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Lucius D. Clay

General Lucius Dubignon Clay (April 23, 1898 – April 16, 1978) was a senior officer of the United States Army who was known for his administration of occupied Germany after World War II.[1] He served as the deputy to General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1945; deputy military governor, Germany, in 1946; Commander in Chief, United States Forces in Europe and military governor of the United States Zone, Germany, from 1947 to 1949. Clay orchestrated the Berlin Airlift (1948–1949) when the USSR blockaded West Berlin.

Lucius D. Clay
Birth nameLucius D. Clay
Nickname(s)The Great Uncompromiser
Born(1898-04-23)April 23, 1898[1]
Marietta, Georgia, U.S.
DiedApril 16, 1978(1978-04-16) (aged 79)
Chatham, Massachusetts, U.S.
Buried
AllegianceUnited States
Service/branchUnited States Army
Years of service1918–1949
RankGeneral
Commands heldEuropean Command
Normandy Base Section
Battles/warsWorld War II
AwardsArmy Distinguished Service Medal (3)
Legion of Merit
Bronze Star Medal
RelationsAlexander S. Clay (father)
Lucius D. Clay Jr. (son)
Frank B. Clay (son)
Eugene H. Clay (brother)
Henry Clay (ancestor)

Early life

 
At West Point in 1918

Clay was born on April 23, 1898,[1] in Marietta, Georgia, the sixth and last child of Alexander S. Clay, who served in the United States Senate from 1897 to 1910. In 1918 Clay graduated from West Point, where he later taught.

Early career

Clay held various civil and military engineering posts in the 1920s and 1930s, such as directing the construction of dams and civilian airports. Because Clay's work involved large government projects, he became closely acquainted with the people and workings of the federal agencies and Congress. He achieved close working relationships with an associate of President Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Hopkins, and with House Majority Leader and Speaker Sam Rayburn. In Rayburn's state of Texas, Clay supervised the building of the Denison Dam. At the time of its completion, in 1943, the largest earthen dam in the world. From 1940 to the December 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, Clay selected and supervised the construction of 450 airports, which were the foundation of America's civil aviation network.[2]

World War II

By March 1942, Clay had risen to the position of being the youngest brigadier general in the army, a month short of his 44th birthday. All the while, he had acquired a reputation for bringing order and operational efficiency out of chaos, and for being an exceptionally hard and disciplined worker, who went long hours and "considered lunch a waste of time".[3]

Clay did not see actual combat but was awarded the Legion of Merit in 1942 and the Army Distinguished Service Medal in 1944 and received the Bronze Star Medal for his action in stabilizing the French harbor of Cherbourg, which was critical to the flow of war matériel. In 1945, he served as deputy to General Dwight Eisenhower. The following year, he was made Deputy Governor of Germany during the Allied Military Government.

Clay would later remark regarding the occupation directive guiding his and Eisenhower's actions that "there was no doubt that JCS 1067 contemplated the Carthaginian peace which dominated our operations in Germany during the early months of occupation."[4]

OMGUS and Cold War

 
Clay with General of the Army Eisenhower at Gatow Airport in Berlin during the Potsdam Conference in 1945

Clay was promoted to lieutenant general on 17 April 1945 and to general on 17 March 1947.

Clay heavily influenced US Secretary of State James F. Byrnes' September 1946 speech in Stuttgart, Germany. The speech, "Restatement of Policy on Germany," marked the formal transition in American occupation policy away from the Morgenthau Plan of economic dismantlement to one of economic reconstruction.[5]

On March 15, 1947, Clay succeeded Joseph T. McNarney as military governor (or "high commissioner"[6]) of the US zone of occupied Germany—the head of the OMGUS, the "Office of Military Government, United States." Clay's responsibilities covered a wide spectrum of social issues related to Germany's recovery from the war in addition to strictly military issues.[7] He commissioned Lewis H. Brown to research and write "A Report on Germany", which served as a detailed recommendation for the reconstruction of postwar Germany and served as a basis for the Marshall Plan. Clay promoted democratic federalism in Germany and resisted US politicians who sought to undo a constitution that a Constituent Assembly in Bavaria had adopted on 26 October 1946.[8] He also closed the borders of the American Zone in 1947 to stem the tide of Jewish refugees that was generating tension with the local populations.[9]

Treatment of Nazis during governorship

Clay was responsible for the controversial commuting of some death sentences, such as convicted Nazi war criminals Erwin Metz and his superior, Hauptmann Ludwig Merz. Metz and Merz were two notorious figures of the Berga concentration camp in which 350 U.S. POWs were beaten, tortured, starved, and forced to work for the German government during World War II. The soldiers were singled out for looking or sounding Jewish. At least 70 U.S. POWs soldiers died in the camp and on a death march near the end of the war. The commutation was partly due to the military botching the case. Prosecutors did not summon a single witness, despite dozens of witnesses saying they were willing to testify.[10][11]

Clay also reduced the sentence of Ilse Koch, the "Beast of Buchenwald," who had been convicted of murder at the Nuremberg trials and who had infamously been accused of having gloves and lampshades made from prisoners' skin. Clay later said he commuted Koch's sentence since none of the documents about Koch actually mentioned the fact or included any evidence of her committing murder. The reductions in sentences were based on the hasty convictions of some Buchenwald personnel following the end of the war. Evidence was sometimes questionable, and many witnesses claimed to have been beaten by Allied interrogators.[12] Clay confirmed several death sentences as valid, commuted several, and had some like Koch released after they had served a reduced sentence because of questionable evidence.[13] Under the pressure of public opinion, Koch was rearrested in 1949, tried before a West German court, and, on 15 January 1951, sentenced to life imprisonment.

According to BBC journalist, Tom Bower, despite Clay's mixed record, he was one of only two prominent American and British officials, the other being British diplomat Patrick Dean, who were both competent and seemed genuinely interest in denazification.[14] According to Donald Bloxham, Clay's influence was crucial to American occupation authorities prosecuting major Nazi war criminals on their own in the Subsequent Nuremberg trials.[15]

In 1946, Clay announced to West German officials that he was disappointed with their results from denazification tribunals:

"I do not see how you can demonstrate your ability for self-government nor your will for democracy if you are going to evade or shirk the first unpleasant and difficult task that falls upon you. Unless there is real and rapid improvement, I can only assume that German administration is unwilling to accept this responsibility."[16]

The results temporarily improved after Clay gave them 60 days to make improvements.[16] In late 1948, Clay admitted he did not enjoy, in his position as Military Governor, having to regularly "sign many death warrants and to approve many life imprisonments." Nevertheless, he was willing to and did approve most death sentences imposed by American military tribunals. He also approved all but one of the sentences imposed in the Subsequent Nuremberg trials.[17]

Near the end of the occupation, Clay openly admitted his hopes for denazification were failing.[18] In June 1948, a blanket stay of execution had been granted to all of the Nazi war criminals on death row in the U.S. occupation zone. This came after false allegations of torture were propagated by several politicians in the United States, especially Senator Joseph McCarthy. In October 1948, however, the stay was removed for nearly everyone, excluding those convicted in the Malmedy massacre trial.[19] Upon the lifting of the stay, Clay embarked on a spate of last-minute mass executions. In response, the German Catholic priests started objecting to not only the executions, but the prosecutions of war criminals outright. However, their pleas failed to convince Clay to halt the executions. Between October 1948 and March 1949, over 100 Nazi war criminals convicted by U.S. military tribunals were hanged at Landsberg Prison.[20][21][22]

Berlin Airlift

 
Clay on the cover of Time (July 12, 1948)

On June 26, 1948, two days after the Soviets imposed the Berlin Blockade, Clay gave the order for the Berlin Airlift, which was only later authorized by President Harry Truman.[7] That was an act of defiance against the Soviets, an incredible feat of logistics[23] (at one point, cargo planes landed at Tempelhof every four minutes, 24 hours a day), a defining moment of the Cold War, and a demonstration of American support for the citizens of Berlin.

Clay is remembered for ordering and maintaining the airlift, which would ultimately last 324 days and ended on September 30, 1949. He resigned his post days after the blockade had been lifted on May 12, 1949.

Later career

On May 15, 1949, Clay left Germany and was replaced by John McCloy as civilian high commissioner for Germany. Clay retired from the Army at the end of the month. In the same year, he was elected as an honorary member of the North Carolina Society of the Cincinnati. In 1950, he became the chairman of the Continental Can Company for 12 consecutive years.[24][25] He retired from Continental Can in 1962 to become a senior partner in Lehman Brothers investment banking house until his retirement in 1973.[24]

Cultural cold war

Meanwhile, Clay hired the American intellectual and former Army combat historian Melvin J. Lasky. Both developed the concept of a "cultural cold war" through which the Soviets would be fought at a psychological and intellectual level.[26] Clay was instrumental in creating, funding, and promoting Der Monat, a journal intended to support US foreign policy and win over German intellectuals. Copies of Der Monat were delivered along with supplies during the airlift.[27]

Clay also studied television propaganda and suggested that in Europe "you get this constant repeated propaganda without advertising and without break," but in the United States, "the advertising gives you a direct feeling of assurance that you haven't got propaganda in the program being thrown at you."[28]

Eisenhower administration and Crusade for Freedom

After OMGUS ended, Clay served the United States in other capacities. He had previous experience in 1933 with managing and organizing projects under the New Deal and later became one of Dwight Eisenhower's closest advisers and assisted him in securing the 1952 Republican nomination and helping him select members of his cabinet upon ascension to the presidency. When Eisenhower was in office, Clay served as his unofficial emissary in Europe. One of his first duties as Eisenhower's emissary and, as the national chairman of the Crusade for Freedom, was to dedicate the city of Berlin's Liberty Bell.[29] In 1954, he was called upon by Eisenhower to help forge a plan for financing the proposed Interstate highway system.

During the Berlin Crisis of 1961, President John F. Kennedy asked him to be an adviser and to go to Berlin and report on the situation. Two years later Clay accompanied Kennedy on his trip to Berlin.[30] During his famous Ich bin ein Berliner speech, Kennedy said, "I am proud .. to come here in the company of my fellow American, General Clay, who has been in this city during its great moments of crisis and will come again if ever needed." That mention triggered enthusiastic cheers from the hundreds of thousands gathered to hear the president.[31]

Foundations, corporations, and committees: 1950–1978

The George C. Marshall Foundation, which oversees Clay's correspondences with corporations, foundations, and committees,[32] assembled an alphabetical list that gives a very good overview of Clay's broad range of activities in those fields. Clay served all of the following institutions in some capacity as an associate, as board member, or in a similar position.

Death and burial

Clay died on April 16, 1978, in Chatham, Massachusetts. Clay lies buried in West Point Cemetery, between the graves of Apollo I astronaut Ed White and Panama Canal chief engineer George W. Goethals. At Clay's grave site is a stone plate from the citizens of Berlin that says: "Wir danken dem Bewahrer unserer Freiheit" (We thank the Preserver of our Freedom).

Family

Clay was a descendant of senator Henry Clay. Due to his notorious stubbornness, Lucius derived his nickname "The great uncompromiser" as a play on Henry's nickname "The Great Compromiser." Lucius Clay was the father of two sons, both of whom became generals. Clay's son, General Lucius D. Clay Jr.,[33] held the positions of commander-in-chief of the North American Air Defense Command, the Continental Air Defense Command, and the United States element of NORAD, and was also a commander of the United States Air Force Aerospace Defense Command. Clay's other son, Major General Frank B. Clay, served in conflicts from World War II through the Vietnam War, and was an adviser to the US delegation at the Paris peace talks which ended US involvement in the Vietnam War.

Honors

Clay was given a ticker-tape parade, among many other honors, upon his return to the United States on May 19, 1949. He appeared on the cover of Time magazine three times. Clay also received an honorary doctorate of the Freie Universität Berlin and became an honorary citizen of Berlin (West) in 1953. One of the longest streets in West Berlin was named Clayallee in his honor, as was the Clay Headquarters Compound, which was located on the street. It held the headquarters of the Berlin Brigade, U.S. Army Berlin (USAB), and the U.S. Mission in Berlin.[34] Marietta, Georgia, named one of its major streets Clay Road, and South Cobb High School's football stadium is named "Clay Stadium" in honor of his work in creating what is now Dobbins Air Force Base there. While now called South Cobb Drive (State Route 280), it still carries memorial signs at each end dedicating the highway to him.

 
Lucius D. Clay Kaserne

In 1978 a new U.S. Army base in Northern Germany north of the city of Bremen was named for Clay and until the end of the Cold War housed a forward-stationed brigade of the 2nd Armored Division, the 3rd Brigade, 2nd Armored Division, which had been based at Fort Hood, Texas, with the rest of the 2AD. This unit was redesignated as the 2nd Armored Division (Forward). 2AD (FWD) saw action in the Gulf War of 1991 before being disbanded as part of the post-Cold War drawdown of the U.S. Army. Since October 1, 1993, these barracks are used by the Bundeswehr and are still named after Clay. The "General-Clay-March" by Heinz Mertins was written in his honor.[35] Wiesbaden Army Airfield, near Frankfurt, Germany, was renamed "Lucius D. Clay Kaserne" in his honor on 14 June 2012. Wiesbaden Army Airfield was used extensively in "Operation Vittles," aka the Berlin Airlift. The name "Lucius Clay" features in the song "The Legend of Wooley Swamp" by the Charlie Daniels Band. Clay had just died (of emphysema and heart failure) around the time the song was written.

Awards and decorations

Clay's decorations include: the Army Distinguished Service Medal with two Oak Leaf Clusters, Legion of Merit, Bronze Star Medal, World War I Victory Medal, Army of Occupation of Germany Medal, American Defense Service Medal, American Campaign Medal, European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal, World War II Victory Medal, Army of Occupation Medal, Order of Kutuzov, Order of the British Empire, Military Order of the White Lion, Officer of the Military William Order, Commander of the Legion of Honour and Bundesverdienstkreuz (Grand Cross).

 
 
 
     
       
       
       

In addition to military awards, he was also awarded the international human rights award Dr.-Rainer-Hildebrandt-Medaille.

Dates of rank

Insignia Rank Component Date
No insignia Cadet United States Military Academy June 15, 1915
  Second lieutenant Regular Army June 12, 1918
  First lieutenant Regular Army June 12, 1918
  Captain Temporary June 12, 1918
  Captain Regular Army February 27, 1920
  First lieutenant Regular Army November 18, 1922
  Captain Regular Army June 19, 1933
  Major Regular Army March 1, 1940
  Lieutenant colonel Army of the United States June 12, 1941
  Colonel Army of the United States September 23, 1941
  Brigadier general Army of the United States March 12, 1942
  Lieutenant colonel Regular Army July 4, 1942
  Major general Army of the United States December 3, 1942
  Lieutenant general Army of the United States April 17, 1945
  Brigadier general Regular Army March 5, 1946
  General Army of the United States March 17, 1947
  Major general Regular Army January 24, 1948
  General Regular Army, Retired May 31, 1949

[36]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c When he entered West Point, Clay stated the birth year as 1897 because he thought that he was too young. The incorrect year became part of his military record, and his biographer Jean Edward Smith discovered the discrepancy only in 1970. Smith, Jean Edward (2012). Eisenhower in War and Peace. Random House. pp. 28, 39. ISBN 978-0-679-64429-3.
  2. ^ Lucius D. Clay: An American Life by Jean Edward Smith, New York: Henry, Holt & Company, 1990.
  3. ^ Cold War—Episode 4: "Berlin" (5:24), retrieved March 26, 2022
  4. ^ A Nation at War in an Era of Strategic Change, p.129 (Google Books)
  5. ^ Curtis Franklin Morgan Jr, James F. Byrnes, Lucius Clay and American Policy in Germany, 1945-1947 (Edwin Mellen Press, 2002).
  6. ^ "Max Lowenthal, Lawyer, Dies; Book on F.B.I. Stirred a Storm". New York Times. May 19, 1971. Retrieved August 19, 2017.
  7. ^ a b Vaughn, Mark (February 5, 1998). "GENERAL LUCIUS DUBIGNON CLAY (1897–1978) – FATHER OF THE BERLIN AIRLIFT IN 1948 – 1949". Berlin Airlift Veterans Association. Retrieved September 18, 2012.
  8. ^ Hudson, Walter M. (2004). "THE U.S. MILITARY GOVERNMENT AND THE ESTABLISHMENT OF DEMOCRATIC REFORM, FEDERALISM, AND CONSTITUTIONALISM DURING THE OCCUPATION OF BAVARIA, 1945–47" (PDF). Military Law Review. 180. Retrieved September 18, 2012.
  9. ^ "U.S. Army and the Holocaust". Encyclopedia Judaica. Macmillan Reference. 2008. Retrieved September 18, 2012.
  10. ^ Wayne Drash (October 28, 2010). "'You don't forget': Medic's Holocaust diary tells story of hell". CNN. Retrieved October 7, 2020.
  11. ^ "Feature: "Our Fellows Deserve to Be Heard" | 2009: Fall | Amherst College". www.amherst.edu. Retrieved May 5, 2023.
  12. ^ Hackett, David A. (1997). The Buchenwald Report. Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-8133-3363-2.
  13. ^ McCarthy, Jamie. "Frau Ilse Koch, General Lucius Clay, and Human-Skin Atrocities". Bloomberg News. Retrieved September 13, 2011.
  14. ^ Rowe, James (February 14, 1982). "POSTWAR JUSTICE". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved April 25, 2023.
  15. ^ "Chapter One Shaping the Trials: The Politics of Trial Policy, 1945–1949 | Genocide on Trial: War Crimes Trials and the Formation of Holocaust History and Memory". academic.oup.com. Retrieved April 25, 2023.
  16. ^ a b "THE U.S. MILITARY GOVERNMENT AND DEMOCRATIC REFORM AND DENAZIFICATION IN BAVARIA, 1945-47" (PDF).
  17. ^ "Aftermath | The Nuremberg Military Tribunals and the Origins of International Criminal Law". academic.oup.com. Retrieved April 25, 2023.
  18. ^ "Denazifying Germany: German Protestantism and the Response to Denazification in the American Zone, 1945-1948" (PDF).
  19. ^ "Landsberger Zeitgeschichte: War Criminal Prison No. 1 Landsberg". www.landsberger-zeitgeschichte.de. Retrieved April 25, 2023.
  20. ^ "Persons hanged after World War II under US jurisdiction". www.capitalpunishmentuk.org. Retrieved January 27, 2023.
  21. ^ BLOXHAM, DONALD (2013). "From the International Military Tribunal to the Subsequent Nuremberg Proceedings: The American Confrontation with Nazi Criminality Revisited". History. 98 (4 (332)): 567–591. doi:10.1111/1468-229X.12024. ISSN 0018-2648. JSTOR 24429508.
  22. ^ Buscher, Frank M.; Phayer, Michael (1988). "German Catholic Bishops and the Holocaust, 1940-1952". German Studies Review. 11 (3): 463–485. doi:10.2307/1430508. ISSN 0149-7952. JSTOR 1430508.
  23. ^ Clay speaks on Berlin Airlift, 1948/10/21 (1948). Universal Newsreel. 1948. Retrieved February 22, 2012.
  24. ^ a b "The Papers of Lucius DuBignon Clay – Biographical and Subject Summary" George C. Marchall Research Foundation
  25. ^ Kisatsky, Deborah: The United States and the European Right, 1945–1955. p.11 Ohio State University Press, 2005
  26. ^ Lasky, Melvin (May 21, 2004). "Melvin Lasky". The Telegraph. Retrieved September 17, 2012.
  27. ^ Saunders, Cultural Cold War (1999), pp. 30, 140.
  28. ^ Anna McCarthy, The Citizen Machine: Governing by Television in 1950s America, New York: The New Press, 2010, p. 23.
  29. ^ Bennett, Lowell. Freedom Bell Tolls Message of Hope and Faith, in: Information Bulletin, High Commission of Germany, November 1950.
  30. ^ Andreas Daum, Kennedy in Berlin. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2008, ISBN 978-0-521-85824-3, 47‒49, 73, 80, 101–102.
  31. ^ Daum, Kennedy in Berlin, p. 141, 224.
  32. ^ The Papers of Lucius DuBignon Clay – Biographical and Subject Summary George C. Marshall Research Foundation (Undated)
  33. ^ . Archived from the original on February 11, 2004. Retrieved December 19, 2006.
  34. ^ "Blog der Casinospieler-Brigade - Just another WordPress site". Archived from the original on January 4, 2005.
  35. ^ "German Federal Defence Forces Massed Bands". YouTube.
  36. ^ Official Register of Officers of the United States Army. 1948. Vol. 1. pg. 349.

References and further reading

External video
  Booknotes interview with Jean Edward Smith on Lucius D. Clay: An American Life, November 18, 1990, C-SPAN
  • Cherny, Andrei. "The Candy Bombers: The Untold Story of the Berlin Airlift and America's Finest Hour" 2009 (New York: Berkley Caliber)
  • Daum, Andreas. Kennedy in Berlin. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2008, ISBN 978-0-521-85824-3.
  • George, Matthew A. "The Operational Art of Political Transformation: General Lucius D. Clay, Post World War II Germany, and Beyond" (Army Command And General Staff College Fort Leavenworth KS, 2018). online
  • Judge, Clark S. "Clay, Lucius." In Tracy S. Uebelhor, ed. The Truman Years, Presidential Profiles (New York: Facts On File, Inc., 2006)
  • Lamberti, Marjorie. "General Lucius Clay, German Politicians, and the Great Crisis during the Making of West Germany's Constitution." German Politics and Society 27.4 (2009): 24-50.
  • Morgan, Jr., Curtis F. James F. Byrnes, Lucius Clay and American Policy in Germany, 1945-1947. (Edwin Mellen Press, 2002).
  • Smith, Jean Edward. Lucius D. Clay: An American Life New York: Henry, Holt & Company, 1990.

Primary sources

  • Jean Edward Smith. The Papers Of General Lucius D. Clay Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1974.

External links

  • Interview with General Lucius D. Clay
  • United States Department of Transportation – Federal Highway Administration: "The Man Who Changed America"
  • Clay's role in the US highway system
  • SOUTHERN PARTNERSHIP: JAMES F. BYRNES, LUCIUS D. CLAY AND GERMANY, 1945–47 by Curtis F. Morgan, PhD
  • Lucius D. Clay at the Georgia Encyclopedia
  • Bell Bomber – building airstrips and airfields
  • May 2003, Peaceworks No. 49, United States Institute of Peace (The PDF report contains a good overview of Clays activities in Germany 1945–1949)
  • Finding aid for General Lucius D. Clay Oral History, Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library January 14, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  • Nazis dig up mass grave of US soldiers
  • The complete guide to World War 2
  • Newspaper clippings about Lucius D. Clay in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
  • Lucius Clay | American Experience | PBS
Military offices
Preceded by Commanding General of the European Command
1947–1949
Succeeded by

lucius, clay, other, people, with, same, name, lucius, clay, general, lucius, dubignon, clay, april, 1898, april, 1978, senior, officer, united, states, army, known, administration, occupied, germany, after, world, served, deputy, general, army, dwight, eisenh. For other people with the same name see Lucius Clay General Lucius Dubignon Clay April 23 1898 April 16 1978 was a senior officer of the United States Army who was known for his administration of occupied Germany after World War II 1 He served as the deputy to General of the Army Dwight D Eisenhower in 1945 deputy military governor Germany in 1946 Commander in Chief United States Forces in Europe and military governor of the United States Zone Germany from 1947 to 1949 Clay orchestrated the Berlin Airlift 1948 1949 when the USSR blockaded West Berlin Lucius D ClayBirth nameLucius D ClayNickname s The Great UncompromiserBorn 1898 04 23 April 23 1898 1 Marietta Georgia U S DiedApril 16 1978 1978 04 16 aged 79 Chatham Massachusetts U S BuriedWest Point CemeteryAllegianceUnited StatesService wbr branchUnited States ArmyYears of service1918 1949RankGeneralCommands heldEuropean CommandNormandy Base SectionBattles warsWorld War IIAwardsArmy Distinguished Service Medal 3 Legion of MeritBronze Star MedalRelationsAlexander S Clay father Lucius D Clay Jr son Frank B Clay son Eugene H Clay brother Henry Clay ancestor Contents 1 Early life 2 Early career 3 World War II 4 OMGUS and Cold War 4 1 Treatment of Nazis during governorship 4 2 Berlin Airlift 5 Later career 5 1 Cultural cold war 5 2 Eisenhower administration and Crusade for Freedom 5 3 Foundations corporations and committees 1950 1978 6 Death and burial 7 Family 8 Honors 9 Awards and decorations 10 Dates of rank 11 Notes 12 References and further reading 12 1 Primary sources 13 External linksEarly life Edit At West Point in 1918 Clay was born on April 23 1898 1 in Marietta Georgia the sixth and last child of Alexander S Clay who served in the United States Senate from 1897 to 1910 In 1918 Clay graduated from West Point where he later taught Early career EditClay held various civil and military engineering posts in the 1920s and 1930s such as directing the construction of dams and civilian airports Because Clay s work involved large government projects he became closely acquainted with the people and workings of the federal agencies and Congress He achieved close working relationships with an associate of President Franklin Roosevelt Harry Hopkins and with House Majority Leader and Speaker Sam Rayburn In Rayburn s state of Texas Clay supervised the building of the Denison Dam At the time of its completion in 1943 the largest earthen dam in the world From 1940 to the December 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor Clay selected and supervised the construction of 450 airports which were the foundation of America s civil aviation network 2 World War II EditBy March 1942 Clay had risen to the position of being the youngest brigadier general in the army a month short of his 44th birthday All the while he had acquired a reputation for bringing order and operational efficiency out of chaos and for being an exceptionally hard and disciplined worker who went long hours and considered lunch a waste of time 3 Clay did not see actual combat but was awarded the Legion of Merit in 1942 and the Army Distinguished Service Medal in 1944 and received the Bronze Star Medal for his action in stabilizing the French harbor of Cherbourg which was critical to the flow of war materiel In 1945 he served as deputy to General Dwight Eisenhower The following year he was made Deputy Governor of Germany during the Allied Military Government Clay would later remark regarding the occupation directive guiding his and Eisenhower s actions that there was no doubt that JCS 1067 contemplated the Carthaginian peace which dominated our operations in Germany during the early months of occupation 4 OMGUS and Cold War Edit Clay with General of the Army Eisenhower at Gatow Airport in Berlin during the Potsdam Conference in 1945 Clay was promoted to lieutenant general on 17 April 1945 and to general on 17 March 1947 Clay heavily influenced US Secretary of State James F Byrnes September 1946 speech in Stuttgart Germany The speech Restatement of Policy on Germany marked the formal transition in American occupation policy away from the Morgenthau Plan of economic dismantlement to one of economic reconstruction 5 On March 15 1947 Clay succeeded Joseph T McNarney as military governor or high commissioner 6 of the US zone of occupied Germany the head of the OMGUS the Office of Military Government United States Clay s responsibilities covered a wide spectrum of social issues related to Germany s recovery from the war in addition to strictly military issues 7 He commissioned Lewis H Brown to research and write A Report on Germany which served as a detailed recommendation for the reconstruction of postwar Germany and served as a basis for the Marshall Plan Clay promoted democratic federalism in Germany and resisted US politicians who sought to undo a constitution that a Constituent Assembly in Bavaria had adopted on 26 October 1946 8 He also closed the borders of the American Zone in 1947 to stem the tide of Jewish refugees that was generating tension with the local populations 9 Treatment of Nazis during governorship Edit Clay was responsible for the controversial commuting of some death sentences such as convicted Nazi war criminals Erwin Metz and his superior Hauptmann Ludwig Merz Metz and Merz were two notorious figures of the Berga concentration camp in which 350 U S POWs were beaten tortured starved and forced to work for the German government during World War II The soldiers were singled out for looking or sounding Jewish At least 70 U S POWs soldiers died in the camp and on a death march near the end of the war The commutation was partly due to the military botching the case Prosecutors did not summon a single witness despite dozens of witnesses saying they were willing to testify 10 11 Clay also reduced the sentence of Ilse Koch the Beast of Buchenwald who had been convicted of murder at the Nuremberg trials and who had infamously been accused of having gloves and lampshades made from prisoners skin Clay later said he commuted Koch s sentence since none of the documents about Koch actually mentioned the fact or included any evidence of her committing murder The reductions in sentences were based on the hasty convictions of some Buchenwald personnel following the end of the war Evidence was sometimes questionable and many witnesses claimed to have been beaten by Allied interrogators 12 Clay confirmed several death sentences as valid commuted several and had some like Koch released after they had served a reduced sentence because of questionable evidence 13 Under the pressure of public opinion Koch was rearrested in 1949 tried before a West German court and on 15 January 1951 sentenced to life imprisonment According to BBC journalist Tom Bower despite Clay s mixed record he was one of only two prominent American and British officials the other being British diplomat Patrick Dean who were both competent and seemed genuinely interest in denazification 14 According to Donald Bloxham Clay s influence was crucial to American occupation authorities prosecuting major Nazi war criminals on their own in the Subsequent Nuremberg trials 15 In 1946 Clay announced to West German officials that he was disappointed with their results from denazification tribunals I do not see how you can demonstrate your ability for self government nor your will for democracy if you are going to evade or shirk the first unpleasant and difficult task that falls upon you Unless there is real and rapid improvement I can only assume that German administration is unwilling to accept this responsibility 16 The results temporarily improved after Clay gave them 60 days to make improvements 16 In late 1948 Clay admitted he did not enjoy in his position as Military Governor having to regularly sign many death warrants and to approve many life imprisonments Nevertheless he was willing to and did approve most death sentences imposed by American military tribunals He also approved all but one of the sentences imposed in the Subsequent Nuremberg trials 17 Near the end of the occupation Clay openly admitted his hopes for denazification were failing 18 In June 1948 a blanket stay of execution had been granted to all of the Nazi war criminals on death row in the U S occupation zone This came after false allegations of torture were propagated by several politicians in the United States especially Senator Joseph McCarthy In October 1948 however the stay was removed for nearly everyone excluding those convicted in the Malmedy massacre trial 19 Upon the lifting of the stay Clay embarked on a spate of last minute mass executions In response the German Catholic priests started objecting to not only the executions but the prosecutions of war criminals outright However their pleas failed to convince Clay to halt the executions Between October 1948 and March 1949 over 100 Nazi war criminals convicted by U S military tribunals were hanged at Landsberg Prison 20 21 22 Berlin Airlift Edit Clay on the cover of Time July 12 1948 On June 26 1948 two days after the Soviets imposed the Berlin Blockade Clay gave the order for the Berlin Airlift which was only later authorized by President Harry Truman 7 That was an act of defiance against the Soviets an incredible feat of logistics 23 at one point cargo planes landed at Tempelhof every four minutes 24 hours a day a defining moment of the Cold War and a demonstration of American support for the citizens of Berlin Clay is remembered for ordering and maintaining the airlift which would ultimately last 324 days and ended on September 30 1949 He resigned his post days after the blockade had been lifted on May 12 1949 Later career EditOn May 15 1949 Clay left Germany and was replaced by John McCloy as civilian high commissioner for Germany Clay retired from the Army at the end of the month In the same year he was elected as an honorary member of the North Carolina Society of the Cincinnati In 1950 he became the chairman of the Continental Can Company for 12 consecutive years 24 25 He retired from Continental Can in 1962 to become a senior partner in Lehman Brothers investment banking house until his retirement in 1973 24 Cultural cold war Edit Meanwhile Clay hired the American intellectual and former Army combat historian Melvin J Lasky Both developed the concept of a cultural cold war through which the Soviets would be fought at a psychological and intellectual level 26 Clay was instrumental in creating funding and promoting Der Monat a journal intended to support US foreign policy and win over German intellectuals Copies of Der Monat were delivered along with supplies during the airlift 27 Clay also studied television propaganda and suggested that in Europe you get this constant repeated propaganda without advertising and without break but in the United States the advertising gives you a direct feeling of assurance that you haven t got propaganda in the program being thrown at you 28 Eisenhower administration and Crusade for Freedom Edit See also Berlin Crisis of 1961 Ich bin ein Berliner I am a Berliner speech source source source source source source track track track track Speech from the Rathaus Schoneberg by John F Kennedy June 26 1963 Duration 9 01 Ich bin ein Berliner I am a Berliner speech audio source source track track track Audio only version Duration 9 22 Problems playing these files See media help After OMGUS ended Clay served the United States in other capacities He had previous experience in 1933 with managing and organizing projects under the New Deal and later became one of Dwight Eisenhower s closest advisers and assisted him in securing the 1952 Republican nomination and helping him select members of his cabinet upon ascension to the presidency When Eisenhower was in office Clay served as his unofficial emissary in Europe One of his first duties as Eisenhower s emissary and as the national chairman of the Crusade for Freedom was to dedicate the city of Berlin s Liberty Bell 29 In 1954 he was called upon by Eisenhower to help forge a plan for financing the proposed Interstate highway system During the Berlin Crisis of 1961 President John F Kennedy asked him to be an adviser and to go to Berlin and report on the situation Two years later Clay accompanied Kennedy on his trip to Berlin 30 During his famous Ich bin ein Berliner speech Kennedy said I am proud to come here in the company of my fellow American General Clay who has been in this city during its great moments of crisis and will come again if ever needed That mention triggered enthusiastic cheers from the hundreds of thousands gathered to hear the president 31 Foundations corporations and committees 1950 1978 Edit The George C Marshall Foundation which oversees Clay s correspondences with corporations foundations and committees 32 assembled an alphabetical list that gives a very good overview of Clay s broad range of activities in those fields Clay served all of the following institutions in some capacity as an associate as board member or in a similar position Advisory Committee on Army Organization 1953 1954 Affirmation Vietnam 1965 1966 American Express 1953 1967 1969 1977 American Red Cross 1952 1955 1957 1959 1962 American Rose Society 1972 1973 American School of Classical Studies at Athens 1971 1974 American Society of Civil Engineers 1975 1979 Business Advisory Council 1950 1958 Business Council The 1967 1972 Central Savings Bank 1952 Chase Manhattan Bank 1965 1974 1975 Citizens for Eisenhower Nixon 1956 1962 Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center 1969 1972 1976 Committee of Concern 1973 1975 Committee of Cuban Families 1963 1965 Continental Can Company 1973 1977 Cornell University 1954 1956 1957 Corps of Engineers 1971 1974 1977 Council on Social Work Education 1968 1971 Crusade for Freedom 1950 1953 Federal National Mortgage Association 1972 1977 George C Marshall Research Foundation 1972 1974 George C Marshall Research Foundation 1975 1978 General Aniline and Film Corporation 1955 1957 General Motors Corporation 1951 1973 Infantry Museum Association Inc 1972 1973 International Management and Development Institute 1973 1978 Lehman Brothers 1963 1974 Lehman Brothers 1975 1978 Marine Midland Trust Company 1950 1951 1953 1955 1957 Metropolitan Life Insurance Company 1953 1957 Munitions Board 1951 National Committee for a Free Europe 1953 National Fire Protection Association 1953 1954 New York City Mayor s Committee on Stock Transfer Tax 1966 1968 New York State Civil Defense Commission 1950 July 10 Pakistan Relief Committee 1970 1971Death and burial EditClay died on April 16 1978 in Chatham Massachusetts Clay lies buried in West Point Cemetery between the graves of Apollo I astronaut Ed White and Panama Canal chief engineer George W Goethals At Clay s grave site is a stone plate from the citizens of Berlin that says Wir danken dem Bewahrer unserer Freiheit We thank the Preserver of our Freedom Family EditClay was a descendant of senator Henry Clay Due to his notorious stubbornness Lucius derived his nickname The great uncompromiser as a play on Henry s nickname The Great Compromiser Lucius Clay was the father of two sons both of whom became generals Clay s son General Lucius D Clay Jr 33 held the positions of commander in chief of the North American Air Defense Command the Continental Air Defense Command and the United States element of NORAD and was also a commander of the United States Air Force Aerospace Defense Command Clay s other son Major General Frank B Clay served in conflicts from World War II through the Vietnam War and was an adviser to the US delegation at the Paris peace talks which ended US involvement in the Vietnam War Honors EditClay was given a ticker tape parade among many other honors upon his return to the United States on May 19 1949 He appeared on the cover of Time magazine three times Clay also received an honorary doctorate of the Freie Universitat Berlin and became an honorary citizen of Berlin West in 1953 One of the longest streets in West Berlin was named Clayallee in his honor as was the Clay Headquarters Compound which was located on the street It held the headquarters of the Berlin Brigade U S Army Berlin USAB and the U S Mission in Berlin 34 Marietta Georgia named one of its major streets Clay Road and South Cobb High School s football stadium is named Clay Stadium in honor of his work in creating what is now Dobbins Air Force Base there While now called South Cobb Drive State Route 280 it still carries memorial signs at each end dedicating the highway to him Lucius D Clay Kaserne In 1978 a new U S Army base in Northern Germany north of the city of Bremen was named for Clay and until the end of the Cold War housed a forward stationed brigade of the 2nd Armored Division the 3rd Brigade 2nd Armored Division which had been based at Fort Hood Texas with the rest of the 2AD This unit was redesignated as the 2nd Armored Division Forward 2AD FWD saw action in the Gulf War of 1991 before being disbanded as part of the post Cold War drawdown of the U S Army Since October 1 1993 these barracks are used by the Bundeswehr and are still named after Clay The General Clay March by Heinz Mertins was written in his honor 35 Wiesbaden Army Airfield near Frankfurt Germany was renamed Lucius D Clay Kaserne in his honor on 14 June 2012 Wiesbaden Army Airfield was used extensively in Operation Vittles aka the Berlin Airlift The name Lucius Clay features in the song The Legend of Wooley Swamp by the Charlie Daniels Band Clay had just died of emphysema and heart failure around the time the song was written Awards and decorations EditClay s decorations include the Army Distinguished Service Medal with two Oak Leaf Clusters Legion of Merit Bronze Star Medal World War I Victory Medal Army of Occupation of Germany Medal American Defense Service Medal American Campaign Medal European African Middle Eastern Campaign Medal World War II Victory Medal Army of Occupation Medal Order of Kutuzov Order of the British Empire Military Order of the White Lion Officer of the Military William Order Commander of the Legion of Honour and Bundesverdienstkreuz Grand Cross In addition to military awards he was also awarded the international human rights award Dr Rainer Hildebrandt Medaille Dates of rank EditInsignia Rank Component DateNo insignia Cadet United States Military Academy June 15 1915 Second lieutenant Regular Army June 12 1918 First lieutenant Regular Army June 12 1918 Captain Temporary June 12 1918 Captain Regular Army February 27 1920 First lieutenant Regular Army November 18 1922 Captain Regular Army June 19 1933 Major Regular Army March 1 1940 Lieutenant colonel Army of the United States June 12 1941 Colonel Army of the United States September 23 1941 Brigadier general Army of the United States March 12 1942 Lieutenant colonel Regular Army July 4 1942 Major general Army of the United States December 3 1942 Lieutenant general Army of the United States April 17 1945 Brigadier general Regular Army March 5 1946 General Army of the United States March 17 1947 Major general Regular Army January 24 1948 General Regular Army Retired May 31 1949 36 Notes Edit a b c When he entered West Point Clay stated the birth year as 1897 because he thought that he was too young The incorrect year became part of his military record and his biographer Jean Edward Smith discovered the discrepancy only in 1970 Smith Jean Edward 2012 Eisenhower in War and Peace Random House pp 28 39 ISBN 978 0 679 64429 3 Lucius D Clay An American Life by Jean Edward Smith New York Henry Holt amp Company 1990 Cold War Episode 4 Berlin 5 24 retrieved March 26 2022 A Nation at War in an Era of Strategic Change p 129 Google Books Curtis Franklin Morgan Jr James F Byrnes Lucius Clay and American Policy in Germany 1945 1947 Edwin Mellen Press 2002 Max Lowenthal Lawyer Dies Book on F B I Stirred a Storm New York Times May 19 1971 Retrieved August 19 2017 a b Vaughn Mark February 5 1998 GENERAL LUCIUS DUBIGNON CLAY 1897 1978 FATHER OF THE BERLIN AIRLIFT IN 1948 1949 Berlin Airlift Veterans Association Retrieved September 18 2012 Hudson Walter M 2004 THE U S MILITARY GOVERNMENT AND THE ESTABLISHMENT OF DEMOCRATIC REFORM FEDERALISM AND CONSTITUTIONALISM DURING THE OCCUPATION OF BAVARIA 1945 47 PDF Military Law Review 180 Retrieved September 18 2012 U S Army and the Holocaust Encyclopedia Judaica Macmillan Reference 2008 Retrieved September 18 2012 Wayne Drash October 28 2010 You don t forget Medic s Holocaust diary tells story of hell CNN Retrieved October 7 2020 Feature Our Fellows Deserve to Be Heard 2009 Fall Amherst College www amherst edu Retrieved May 5 2023 Hackett David A 1997 The Buchenwald Report Westview Press ISBN 978 0 8133 3363 2 McCarthy Jamie Frau Ilse Koch General Lucius Clay and Human Skin Atrocities Bloomberg News Retrieved September 13 2011 Rowe James February 14 1982 POSTWAR JUSTICE The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 25 2023 Chapter One Shaping the Trials The Politics of Trial Policy 1945 1949 Genocide on Trial War Crimes Trials and the Formation of Holocaust History and Memory academic oup com Retrieved April 25 2023 a b THE U S MILITARY GOVERNMENT AND DEMOCRATIC REFORM AND DENAZIFICATION IN BAVARIA 1945 47 PDF Aftermath The Nuremberg Military Tribunals and the Origins of International Criminal Law academic oup com Retrieved April 25 2023 Denazifying Germany German Protestantism and the Response to Denazification in the American Zone 1945 1948 PDF Landsberger Zeitgeschichte War Criminal Prison No 1 Landsberg www landsberger zeitgeschichte de Retrieved April 25 2023 Persons hanged after World War II under US jurisdiction www capitalpunishmentuk org Retrieved January 27 2023 BLOXHAM DONALD 2013 From the International Military Tribunal to the Subsequent Nuremberg Proceedings The American Confrontation with Nazi Criminality Revisited History 98 4 332 567 591 doi 10 1111 1468 229X 12024 ISSN 0018 2648 JSTOR 24429508 Buscher Frank M Phayer Michael 1988 German Catholic Bishops and the Holocaust 1940 1952 German Studies Review 11 3 463 485 doi 10 2307 1430508 ISSN 0149 7952 JSTOR 1430508 Clay speaks on Berlin Airlift 1948 10 21 1948 Universal Newsreel 1948 Retrieved February 22 2012 a b The Papers of Lucius DuBignon Clay Biographical and Subject Summary George C Marchall Research Foundation Kisatsky Deborah The United States and the European Right 1945 1955 p 11 Ohio State University Press 2005 Lasky Melvin May 21 2004 Melvin Lasky The Telegraph Retrieved September 17 2012 Saunders Cultural Cold War 1999 pp 30 140 Anna McCarthy The Citizen Machine Governing by Television in 1950s America New York The New Press 2010 p 23 Bennett Lowell Freedom Bell Tolls Message of Hope and Faith in Information Bulletin High Commission of Germany November 1950 Andreas Daum Kennedy in Berlin New York Cambridge University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 521 85824 3 47 49 73 80 101 102 Daum Kennedy in Berlin p 141 224 The Papers of Lucius DuBignon Clay Biographical and Subject Summary George C Marshall Research Foundation Undated Lucius D Clay Jr USAF Biography Archived from the original on February 11 2004 Retrieved December 19 2006 Blog der Casinospieler Brigade Just another WordPress site Archived from the original on January 4 2005 German Federal Defence Forces Massed Bands YouTube Official Register of Officers of the United States Army 1948 Vol 1 pg 349 References and further reading EditExternal video Booknotes interview with Jean Edward Smith on Lucius D Clay An American Life November 18 1990 C SPANCherny Andrei The Candy Bombers The Untold Story of the Berlin Airlift and America s Finest Hour 2009 New York Berkley Caliber Daum Andreas Kennedy in Berlin New York Cambridge University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 521 85824 3 George Matthew A The Operational Art of Political Transformation General Lucius D Clay Post World War II Germany and Beyond Army Command And General Staff College Fort Leavenworth KS 2018 onlineHackett David A The Buchenwald Report 1997 Westview Press ISBN 0 8133 3363 6Judge Clark S Clay Lucius In Tracy S Uebelhor ed The Truman Years Presidential Profiles New York Facts On File Inc 2006 Lamberti Marjorie General Lucius Clay German Politicians and the Great Crisis during the Making of West Germany s Constitution German Politics and Society 27 4 2009 24 50 Morgan Jr Curtis F James F Byrnes Lucius Clay and American Policy in Germany 1945 1947 Edwin Mellen Press 2002 Smith Jean Edward Lucius D Clay An American Life New York Henry Holt amp Company 1990 Saunders Francis Stonor Who Paid the Piper CIA and the Cultural Cold War 1999 Granta ISBN 1 86207 029 6 USA The Cultural Cold War The CIA and the World of Arts and Letters 2000 The New Press ISBN 1 56584 596 X Trauschweizer Ingo Wolfgang Tanks at Checkpoint Charlie Lucius Clay and the Berlin Crisis 1961 62 Cold War History 6 2 2006 205 228 Primary sources Edit Jean Edward Smith The Papers Of General Lucius D Clay Bloomington IN Indiana University Press 1974 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lucius D Clay Interview with General Lucius D Clay United States Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration The Man Who Changed America Clay s role in the US highway system SOUTHERN PARTNERSHIP JAMES F BYRNES LUCIUS D CLAY AND GERMANY 1945 47 by Curtis F Morgan PhD Lucius D Clay at the Georgia Encyclopedia Bell Bomber building airstrips and airfields The Road Ahead Lessons in Nation Building from Japan Germany and Afghanistan for Postwar Iraq by Ray Salvatore Jennings May 2003 Peaceworks No 49 United States Institute of Peace The PDF report contains a good overview of Clays activities in Germany 1945 1949 Finding aid for General Lucius D Clay Oral History Dwight D Eisenhower Presidential Library Archived January 14 2009 at the Wayback Machine Nazis dig up mass grave of US soldiers The complete guide to World War 2 Newspaper clippings about Lucius D Clay in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Lucius Clay American Experience PBSMilitary officesPreceded byJoseph T McNarney Commanding General of the European Command1947 1949 Succeeded byClarence R Huebner Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lucius D Clay amp oldid 1153245768, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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