A Guide to the Papers of Edward R. Stettinius, Jr., 1924, 1949–1950
A Collection in
Special Collections
The University of Virginia Library
Accession number 2723-z
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Preferred Citation
Papers of Edward R. Stettinius, Jr., 1924, 1949-1950, Accession #2723-z, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.
Acquisitions
The collection was a gift from Cathy Zimmerman on August 24, 2008.
Biographical/Historical Information
Edward R. Stettinius, Jr. (1900-1949), was an American industrialist and
public servant and the Secretary of State in President Franklin Roosevelt's Cabinet.
He was born in Chicago, Ill., on Oct. 2, 1900 to Edward Reilly and Judith
(Carrington) Stettinius. His mother was a Virginian of colonial English ancestry and
his father was of German descent, and a native of St. Louis who worked for
financier, J. P. Morgan.
Stettinius, Jr. received his education at the Pomfret School and the University of
Virginia although he did not graduate. In 1924 he joined the General Motors Company
as a stock clerk at 44 cents an hour. On May 15, 1926, he married Virginia Gordon
Wallace, daughter of a prominent family of Richmond, Virginia. They had three
children: Edward Reilly, and twins Wallace and Joseph. In 1931 he became Vice
President
in charge of public and industrial relations at General Motors. He worked
to develop unemployment relief programs and came into contact with Franklin D.
Roosevelt, for whom he worked briefly in the National Recovery Administration. In
1934 he became chairman of the finance committee of the U.S. Steel Corporation, and
in 1938 he became chairman of the board. Two years later he became head of the
Lend-Lease aid to the allies, a position he held until he became undersecretary of
state. In October 1943 Stettinius succeeded Cordell Hull as Secretary of State. In
this capacity he undertook a reorganization of the department, sought to bring it
into closer relations with other parts of the government, improved the relations of
the department with the public at large, and labored vigorously in the creation of
the United Nations. In the winter of 1945 Stettinius accompanied
President
Roosevelt
to the Yalta Conference in the Crimea, at which the Big Three, Roosevelt, Winston
Churchill of England, and Joseph Stalin of the U.S.S.R., attempted to plot the
future course of international affairs.
As Secretary, Stettinius made the decision to return a Russian codebook, found in Finland, to the Soviet Union. This hampered efforts of the United States to decode Russian cables, many of which, when later released, provided information about the widespread penetration of Soviet agents into senior United States Government positions. The reasons for this act are not clear. Soon afterward, Stettinius resigned as Secretary of State to become the first United States Ambassador to the United Nations. Stettinius resigned from this position in June 1946, after which he became critical of what he saw as Truman's refusal to use the United Nations as a tool to resolve tensions with the Soviet Union.
For three years after his return to private life he served as rector of the
University of Virginia. A longtime friend of William Tubman,, the president
of
Liberia, he helped form (1947) the Liberia Company, a partnership between the
Liberian government and American financiers to provide funds for the development of
that African nation. He lived during his retirement at his estate, Horseshoe Farm on
the Rapidan River, Virginia. He died of a coronary thrombosis at the home of a
sister in Greenwich, Connecticut, at the age of 49, and was buried in the family
plot in Locust Valley Cemetery, Locust Valley, New York.
Scope and Content
The collection contains condolences to Mrs. Stettinius on the death of her husband, Edward Reilly Stettinius, Jr. and an address list for those who wrote the condolence letters. Among the many prominent writers are Bernard Baruch, Harry Byrd, Sr., James F. Byrnes, John Foster Dulles, William F. Halsey, J. Edgar Hoover, Cordell Hull, Trygve Lie, Archibald MacLeish, George C. Marshall, Eddie Rickenbacker, Eleanor Roosevelt (telegram), Adlai Stevenson, William V. Tubman, Henry A. Wallace and Earl Warren. Miscellaneous items include letters concerning a gift of stock to Sidney James Weinberg; news clippings, photographs, miscellaneous printed items, commemorative statements, bound volumes of memorial resolutions and a blueprint of his gravesite. There are also nine letters that Edward Stettinius wrote to his parents about his travels in 1924. The collection consists of approximately 380 items, 2 Hollinger boxes, and one linear foot.
Contents List
Correspondents include Dean Gooderham Acheson (1893-1971); Carl
Adams; Hafez Afifi; Henry Harley "Hap" Arnold (1886-1950),
General of the United States Air Force; Brigadier General Frank Albert
Allen, Jr. (1896-1979); American Consul General Stephen E.
Aguirre; Hamilton Fish Armstrong (1893-1973); I Gonzalez Arevalo,
Minister of Foreign Relations Guatemala; Warren Robinson Austin
(1877-1962), United States Ambassador to the United Nations;
Joseph W. Barron; Lucy M. Barringer; Claude Albert Barnett
(1889-1967) Founder of the Associated Negro Press; Eugenia Barton
and Harry Mason; D. M. Bates; Murray Reed Benedict (1892-1980),
President
of the Agricultural Economics Association; John James Bennett
(1894-1967), New York State Attorney General; Right Honorable
Isaac Leslie Hore-Belisha (1893-1957), British Secretary of State
for War; Jules Basdevant (1877-1968),
President
of the
International Court of Justice ; Sir Carl August Berendsen
(1890-1973), Ambassador of New Zealand; Francis L. Berkeley, Jr.
(1911-2003) University of Virginia Archivist and Professor
Emeritus ; Scott B. Berkeley; Bernard Mannes Baruch (1870-1965),
United States financier, presidential advisor, and statesman; William S.
Bernard, Chairman of the War Industries Board; Charles Eustis "Chip"
Bohlen, (1904-1974), United States Diplomat; William Marshall
Boyle, Jr. (1902-1961) Chairman National Democratic Party; Otto
Brandt; Ellen and Jim Bruce (United States Ambassador to Argentina);
Barron Foster Black (1893-1974) and his wife Aileen Taylor Black;
Henri and Helle Bonnet; Isaiah Bowman 91878-1950), Director of
the American Geological Society; Arthur B. Van Buskirk; Senator Harry F.
Byrd (1887-1966); James F. Byrnes (1879-1972), Secretary
of State; Harry Clemons (1879-1968), Head, University of Virginia
Library; Frederic Ren?oudert, Jr.(1898-1972), Assistant United
States Attorney for New York; Madame de Chabrieres; Cliff Cobham; Rafael
De La Colina, Ambassador of Mexico and representative at the United
Nations; Mrs. Fairlie Patton Cooke; Oscar Cox; Colgate Whitehead Darden
Jr. (1897-1981),
President
, University of Virginia; Howard Brush
Dean (1918-1950) Vice
President
of Pan American World Airways;
Gabriel L. Dennis, Secretary of State of Liberia; William E. Dennis,
Secretary of the Treasury of Liberia; Marjorie Merriweather Post Davies
and Joseph E. Davies (1876-1958), United States Ambassador to the
Soviet Union; John William Davis (1873-1955), United States
Ambassador to the United Kingdom; Gayer G. Dominick; Justice William O.
Douglas (1898-1980); Cyro De Freitas-Valle, Secretary of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Fleet Admiral William Frederick Halsey
(1882-1959); Lewis Williams Douglas(1885-1924), United
States Ambassador to the United Kingdom; William A. Drayton; John Foster
Dulles (1888-1959), United States Secretary of State; James
"Jimmy" Clement Dunn (1890-1979), United States Diplomat; John D.
East; Lewis Eldred,
President
of Elmira College; Helen W. Elting, The
English-Speaking Union; Frank S. Emmert; Louise Eriksen; James Aloysius
Farley (1888-1973), Postmaster General; Justice Felix Frankfurter
(1882-1965), Associate Justice of the Supreme Court and
newsclipping; W. L. Finger; Directors of Caribcemco; Harvey Samuel
Firestone, Jr. (1898-1973); Baron Oliver Shewell Franks
(1905-1992); John Gange, Chairman of the Woodrow Wilson School of
Foreign Affairs; Paul Garrett, Vice
President
of Public Relations for
General Motors Corporation; Bettis Alston Garside (1894-1989);
Mrs. John Minor Gatewood; [Gil] Gillespie; Albert Goldman, Postmaster of
New York; Reverend F. D. Goodwin and the Board of Virginia Theological
Seminary; John Gladston Grace,
President
of the International Press
Bureau; Julian Greenup, American Consul General; Mrs. William Gregg;
Joseph Clark Grew, United States Ambassador to Denmark.
Edward and Dorothy Halifax; Cornelius A. Hall; [ William Averell
Harriman] (1891-1986), Governor of New York, Ambassador, and
United States Secretary of Commerce, and Marie Norton Whitney Harriman;
Joseph M. Hartfield; [Frank A. Hecht,] English-Speaking Union; General
Lewis Blaine Hershey (1893-1977), Director of the Selective
Service; Russell Hopkinson; John Edgar Hoover (1895-1972)
Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation; Cordell Hull
(1871-1955), Secretary of State; Patrick Jay Hurley
(1883-1963), Secretary of War; Jesse Holman Jones
(1874-1956), Secretary of Finance; N. D. [Dean] Jay; Jane B.
Kaynor; Vi Kyuin "Wellington" Koo (1887-1985), Chinese Foreign
Minister; Jaakko Kahma, General manager of the Finnish Foreign Trade
Association; The Baron of Kellie; Charles Franklin Kettering
(1876-1958), Scientist; Charles Dunbar Burgess King
(1875-1961), Ambassador of Liberia; Reverend Arthur B. Kinsolving
(1861-1951); James S. Knowlson; Mrs. Frank Knox; Shawn Kelly;
Reverend Paul H. Kratzig, Rector, St. Andrew's Episcopal Church; Sally
Cameron Labouisse; Louis St. Laurent (1882-1973), Prime Minister
of Canada; James E. Kinard, President
of The Student Council at the
University of Virginia; Russell Cornell Leffingwell (1878-1960),
President
of the Council on Foreign Relations and Lucy Leffingwell;
Egbert G. Leigh; Admiral Emory Scott "Jerry" Land, Chairman of the
Maritime Commission and Head of the War Shipping Administration ; Ed
Lincoln; Robert Lodge, Campaign Manager New York Heart Association;
Abercrombie Lovett (1895-1986); John David Lodge
(1903-1985); The Venerable Albert H. Lucas D. D.; Robert J. Lynch
(1902-1989), Executive in the Foreign Trade Industry; J. Malcolm
Luck; Trygve Halvdan Lie (1896-1968) Secretary-General of the
United Nations and Norweigan politician; Mrs. Lloyd Burlingham; R. J.
McDonald, Secretary of International General Electric Company; Archibald
MacLeish (1892-1982) Poet, Librarian of Congress, and Assistant
Secretary of State; General George Catlett Marshall (1880-1959)
Chief of Staff; James K. McClintock, Secretary for The American Red
Cross; John Jay McCloy (1895-1989), Presidential Advisor; Doris
M. McGovern; Frank McCarthy; Freeman Matthews (1899-1986) ,United
States Ambassador; Herbert A. May; Dr. Richard H. Meade, Jr.; Samuel
[W.] Meek; Richard King Mellon (1899-1970); Margery Knowles
Megargel, wife of Roy Chester Megargel,
President
of Gulf Texas and
Western Railroad and owner of Pepsi Cola; [Guillermo] Mendez, Minister
of Foreign Relations of Panama; General Sir Frederick Hoyer Millar
(1900-1989), British Diplomat; Francis P. Miller, Virginia Music
Festival; Edward G. Miller, Jr., Assistant Secretary of State for the
American Republics Area; Jim Mooney Henry Morgenthau, Jr.
(1891-1967) United States Secretary of the Treasury; Mauricio
Nabuco, Brazilian Ambassador; Richard Lewis Neuberger (1912-1960)
, United States journalist and politician; Minister of Luxenbourg,
Pierre Dupong (1885-1953); Caroline Preston Mordecai; Wilhelm
Morgenstierne, Norwegian Embassy; John E. Orchard; Pete O'Neill; Irving
Olds; Redvers Opie; C. F. Palmer; John Orlando Pastore
(1907-2000) , Governor of Rhode Island; J. W. Pearson Secretary
of Public Instruction of Liberia; Lester Bowles Pearson
(1897-1972), Prime Minister of Canada and Chairman of the
Political and Security Committee of the United Nations; John Emil
Peurifoy (1907-1955), Deputy Under Secretary of State and
Ambassador Extraordinary; Alice W. Phillips; Clementine Piltuck; John
Lee Pratt (1879-1975), American businessman; Max Preiswerk;
Edward A. Price, Jr. (1855-1934), City Attorney for Nashville,
Tennessee and
President
of the English-Speaking Union; F. A. Price,
Consulate General of Liberia
Natale Ritacco; Hayden G. Raynor, Director, Office of British
Commonwealth and Northern European Affairs, U. S. State Department;
Philip D. Reed, Chief of United States Mission of Foreign Affairs in
London; Patrick J. Reilly; Florence Van Rensselaer (mentions her
genealogy book);General Richards; Edward Vernon Rickenbacker "Fast
Eddie" (1890-1973), American fighter ace in World War I, race car
driver and government consultant; Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller
(1908-1979); Carlos P. Romulo (1899-1985), President
of
the United Nations General Assembly; Jack and Julia Rooney; Sir William
"Billy" Rootes (1894-1964) and his wife Nora; Telegram from
Eleanor Roosevelt; Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Jr.(1914-1988);
Lessing Julius Rosenwald (1891-1979), Chairman of Sears, Roebuck
and Company; John C. Ross, Deputy Representative of United Nations
Security Council; Mary de la Rue; Guillermo Sevilla-Sacasa
(1908-1997), Nicaraguan Ambassador to the United States; James
Arthur Salter (1881-1975), British politician and professor at
Oxford and wife Ethel Salter; Willie Sherwin; [Roth Sherill;] [Willie
Sherwin;] S. Silvercruys; A. Russell Slagle; Alfred Pritchard Sloan, Jr.
(1875-1966) Chairman and
President
of General Motors; Spyros P.
Skouras (1893-1971), movie executive for Twentieth Century Fox;
Blackwell "Blackie" Smith; Mrs. Tanquary Smith; Tse-ven Soong
(1894-1971) Chinese minister of finance and wife "Laura"; Kit and
Betty Stark; John Roy Steelman (1900-1999), Assistant to the
President
of the United States, Harry S. Truman; Sir William Samuel
Stephenson (1896-1989), inventor, businessman and master spy
"Intrepid" and his wife Mary French Simmons; Whitney Stone; Jack Isidor
Strauss ( 1900-1985), Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of
Macy's Department Stores; Judge Edward Allen Tamm and Assistant Director
of the F. B. I. (1906-1985); Admiral Lewis Lichtenstein Strauss
(1896-1974 ), Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission and his
wife Alice Hanauer Strauss; Myron Charles Taylor (1874-1959),
Chief executive officer and Chairman of the United States Steel
Corporation; Walter Clark Teagle (1878-1962), Head of Standard
Oil; Channing H. Tobias (1882-1961), Senior Secretary in the
Department of Interracial Services; Janine Terrill; Harry S. Truman
(1884-1972) (telegram); William Vacanarat Shadrach Tubman
(1895-1971),
President
of Liberia; William Munford Tuck
(1896-1983) Governor of Virginia; Grace G. Tully
(1900-1984), Secretary to
President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt;
James Thomson; W. W. Trench; Dr. Hugh H. Trout, M. D.; Terence Lloyd
Tyson, M. D.; J. E. Valenzuela, Minister of Foreign Relations; Mrs.
Cornelius "Grace" Vanderbilt; Robert Waithman, Washington correspondent
for the News Chronicle of London; John
Scott and Marguerite Walker; Charles Montriou Wallace
(1866-1957), Attorney, Representative of the House of Delegates
and collected African American ballads; Henry Agard Wallace
(1888-1965) Vice
President
of the United States and his wife Ilo
Brown Wallace; Justice Earl Warren (1891-1974); Sidney B.
Congdon,
President
of The National City Bank of Cleveland to Charles E.
Wilson,
President
of General Electric; Lindsay Carter Warren
(1889-1976), Comptroller General of the United States; Thomas
John Watson (1874-1956),
President of IBM; Mrs. W. B. Waugh;
Elizabeth W. Weddell; Sidney James Weinberg (1891-1969),"Mr.
Wallstreet;" Miss Ada R. Woods; Amelie Young; Alexander C. Zabriskie
Included is a letter from attorney John Marsh from Mr. Stettinius's estate concerning one thousand shares of common stock of the World Commerce Corporation that Stettinius left for Mr. Weinberg in return for his advice to Stettinius in business affairs. There is also a letter from Mr. Weinberg declining the gift from Stettinius. There is a letter from John Marsh to Mrs. Stettinius about insurance and her husband's estate.
including articles taken from his scrapbook
Two photographs of Edward Stettinius as a boy and two oversize photographs of him sitting at his desk
Program for the United Nations Conference in Staten Island June 26, 1950 with charter and blueprint; English-Speaking Union Bulletin Volume 9, Number 2; 1949 and Saturday Review of Literature November 19, 1949 containing a review by Walter Johnson of Stettinius's book, Roosevelt and the Russians; Words of Comfort booklet; The Second Mile by Harry Emerson Fosdick and a blank University of Virginia greeting card with a Serpentine wall.
One blueprint of the gravesite of Edward R. Stettinius