the tone of the story considerably. In a 1977 interview Sturgeon commented that it was his concerns about the ongoing McCarthy Hearings that prompted him to write the story.[176]

A more serious fictional portrayal of McCarthy played a central role in the 1959 novel The Manchurian Candidate by Richard Condon.[177] The character of Senator John Iselin, a demagogic anti-communist, is closely modeled on McCarthy, even to the varying numbers of Communists he asserts are employed by the federal government.[178] He remains a major character in the 1962 film version.[179]

The 1962 novel Advise and Consent by Allen Drury features an overzealous demagogue, Senator Fred Van Ackerman, based on McCarthy. Although the fictional senator is an ultra liberal who proposes surrender to the Soviet Union, his portrayal strongly resembles the popular perception of McCarthy's character and methods.

McCarthy was portrayed by Peter Boyle in the 1977 Emmy-winning television movie Tail Gunner Joe, a dramatization of McCarthy's life.[180] He was portrayed by Joe Don Baker in the 1992 HBO film Citizen Cohn.[181] Archival footage of McCarthy himself was used in the 2005 film Good Night, and Good Luck about Edward R. Murrow and the See It Now episode that challenged McCarthy.[182] In the German-French docu-drama The Real American – Joe McCarthy (2012), directed by Lutz Hachmeister, McCarthy is portrayed by the British actor and comedian John Sessions.[183] In Lee Daniels' 2020 film, The United States vs. Billie Holiday, McCarthy is portrayed by actor Randy Davison.

R.E.M.'s song "Exhuming McCarthy", from their 1987 album Document, deals largely with McCarthy and contains sound clips from the Army-McCarthy Hearings.

'Joe' McCarthy is also mentioned in Billy Joel's 1989 song "We Didn't Start the Fire".

McCarthyism is one of the subjects of Barbara Kingsolver's novel The Lacuna.[184]

Reconsideration

McCarthy remains a controversial figure. Arthur Herman, popular historian and senior fellow of the Hudson Institute, says that new evidence—in the form of Venona-decrypted Soviet messages, Soviet espionage data now opened to the West, and newly released transcripts of closed hearings before McCarthy's subcommittee—has partially vindicated McCarthy by showing that some of his identifications of Communists were correct and the scale of Soviet espionage activities in the United States during the 1940s and 1950s was larger than many scholars had suspected.[185] In Blacklisted by History: The Untold Story of Senator Joe McCarthy and His Fight Against America's Enemies, journalist M. Stanton Evans similarly argued that evidence from the Venona documents shows significant penetration by Soviet agents.[186]

Historian John Earl Haynes, who studied the Venona decryptions extensively, challenged Herman's efforts to rehabilitate McCarthy, arguing that McCarthy's attempts to "make anti-communism a partisan weapon" actually "threatened [the post-War] anti-Communist consensus", thereby ultimately harming anti-Communist efforts more than helping them.[187] Haynes concluded that, of the 159 people who were identified on lists used or referenced by McCarthy, evidence only substantially proved that nine of them had aided Soviet espionage efforts -- while several hundred Soviet spies were actually known based on Venona and other evidence, most were never named by McCarthy. Haynes' own view was that a number of those accused on McCarthy's lists above, perhaps a majority, likely posed some form of possible security risk, but a significant minority of others likely did not, and several were indisputably no risk at all.[188][189]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ For a history of this period, see, for example:
    Caute, David (1978). The Great Fear: The Anti-Communist Purge Under Truman and Eisenhower. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-671-22682-7.; Fried, Richard M. (1990). Nightmare in Red: The McCarthy Era in Perspective |. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-504361-8.
    Schrecker, Ellen (1998). Many Are the Crimes: McCarthyism in America. Boston: Little, Brown. ISBN 0-316-77470-7.
  2. ^ Youngblood, Denise J.; Shaw, Tony (2014). Cinematic Cold War: The American Struggle for Hearts and Minds. United States of America: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0700620203.
  3. ^ Feuerherd, Peter (December 2, 2017). "How Hollywood Thrived Through the Red Scare". JSTOR Daily. Retrieved July 29, 2020.
  4. ^ The American Heritage Dictionary (2000) defines "McCarthyism" as "the practice of publicizing accusations of political disloyalty or subversion with insufficient regard to evidence" and "the use of unfair investigatory or accusatory methods in order to suppress opposition". Webster's Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged (1961) defines it as "characterized chiefly by opposition to elements held to be subversive and by the use of tactics involving personal attacks on individuals by means of widely publicized indiscriminate allegations especially on the basis of unsubstantiated charges".
  5. ^ Onion, Rebecca, We're Never Going to Get Our “Have You No Sense of Decency, Sir?” Moment, Slate, July 26, 2018
  6. ^ a b Garraty, John (1989). 1,001 Things Everyone Should Know About American History. New York: Doubleday. p. 24
  7. ^ a b O'Brien, Steven (1991). Santa Barbara, ABC-CLIO, p. 265
  8. ^ a b "Connecticut Cartoonists #5: The Philosopher of Okefenokee Swamp". The Comics Journal. June 22, 2016.
  9. ^ "Communists in Government Service, McCarthy Says". United States Senate History Website. Retrieved March 9, 2007.
  10. ^ McDaniel, Rodger E. (2013). Dying for Joe McCarthy's Sins: The Suicide of Wyoming Senator Lester Hunt. Cody, WY: WordsWorth Press. ISBN 978-0983027591.
  11. ^ Simpson, Alan K.; McDaniel, Rodger (2013). "Prologue". Dying for Joe McCarthy's Sins: The Suicide of Wyoming Senator Lester Hunt. WordsWorth Press. p. x. ISBN 978-0983027591.
  12. ^ McDaniel, Rodger. Dying for Joe McCarthy's Sins
  13. ^ McCarthy's death certificate
  14. ^ Ted Lewis (May 3, 1957). "Joseph McCarthy, the controversial senator, dies at 48 in 1957". New York Daily News. Retrieved August 19, 2017. Reprinted May 1, 2016
  15. ^ a b See, for example:Oshinsky, David M. (2005) [1983]. A Conspiracy So Immense: The World of Joe McCarthy. New York: Free Press. pp. 503–504. ISBN 0-19-515424-X.; Reeves, Thomas C. (1982). The Life and Times of Joe McCarthy: A Biography. New York: Stein and Day. pp. 669–671. ISBN 1-56833-101-0.; Herman, Arthur (2000). Joseph McCarthy: Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America's Most Hated Senator. New York: Free Press. pp. 302–303. ISBN 0-684-83625-4.
  16. ^ Rovere, Richard H. (1959). Senator Joe McCarthy. New York: Harcourt, Brace. p. 79. ISBN 0-520-20472-7.
  17. ^ "Joseph McCarthy: Biography". Appleton Public Library. 2003. Retrieved November 30, 2017.
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on February 28, 2013. Retrieved September 7, 2015.
  19. ^ In A Conspiracy So Immense, Oshinsky states that McCarthy chose Marquette University rather than the University of Wisconsin–Madison partially because Marquette was under Catholic control and partially because he enrolled during the Great Depression, when few working-class or farm-bred students had the money to go out of state for college. See Oshinsky, David M. (2005) [1983]. A Conspiracy So Immense: The World of Joe McCarthy. New York: Free Press. p. 11. ISBN 0-19-515424-X.
  20. ^ Oshinsky explains this (p. 17) as resulting partially from the financial pressures of the Great Depression. He also notes (p. 28) that even during his judgeship, McCarthy was known to have gambled heavily after hours. Oshinsky, David M. (2005) [1983]. A Conspiracy So Immense: The World of Joe McCarthy. New York: Free Press. pp. 17, 28. ISBN 0-19-515424-X.
  21. ^ Judge on Trial, McCarthy – A Documented Record, The Progressive, April 1954 May 11, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ The Wisconsin Legislative Reference Library (1940). "The Wisconsin Blue Book". Wisconsin Blue Books. Madison, WI: State of Wisconsin.
  23. ^ Commire, Anne (1994). Historic World Leaders: North & South America (M–Z). Gale Research Incorporated. p. 492. ISBN 978-0810384132.
  24. ^ Herman, Arthur (2000). Joseph McCarthy: Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America's Most Hated Senator. The Free Press A Division of Simon and Schuster. p. 26. ISBN 978-0684836256.
  25. ^ Morgan, Ted (2003). Reds: McCarthyism In Twentieth-Century America. New York: Random House. p. 328. ISBN 0-679-44399-1. In turn citing Michael O'Brien, McCarthy And McCarthyism in Wisconsin. Columbia, Mo. 1980.
  26. ^ Oshinsky, David M. (2005) [1983]. A Conspiracy So Immense: The World of Joe McCarthy. Oxford University Press. p. 24. ISBN 0-19-515424-X.
  27. ^ Morgan, Ted (2003). Reds: McCarthyism In Twentieth-Century America. New York: Random House. p. 330. ISBN 0-679-44399-1.
  28. ^ Oshinsky, David M. (2005) [1983]. A Conspiracy So Immense: The World of Joe McCarthy. Oxford University Press. p. 27. ISBN 0-19-515424-X.
  29. ^ Ryan, James G.; Schlup, Leonard (2006). Historical Dictionary of the 1940s. M.E. Sharpe, Inc. p. 245. ISBN 978-0765621078.
  30. ^ Belknap, Michal R. (2004). The Vinson Court: Justices, Rulings, and Legacy. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. p. 214. ISBN 978-1-85109-542-1.
  31. ^ O'Connell, Aaron B. (2012). Underdogs: The Making of the Modern Marine Corps. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. p. 109. ISBN 978-0-674-05827-9.
  32. ^ Herman, Arthur (2000). Joseph McCarthy: Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America's Most Hated Senator. The Free Press: A Division of Simon and Schuster. p. 33. ISBN 978-0684836256.
  33. ^ Morgan, Ted (2004). Reds: McCarthyism in Twentieth-Century America. Random House. p. 420. ISBN 978-0812973020.
  34. ^ Morgan, Ted (2003). Reds: McCarthyism In Twentieth-Century America. New York: Random House. p. 338. ISBN 0-679-44399-1. Morgan again cites Michael O'Brien, writing in McCarthy And McCarthyism in Wisconsin.
  35. ^ Oshinsky describes the nickname "Tail-Gunner Joe" as the result of McCarthy's wish to break the record for most live ammunition discharged in a single mission.Oshinsky, David M. (2005) [1983]. A Conspiracy So Immense: The World of Joe McCarthy. Oxford University Press. p. 32. ISBN 0-19-515424-X.
  36. ^ Morgan, Ted (2003). Reds: McCarthyism in Twentieth-Century America. New York: Random House. p. 341. ISBN 978-0-8129-7302-0.
  37. ^ Mundt, Karl, Chairman (June 17, 1954). "Testimony of Hon. Joseph R. McCarthy, a United States Senator from the State of Wisconsin". Special Senate Investigation on Charges Involving: Secretary of the Army Robert T. Stevens, John G. Adams, H. Struve Hensel and Senator Joe McCarthy, Roy M. Cohn and Francis P. Carr. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 2888 – via Google Books.
  38. ^ Reds: McCarthyism in Twentieth-Century America
  39. ^ Giblin, James Cross (2009). The Rise and Fall of Senator Joe McCarthy. Boston: Clarion Books. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-618-61058-7.
  40. ^ Carrier, Jerry (2014). Tapestry: The History and Consequences of America's Complex Culture. New York: Algora Publishing. p. 232. ISBN 978-1-62894-048-0.
  41. ^ a b The Rise and Fall of Senator Joe McCarthy.
  42. ^ Tapestry: The History and Consequences of America's Complex Culture
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  44. ^ Morgan, Ted (November–December 2003). "Judge Joe: How The Youngest Judge In Wisconsin's History Became The Country's Most Notorious Senator". Legal Affairs. Retrieved August 2, 2006.
  45. ^ Underdogs: The Making of the Modern Marine Corps.
  46. ^ Rovere, Richard H. (1959). Senator Joe McCarthy. University of California Press. pp. 97, 102. ISBN 0-520-20472-7.
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  51. ^ Hersh, Burton (2007). Bobby and J. Edgar: The Historic Face-Off Between the Kennedys and J. Edgar Hoover that Transformed America. Carroll & Graf. ISBN 9780786731855.
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  53. ^ C.A. Tripp also mentions this incident in his book The Homosexual Matrix. Tripp describes McCarthy as "predominantly homosexual."
  54. ^ The allegation is specifically rejected in Rovere, Richard H. (1959). Senator Joe McCarthy. University of California Press. p. 68. ISBN 0-520-20472-7.
  55. ^ Talbot, David (2015). The Devil's Chessboard: Allen Dulles, the CIA, and the Rise of America's Secret Government. Harper.
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  72. ^ Also reported as up to 8 hours in length.
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  174. ^ Williams, Paul (1976). "Theodore Sturgeon, Storyteller". Retrieved February 28, 2016.
  175. ^ "Mr Costello Hero | X Minus One". Retrieved May 25, 2020.
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  177. ^ Welsh, James Michael; Lev, Peter (2007). The Literature/film Reader: Issues of Adaptation. Plymouth, UK: Scarecrow Press. p. 205. ISBN 978-0-8108-5949-4.
  178. ^ Sachleben, Mark; Yenerall, Kevan M. (2008). Seeing the Bigger Picture: Understanding Politics Through Film & Television. New York: Peter Lang Publishing. p. 64. ISBN 978-0-8204-7144-0.
  179. ^ DiMare, Philip C. (2011). Movies in American History: An Encyclopedia, Volume 1. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, Inc. p. 325. ISBN 978-1-59884-296-8.
  180. ^ Miller, Stephen (December 14, 2006). "Peter Boyle, 71, Character Actor Played Psychotics and Monsters". New York Sun.
  181. ^ "'Citizen' Woods: James Woods Rips Roy Cohn, the Press and His Own Image". Los Angeles Times. August 16, 1992.
  182. ^ LaSalle, Mick (October 7, 2005). "Newsman Challenges a Powerful Politician". San Francisco Chronicle.
  183. ^ Dorothy Rabinowitz. "A Name That Lives in Infamy", Wall Street Journal, 23. November 2012
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  185. ^ Herman, Arthur (2000). Joseph McCarthy: Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America's Most Hated Senator. Free Press. pp. 5–6. ISBN 0-684-83625-4.
  186. ^ Evans, M. Stanton (2009). Blacklisted by History: The Untold Story of Senator Joe McCarthy and His Fight Against America's Enemies. New York City: Three Rivers Press. ISBN 978-1-4000-8106-6.
  187. ^ Haynes, John Earl (February 2000). "Exchange with Arthur Herman and Venona book talk". Retrieved July 11, 2007.
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  189. ^ Haynes, John Earl; Klehr, Harvey (2000). Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-08462-5.

Primary sources

  • Adams, John G. (1983). Without Precedent: The Story of the Death of McCarthyism. W.W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-393-30230-X.
  • . The United States Department of State. Archived from the original on November 20, 2007. Retrieved June 2, 2009.
  • Fried, Albert (1996). McCarthyism, The Great American Red Scare: A Documentary History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509701-7.
  • "Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum". Retrieved August 11, 2006.
  • McCarthy, Joseph (1951). Major Speeches and Debates of Senator Joe McCarthy Delivered in the United States Senate, 1950–1951. Gordon Press. ISBN 0-87968-308-2.
  • McCarthy, Joseph (1951). America's Retreat from Victory, the Story of George Catlett Marshall. Devin-Adair. ISBN 0-8159-5004-7.
  • McCarthy, Joseph (1952). Fight for America. Devin-Adair. ISBN 0-405-09960-6.
  • Edward R. Murrow & Fred W. Friendly (Producers) (1991). Edward R. Murrow: The McCarthy Years (DVD (from 'See it Now' TV News show)). CBS News/Docudrama.
  • . Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs. Archived from the original on July 16, 2006. Retrieved August 11, 2006.
  • "Transcripts, Executive Sessions of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations". U.S. Government Printing Office. 2003. Retrieved December 19, 2006.
  • Watkins, Arthur Vivian (1969). Enough Rope: The inside story of the censure of Senator Joe McCarthy. Prentice-Hall. ISBN 0-13-283101-5.

Secondary sources

  • Anderson, Jack and May, Ronald W (1952). McCarthy: the man, the Senator, the "ism", Beacon Press.
  • Bayley, Edwin R. (1981). Joe McCarthy and the Press. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 0-299-08624-0.
  • Belfrage, Cedric (1989). The American Inquisition, 1945–1960: A Profile of the "McCarthy Era". Thunder's Mouth Press. ISBN 0-938410-87-3.
  • Buckley, William F. (1954). McCarthy and His Enemies: The Record and Its Meaning. Regnery Publishing. ISBN 0-89526-472-2.
  • Caballero, Raymond. McCarthyism vs. Clinton Jencks. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2019.
  • Crosby, Donald F. "The Jesuits and Joe McCarthy". Church History 1977 46(3): 374–388. ISSN 0009-6407 Fulltext: in Jstor
  • Daynes, Gary (1997). Making Villains, Making Heroes: Joseph R. McCarthy, Martin Luther King Jr. and the Politics of American Memory. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 0-8153-2992-X.
  • Freeland, Richard M. (1985). The Truman Doctrine and the Origins of McCarthyism: Foreign Policy, Domestic Politics, and Internal Security, 1946–1948. New York University Press. ISBN 0-8147-2576-7.
  • Fried, Richard M. (1977). Men Against McCarthy. Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-08360-2.
  • Gauger, Michael. "Flickering Images: Live Television Coverage and Viewership of the Army-McCarthy Hearings". Historian 2005 67(4): 678–693. ISSN 0018-2370 Fulltext: in Swetswise, Ingenta and Ebsco. Audience ratings show that few people watched the hearings.
  • Latham, Earl (1969). Communist Controversy in Washington: From the New Deal to McCarthy. Macmillan Publishing Company. ISBN 0-689-70121-7.
  • Luthin, Reinhard H. (1954). "Joseph McCarthy: Wisconsin". American Demagogues: Twentieth Century. Beacon Press. ASIN B0007DN37C. OCLC 1098334.
  • Morgan, Ted (November–December 2003). "Judge Joe: How the youngest judge in Wisconsin's history became the country's most notorious senator". Legal Affairs.
  • O'Brien, Michael (1980). McCarthy and McCarthyism in Wisconsin. Olympic Marketing Corp. ISBN 0-8262-0319-1.
  • Ranville, Michael (1996). To Strike at a King: The Turning Point in the McCarthy Witch-Hunt. Momentum Books Limited. ISBN 1-879094-53-3.
  • Reeves, Thomas C. (Spring 1997). "The Search for Joe McCarthy". Wisconsin Magazine of History. 60 (3): 185–196.
  • Rosteck, Thomas (1994). See It Now Confronts McCarthyism: Television Documentary and the Politics of Representation. University of Alabama Press. ISBN 0-8173-5191-4.
  • Strout, Lawrence N. (1999). Covering McCarthyism: How the Christian Science Monitor Handled Joseph R. McCarthy, 1950–1954. Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-31091-2.
  • Tye, Larry (2020). Demagogue: The Life and Long Shadow of Senator Joe McCarthy. New York: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-1328959720.
  • Wicker, Tom (2006). Shooting Star: The Brief Arc of Joe McCarthy. Harcourt. ISBN 0-15-101082-X.

External links

  • United States Congress. "Joseph McCarthy (id: M000315)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
  • "Papa" Prell's radio broadcast on "Tail Gunner Joe", including taped segments from the trial.
  • The McCarthy–Welch exchange
  • Joseph McCarthy Papers Marquette University Library
  • A film clip "Longines Chronoscope with Sen. Joseph McCarthy (June 25, 1952)" is available at the Internet Archive
  • A film clip "Longines Chronoscope with Sen. Joseph McCarthy (September 29, 1952)" is available at the Internet Archive
  • Documents on McCarthyism at the Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library
  • The Redhunter: a novel based on the life and times of Senator Joe McCarthy by William F. Buckley, Jr.
Party political offices
Preceded by
Fred Clausen
Republican nominee for U.S. Senator from Wisconsin
(Class 1)

1946, 1952
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. Senator (Class 1) from Wisconsin
1947–1957
Served alongside: Alexander Wiley
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of Senate Government Operations Committee
1953–1955
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Baby of the Senate
1947–1948
Succeeded by

joseph, mccarthy, other, people, named, disambiguation, joseph, raymond, mccarthy, november, 1908, 1957, american, politician, served, republican, senator, from, state, wisconsin, from, 1947, until, death, 1957, beginning, 1950, mccarthy, became, most, visible. For other people named Joseph McCarthy see Joseph McCarthy disambiguation Joseph Raymond McCarthy November 14 1908 May 2 1957 was an American politician who served as a Republican U S Senator from the state of Wisconsin from 1947 until his death in 1957 Beginning in 1950 McCarthy became the most visible public face of a period in the United States in which Cold War tensions fueled fears of widespread communist subversion 1 He is known for alleging that numerous communists and Soviet spies and sympathizers had infiltrated the United States federal government universities film industry 2 3 and elsewhere Ultimately he was censured for refusing to cooperate with and abusing members of the committee established to investigate whether or not he should be censured The term McCarthyism coined in 1950 in reference to McCarthy s practices was soon applied to similar anti communist activities Today the term is used more broadly to mean demagogic reckless and unsubstantiated accusations as well as public attacks on the character or patriotism of political opponents 4 5 Joseph McCarthyMcCarthy in 1954United States Senatorfrom WisconsinIn office January 3 1947 May 2 1957Preceded byRobert M La Follette Jr Succeeded byWilliam ProxmireChair of Senate Government Operations CommitteeIn office January 3 1953 January 3 1955Preceded byJohn L McClellanSucceeded byJohn L McClellanJudge of the Wisconsin Circuit Courtfor the 10th CircuitIn office January 1 1940 January 3 1947Preceded byEdgar WernerSucceeded byMichael EberleinPersonal detailsBornJoseph Raymond McCarthy 1908 11 14 November 14 1908Grand Chute Wisconsin U S DiedMay 2 1957 1957 05 02 aged 48 Bethesda Maryland U S Resting placeSaint Mary s CemeteryPolitical partyDemocratic before 1944 Republican after 1944 SpouseJean Kerr m 1953 wbr Children1 adopted EducationMarquette University LLB SignatureMilitary serviceAllegianceUnited StatesBranch serviceUnited States Marine CorpsYears of service1942 1945 Marine Corps 1946 1957 Reserve RankLieutenant ColonelBattles warsWorld War IIAwardsDistinguished Flying CrossAir Medal 5 Born in Grand Chute Wisconsin McCarthy commissioned into the Marine Corps in 1942 where he served as an intelligence briefing officer for a dive bomber squadron Following the end of World War II he attained the rank of major He volunteered to fly twelve combat missions as a gunner observer These missions were generally safe and after one where he was allowed to shoot as much ammunition as he wanted to mainly at coconut trees he acquired the nickname Tail Gunner Joe Some of his claims of heroism were later shown to be exaggerated or falsified leading many of his critics to use Tail Gunner Joe as a term of mockery 6 7 8 McCarthy successfully ran for the U S Senate in 1946 defeating Robert M La Follette Jr After three largely undistinguished years in the Senate McCarthy rose suddenly to national fame in February 1950 when he asserted in a speech that he had a list of members of the Communist Party and members of a spy ring who were employed in the State Department 9 In succeeding years after his 1950 speech McCarthy made additional accusations of Communist infiltration into the State Department the administration of President Harry S Truman the Voice of America and the U S Army He also used various charges of communism communist sympathies disloyalty or sex crimes to attack a number of politicians and other individuals inside and outside of government 10 This included a concurrent Lavender Scare against suspected homosexuals as homosexuality was prohibited by law at the time it was also perceived to increase a person s risk for blackmail 11 With the highly publicized Army McCarthy hearings of 1954 and following the suicide of Wyoming Senator Lester C Hunt that same year 12 McCarthy s support and popularity faded On December 2 1954 the Senate voted to censure Senator McCarthy by a vote of 67 22 making him one of the few senators ever to be disciplined in this fashion He continued to speak against communism and socialism until his death at the age of 48 at Bethesda Naval Hospital in Bethesda Maryland on May 2 1957 His death certificate listed the cause of death as Hepatitis acute cause unknown 13 Doctors had not previously reported him to be in critical condition 14 Some biographers say this was caused or exacerbated by alcoholism 15 McCarthy is the last Republican to have held or won election to Wisconsin s Class I Senate seat Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Military service 2 2 Senate campaign 3 Personal life 4 United States Senate 4 1 Malmedy massacre trial 4 2 Enemies within 4 3 Tydings Committee 4 4 Fame and notoriety 4 5 McCarthy and the Truman administration 4 6 Support from Roman Catholics and the Kennedy family 4 7 McCarthy and Eisenhower 4 8 Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations 4 9 Investigating the army 4 10 Army McCarthy hearings 4 11 Edward R Murrow See It Now 4 12 Joe Must Go recall attempt 4 13 Public opinion 4 14 Censure and the Watkins Committee 5 Final years 6 Death 7 Legacy 7 1 House Un American Activities Committee 7 2 In popular culture 7 2 1 Post censure reaction 7 3 Reconsideration 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Primary sources 9 3 Secondary sources 10 External linksEarly life and education EditMcCarthy was born in 1908 on a farm in Grand Chute Wisconsin the fifth of nine children 16 17 His mother Bridget McCarthy nee Tierney was from County Tipperary Ireland His father Timothy McCarthy was born in the United States the son of an Irish father and a German mother McCarthy dropped out of junior high school at age 14 to help his parents manage their farm He entered Little Wolf High School in Manawa Wisconsin when he was 20 and graduated in one year 18 He attended Marquette University from 1930 to 1935 McCarthy worked his way through college by coaching boxing etc clarification needed He first studied electrical engineering for two years then law and received a Bachelor of Laws degree in 1935 from Marquette University Law School in Milwaukee 19 Career EditMcCarthy was admitted to the bar in 1935 While working at a law firm in Shawano Wisconsin he launched an unsuccessful campaign for district attorney as a Democrat in 1936 During his years as an attorney McCarthy made money on the side by gambling 20 In 1939 McCarthy had better success when he ran for the nonpartisan elected post of 10th District circuit judge 21 22 McCarthy became the youngest circuit judge in the state s history by defeating incumbent Edgar V Werner who had been a judge for 24 years 23 In the campaign McCarthy lied about Werner s age of 66 claiming that he was 73 and so allegedly too old and infirm to handle the duties of his office 24 Writing of Werner in Reds McCarthyism In Twentieth Century America Ted Morgan wrote Pompous and condescending he Werner was disliked by lawyers His judgements had often been reversed by the Wisconsin Supreme Court and he was so inefficient that he had piled up a huge backlog of cases 25 McCarthy s judicial career attracted some controversy because of the speed with which he dispatched many of his cases as he worked to clear the heavily backlogged docket he had inherited from Werner 26 Wisconsin had strict divorce laws but when McCarthy heard divorce cases he expedited them whenever possible and he made the needs of children involved in contested divorces a priority 27 When it came to other cases argued before him McCarthy compensated for his lack of experience as a jurist by demanding and relying heavily upon precise briefs from the contesting attorneys The Wisconsin Supreme Court reversed a low percentage of the cases he heard 28 but he was also censured in 1941 for having lost evidence in a price fixing case 29 Military service Edit Joseph McCarthy in his U S Marine Corps uniform In 1942 shortly after the U S entered World War II McCarthy joined the United States Marine Corps despite the fact that his judicial office exempted him from military service 30 His college education qualified him for a direct commission and he entered the Marines as a first lieutenant 31 According to Morgan writing in Reds McCarthy s friend and campaign manager attorney and judge Urban P Van Susteren had applied for active duty in the U S Army Air Forces in early 1942 and advised McCarthy Be a hero join the Marines 32 33 When McCarthy seemed hesitant Van Susteren asked You got shit in your blood 34 McCarthy receiving his DFC and Air Medal from Colonel John R Lanigan commanding officer of Fifth Marine Reserve District December 1952 He served as an intelligence briefing officer for a dive bomber squadron VMSB 235 in the Solomon Islands and Bougainville for 30 months August 1942 February 1945 and held the rank of captain by the time he resigned his commission in April 1945 He volunteered to fly twelve combat missions as a gunner observer These missions were generally safe and after one where he was allowed to shoot as much ammunition as he wanted to mainly at coconut trees he acquired the nickname Tail Gunner Joe 35 McCarthy remained in the Marine Corps Reserve after the war attaining the rank of lieutenant colonel 36 37 He later falsely claimed participation in 32 aerial missions in order to qualify for a Distinguished Flying Cross and multiple awards of the Air Medal which the Marine Corps chain of command decided to approve in 1952 because of his political influence 38 39 McCarthy also publicized a letter of commendation which he claimed had been signed by his commanding officer and Admiral Chester W Nimitz then Chief of Naval Operations 40 41 However his commander revealed that McCarthy had written this letter himself probably while preparing award citations and commendation letters as an additional duty and that he had signed his commander s name after which Nimitz signed it during the process of just signing numerous other such letters 42 41 A war wound a badly broken leg that McCarthy made the subject of varying stories involving airplane crashes or anti aircraft fire had in fact happened aboard ship during a raucous celebration for sailors crossing the equator for the first time 43 44 45 Because of McCarthy s various lies about his military heroism his Tail Gunner Joe nickname was sarcastically used as a term of mockery by his critics 6 7 8 McCarthy campaigned for the Republican Senate nomination in Wisconsin while still on active duty in 1944 but was defeated by Alexander Wiley the incumbent After he left the Marines in April 1945 five months before the end of the Pacific war in September 1945 McCarthy was reelected unopposed to his circuit court position He then began a much more systematic campaign for the 1946 Republican Senate primary nomination with support from Thomas Coleman the Republican Party s political boss in Wisconsin In this race he was challenging three term senator Robert M La Follette Jr founder of the Wisconsin Progressive Party and son of the celebrated Wisconsin governor and senator Robert M La Follette Sr Senate campaign Edit In his campaign McCarthy attacked La Follette for not enlisting during the war although La Follette had been 46 when Pearl Harbor was bombed He also claimed La Follette had made huge profits from his investments while he McCarthy had been away fighting for his country In fact McCarthy had invested in the stock market himself during the war netting a profit of 42 000 in 1943 over 604 000 in 2017 dollars Where McCarthy got the money to invest in the first place remains a mystery La Follette s investments consisted of partial interest in a radio station which earned him a profit of 47 000 over two years 46 According to Jack Anderson and Ronald W May 47 McCarthy s campaign funds much of them from out of state were ten times more than La Follette s and McCarthy s vote benefited from a Communist Party vendetta against La Follette The suggestion that La Follette had been guilty of war profiteering was deeply damaging and McCarthy won the primary nomination 207 935 votes to 202 557 It was during this campaign that McCarthy started publicizing his war time nickname Tail Gunner Joe using the slogan Congress needs a tail gunner Journalist Arnold Beichman later stated that McCarthy was elected to his first term in the Senate with support from the Communist controlled United Electrical Radio and Machine Workers CIO which preferred McCarthy to the anti communist Robert M La Follette 48 In the general election against Democratic opponent Howard J McMurray McCarthy won 61 2 to Democrat McMurray s 37 3 and thus joined Senator Wiley whom he had challenged unsuccessfully two years earlier in the Senate 1946 Wisconsin U S Senate election Party Candidate Votes Republican Joseph McCarthy 620 430 61 2Democratic Howard McMurray 378 772 37 3Total votes 999 202 98 5Republican holdPersonal life EditIn 1950 McCarthy assaulted journalist Drew Pearson in the cloakroom at the Sulgrave Club reportedly kneeing him in the groin McCarthy who admitted the assault claimed he merely slapped Pearson 49 In 1952 using rumors collected by Pearson as well as other sources Nevada publisher Hank Greenspun wrote that McCarthy was a frequent patron at the White Horse Inn a Milwaukee gay bar and cited his involvement with young men Greenspun named some of McCarthy s alleged lovers including Charles E Davis an ex Communist and confessed homosexual who claimed that he had been hired by McCarthy to spy on U S diplomats in Switzerland 50 51 McCarthy s FBI file also contains numerous allegations including a 1952 letter from an Army lieutenant who said When I was in Washington some time ago McCarthy picked me up at the bar in the Wardman Hotel and took me home and while I was half drunk he committed sodomy on me J Edgar Hoover conducted a perfunctory investigation of the Senator s alleged sexual assault Hoover s approach was that homosexuals are very bitter against Senator McCarthy for his attack upon those who are supposed to be in the Government 52 53 Although some notable McCarthy biographers have rejected these rumors 54 others have suggested that he may have been blackmailed During the early 1950s McCarthy launched a series of attacks on the CIA claiming it had been infiltrated by communist agents Allen Dulles who suspected McCarthy was using information supplied by Hoover refused to cooperate According to the historian David Talbot Dulles also compiled a scandalous intimate dossier on the Senator s personal life and used the homosexual stories to take him down 55 In any event McCarthy did not sue Greenspun for libel He was told that if the case went ahead he would be compelled to take the witness stand and to refute the charges made in the affidavit of the young man which was the basis for Greenspun s story In 1953 he married Jean Fraser Kerr a researcher in his office In January 1957 McCarthy and his wife adopted an infant with the help of Roy Cohn s close friend Cardinal Spellman They named the baby girl Tierney Elizabeth McCarthy 56 United States Senate EditSenator McCarthy s first three years in the Senate were unremarkable 57 McCarthy was a popular speaker invited by many different organizations covering a wide range of topics His aides and many in the Washington social circle described him as charming and friendly and he was a popular guest at cocktail parties He was far less well liked among fellow senators however who found him quick tempered and prone to impatience and even rage Outside of a small circle of colleagues he was soon an isolated figure in the Senate 58 McCarthy was active in labor management issues with a reputation as a moderate Republican He fought against continuation of wartime price controls especially on sugar His advocacy in this area was associated by critics with a 20 000 personal loan McCarthy received from a Pepsi bottling executive earning the Senator the derisive nickname The Pepsi Cola Kid 59 McCarthy supported the Taft Hartley Act over Truman s veto angering labor unions in Wisconsin but solidifying his business base 60 Malmedy massacre trial Edit Main article Malmedy massacreMain article Malmedy massacre trial In an incident for which he would be widely criticized McCarthy lobbied for the commutation of death sentences given to a group of Waffen SS soldiers convicted of war crimes for carrying out the 1944 Malmedy massacre of American prisoners of war McCarthy was critical of the convictions because the German soldiers confessions were allegedly obtained through torture during the interrogations He argued that the U S Army was engaged in a coverup of judicial misconduct but never presented any evidence to support the accusation 61 Shortly after this a 1950 poll of the Senate press corps voted McCarthy the worst U S senator currently in office 62 McCarthy biographer Larry Tye has written that antisemitism may have factored into McCarthy s outspoken views on Malmedy Although he had substantial Jewish support notably Lewis Rosenstiel of Schenley Industries Rabbi Benjamin Schultz of the American Jewish League Against Communism and the columnist George Sokolsky who convinced him to hire Roy Cohn and G David Schine 63 McCarthy frequently used anti Jewish slurs He also received enthusiastic support from antisemitic politicians including Ku Klux Klansman Wesley Swift and according to friends would display his copy of Mein Kampf stating That s the way to do it 64 Tye cites three quotes from European historian Steven Remy chief Malmedy prosecutor COL Burton Ellis JAG USA and massacre victim and survivor Virgil P Laru Jr Both willfully clueless and supremely self confident McCarthy impeded but did not derail a truly fair and balanced investigation of the Malmedy affair Steven Remy 64 It beats the hell out of me why everyone tries so hard to show that the prosecution s were insidious underhanded unethical immoral and God knows what monsters that unfairly convicted a group of whiskerless Sunday school boys Burton Ellis 64 I have seen persons bent on murdering me persons who murdered my companions defended by a United States senator I charge that this action of Senator McCarthy s became the basis for the Communist propaganda in western Germany designed to discredit the American armed forces and American justice Virgil P Lary Jr 64 Enemies within Edit McCarthy experienced a meteoric rise in national profile beginning on February 9 1950 when he gave a Lincoln Day speech to the Republican Women s Club of Wheeling West Virginia His words in the speech are a matter of some debate as no audio recording was saved However it is generally agreed that he produced a piece of paper that he claimed contained a list of known Communists working for the State Department McCarthy is usually quoted to have said The State Department is infested with communists I have here in my hand a list of 205 a list of names that were made known to the Secretary of State as being members of the Communist Party and who nevertheless are still working and shaping policy in the State Department 65 66 There is some dispute about whether or not McCarthy actually gave the number of people on the list as being 205 or 57 In a later telegram to President Truman and when entering the speech into the Congressional Record he used the number 57 67 The origin of the number 205 can be traced in later debates on the Senate floor McCarthy referred to a 1946 letter that then Secretary of State James Byrnes sent to Congressman Adolph J Sabath In that letter Byrnes said State Department security investigations had resulted in recommendation against permanent employment for 284 persons and that 79 of these had been removed from their jobs this left 205 still on the State Department s payroll In fact by the time of McCarthy s speech only about 65 of the employees mentioned in the Byrnes letter were still with the State Department and all of these had undergone further security checks 68 At the time of McCarthy s speech communism was a significant concern in the United States This concern was exacerbated by the actions of the Soviet Union in Eastern Europe the victory of the communists in the Chinese Civil War the Soviets development of a nuclear weapon the year before and by the contemporary controversy surrounding Alger Hiss and the confession of Soviet spy Klaus Fuchs With this background and due to the sensational nature of McCarthy s charge against the State Department the Wheeling speech soon attracted a flood of press interest in McCarthy s claim 69 70 Tydings Committee Edit Main article Tydings Committee McCarthy himself was taken aback by the massive media response to the Wheeling speech and he was accused of continually revising both his charges and figures In Salt Lake City Utah a few days later he cited a figure of 57 and in the Senate on February 20 1950 he claimed 81 71 During a five hour speech 72 McCarthy presented a case by case analysis of his 81 loyalty risks employed at the State Department It is widely accepted that most of McCarthy s cases were selected from the so called Lee list a report that had been compiled three years earlier for the House Appropriations Committee Led by a former Federal Bureau of Investigation agent named Robert E Lee the House investigators had reviewed security clearance documents on State Department employees and had determined that there were incidents of inefficiencies 73 in the security reviews of 108 employees McCarthy hid the source of his list stating that he had penetrated the iron curtain of State Department secrecy with the aid of some good loyal Americans in the State Department 74 In reciting the information from the Lee list cases McCarthy consistently exaggerated representing the hearsay of witnesses as facts and converting phrases such as inclined towards Communism to a Communist 75 Senator Millard Tydings In response to McCarthy s charges the Senate voted unanimously to investigate and the Tydings Committee hearings were called 76 This was a subcommittee of the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations set up in February 1950 to conduct a full and complete study and investigation as to whether persons who are disloyal to the United States are or have been employed by the Department of State 77 Many Democrats were incensed at McCarthy s attack on the State Department of a Democratic administration and had hoped to use the hearings to discredit him The Democratic chairman of the subcommittee Senator Millard Tydings was reported to have said Let me have him McCarthy for three days in public hearings and he ll never show his face in the Senate again 78 During the hearings McCarthy made charges against nine specific people Dorothy Kenyon Esther Brunauer Haldore Hanson Gustavo Duran Owen Lattimore Harlow Shapley Frederick Schuman John S Service and Philip Jessup They all had previously been the subject of charges of varying worth and validity Owen Lattimore became a particular focus of McCarthy s who at one point described him as a top Russian spy From its beginning the Tydings Committee was marked by intense partisan infighting Its final report written by the Democratic majority concluded that the individuals on McCarthy s list were neither Communists nor pro communist and said the State Department had an effective security program The Tydings Report labeled McCarthy s charges a fraud and a hoax and described them as using incensing rhetoric saying that the result of McCarthy s actions was to confuse and divide the American people to a degree far beyond the hopes of the Communists themselves Republicans were outraged by the Democratic response They responded to the report s rhetoric in kind with William E Jenner stating that Tydings was guilty of the most brazen whitewash of treasonable conspiracy in our history 79 The full Senate voted three times on whether to accept the report and each time the voting was precisely divided along party lines 80 Fame and notoriety Edit Herbert Block who signed his work Herblock coined the term McCarthyism in this cartoon in the March 29 1950 Washington Post From 1950 onward McCarthy continued to exploit the fear of Communism and to press his accusations that the government was failing to deal with Communism within its ranks McCarthy also began investigations into homosexuals working in the foreign policy bureaucracy who were considered prime candidates for blackmail by the Soviets 81 These accusations received wide publicity increased his approval rating and gained him a powerful national following In Congress there was little doubt that homosexuals did not belong in sensitive government positions 81 Since the late 1940s the government had been dismissing about five homosexuals a month from civilian posts by 1954 the number had grown twelve fold 82 As historian David M Barrett would write Mixed in with the hysterics were some logic though homosexuals faced condemnation and discrimination and most of them wishing to conceal their orientation were vulnerable to blackmail 83 Director of Central Intelligence Roscoe Hillenkoetter was called to Congress to testify on homosexuals being employed at the CIA He said The use of homosexuals as a control mechanism over individuals recruited for espionage is a generally accepted technique which has been used at least on a limited basis for many years As soon as the DCI said these words his aide signaled to take the remainder of the DCI s testimony off the record Political historian David Barrett uncovered Hillenkoetter s notes which reveal the remainder of the statement While this agency will never employ homosexuals on its rolls it might conceivably be necessary and in the past has actually been valuable to use known homosexuals as agents in the field I am certain that if Joseph Stalin or a member of the Politburo or a high satellite official were known to be a homosexual no member of this committee or of the Congress would balk against our use of any technique to penetrate their operations after all intelligence and espionage is at best an extremely dirty business 84 The senators reluctantly agreed the CIA had to be flexible 85 McCarthy s methods also brought on the disapproval and opposition of many Barely a month after McCarthy s Wheeling speech the term McCarthyism was coined by Washington Post cartoonist Herbert Block Block and others used the word as a synonym for demagoguery baseless defamation and mudslinging Later it would be embraced by McCarthy and some of his supporters McCarthyism is Americanism with its sleeves rolled McCarthy said in a 1952 speech and later that year he published a book titled McCarthyism The Fight For America McCarthy sought to discredit his critics and political opponents by accusing them of being Communists or communist sympathizers In the 1950 Maryland Senate election McCarthy campaigned for John Marshall Butler in his race against four term incumbent Millard Tydings with whom McCarthy had been in conflict during the Tydings Committee hearings In speeches supporting Butler McCarthy accused Tydings of protecting Communists and shielding traitors McCarthy s staff was heavily involved in the campaign and collaborated in the production of a campaign tabloid that contained a composite photograph doctored to make it appear that Tydings was in intimate conversation with Communist leader Earl Russell Browder 86 87 88 A Senate subcommittee later investigated this election and referred to it as a despicable back street type of campaign as well as recommending that the use of defamatory literature in a campaign be made grounds for expulsion from the Senate 89 The pamphlet was clearly labeled a composite McCarthy said it was wrong to distribute it though staffer Jean Kerr thought it was fine After he lost the election by almost 40 000 votes Tydings claimed foul play In addition to the Tydings Butler race McCarthy campaigned for several other Republicans in the 1950 elections including Everett Dirksen against Democratic incumbent and Senate Majority Leader Scott W Lucas Dirksen and indeed all the candidates McCarthy supported won their elections and those he opposed lost The elections including many that McCarthy was not involved in were an overall Republican sweep Although his impact on the elections was unclear McCarthy was credited as a key Republican campaigner He was now regarded as one of the most powerful men in the Senate and was treated with new found deference by his colleagues 90 In the 1952 Senate elections McCarthy was returned to his Senate seat with 54 2 of the vote compared to Democrat Thomas Fairchild s 45 6 As of 2020 McCarthy is the last Republican to win Wisconsin s Class 1 Senate seat 1952 Wisconsin U S Senate election Party Candidate Votes Republican Joseph McCarthy 870 444 54 2Democratic Thomas E Fairchild 731 402 45 6Total votes 1 601 846 99 8Republican holdMcCarthy and the Truman administration Edit McCarthy and President Truman clashed often during the years both held office McCarthy characterized Truman and the Democratic Party as soft on or even in league with Communists and spoke of the Democrats twenty years of treason Truman in turn once referred to McCarthy as the best asset the Kremlin has calling McCarthy s actions an attempt to sabotage the foreign policy of the United States in a cold war and comparing it to shooting American soldiers in the back in a hot war 91 It was the Truman Administration s State Department that McCarthy accused of harboring 205 or 57 or 81 known Communists Truman s Secretary of Defense George Marshall was the target of some of McCarthy s most vitriolic rhetoric Marshall had been Army Chief of Staff during World War II and was also Truman s former Secretary of State Marshall was a highly respected general and statesman remembered today as the architect of victory and peace the latter based on the Marshall Plan for post war reconstruction of Europe for which he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1953 McCarthy made a lengthy speech on Marshall later published in 1951 as a book titled America s Retreat From Victory The Story of George Catlett Marshall Marshall had been involved in American foreign policy with China and McCarthy charged that Marshall was directly responsible for the loss of China to Communism In the speech McCarthy also implied that Marshall was guilty of treason 92 declared that if Marshall were merely stupid the laws of probability would dictate that part of his decisions would serve this country s interest 92 and most famously accused him of being part of a conspiracy so immense and an infamy so black as to dwarf any previous venture in the history of man 92 During the Korean War when Truman dismissed General Douglas MacArthur McCarthy charged that Truman and his advisors must have planned the dismissal during late night sessions when they ve had time to get the President cheerful on bourbon and Benedictine McCarthy declared The son of a bitch should be impeached 93 Support from Roman Catholics and the Kennedy family Edit One of the strongest bases of anti Communist sentiment in the United States was the Catholic community which constituted over 20 of the national vote McCarthy identified himself as Catholic and although the great majority of Catholics were Democrats as his fame as a leading anti Communist grew he became popular in Catholic communities across the country with strong support from many leading Catholics diocesan newspapers and Catholic journals 94 At the same time some Catholics opposed McCarthy notably the anti Communist author Father John Francis Cronin and the influential journal Commonweal 95 McCarthy established a bond with the powerful Kennedy family which had high visibility among Catholics McCarthy became a close friend of Joseph P Kennedy Sr himself a fervent anti Communist and he was also a frequent guest at the Kennedy compound in Hyannis Port Massachusetts He dated two of Kennedy s daughters Patricia and Eunice 96 97 It has been stated that McCarthy was godfather to Robert F Kennedy s first child Kathleen Kennedy This claim has been acknowledged by Robert s wife and Kathleen s mother Ethel 98 though Kathleen later claimed that she looked at her christening certificate and that her actual godfather was Manhattanville College of the Sacred Heart professor Daniel Walsh 98 Robert Kennedy was chosen by McCarthy to be a counsel for his investigatory committee but he resigned after six months due to disagreements with McCarthy and Committee Counsel Roy Marcus Cohn Joseph Kennedy had a national network of contacts and became a vocal supporter building McCarthy s popularity among Catholics and making sizable contributions to McCarthy s campaigns 99 The Kennedy patriarch hoped that one of his sons would be president Mindful of the anti Catholic prejudice which Al Smith faced during his 1928 campaign for that office Joseph Kennedy supported McCarthy as a national Catholic politician who might pave the way for a younger Kennedy s presidential candidacy Unlike many Democrats John F Kennedy who served in the Senate with McCarthy from 1953 until the latter s death in 1957 never attacked McCarthy McCarthy did not campaign for Kennedy s 1952 opponent Republican incumbent Henry Cabot Lodge Jr due to his friendship with the Kennedys 100 and reportedly a 50 000 donation from Joseph Kennedy Lodge lost despite Eisenhower winning the state in the presidential election 101 When a speaker at a February 1952 final club dinner stated that he was glad that McCarthy had not attended Harvard College an angry Kennedy jumped up denounced the speaker and left the event 102 When Arthur M Schlesinger Jr asked Kennedy why he avoided criticizing McCarthy Kennedy responded by saying Hell half my voters in Massachusetts look on McCarthy as a hero 101 McCarthy and Eisenhower Edit Dwight D Eisenhower 34th President of the United States During the 1952 presidential election the Eisenhower campaign toured Wisconsin with McCarthy In a speech delivered in Green Bay Eisenhower declared that while he agreed with McCarthy s goals he disagreed with his methods In draft versions of his speech Eisenhower had also included a strong defense of his mentor George Marshall which was a direct rebuke of McCarthy s frequent attacks However under the advice of conservative colleagues who were fearful that Eisenhower could lose Wisconsin if he alienated McCarthy supporters he deleted this defense from later versions of his speech 103 104 The deletion was discovered by William H Laurence a reporter for The New York Times and featured on its front page the next day Eisenhower was widely criticized for giving up his personal convictions and the incident became the low point of his campaign 103 With his victory in the 1952 presidential race Dwight Eisenhower became the first Republican president in 20 years The Republican party also held a majority in the House of Representatives and the Senate After being elected president Eisenhower made it clear to those close to him that he did not approve of McCarthy and he worked actively to diminish his power and influence Still he never directly confronted McCarthy or criticized him by name in any speech thus perhaps prolonging McCarthy s power by giving the impression that even the President was afraid to criticize him directly Oshinsky disputes this stating that Eisenhower was known as a harmonizer a man who could get diverse factions to work toward a common goal Leadership he explained meant patience and conciliation not hitting people over the head 105 McCarthy won reelection in 1952 with 54 of the vote defeating former Wisconsin State Attorney General Thomas E Fairchild but as stated above badly trailing a Republican ticket which otherwise swept the state of Wisconsin all the other Republican winners including Eisenhower himself received at least 60 of the Wisconsin vote 106 Those who expected that party loyalty would cause McCarthy to tone down his accusations of Communists being harbored within the government were soon disappointed Eisenhower had never been an admirer of McCarthy and their relationship became more hostile once Eisenhower was in office In a November 1953 speech that was carried on national television McCarthy began by praising the Eisenhower Administration for removing 1 456 Truman holdovers who were gotten rid of because of Communist connections and activities or perversion He then went on to complain that John Paton Davies Jr was still on the payroll after eleven months of the Eisenhower Administration even though Davies had actually been dismissed three weeks earlier and repeated an unsubstantiated accusation that Davies had tried to put Communists and espionage agents in key spots in the Central Intelligence Agency In the same speech he criticized Eisenhower for not doing enough to secure the release of missing American pilots shot down over China during the Korean War 107 By the end of 1953 McCarthy had altered the twenty years of treason catchphrase he had coined for the preceding Democratic administrations and began referring to twenty one years of treason to include Eisenhower s first year in office 108 As McCarthy became increasingly combative towards the Eisenhower Administration Eisenhower faced repeated calls that he confront McCarthy directly Eisenhower refused saying privately nothing would please him McCarthy more than to get the publicity that would be generated by a public repudiation by the President 109 On several occasions Eisenhower is reported to have said of McCarthy that he did not want to get down in the gutter with that guy 110 Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations Edit With the beginning of his second term as senator in 1953 McCarthy was made chairman of the Senate Committee on Government Operations According to some reports Republican leaders were growing wary of McCarthy s methods and gave him this relatively mundane panel rather than the Internal Security Subcommittee the committee normally involved with investigating Communists thus putting McCarthy where he can t do any harm in the words of Senate Majority Leader Robert A Taft 111 However the Committee on Government Operations included the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations and the mandate of this subcommittee was sufficiently flexible to allow McCarthy to use it for his own investigations of Communists in the government McCarthy appointed Roy Cohn as chief counsel and 27 year old Robert F Kennedy as an assistant counsel to the subcommittee Later McCarthy also hired Gerard David Schine heir to a hotel chain fortune on the recommendation of George Sokolsky 63 This subcommittee would be the scene of some of McCarthy s most publicized exploits When the records of the closed executive sessions of the subcommittee under McCarthy s chairmanship were made public in 2003 04 112 Senators Susan Collins and Carl Levin wrote the following in their preface to the documents Senator McCarthy s zeal to uncover subversion and espionage led to disturbing excesses His browbeating tactics destroyed careers of people who were not involved in the infiltration of our government His freewheeling style caused both the Senate and the Subcommittee to revise the rules governing future investigations and prompted the courts to act to protect the Constitutional rights of witnesses at Congressional hearings These hearings are a part of our national past that we can neither afford to forget nor permit to re occur 113 The subcommittee first investigated allegations of Communist influence in the Voice of America at that time administered by the State Department s United States Information Agency Many VOA personnel were questioned in front of television cameras and a packed press gallery with McCarthy lacing his questions with hostile innuendo and false accusations 114 A few VOA employees alleged Communist influence on the content of broadcasts but none of the charges were substantiated Morale at VOA was badly damaged and one of its engineers committed suicide during McCarthy s investigation Ed Kretzman a policy advisor for the service would later comment that it was VOA s darkest hour when Senator McCarthy and his chief hatchet man Roy Cohn almost succeeded in muffling it 114 The subcommittee then turned to the overseas library program of the International Information Agency Cohn toured Europe examining the card catalogs of the State Department libraries looking for works by authors he deemed inappropriate McCarthy then recited the list of supposedly pro communist authors before his subcommittee and the press The State Department bowed to McCarthy and ordered its overseas librarians to remove from their shelves material by any controversial persons Communists fellow travelers etc Some libraries went as far as burning the newly forbidden books 115 Shortly after this in one of his public criticisms of McCarthy President Eisenhower urged Americans Don t join the book burners Don t be afraid to go in your library and read every book 116 Soon after receiving the chair to the Subcommittee on Investigations McCarthy appointed J B Matthews as staff director of the subcommittee One of the nation s foremost anti communists Matthews had formerly been staff director for the House Un American Activities Committee The appointment became controversial when it was learned that Matthews had recently written an article titled Reds and Our Churches 117 118 which opened with the sentence The largest single group supporting the Communist apparatus in the United States is composed of Protestant Clergymen A group of senators denounced this shocking and unwarranted attack against the American clergy and demanded that McCarthy dismiss Matthews McCarthy initially refused to do this As the controversy mounted however and the majority of his own subcommittee joined the call for Matthews s ouster McCarthy finally yielded and accepted his resignation For some McCarthy opponents this was a signal defeat of the senator showing he was not as invincible as he had formerly seemed 119 Investigating the army Edit In autumn 1953 McCarthy s committee began its ill fated inquiry into the United States Army This began with McCarthy opening an investigation into the Army Signal Corps laboratory at Fort Monmouth McCarthy newly married to Jean Kerr cut short his honeymoon to open the investigation He garnered some headlines with stories of a dangerous spy ring among the army researchers but after weeks of hearings nothing came of his investigations 120 Unable to expose any signs of subversion McCarthy focused instead on the case of Irving Peress a New York dentist who had been drafted into the army in 1952 and promoted to major in November 1953 Shortly thereafter it came to the attention of the military bureaucracy that Peress who was a member of the left wing American Labor Party had declined to answer questions about his political affiliations on a loyalty review form Peress s superiors were therefore ordered to discharge him from the army within 90 days McCarthy subpoenaed Peress to appear before his subcommittee on January 30 1954 Peress refused to answer McCarthy s questions citing his rights under the Fifth Amendment McCarthy responded by sending a message to Secretary of the Army Robert T Stevens demanding that Peress be court martialed On that same day Peress asked for his pending discharge from the army to be effected immediately and the next day Brigadier General Ralph W Zwicker his commanding officer at Camp Kilmer in New Jersey gave him an honorable separation from the army At McCarthy s encouragement Who promoted Peress became a rallying cry among many anti communists and McCarthy supporters In fact and as McCarthy knew Peress had been promoted automatically through the provisions of the Doctor Draft Law for which McCarthy had voted 121 Army McCarthy hearings Edit Main article Army McCarthy hearings Early in 1954 the U S Army accused McCarthy and his chief counsel Roy Cohn of improperly pressuring the army to give favorable treatment to G David Schine a former aide to McCarthy and a friend of Cohn s who was then serving in the army as a private 122 McCarthy claimed that the accusation was made in bad faith in retaliation for his questioning of Zwicker the previous year The Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations usually chaired by McCarthy himself was given the task of adjudicating these conflicting charges Republican senator Karl Mundt was appointed to chair the committee and the Army McCarthy hearings convened on April 22 1954 123 McCarthy chats with Roy Cohn right at the Army McCarthy hearings The army consulted with an attorney familiar with McCarthy to determine the best approach to attacking him Based on his recommendation it decided not to pursue McCarthy on the issue of communists in government The attorney feels it is almost impossible to counter McCarthy effectively on the issue of kicking Communists out of Government because he generally has some basis no matter how slight for his claim of Communist connection 43 The hearings lasted for 36 days and were broadcast on live television by ABC and DuMont with an estimated 20 million viewers After hearing 32 witnesses and two million words of testimony the committee concluded that McCarthy himself had not exercised any improper influence on Schine s behalf but that Cohn had engaged in unduly persistent or aggressive efforts The committee also concluded that Army Secretary Robert Stevens and Army Counsel John Adams made efforts to terminate or influence the investigation and hearings at Fort Monmouth and that Adams made vigorous and diligent efforts to block subpoenas for members of the Army Loyalty and Screening Board by means of personal appeal to certain members of the McCarthy committee 124 Of far greater importance to McCarthy than the committee s inconclusive final report was the negative effect that the extensive exposure had on his popularity Many in the audience saw him as bullying reckless and dishonest and the daily newspaper summaries of the hearings were also frequently unfavorable 125 126 Late in the hearings Senator Stuart Symington made an angry and prophetic remark to McCarthy Upon being told by McCarthy that You re not fooling anyone Symington replied Senator the American people have had a look at you now for six weeks you re not fooling anyone either 127 In Gallup polls of January 1954 50 of those polled had a positive opinion of McCarthy In June that number had fallen to 34 In the same polls those with a negative opinion of McCarthy increased from 29 to 45 128 An increasing number of Republicans and conservatives were coming to see McCarthy as a liability to the party and to anti communism Congressman George H Bender noted There is a growing impatience with the Republican Party McCarthyism has become a synonym for witch hunting Star Chamber methods and the denial of civil liberties 129 Frederick Woltman a reporter with a long standing reputation as a staunch anti communist wrote a five part series of articles criticizing McCarthy in the New York World Telegram He stated that McCarthy has become a major liability to the cause of anti communism and accused him of wild twisting of facts and near facts that repels authorities in the field 130 131 Joseph N Welch left being questioned by Senator McCarthy June 9 1954 The most famous incident in the hearings was an exchange between McCarthy and the army s chief legal representative Joseph Nye Welch On June 9 1954 132 the 30th day of the hearings Welch challenged Roy Cohn to provide U S Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr with McCarthy s list of 130 Communists or subversives in defense plants before the sun goes down McCarthy stepped in and said that if Welch was so concerned about persons aiding the Communist Party he should check on a man in his Boston law office named Fred Fisher who had once belonged to the National Lawyers Guild a progressive lawyers association 133 In an impassioned defense of Fisher Welch responded Until this moment Senator I think I never really gauged your cruelty or your recklessness When McCarthy resumed his attack Welch interrupted him Let us not assassinate this lad further Senator You ve done enough Have you no sense of decency Sir at long last Have you left no sense of decency When McCarthy once again persisted Welch cut him off and demanded the chairman call the next witness At that point the gallery erupted in applause and a recess was called 134 Edward R Murrow See It Now Edit Edward R Murrow pioneer in broadcast journalism Even before McCarthy s clash with Welch in the hearings one of the most prominent attacks on McCarthy s methods was an episode of the television documentary series See It Now hosted by journalist Edward R Murrow which was broadcast on March 9 1954 Titled A Report on Senator Joseph R McCarthy the episode consisted largely of clips of McCarthy speaking In these clips McCarthy accuses the Democratic party of twenty years of treason describes the American Civil Liberties Union as listed as a front for and doing the work of the Communist Party 135 and berates and harangues various witnesses including General Zwicker 136 In his conclusion Murrow said of McCarthy No one familiar with the history of this country can deny that congressional committees are useful It is necessary to investigate before legislating but the line between investigating and persecuting is a very fine one and the junior Senator from Wisconsin has stepped over it repeatedly His primary achievement has been in confusing the public mind as between the internal and the external threats of Communism We must not confuse dissent with disloyalty We must remember always that accusation is not proof and that conviction depends upon evidence and due process of law We will not walk in fear one of another We will not be driven by fear into an age of unreason if we dig deep in our history and our doctrine and remember that we are not descended from fearful men not from men who feared to write to speak to associate and to defend causes that were for the moment unpopular This is no time for men who oppose Senator McCarthy s methods to keep silent or for those who approve We can deny our heritage and our history but we cannot escape responsibility for the result There is no way for a citizen of a republic to abdicate his responsibilities As a nation we have come into our full inheritance at a tender age We proclaim ourselves as indeed we are the defenders of freedom wherever it continues to exist in the world but we cannot defend freedom abroad by deserting it at home The actions of the junior Senator from Wisconsin have caused alarm and dismay amongst our allies abroad and given considerable comfort to our enemies And whose fault is that Not really his He didn t create this situation of fear he merely exploited it and rather successfully Cassius was right The fault dear Brutus is not in our stars but in ourselves 137 The following week See It Now ran another episode critical of McCarthy this one focusing on the case of Annie Lee Moss an African American army clerk who was the target of one of McCarthy s investigations The Murrow shows together with the televised Army McCarthy hearings of the same year were the major causes of a nationwide popular opinion backlash against McCarthy 138 in part because for the first time his statements were being publicly challenged by noteworthy figures To counter the negative publicity McCarthy appeared on See It Now on April 6 1954 and made a number of charges against the popular Murrow including the accusation that he colluded with VOKS the Russian espionage and propaganda organization 139 This response did not go over well with viewers and the result was a further decline in McCarthy s popularity citation needed Joe Must Go recall attempt Edit On March 18 1954 Sauk Prairie Star editor Leroy Gore of Sauk City Wisconsin urged the recall of McCarthy in a front page editorial that ran alongside a sample petition that readers could fill out and mail to the newspaper A Republican and former McCarthy supporter Gore cited the senator with subverting President Eisenhower s authority disrespecting Wisconsin s own Gen Ralph Wise Zwicker and ignoring the plight of Wisconsin dairy farmers faced with price slashing surpluses 140 Despite critics claims that a recall attempt was foolhardy the Joe Must Go movement caught fire and was backed by a diverse coalition including other Republican leaders Democrats businessmen farmers and students Wisconsin s constitution stipulates the number of signatures needed to force a recall election must exceed one quarter the number of voters in the most recent gubernatorial election requiring the anti McCarthy movement to gather some 404 000 signatures in sixty days With little support from organized labor or the state Democratic Party the roughly organized recall effort attracted national attention particularly during the concurrent Army McCarthy hearings citation needed Following the deadline of June 5 the final number of signatures was never determined because the petitions were sent out of state to avoid a subpoena from Sauk County district attorney Harlan Kelley an ardent McCarthy supporter who was investigating the leaders of the recall campaign on the grounds that they had violated Wisconsin s Corrupt Practices Act Chicago newspapermen later tallied 335 000 names while another 50 000 were said to be hidden in Minneapolis with other lists buried on Sauk County farms 140 Public opinion Edit McCarthy s Support in Gallup Polls 141 Date Favorable No Opinion Unfavorable Net Favorable1952 August 15 63 22 71953 April 19 59 22 31953 June 35 35 30 51953 August 34 24 42 81954 January 50 21 29 211954 March 46 18 36 101954 April 38 16 46 81954 May 35 16 49 141954 June 34 21 45 111954 August 36 13 51 151954 November 35 19 46 11Censure and the Watkins Committee Edit Senator Ralph Flanders who introduced the resolution calling for McCarthy to be censured Several members of the U S Senate had opposed McCarthy well before 1953 Senator Margaret Chase Smith a Maine Republican was the first She delivered her Declaration of Conscience speech on June 1 1950 calling for an end to the use of smear tactics without mentioning McCarthy or anyone else by name Only six other Republican senators Wayne Morse Irving Ives Charles W Tobey Edward John Thye George Aiken and Robert C Hendrickson agreed to join her in condemning McCarthy s tactics McCarthy referred to Smith and her fellow senators as Snow White and the six dwarfs 142 On March 9 1954 Vermont Republican senator Ralph E Flanders gave a humor laced speech on the Senate floor questioning McCarthy s tactics in fighting communism likening McCarthyism to house cleaning with much clatter and hullabaloo He recommended that McCarthy turn his attention to the worldwide encroachment of Communism outside North America 143 144 In a June 1 speech Flanders compared McCarthy to Adolf Hitler accusing him of spreading division and confusion and saying Were the Junior Senator from Wisconsin in the pay of the Communists he could not have done a better job for them 145 On June 11 Flanders introduced a resolution to have McCarthy removed as chair of his committees Although there were many in the Senate who believed that some sort of disciplinary action against McCarthy was warranted there was no clear majority supporting this resolution Some of the resistance was due to concern about usurping the Senate s rules regarding committee chairs and seniority Flanders next introduced a resolution to censure McCarthy The resolution was initially written without any reference to particular actions or misdeeds on McCarthy s part As Flanders put it It was not his breaches of etiquette or of rules or sometimes even of laws which is so disturbing but rather his overall pattern of behavior Ultimately a bill of particulars listing 46 charges was added to the censure resolution A special committee chaired by Senator Arthur Vivian Watkins was appointed to study and evaluate the resolution This committee opened hearings on August 31 146 Senator Arthur V Watkins After two months of hearings and deliberations the Watkins Committee recommended that McCarthy be censured on two of the 46 counts his contempt of the Subcommittee on Rules and Administration which had called him to testify in 1951 and 1952 and his abuse of General Zwicker in 1954 The Zwicker count was dropped by the full Senate on the grounds that McCarthy s conduct was arguably induced by Zwicker s own behavior In place of this count a new one was drafted regarding McCarthy s statements about the Watkins Committee itself 147 The two counts on which the Senate ultimately voted were That McCarthy had failed to co operate with the Sub committee on Rules and Administration and repeatedly abused the members who were trying to carry out assigned duties That McCarthy had charged three members of the Watkins Select Committee with deliberate deception and fraud that the special Senate session was a lynch party and had characterized the committee as the unwitting handmaiden involuntary agent and attorneys in fact of the Communist Party and had acted contrary to senatorial ethics and tended to bring the Senate into dishonor and disrepute to obstruct the constitutional processes of the Senate and to impair its dignity 148 On December 2 1954 the Senate voted to condemn McCarthy on both counts by a vote of 67 to 22 149 The Democrats present unanimously favored condemnation and the Republicans were split evenly The only senator not on record was John F Kennedy who was hospitalized for back surgery Kennedy never indicated how he would have voted 150 Immediately after the vote Senator H Styles Bridges a McCarthy supporter argued that the resolution was not a censure resolution because the word condemn rather than censure was used in the final draft The word censure was then removed from the title of the resolution though it is generally regarded and referred to as a censure of McCarthy both by historians 151 and in Senate documents 152 McCarthy himself said I wouldn t exactly call it a vote of confidence He added I don t feel I ve been lynched 153 Indiana Senator William E Jenner one of McCarthy s friends and fellow Republicans likened McCarthy s conduct however to that of the kid who came to the party and peed in the lemonade 154 Final years Edit Harry J Anslinger criticized and supplied McCarthy s morphine addiction After his condemnation and censure Joseph McCarthy continued to perform his senatorial duties for another two and a half years His career as a major public figure however had been ruined His colleagues in the Senate avoided him his speeches on the Senate floor were delivered to a near empty chamber or they were received with intentional and conspicuous displays of inattention 155 The press that had once recorded his every public statement now ignored him and outside speaking engagements dwindled almost to nothing Eisenhower finally freed of McCarthy s political intimidation quipped to his Cabinet that McCarthyism was now McCarthywasm 156 Still McCarthy continued to rail against Communism He warned against attendance at summit conferences with the Reds saying that you cannot offer friendship to tyrants and murderers without advancing the cause of tyranny and murder 157 He declared that co existence with Communists is neither possible nor honorable nor desirable Our long term objective must be the eradication of Communism from the face of the earth In one of his final acts in the Senate McCarthy opposed President Eisenhower s nomination to the Supreme Court of William J Brennan after reading a speech Brennan had given shortly beforehand in which he characterized McCarthy s anti Communist investigations as witch hunts McCarthy s opposition failed to gain any traction however and he was the only senator to vote against Brennan s confirmation 158 McCarthy s biographers agree that he was a changed man for the worse after the censure declining both physically and emotionally he became a pale ghost of his former self in the words of Fred J Cook 159 It was reported that McCarthy suffered from cirrhosis of the liver and was frequently hospitalized for alcohol abuse Numerous eyewitnesses including Senate aide George Reedy and journalist Tom Wicker reported finding him drunk in the Senate Journalist Richard Rovere 1959 wrote He had always been a heavy drinker and there were times in those seasons of discontent when he drank more than ever But he was not always drunk He went on the wagon for him this meant beer instead of whiskey for days and weeks at a time The difficulty toward the end was that he couldn t hold the stuff He went to pieces on his second or third drink and he did not snap back quickly 160 McCarthy had also become addicted to morphine Harry J Anslinger head of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics became aware of McCarthy s addiction in the 1950s and demanded he stop using the drug McCarthy refused 161 In Anslinger s memoir The Murderers McCarthy is anonymously quoted as saying I wouldn t try to do anything about it Commissioner It will be the worse for you and if it winds up in a public scandal and that should hurt this country I wouldn t care The choice is yours 161 Anslinger decided to give McCarthy access to morphine in secret from a pharmacy in Washington DC The morphine was paid for by the Federal Bureau of Narcotics right up to McCarthy s death Anslinger never publicly named McCarthy and he threatened with prison a journalist who had uncovered the story 161 However McCarthy s identity was known to Anslinger s agents and journalist Maxine Cheshire confirmed his identity with Will Oursler co author of The Murderers in 1978 161 162 Death Edit Tombstone of Joseph McCarthy with the Fox River in the background McCarthy died in the Bethesda Naval Hospital on Thursday May 2 1957 at the age of 48 His death certificate listed the cause of death as Hepatitis acute cause unknown previously doctors had not reported him to be in critical condition It was hinted in the press that he died of alcoholism cirrhosis of the liver an estimation that is now accepted by modern biographers 15 Thomas C Reeves argues that he effectively committed suicide 163 He was given a state funeral that was attended by 70 senators and a Solemn Pontifical Requiem Mass was celebrated before more than 100 priests and 2 000 others at Washington s St Matthew s Cathedral Thousands of people viewed his body in Washington He was buried in St Mary s Parish Cemetery Appleton Wisconsin where more than 17 000 people filed through St Mary s Church in order to pay him their last respects 164 Three senators George W Malone William E Jenner and Herman Welker had flown from Washington to Appleton on the plane that carried McCarthy s casket Robert F Kennedy attended the funeral in Wisconsin McCarthy was survived by his wife Jean and their adopted daughter Tierney In the summer of 1957 a special election was held in order to fill McCarthy s seat In the primaries voters in both parties turned away from McCarthy s legacy The Republican primary was won by Governor Walter J Kohler Jr who called for a clean break from McCarthy s approach he defeated former Congressman Glenn Robert Davis who charged that Eisenhower was soft on Communism The Democratic candidate William Proxmire called the late McCarthy a disgrace to Wisconsin to the Senate and to America On August 27 Proxmire won the election serving in the seat for 32 years 165 Legacy EditWilliam Bennett former Reagan Administration Secretary of Education summed up his perspective in his 2007 book America The Last Best Hope The cause of anti communism which united millions of Americans and which gained the support of Democrats Republicans and independents was undermined by Sen Joe McCarthy McCarthy addressed a real problem disloyal elements within the U S government But his approach to this real problem was to cause untold grief to the country he claimed to love Worst of all McCarthy besmirched the honorable cause of anti communism He discredited legitimate efforts to counter Soviet subversion of American institutions 166 House Un American Activities Committee Edit McCarthy s hearings are often incorrectly conflated with the hearings of the House Un American Activities Committee HUAC HUAC is best known for its investigations of Alger Hiss and the Hollywood film industry which led to the blacklisting of hundreds of actors writers and directors HUAC was a House committee and as such it had no formal connection to McCarthy who served in the Senate although the existence of the House Un American Activities Committee thrived in part as a result of McCarthy s activities HUAC was active for 37 years 1938 1975 167 In popular culture Edit From the start of his notoriety McCarthy served as a favorite subject for political cartoonists He was traditionally depicted in a negative light normally pertaining to McCarthyism and his accusations Herblock s cartoon that coined the term McCarthyism appeared less than two months after the senator s now famous February 1950 speech in Wheeling West Virginia In 1951 Ray Bradbury published The Fireman an allegory on suppression of ideas This served as the basis for Fahrenheit 451 published in 1953 168 169 Bradbury said that he wrote Fahrenheit 451 because of his concerns at the time during the McCarthy era about the threat of book burning in the United States 170 Bob Hope was one of the first comedians to make jokes about McCarthy During his 1952 Christmas show Hope made a joke about Santa Claus writing to let Joe McCarthy know he was going to wear his red suit despite the Red Scare Hope continued to offer McCarthy jokes as they were well received by most people although he did receive some hate mail In 1953 the popular daily comic strip Pogo introduced the character Simple J Malarkey a pugnacious and conniving wildcat with an unmistakable physical resemblance to McCarthy After a worried Rhode Island newspaper editor protested to the syndicate that provided the strip creator Walt Kelly began depicting the Malarkey character with a bag over his head concealing his features The explanation was that Malarkey was hiding from a Rhode Island Red hen a clear reference to the controversy over the Malarkey character 171 In 1953 playwright Arthur Miller published The Crucible suggesting the Salem witch trials were analogous to McCarthyism 172 As his fame grew McCarthy increasingly became the target of ridicule and parody He was impersonated by nightclub and radio impressionists and was satirized in Mad magazine on The Red Skelton Show and elsewhere Several comedy songs lampooning the senator were released in 1954 including Point of Order by Stan Freberg and Daws Butler Senator McCarthy Blues by Hal Block and unionist folk singer Joe Glazer s Joe McCarthy s Band sung to the tune of McNamara s Band Also in 1954 the radio comedy team Bob and Ray parodied McCarthy with the character Commissioner Carstairs in their soap opera spoof Mary Backstayge Noble Wife That same year the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation radio network broadcast a satire The Investigator whose title character was a clear imitation of McCarthy A recording of the show became popular in the United States and was reportedly played by President Eisenhower at cabinet meetings 173 The 1953 short story Mr Costello Hero by Theodore Sturgeon was described by noted journalist and author Paul Williams as the all time great story about Senator Joseph McCarthy who he was and how he did what he did 174 Post censure reaction Edit Mr Costello Hero was adapted in 1958 by X Minus One into a radio teleplay and broadcast on July 3 1956 175 While the radio adaptation retains much of the story it completely remakes the narrator and in fact gives him a line spoken in the original by Mr Costello himself thus changing the tone of the story considerably In a 1977 interview Sturgeon commented that it was his concerns about the ongoing McCarthy Hearings that prompted him to write the story 176 A more serious fictional portrayal of McCarthy played a central role in the 1959 novel The Manchurian Candidate by Richard Condon 177 The character of Senator John Iselin a demagogic anti communist is closely modeled on McCarthy even to the varying numbers of Communists he asserts are employed by the federal government 178 He remains a major character in the 1962 film version 179 The 1962 novel Advise and Consent by Allen Drury features an overzealous demagogue Senator Fred Van Ackerman based on McCarthy Although the fictional senator is an ultra liberal who proposes surrender to the Soviet Union his portrayal strongly resembles the popular perception of McCarthy s character and methods McCarthy was portrayed by Peter Boyle in the 1977 Emmy winning television movie Tail Gunner Joe a dramatization of McCarthy s life 180 He was portrayed by Joe Don Baker in the 1992 HBO film Citizen Cohn 181 Archival footage of McCarthy himself was used in the 2005 film Good Night and Good Luck about Edward R Murrow and the See It Now episode that challenged McCarthy 182 In the German French docu drama The Real American Joe McCarthy 2012 directed by Lutz Hachmeister McCarthy is portrayed by the British actor and comedian John Sessions 183 In Lee Daniels 2020 film The United States vs Billie Holiday McCarthy is portrayed by actor Randy Davison R E M s song Exhuming McCarthy from their 1987 album Document deals largely with McCarthy and contains sound clips from the Army McCarthy Hearings Joe McCarthy is also mentioned in Billy Joel s 1989 song We Didn t Start the Fire McCarthyism is one of the subjects of Barbara Kingsolver s novel The Lacuna 184 Reconsideration Edit McCarthy remains a controversial figure Arthur Herman popular historian and senior fellow of the Hudson Institute says that new evidence in the form of Venona decrypted Soviet messages Soviet espionage data now opened to the West and newly released transcripts of closed hearings before McCarthy s subcommittee has partially vindicated McCarthy by showing that some of his identifications of Communists were correct and the scale of Soviet espionage activities in the United States during the 1940s and 1950s was larger than many scholars had suspected 185 In Blacklisted by History The Untold Story of Senator Joe McCarthy and His Fight Against America s Enemies journalist M Stanton Evans similarly argued that evidence from the Venona documents shows significant penetration by Soviet agents 186 Historian John Earl Haynes who studied the Venona decryptions extensively challenged Herman s efforts to rehabilitate McCarthy arguing that McCarthy s attempts to make anti communism a partisan weapon actually threatened the post War anti Communist consensus thereby ultimately harming anti Communist efforts more than helping them 187 Haynes concluded that of the 159 people who were identified on lists used or referenced by McCarthy evidence only substantially proved that nine of them had aided Soviet espionage efforts while several hundred Soviet spies were actually known based on Venona and other evidence most were never named by McCarthy Haynes own view was that a number of those accused on McCarthy s lists above perhaps a majority likely posed some form of possible security risk but a significant minority of others likely did not and several were indisputably no risk at all 188 189 See also EditList of deaths through alcohol List of United States Congress members who died in office 1950 99 List of United States senators expelled or censuredReferences EditCitations Edit For a history of this period see for example Caute David 1978 The Great Fear The Anti Communist Purge Under Truman and Eisenhower New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 671 22682 7 Fried Richard M 1990 Nightmare in Red The McCarthy Era in Perspective New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 504361 8 Schrecker Ellen 1998 Many Are the Crimes McCarthyism in America Boston Little Brown ISBN 0 316 77470 7 Youngblood Denise J Shaw Tony 2014 Cinematic Cold War The American Struggle for Hearts and Minds United States of America University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0700620203 Feuerherd Peter December 2 2017 How Hollywood Thrived Through the Red Scare JSTOR Daily Retrieved July 29 2020 The American Heritage Dictionary 2000 defines McCarthyism as the practice of publicizing accusations of political disloyalty or subversion with insufficient regard to evidence and the use of unfair investigatory or accusatory methods in order to suppress opposition Webster s Third New International Dictionary Unabridged 1961 defines it as characterized chiefly by opposition to elements held to be subversive and by the use of tactics involving personal attacks on individuals by means of widely publicized indiscriminate allegations especially on the basis of unsubstantiated charges Onion Rebecca We re Never Going to Get Our Have You No Sense of Decency Sir Moment Slate July 26 2018 a b Garraty John 1989 1 001 Things Everyone Should Know About American History New York Doubleday p 24 a b O Brien Steven 1991 Santa Barbara ABC CLIO p 265 a b Connecticut Cartoonists 5 The Philosopher of Okefenokee Swamp The Comics Journal June 22 2016 Communists in Government Service McCarthy Says United States Senate History Website Retrieved March 9 2007 McDaniel Rodger E 2013 Dying for Joe McCarthy s Sins The Suicide of Wyoming Senator Lester Hunt Cody WY WordsWorth Press ISBN 978 0983027591 Simpson Alan K McDaniel Rodger 2013 Prologue Dying for Joe McCarthy s Sins The Suicide of Wyoming Senator Lester Hunt WordsWorth Press p x ISBN 978 0983027591 McDaniel Rodger Dying for Joe McCarthy s Sins McCarthy s death certificate Ted Lewis May 3 1957 Joseph McCarthy the controversial senator dies at 48 in 1957 New York Daily News Retrieved August 19 2017 Reprinted May 1 2016 a b See for example Oshinsky David M 2005 1983 A Conspiracy So Immense The World of Joe McCarthy New York Free Press pp 503 504 ISBN 0 19 515424 X Reeves Thomas C 1982 The Life and Times of Joe McCarthy A Biography New York Stein and Day pp 669 671 ISBN 1 56833 101 0 Herman Arthur 2000 Joseph McCarthy Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America s Most Hated Senator New York Free Press pp 302 303 ISBN 0 684 83625 4 Rovere Richard H 1959 Senator Joe McCarthy New York Harcourt Brace p 79 ISBN 0 520 20472 7 Joseph McCarthy Biography Appleton Public Library 2003 Retrieved November 30 2017 McCarthy as Student Archived from the original on February 28 2013 Retrieved September 7 2015 In A Conspiracy So Immense Oshinsky states that McCarthy chose Marquette University rather than the University of Wisconsin Madison partially because Marquette was under Catholic control and partially because he enrolled during the Great Depression when few working class or farm bred students had the money to go out of state for college See Oshinsky David M 2005 1983 A Conspiracy So Immense The World of Joe McCarthy New York Free Press p 11 ISBN 0 19 515424 X Oshinsky explains this p 17 as resulting partially from the financial pressures of the Great Depression He also notes p 28 that even during his judgeship McCarthy was known to have gambled heavily after hours Oshinsky David M 2005 1983 A Conspiracy So Immense The World of Joe McCarthy New York Free Press pp 17 28 ISBN 0 19 515424 X Judge on Trial McCarthy A Documented Record The Progressive April 1954 Archived May 11 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Wisconsin Legislative Reference Library 1940 The Wisconsin Blue Book Wisconsin Blue Books Madison WI State of Wisconsin Commire Anne 1994 Historic World Leaders North amp South America M Z Gale Research Incorporated p 492 ISBN 978 0810384132 Herman Arthur 2000 Joseph McCarthy Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America s Most Hated Senator The Free Press A Division of Simon and Schuster p 26 ISBN 978 0684836256 Morgan Ted 2003 Reds McCarthyism In Twentieth Century America New York Random House p 328 ISBN 0 679 44399 1 In turn citing Michael O Brien McCarthy And McCarthyism in Wisconsin Columbia Mo 1980 Oshinsky David M 2005 1983 A Conspiracy So Immense The World of Joe McCarthy Oxford University Press p 24 ISBN 0 19 515424 X Morgan Ted 2003 Reds McCarthyism In Twentieth Century America New York Random House p 330 ISBN 0 679 44399 1 Oshinsky David M 2005 1983 A Conspiracy So Immense The World of Joe McCarthy Oxford University Press p 27 ISBN 0 19 515424 X Ryan James G Schlup Leonard 2006 Historical Dictionary of the 1940s M E Sharpe Inc p 245 ISBN 978 0765621078 Belknap Michal R 2004 The Vinson Court Justices Rulings and Legacy Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO p 214 ISBN 978 1 85109 542 1 O Connell Aaron B 2012 Underdogs The Making of the Modern Marine Corps Cambridge Harvard University Press p 109 ISBN 978 0 674 05827 9 Herman Arthur 2000 Joseph McCarthy Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America s Most Hated Senator The Free Press A Division of Simon and Schuster p 33 ISBN 978 0684836256 Morgan Ted 2004 Reds McCarthyism in Twentieth Century America Random House p 420 ISBN 978 0812973020 Morgan Ted 2003 Reds McCarthyism In Twentieth Century America New York Random House p 338 ISBN 0 679 44399 1 Morgan again cites Michael O Brien writing in McCarthy And McCarthyism in Wisconsin Oshinsky describes the nickname Tail Gunner Joe as the result of McCarthy s wish to break the record for most live ammunition discharged in a single mission Oshinsky David M 2005 1983 A Conspiracy So Immense The World of Joe McCarthy Oxford University Press p 32 ISBN 0 19 515424 X Morgan Ted 2003 Reds McCarthyism in Twentieth Century America New York Random House p 341 ISBN 978 0 8129 7302 0 Mundt Karl Chairman June 17 1954 Testimony of Hon Joseph R McCarthy a United States Senator from the State of Wisconsin Special Senate Investigation on Charges Involving Secretary of the Army Robert T Stevens John G Adams H Struve Hensel and Senator Joe McCarthy Roy M Cohn and Francis P Carr Washington DC U S Government Printing Office p 2888 via Google Books Reds McCarthyism in Twentieth Century America Giblin James Cross 2009 The Rise and Fall of Senator Joe McCarthy Boston Clarion Books p 34 ISBN 978 0 618 61058 7 Carrier Jerry 2014 Tapestry The History and Consequences of America s Complex Culture New York Algora Publishing p 232 ISBN 978 1 62894 048 0 a b The Rise and Fall of Senator Joe McCarthy Tapestry The History and Consequences of America s Complex Culture a b Herman Arthur 1999 Joseph McCarthy Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America s Most Hated Senator Free Press p 264 ISBN 0 684 83625 4 Morgan Ted November December 2003 Judge Joe How The Youngest Judge In Wisconsin s History Became The Country s Most Notorious Senator Legal Affairs Retrieved August 2 2006 Underdogs The Making of the Modern Marine Corps Rovere Richard H 1959 Senator Joe McCarthy University of California Press pp 97 102 ISBN 0 520 20472 7 McCarthy The Man the Senator the Ism Boston Beacon Press 1952 pp 101 105 Beichman Arnold February March 2006 The Politics of Personal Self Destruction Policy Review Archived from the original on March 12 2008 Retrieved February 25 2008 Herman Arthur 2000 Joseph McCarthy Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America s Most Hated Senator Free Press p 233 ISBN 0 684 83625 4 Memorandum of understanding about McCarthy and a besieged army Life Time Inc March 8 1954 p 28 Hersh Burton 2007 Bobby and J Edgar The Historic Face Off Between the Kennedys and J Edgar Hoover that Transformed America Carroll amp Graf ISBN 9780786731855 Joseph McCarthy FBI File part 3 of 56 part 2 of 28 FBI Records The Vault C A Tripp also mentions this incident in his book The Homosexual Matrix Tripp describes McCarthy as predominantly homosexual The allegation is specifically rejected in Rovere Richard H 1959 Senator Joe McCarthy University of California Press p 68 ISBN 0 520 20472 7 Talbot David 2015 The Devil s Chessboard Allen Dulles the CIA and the Rise of America s Secret Government Harper Oshinsky David 2019 A Conspiracy So Immense The World of Joe McCarthy Free Press This Day in History Joseph McCarthy Dies History com New York A amp E Television Networks LLC 2018 Herman Arthur 1999 Joseph McCarthy Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America s Most Hated Senator Free Press pp 44 51 55 ISBN 0 684 83625 4 Herman Arthur 2000 Joseph McCarthy Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America s Most Hated Senator Free Press p 53 ISBN 0 684 83625 4 Reeves Thomas C 1982 The Life and Times of Joe McCarthy A Biography Madison Books pp 116 119 ISBN 1 56833 101 0 Herman Arthur 2000 Joseph McCarthy Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America s Most Hated Senator Free Press pp 54 55 ISBN 0 684 83625 4 Herman Arthur 1999 Joseph McCarthy Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America s Most Hated Senator Free Press p 51 ISBN 0 684 83625 4 a b The Press The Man in the Middle Time May 24 1954 Retrieved February 2 2022 a b c d Tye Larry July August 2020 When Senator Joe McCarthy Defended Nazis Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved January 24 2021 Griffith Robert 1970 The Politics of Fear Joseph R McCarthy and the Senate University of Massachusetts Press p 49 ISBN 0 87023 555 9 Phillips Steve 2001 5 In Martin Collier Erica Lewis ed The Cold War Heinemann Advanced History Oxford Heinemann Educational Publishers p 65 ISBN 0 435 32736 4 Retrieved December 1 2008 Congressional Record 81st Congress 2nd Session West Virginia Division of Culture and History February 20 1950 Archived from the original on September 25 2009 Retrieved August 11 2006 Cook Fred J 1971 The Nightmare Decade The Life and Times of Senator Joe McCarthy Random House pp 155 156 ISBN 0 394 46270 X McCarthy says communists are in State Department History Retrieved January 17 2020 Andrew Glass McCarthy targets communists in government Feb 9 1950 Politico Retrieved January 17 2020 Swanson Richard 1977 McCarthyism in Utah Master s thesis Brigham Young University Also reported as up to 8 hours in length Reeves Thomas C 1982 The Life and Times of Joe McCarthy A Biography Madison Books p 227 ISBN 1 56833 101 0 Griffith Robert 1970 The Politics of Fear Joseph R McCarthy and the Senate University of Massachusetts Press p 55 ISBN 0 87023 555 9 Griffith Robert 1970 The Politics of Fear Joseph R McCarthy and the Senate University of Massachusetts Press p 56 ISBN 0 87023 555 9 David M Barrett CIA and Congress The Untold Story from Truman to Kennedy Lawrence University Press of Kansas 2005 p 65 Congressional Record 81st Congress 2nd session pp 2062 2068 quoted in Reeves Thomas C 1982 The Life and Times of Joe McCarthy A Biography Madison Books p 243 ISBN 1 56833 101 0 Oshinsky David M 2005 1983 A Conspiracy So Immense The World of Joe McCarthy Oxford University Press p 119 ISBN 0 19 515424 X Griffith Robert 1970 The Politics of Fear Joseph R McCarthy and the Senate University of Massachusetts Press p 101 ISBN 0 87023 555 9 Fried Richard M 1990 Nightmare in Red The McCarthy Era in Perspective Oxford University Press p 128 ISBN 0 19 504361 8 a b David M Barrett CIA and Congress The Untold Story from Truman to Kennedy Lawrence University Press of Kansas 2005 p 67 William N Eskridge Privacy Jurisprudence and the Apartheid of the Closet 1946 1961 Florida State University Law Review 23 no 4 Summer 1997 quoted in David M Barrett CIA and Congress The Untold Story from Truman to Kennedy Lawrence University Press of Kansas 2005 p 70 David M Barrett CIA and Congress The Untold Story from Truman to Kennedy Lawrence University Press of Kansas 2005 p 70 Hillenkoetter Testimony 7 14 50 CIS Unpublished U S Senate Committee Hearings on Microfiche Washington D C Congressional Information Service quoted in David M Barrett CIA and Congress The Untold Story from Truman to Kennedy Lawrence University Press of Kansas 2005 p 79 David M Barrett CIA and Congress The Untold Story from Truman to Kennedy Lawrence University Press of Kansas 2005 p 80 Oshinsky David M 2005 1983 A Conspiracy So Immense The World of Joe McCarthy Oxford University Press p 175 ISBN 0 19 515424 X The Official United States Congressional Daily Digest Records Government Publishing Office Thomas Library Official Repository Library Local Bakersfield California CSUB 2009 1946 pp 8 79th Congress 3rd Session Date August 2 1946 Congressional Records House p 10749 The United States Constitution Government Publishing Office Thomas Library Official Repository Library Local Bakersfield California CSUB 2009 1782 p 10 Cook Fred J 1971 The Nightmare Decade The Life and Times of Senator Joe McCarthy Random House pp 150 151 ISBN 0 394 46270 X Cook Fred J 1971 The Nightmare Decade The Life and Times of Senator Joe McCarthy Random House p 316 ISBN 0 394 46270 X Herman Arthur 2000 Joseph McCarthy Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America s Most Hated Senator Free Press p 131 ISBN 0 684 83625 4 a b c McCarthy Joseph 1951 Major Speeches and Debates of Senator Joe McCarthy Delivered in the United States Senate 1950 1951 Gordon Press pp 264 307 215 ISBN 0 87968 308 2 Oshinsky David M 2005 1983 A Conspiracy So Immense The World of Joe McCarthy Oxford University Press p 194 ISBN 0 19 515424 X Crosby Donald F 1978 God Church and Flag Senator Joseph R McCarthy and the Catholic Church 1950 1957 University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 1312 5 Crosby Donald F 1978 God Church and Flag Senator Joseph R McCarthy and the Catholic Church 1950 1957 University of North Carolina Press pp 200 67 ISBN 0 8078 1312 5 Morrow Lance 1978 The Best Year of Their Lives Kennedy Johnson And Nixon in 1948 Perseus Books Group p 4 ISBN 0 465 04724 6 Bogle Lori 2001 Cold War Espionage and Spying Routledge p 129 ISBN 0 8153 3241 6 a b Tye Larry 2016 Bobby Kennedy The Making of a Liberal Icon New York Random House p 68 ISBN 978 0812993349 via Electronic version It is unclear where the rumor began about McCarthy being godfather to Bobby s firstborn Kathleen Authors and journalists echoed it enough that they stopped footnoting it but they continued citing it as the clearest sign of how close Kennedy was to McCarthy Even Kathleen s mother Ethel who recently asked if it was true said He was I think he was Kathleen who would enter politics herself and knew firsthand the stigma of being associated with Joe McCarthy has no idea where the rumor came from but double checked her christening certificate in order to confirm that it was false It s bizarro she says adding that her actual godfather was Daniel Walsh a professor at Manhattanville College of the Sacred Heart Ethel s alma mater and a counselor to the Catholic poet and mystic Thomas Merton Oshinsky David M 2005 1983 A Conspiracy So Immense The World of Joe McCarthy Oxford University Press p 240 ISBN 0 19 515424 X Reeves Thomas C 1982 The Life and Times of Joe McCarthy A Biography Madison Books p 443 ISBN 1 56833 101 0 The Kennedys Archived February 27 2010 at the Wayback Machine American Experience Boston Massachusetts WGBH TV 2009 a b Johnson Haynes 2005 The Age of Anxiety McCarthyism to Terrorism Harcourt p 250 ISBN 0 15 101062 5 Leamer Laurence 2001 The Kennedy Men 1901 1963 HarperCollins p 346 ISBN 0 688 16315 7 a b Wicker Tom 2002 Dwight D Eisenhower The American Presidents Series Times Books p 15 ISBN 0 8050 6907 0 Griffith Robert 1970 The Politics of Fear Joseph R McCarthy and the Senate University of Massachusetts Press pp 188 ISBN 0 87023 555 9 Oshinsky David M 2005 1983 A Conspiracy So Immense The World of Joe McCarthy Oxford University Press p 259 ISBN 0 19 515424 X Oshinsky David M 2005 1983 A Conspiracy So Immense The World of Joe McCarthy Oxford University Press p 244 ISBN 0 19 515424 X All quotes in this paragraph Fried Albert 1997 McCarthyism The Great American Red Scare A Documentary History Oxford University Press pp 182 184 ISBN 0 19 509701 7 Fried Albert 1996 McCarthyism The Great American Red Scare A Documentary History Oxford University Press p 179 ISBN 0 19 509701 7 Powers Richard Gid 1998 Not Without Honor The History of American Anticommunism Yale University Press p 263 ISBN 0 300 07470 0 Parmet Herbert S 1998 Eisenhower and the American Crusades Transaction Publishers pp 248 337 577 ISBN 0 7658 0437 9 Fried Richard M 1990 Nightmare in Red The McCarthy Era in Perspective Oxford University Press p 134 ISBN 0 19 504361 8 See Transcripts Executive Sessions under Primary sources below Collins Susan Levin Carl 2003 Preface PDF Executive Sessions of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations U S Government Printing Office Retrieved December 19 2006 a b Heil Alan L 2003 Voice of America A History Columbia University Press p 53 ISBN 0 231 12674 3 Griffith Robert 1970 The Politics of Fear Joseph R McCarthy and the Senate University of Massachusetts Press p 216 ISBN 0 87023 555 9 Ike Milton and the McCarthy Battle Dwight D Eisenhower Memorial Commission Archived from the original on June 15 2006 Retrieved August 9 2006 Reds and Our Churches Matthews via Google Search Reds in Our Churches Matthews via Google Search Griffith Robert 1970 The Politics of Fear Joseph R McCarthy and the Senate University of Massachusetts Press p 233 ISBN 0 87023 555 9 Stone 2004 Perilous Times Free Speech in Wartime from the Sedition Act of 1798 to the War on Terrorism W W Norton amp Co ISBN 0 393 05880 8 Barnes Bart November 18 2014 Irving Peress dentist who was subject of Sen Joseph McCarthy s hearings dies at 97 Washington Post Washington DC Schwarz Frederick D 1954 50 Years Ago The Demagogue s Downfall American Heritage November December 2004 Retrieved November 30 2017 U S Senate The Censure Case of Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin 1954 Retrieved July 27 2020 Karl E Mundt Senator et al Report no 2507 pursuant to Senate Resolution 189 Washington DC U S Government Printing Office 30 Aug 1954 80 Online at books google com books id Nh64jR1OzjUC amp pg RA245 PA80 Morgan Ted 2004 Reds McCarthyism in Twentieth Century America Random House p 489 ISBN 0 8129 7302 X Streitmatter Rodger 1998 Mightier Than the Sword How the News Media Have Shaped American History Westview Press p 167 ISBN 0 8133 3211 7 Powers Richard Gid 1998 Not Without Honor The History of American Anticommunism Yale University Press p 271 ISBN 0 300 07470 0 Fried Richard M 1990 Nightmare in Red The McCarthy Era in Perspective Oxford University Press p 138 ISBN 0 19 504361 8 Griffith Robert 1970 The Politics of Fear Joseph R McCarthy and the Senate University of Massachusetts Press p 264 ISBN 0 87023 555 9 Cook Fred J 1971 The Nightmare Decade The Life and Times of Senator Joe McCarthy Random House p 536 ISBN 0 394 46270 X About McCarthy Time July 19 1954 Archived from the original on February 4 2013 Retrieved December 18 2006 June 9 1954 Have You No Sense of Decency United States Senate Archived from the original on May 13 2021 Retrieved May 19 2021 Oshinsky David M 2005 1983 A Conspiracy So Immense The World of Joe McCarthy Oxford University Press p 459 ISBN 0 19 515424 X Oshinsky David M 2005 1983 A Conspiracy So Immense The World of Joe McCarthy Oxford University Press p 464 ISBN 0 19 515424 X Transcript See it Now A Report on Senator Joseph R McCarthy CBS TV March 9 1954 Retrieved February 15 2015 Burns Eric 2010 Invasion of the Mind Snatchers Television s Conquest of America in the Fifties Philadelphia Temple University Press p 175 ISBN 978 1 4399 0288 2 Transcript See it Now A Report on Senator Joseph R McCarthy CBS TV March 9 1954 Retrieved March 9 2008 Joseph Wershba March 4 1979 Murrow vs McCarthy The New York Times Retrieved August 19 2017 CBS said it was the greatest spontaneous response in the history of broadcasting 12 348 telephone calls and telegrams in the first few hours 11 567 of these supported Murrow Transcript Senator Joseph R McCarthy Reply to Edward R Murrow See It Now CBS TV April 6 1954 Retrieved February 15 2009 a b David P Thelen and Esther S Thelen Joe Must Go The Movement to Recall Senator Joseph R McCarthy Wisconsin Magazine of History vol 45 no 3 Spring 1966 185 209 Polsby Nelson W October 1962 Towards an Explanation of McCarthyism Political Studies 8 3 252 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9248 1960 tb01144 x S2CID 147198989 Wallace Patricia Ward 1995 Politics of Conscience A Biography of Margaret Chase Smith Praeger Trade p 109 ISBN 0 275 95130 8 Flanders Ralph 1961 Senator from Vermont Boston Little Brown Text of Flanders s speech March 9 1959 Archived from the original on November 27 2007 Woods Randall Bennett 1995 Fulbright A Biography Cambridge University Press p 187 ISBN 0 521 48262 3 Griffith Robert 1970 The Politics of Fear Joseph R McCarthy and the Senate University of Massachusetts Press pp 277 et seq ISBN 0 87023 555 9 Rovere Richard H 1959 Senator Joe McCarthy University of California Press pp 229 230 ISBN 0 520 20472 7 Senate Resolution 301 Censure of Senator Joseph McCarthy HistoricalDocuments com Retrieved March 9 2008 United States Senate Historical Office The Censure Case of Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin 1954 Retrieved January 4 2010 Oshinsky 1983 2005 pp 33 490 Michael O Brien John F Kennedy A Biography 2005 pp 250 254 274 279 396 400 Reeves 1982 pp 442 443 Thomas Maier The Kennedys America s Emerald Kings 2003 pp 270 280 Crosby God Church and Flag 138 160 Griffith Robert 1970 The Politics of Fear Joseph R McCarthy and the Senate University of Massachusetts Press p 310 ISBN 0 87023 555 9 Senate Report 104 137 Resolution For Disciplinary Action Library of Congress 1995 Retrieved October 19 2006 permanent dead link Rovere Richard H 1959 Senator Joe McCarthy University of California Press p 231 ISBN 0 520 20472 7 Thomas Evan 1991 The Man to See New York Simon amp Schuster pp 76 77 ISBN 978 0 671 68934 6 Griffith Robert 1970 The Politics of Fear Joseph R McCarthy and the Senate Amherst Massachusetts University of Massachusetts Press p 318 ISBN 0 87023 555 9 Fried Richard M 1990 Nightmare in Red The McCarthy Era in Perspective Oxford Oxford University Press p 141 ISBN 0 19 504361 8 Graebner Norman A 1956 The New Isolationism A Study in Politics and Foreign Policy since 1950 New York City Ronald Press p 227 Eisler Kim Isaac 1993 A Justice for All William J Brennan Jr and the Decisions That Transformed America New York Simon amp Schuster p 119 ISBN 978 0 671 76787 7 Cook Fred J 1971 The Nightmare Decade The Life and Times of Senator Joe McCarthy New York City Random House p 537 ISBN 0 394 46270 X Rovere Richard H 1959 Senator Joe McCarthy Berkely California University of California Press pp 244 245 ISBN 0 520 20472 7 a b c d Hari Johann January 15 2015 Chasing the Scream The First and Last Days of the War on Drugs London Bloomsbury pp 289 290 ISBN 978 1 4088 5782 3 OCLC 881418255 Cheshire Maxine December 1978 Drugs and Washington D C Ladies Home Journal Vol 95 OCLC 33261187 Retrieved December 17 2017 The Real American Joe McCarthy 2012 documentary Joseph McCarthy Photographs The Funeral Archived from the original on February 5 2012 Retrieved July 18 2014 Nichols John July 31 2007 In 1957 a McCarthy free morning in America The Capital Times Archived from the original on April 5 2009 Thomma Steven April 1 2010 Not satisfied with U S history some conservatives rewrite it McClatchy Newspapers Archived from the original on April 2 2010 Retrieved April 1 2010 House Un American Activities Committee infoplease com Retrieved January 17 2017 A Bruin Birthday Tribute To Ray Bradbury Tweet August 22 2010 First Spark Ray Bradbury Turns 90 The Universe and UCLA Academy Celebrate Spotlight ucla edu Archived from the original on October 5 2011 Retrieved September 30 2011 Asimov Issac Bradbury Ray Campbell John W December 4 1956 Ticket to the Moon tribute to SciFi mp3 Biography in Sound Narrated by Norman Rose NBC Radio News 27 10 27 30 Retrieved February 2 2017 I wrote this book at a time when I was worried about the way things were going in this country four years ago Too many people were afraid of their shadows there was a threat of book burning Many of the books were being taken off the shelves at that time Johnston Amy E Boyle May 30 2007 Ray Bradbury Fahrenheit 451 Misinterpreted LA Weekly website Archived from the original on September 2 2013 Retrieved August 3 2013 Georgia State Possum Netstate com September 18 2014 Retrieved December 22 2014 Blakesley 1992 xv Doherty Thomas 2005 Cold War Cool Medium Television McCarthyism and American Culture Columbia University Press p 213 ISBN 978 0 231 12953 4 Williams Paul 1976 Theodore Sturgeon Storyteller Retrieved February 28 2016 Mr Costello Hero X Minus One Retrieved May 25 2020 Paul Williams ed 2000 A Saucer of Loneliness Vol VII The Complete Stories of Theodore Sturgeon Berkeley North Atlantic Books pp 384 385 ISBN 1 55643 424 3 Retrieved February 28 2016 Welsh James Michael Lev Peter 2007 The Literature film Reader Issues of Adaptation Plymouth UK Scarecrow Press p 205 ISBN 978 0 8108 5949 4 Sachleben Mark Yenerall Kevan M 2008 Seeing the Bigger Picture Understanding Politics Through Film amp Television New York Peter Lang Publishing p 64 ISBN 978 0 8204 7144 0 DiMare Philip C 2011 Movies in American History An Encyclopedia Volume 1 Santa Barbara ABC CLIO Inc p 325 ISBN 978 1 59884 296 8 Miller Stephen December 14 2006 Peter Boyle 71 Character Actor Played Psychotics and Monsters New York Sun Citizen Woods James Woods Rips Roy Cohn the Press and His Own Image Los Angeles Times August 16 1992 LaSalle Mick October 7 2005 Newsman Challenges a Powerful Politician San Francisco Chronicle Dorothy Rabinowitz A Name That Lives in Infamy Wall Street Journal 23 November 2012 The Lacuna By Barbara Kingsolver The Independent November 13 2009 Archived from the original on June 17 2022 Retrieved February 13 2017 Herman Arthur 2000 Joseph McCarthy Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America s Most Hated Senator Free Press pp 5 6 ISBN 0 684 83625 4 Evans M Stanton 2009 Blacklisted by History The Untold Story of Senator Joe McCarthy and His Fight Against America s Enemies New York City Three Rivers Press ISBN 978 1 4000 8106 6 Haynes John Earl February 2000 Exchange with Arthur Herman and Venona book talk Retrieved July 11 2007 Haynes John Earl 2006 Senator Joseph McCarthy s Lists and Venona Retrieved August 31 2006 Haynes John Earl Klehr Harvey 2000 Venona Decoding Soviet Espionage in America New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 08462 5 Primary sources Edit Adams John G 1983 Without Precedent The Story of the Death of McCarthyism W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 30230 X Censure of Senator Joseph McCarthy 1954 The United States Department of State Archived from the original on November 20 2007 Retrieved June 2 2009 Fried Albert 1996 McCarthyism The Great American Red Scare A Documentary History Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 509701 7 Harry S Truman Presidential Library and Museum Retrieved August 11 2006 McCarthy Joseph 1951 Major Speeches and Debates of Senator Joe McCarthy Delivered in the United States Senate 1950 1951 Gordon Press ISBN 0 87968 308 2 McCarthy Joseph 1951 America s Retreat from Victory the Story of George Catlett Marshall Devin Adair ISBN 0 8159 5004 7 McCarthy Joseph 1952 Fight for America Devin Adair ISBN 0 405 09960 6 Edward R Murrow amp Fred W Friendly Producers 1991 Edward R Murrow The McCarthy Years DVD from See it Now TV News show CBS News Docudrama Senate Committee Transcripts 107th Congress Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Archived from the original on July 16 2006 Retrieved August 11 2006 Transcripts Executive Sessions of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations U S Government Printing Office 2003 Retrieved December 19 2006 Watkins Arthur Vivian 1969 Enough Rope The inside story of the censure of Senator Joe McCarthy Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 283101 5 Secondary sources Edit Anderson Jack and May Ronald W 1952 McCarthy the man the Senator the ism Beacon Press Bayley Edwin R 1981 Joe McCarthy and the Press University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 0 299 08624 0 Belfrage Cedric 1989 The American Inquisition 1945 1960 A Profile of the McCarthy Era Thunder s Mouth Press ISBN 0 938410 87 3 Buckley William F 1954 McCarthy and His Enemies The Record and Its Meaning Regnery Publishing ISBN 0 89526 472 2 Caballero Raymond McCarthyism vs Clinton Jencks Norman University of Oklahoma Press 2019 Crosby Donald F The Jesuits and Joe McCarthy Church History 1977 46 3 374 388 ISSN 0009 6407 Fulltext in Jstor Daynes Gary 1997 Making Villains Making Heroes Joseph R McCarthy Martin Luther King Jr and the Politics of American Memory Taylor amp Francis ISBN 0 8153 2992 X Freeland Richard M 1985 The Truman Doctrine and the Origins of McCarthyism Foreign Policy Domestic Politics and Internal Security 1946 1948 New York University Press ISBN 0 8147 2576 7 Fried Richard M 1977 Men Against McCarthy Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 08360 2 Gauger Michael Flickering Images Live Television Coverage and Viewership of the Army McCarthy Hearings Historian 2005 67 4 678 693 ISSN 0018 2370 Fulltext in Swetswise Ingenta and Ebsco Audience ratings show that few people watched the hearings Latham Earl 1969 Communist Controversy in Washington From the New Deal to McCarthy Macmillan Publishing Company ISBN 0 689 70121 7 Luthin Reinhard H 1954 Joseph McCarthy Wisconsin American Demagogues Twentieth Century Beacon Press ASIN B0007DN37C OCLC 1098334 Morgan Ted November December 2003 Judge Joe How the youngest judge in Wisconsin s history became the country s most notorious senator Legal Affairs O Brien Michael 1980 McCarthy and McCarthyism in Wisconsin Olympic Marketing Corp ISBN 0 8262 0319 1 Ranville Michael 1996 To Strike at a King The Turning Point in the McCarthy Witch Hunt Momentum Books Limited ISBN 1 879094 53 3 Reeves Thomas C Spring 1997 The Search for Joe McCarthy Wisconsin Magazine of History 60 3 185 196 Rosteck Thomas 1994 See It Now Confronts McCarthyism Television Documentary and the Politics of Representation University of Alabama Press ISBN 0 8173 5191 4 Strout Lawrence N 1999 Covering McCarthyism How the Christian Science Monitor Handled Joseph R McCarthy 1950 1954 Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 31091 2 Tye Larry 2020 Demagogue The Life and Long Shadow of Senator Joe McCarthy New York Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 1328959720 Wicker Tom 2006 Shooting Star The Brief Arc of Joe McCarthy Harcourt ISBN 0 15 101082 X External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Joseph McCarthy Wikiquote has quotations related to Joseph McCarthy United States Congress Joseph McCarthy id M000315 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Papa Prell s radio broadcast on Tail Gunner Joe including taped segments from the trial The McCarthy Welch exchange Joseph McCarthy Papers Marquette University Library A film clip Longines Chronoscope with Sen Joseph McCarthy June 25 1952 is available at the Internet Archive A film clip Longines Chronoscope with Sen Joseph McCarthy September 29 1952 is available at the Internet Archive Documents on McCarthyism at the Dwight D Eisenhower Presidential Library The Redhunter a novel based on the life and times of Senator Joe McCarthy by William F Buckley Jr Party political officesPreceded byFred Clausen Republican nominee for U S Senator from Wisconsin Class 1 1946 1952 Succeeded byWalter J Kohler Jr U S SenatePreceded byRobert M La Follette Jr U S Senator Class 1 from Wisconsin1947 1957 Served alongside Alexander Wiley Succeeded byWilliam ProxmirePreceded byJohn L McClellan Chair of Senate Government Operations Committee1953 1955 Succeeded byJohn L McClellanHonorary titlesPreceded byWilliam Knowland Baby of the Senate1947 1948 Succeeded byRussell B Long Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joseph McCarthy amp oldid 1138577396, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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