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Guide to the Chester Bowles Papers

Manuscript Group 628

compiled by Diane Kaplan, Peggy Bruns and Michael Sherry

October 1975 - May 2007 (3 revisions)

Yale University Shield

Copyright 2003 Yale University Library

Overview

Creator:

Bowles, Chester, 1901-

Title:

Chester Bowles papers, 1924-1982

Physical Description:

180.25 linear ft.

Arrangement:

Arranged in nine parts and two additions: I. 1942-1946 July. II. 1946 July-1951 October. III. 1951 October-1953 March. IV. 1953 April-1958 December. V. 1959 January-1960 December. VI. 1961 January-1963 June. VII. 1963 July-1969 May. VIII. 1969 June- . IX. Various Files, 1924-1973. Accession 87-M-16. Accession 94-M-88.

    Biographical Overview:

    Chester Bowles was born on April 5, 1901 in Springfield, Massachusetts. He graduated from Yale University in 1924 (B.S.) and established the advertising firm of Benton and Bowles, with William Benton, in 1929. Bowles served in the Office of Price Administration in Connecticut and at the federal level. He was named a Special Assistant to the Secretary General of the United Nations and was elected governor of Connecticut (1948-1950). Bowles served as ambassador to India (1951-1953, 1963-1969) and was elected to the U.S. Congress (1959-1960). He also served as a foreign policy advisor to Adlai Stevenson and John F. Kennedy, and held the positions of Under Secretary for Political Affairs and Special Representative and Advisor on Africa, Asia, and Latin American Affairs (1960-1961). Bowles lectured and wrote extensively on national and foreign political topics and published his memoirs in 1971.

    Summary:

    The papers consist of correspondence, speeches, writings, photographs, clippings, oral history interviews, and other material documenting the personal life and professional career of Chester Bowles. Bowles' political career in Connecticut and his service as ambassador to India are detailed, as is his work as a foreign policy advisor, chairman of the Democratic Platform Committee at the 1960 national convention, and author and speaker on political affairs.

    Restrictions on Access:

    Boxes 220-223, which contain constituent correspondence, are restricted until 2035 Jan 1.

    The transcript of the oral history interview with Douglas Bennet, Jr. in Box 399b is closed until the deed of gift is secured from Bennet.

    Box 408, which contains restricted personal and financial papers is closed until 2025 Jan 1.

    Box 409, which contains audio tapes of oral history interviews with Bowles's associates, is not open to researchers.

    Negative film in drawer 2 of Security File 2 are not open to researchers.

    Preferred Citation:

    Copyright has been transferred to Yale University.

    Original audiotapes, videotapes, and motion picture films, as well as preservation and duplicating masters, may not be played. Researchers must consult use copies, or pay for the creation of a use copy, retained by the repository, if none exist.

    Preferred Citation:

    Chester Bowles Papers. Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library.

    Catalog Record:
    a record for this collection is in our Library Catalog (ORBIS)
    For further information:
    Manuscripts and Archives
    Yale University Library
    P.O. Box 208240
    New Haven, CT 06520-8240
    Tel. (203) 432-1744
    Fax. (203) 432-7441
    mssa.assist@yale.edu

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    Description of the Papers

    INTRODUCTION

    The Chester Bowles Papers, consisting of 186 feet of correspondence, speeches, writings, photographs, oral history interviews, and various other types of material, record Bowles' long career in public service. Though the papers do contain some photographs and memorabilia from Bowles' childhood, college years, and from the period of his association with the advertising firm of Benton and Bowles, there is no correspondence or other important documentation before 1942, when Bowles assumed the position of Connecticut State Tire Rationing Administrator. After that date, the papers illuminate Bowles' varied roles as state and federal administrator, politician, diplomat, publicist and as author and consultant. The papers shed much light on a wide range of subjects, including U.S. politics, economic policy, foreign policy, U.S. foreign aid and development policies, India, U.S. relations with India, Connecticut politics, and activities of American organizations and individuals in the field of liberal politics, civil rights and other causes. There is correspondence with six U.S. Presidents, Congressmen, federal and state government officials, Prime Ministers and other officials of foreign governments, press people, and leaders of liberal U.S. groups, as well as with constituents and admirers in the general public.

    The papers have been divided into eight chronological parts, each of which includes several series. There is also one unprocessed part:

    Part I. 1942 - 1946 July

    Part II. 1946 July - 1951 October

    Part III. 1951 October - 1953 March

    Part IV. 1953 April - 1958 December

    Part V. 1959 January - 1960 December

    Part VI. 1961 January - 1963 June

    Part VII. 1963 July - 1969 May

    Part VIII. Unprocessed

    1969 June on

    The dates of each part are somewhat arbitrary, but are defined, more or less, by the specific position Bowles held at the time. For example, Part I ends on Bowles' resignation as director of the Office of Economic Stabilization and Part IV begins when Bowles returned from his first tour of duty as ambassador to India. The parts are clearly delineated in the chronology that follows (p.4). Each part includes correspondence, speeches, writings, and newspaper clippings and may also include memoranda and subject files. For each of these eight parts there is a separate register containing a more detailed description and a folder list. Since correspondence with a particular individual may appear in any or all of the eight parts, a cumulative name index has been prepared to facilitate the location of that person's correspondence.

    Certain types of material overlap the chronological divisions or require special handling. For these reasons a Part IX has been created. This part, which includes photographs and memorabilia; personal and financial papers; information files; and audio and video tapes, will prove valuable even to the researcher only interested in a particular time period. The special collection of oral history interviews are in this section, as are Bowles' personal diaries. For a more detailed description and folder list, see the register for Part IX.

    The Chester Bowles Papers in the Yale University Library do not include all papers that ever passed through Bowles' hands. Researchers will undoubtedly find the National Archives a useful source for documentation of Bowles' roles in OPA; files still at the State Department will, when available, prove invaluable for his years with the Kennedy Administration, as well as for his two periods as ambassador to India. Similarly, the Connecticut State Library in Hartford has important supplements to Yale's holdings on Bowles' term as Governor of Connecticut; it also has some records relating to the Connecticut Office of Price Administration.

    For related papers in Manuscripts and Archives, see the following collections:

    Dorothy Stebbins Bowles Papers

    Philip Hall Coombs Papers

    James G. Rogers, Jr. Papers

    Commission on State Government Organization, 1949-1950, in Connecticut Miscellaneous Manuscripts Collection

    ACCESSION NOTE:

    The Chester Bowles Papers became the property of Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library, in February 1973, through Bowles' instrument of gift. Up until that time the papers had been in Bowles' possession at the family home in Essex, Connecticut. The organization of the papers was completed in December 1974, at which time they became open for research. Only a limited number of items are restricted for the time being, and these almost entirely as sensitive personal material. Jean Joyce, a long-time associate of Mr. Bowles, served as consultant in reviewing the collection. Joyce also prepared the oral history interviews with Bowles' colleagues, which are being included in his papers. Any additional accessions of papers will be integrated into the existing organization.

    PART I -- 1942 January - 1946 July 15

    Chester Bowles began his career of public service as Connecticut State Tire Rationing Administrator (January 1942 - March 1942), Connecticut State Rationing Administrator and Director of the Connecticut State Office of Price Administration (March 1942 - July 1943). After serving as general manager to the Office of Price Administration (OPA) in Washington for several months, he became national OPA Administrator in October 1943. In early 1946 he was named director of the Office of Economic Stabilization (OES), February 1946 - July 1, 1946. He resigned after Congress, in June 1946, failed to pass the strong legislation he felt was necessary to maintain effective price controls.

    The successful conduct of World War II on the home front hinged in significant part on control of war-induced inflation and the equitable rationing of scarce commodities. The determination of price and rationing policies served as a focus of controversy and negotiation among the several emergency war agencies, the older bureaucracies, the political representatives in Congress, and business, farm and labor groups.

    The Chester Bowles Papers, Part I, though only a fragment of the correspondence that passed through Bowles' hands, reveal much of the story of the organization of the national OPA and of local price and rationing boards; of the attempts to secure public understanding, acceptance and compliance with controls; of the bureaucratic and political conflicts in Washington; and of the recurring issue of securing Congressional support.

    The papers are arranged in four series:

    Correspondence

    Speeches, Statements, and Writings

    OPA Reports and Printed Material

    Appointment Calendars, Clippings, Scrapbooks

    PART II -- July 15 - 1951 October 20

    During this period Bowles participated in a vide variety of public activities. Although he did not secure his party's nomination in 1946, in 1948 he won the governorship in a race against Republican James C. Shannon. He lost, narrowly, his 1950 bid for reelection against John D. Lodge. His brief tenure as Governor featured several struggles to implement such liberal reforms as the reorganization of Connecticut's chaotic state government, reform of the state budget, initiation of a state-wide housing program, and enlarged state assistance to local communities for building new schools.

    Throughout these years Bowles immersed himself in Democratic politics at the state and national level. His most notable excursion into national politics came in 1948, when he added his voice to the so-called "dump-Truman" movement of disaffected Democrats. At the same time Bowles' frequent service to the United Nations -- as UNESCO delegate, as consultant to Secretary-General Trygve Lie, and as international chairman of the UN Children's Appeal -- deepened his interest in foreign affairs.

    Throughout the 1946-1951 period Bowles was a prolific writer and spoke frequently, aside from his activities as Governor. He participated in the organization and politics of liberal groups, and was an early supporter of the Americans for Democratic Action. In September 1951, he was appointed by President Truman as Ambassador to India and Nepal and reached India in October 1951 where Part III begins.

    The papers are organized in six series:

    General Correspondence

    Correspondence on Political Appointments and Job Applications

    Writings, Speeches, and News Releases

    Special Subjects (in two subseries: 1948 and 1950 Gubernatorial Campaigns; and Governor's Information Files)

    Biographical Profiles, Lists, and Appointments and Schedules

    Clippings

    In addition, see Part IX for any photographs or memorabilia, tapes (audio and video), discs, films, etc. from this period. Also, in Manuscripts and Archives, in the Connecticut Collection, see the Commission on State Government Organization, 1949-1950. The Connecticut State Library in Hartford contains some of Bowles' papers during his period as Governor; the material consists mostly of the files of state agencies, boards and commissions. An appendix at the end of Part II lists these files. There are also records of some state agencies dating from this period in the Connecticut State Library.

    PART III -- 1951 October 20 - 1953 March 22

    In September 1951, Bowles was nominated ambassador to India and Nepal by President Truman. His appointment was confirmed in spite of strong opposition led by Senator Robert Taft. This register covers his term in India from his arrival with his family in New Delhi on October 20, 1951 until his departure in March 1953. Correspondence about Bowles' appointment and confirmation, letters of congratulation, and some correspondence about recruitment of personnel for India may be found in Part II (1946-1951).

    As ambassador, Bowles was involved not only in the traditional diplomatic functions, but with the many new and growing activities of the U.S. Mission in New Delhi. Under his administration, the work of the Embassy, the Technical Cooperation Administration, and the United States Information Service was closely coordinated.

    Part III indeed provides a rich record on the first major U.S. economic assistance program for underdeveloped nations. In Bowles' first few weeks as ambassador, India became the first underdeveloped nation to receive a significant grant or loan under the new "Point Four" program. A Technical Cooperation Administration (TCA) had rapidly to be set up and staffed. A top priority job to be done was planning the most effective use of U.S. aid funds in collaboration with Indian officials who were then preparing India's own first five-year development program.

    Bowles' deep concern with, economic development for India as a basis for its future economic and political stability and his close working relationship with, high Indian officials in the selection of significant development programs to be funded by U.S. aid are well documented here. His correspondence with U.S. Government and Indian officials is extensive on the initiation and potential of these programs, and on the need for congressional and public support. Part 111 also documents Bowles' belief in the importance of the United States Information Service (USIS) and his efforts to expand its activities and staff in India and Nepal.

    Bowles' informal and personal approach to diplomacy received wide publicity and he encouraged all mission personnel, including spouses and children, to learn Indian languages and customs. In his staffing of mission posts, he sought capable officers and made strenuous efforts to recruit black officers. He believed that the presence of black staff members would help counteract the negative impression Asians had of America's treatment of its racial minorities.

    Bowles sometimes found himself in the anomalous position of being pressured and attacked both by conservatives in the U.S. and by Communists in India. As a liberal in the McCarthy era, Bowles was criticized at home for not taking a stronger stand against Communism and for his strong advocacy of foreign aid. In India, on the other hand, he was often attacked by the Communist press. One Indian Communist, R.K. Karanjia, the editor of Blitz, even attempted to discredit him by forging a letter in Bowles' name.

    Bowles kept in close touch with Democratic politics at home during the 1952 political conventions and campaigns. When Brien McMahon, the Democratic senator from Connecticut, died in July 1952, there was pressure on Bowles to resign his post and seek the Democratic nomination for McMahon's seat, or at least return home and work for the party in the campaign, Bowles, however, believed his work in India was more important.

    With Eisenhower's victory in 1952, Bowles was hopeful that American foreign policy would not change drastically and that he would be asked to stay on under the new administration. Eisenhower, however, appointed George V. Allen to replace him, and Bowles left India in March 1953. Bowles' book, Ambassador's Report, is a detailed account of his term in India.

    The papers in Part III give a fairly complete record of Bowles' activities during this period. Much of the material relates to his post as Ambassador, such as his files of U.S. Mission memoranda and reports, and his correspondence with Indian and American policymakers on India and Asia. In addition, there is much on his personal and political interests in the U.S. for example, on national and Connecticut Democratic politics. The papers are arranged in four series:

    I. U.S. and International Correspondence

    1. General Correspondence

    2. U.S. Government Correspondence

    II. Indian and Nepal Correspondence

    1. General Correspondence

    2. U.S. Mission to India and Nepal

    III. Writings, Speeches, Statements and News Releases

    IV. Clippings

    In addition to the material in this part, see Part IX for photographs, memorabilia, audio tapes, video tapes, and movie films from this period.

    Note on the Organization of the Correspondence in Part III;

    The arrangement of the correspondence files in two series follows the system used in Bowles' office in New Delhi; one series for correspondence outside of India and the second for local (India and Nepal) correspondence whether with Indian or U.S. officials or other correspondents. In the U.S. Mission sub-series is Bowles' correspondence, in the form of memoranda and reports, with U.S. officials in India and Nepal, on USIS and TCA, as well as on Embassy matters.

    Note: Bowles' office staff had a complicated filing system which included the placing of duplicate carbon copies of outgoing letters in more than one file in an attempt to cross-reference by subject. The symbols "X" and "CR" indicate such duplicate copies. Occasionally there may be other notations, underlinings, notes, and circled numbers Which were probably made when research was done for Bowles' books and articles.

    PART IV -- 1953 April - 1958 December

    Bowles, after leaving India at the end of March, 1953, returned to his home in Essex, Connecticut, with no specific job responsibilities. Yet the years between 1953 and 1958, which are covered in Part IV, were particularly active. Bowles set himself the immediate task of helping the American public understand the problems of Asia, and in the months after his return he worked on Ambassador's Report, a personal account of the family's experiences in and impressions of India and Asia. Its success led to a demand for Bowles to lecture in countless appearances across the country.

    Between 1955 and 1958, Bowles published four more books: The New Dimensions of Peace (1955), Africa's Challenge to America (1956), American Politics in a Revolutionary World (1956) and Ideas, People and Peace (1958). These books and his trips to Africa, Asia and Russia earned for Bowles a reputation as an expert in foreign affairs, as an advocate of foreign assistance programs (which he considered an "investment in the cause of peace"), and as a strong critic of the Eisenhower Administration's foreign policy.

    During this period he became increasingly involved in state and national politics. In 1954 Bowles was pressed by friends to run for governor of Connecticut against the man who had defeated him in 1950, John Lodge. John Bailey and other Connecticut Democratic leaders were convinced that Bowles could win, and Bowles himself was eager to run. At this same time Adlai Stevenson had held out the possibility of Bowles joining his administration, perhaps in the State Department, if Stevenson ran successfully for the presidency in 1956. Bowles decided to take his chances with Stevenson - a decision he later realized had been a mistake.

    From 1954 to the 1956 election Bowles worked actively to help Stevenson, and Part IV has considerable documentation on this association. Bowles was part of an informal, liberal brain trust for Stevenson, organized by Thomas Finletter. The group, which included Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., and Averell Harriman, sought to feed Stevenson position papers on important issues. Later Bowles attempted to get Douglas MacArthur, who was disgruntled with Eisenhower and his administration, to vocally support Stevenson. During the campaign itself, Bowles submitted memoranda on campaign strategy and foreign policy, wrote draft speeches for Stevenson, and did some campaigning himself.

    With Stevenson's defeat, Bowles once again turned his thoughts to Connecticut politics. Since Connecticut already had a popular Democratic governor, Abraham Ribicoff, Bowles decided to seek the party nomination for the Senate seat held by William A. Purtell. It was an ill-fated race. William Benton, Bowles' former business partner whom he had appointed to fill a vacant Senate seat in 1949, also wanted to run and felt that he had a better chance than Bowles to win the support of John Bailey and Ribicoff. In mid-September a third candidate appeared when Thomas Dodd made a formal declaration of his intention to seek the nomination. Bowles viewed Dodd, a conservative Democrat and a Catholic, as the real challenge; some behind Dodd thought he might stand a better chance against the Catholic Purtell.

    Bowles, on the basis of a private Harris Poll which showed Benton running a poor third, was certain Benton posed no threat; and he remained convinced that Bailey and Ribicoff could not support Dodd. Yet the Democratic state convention in June found close associates of Bailey's campaigning vigorously for Dodd; and Bowles' emissaries could not convince Benton to withdraw from the race.

    Dodd won the nomination on the first ballot. To bind up party wounds the Democratic leadership asked Bowles to run for the Second District Congressional seat. Though tempted to refuse, Bowles felt that he had been out of public life too long, and that he could use the Congressional seat as a platform to speak out on national issues. He launched an ambitious campaign devoting one week to each of the state senatorial districts. In a series of coffee parties, rallies, and weekly newspaper columns, he discussed the issues important to the district, unemployment, new industry, housing and government spending. The Bowles campaign was effective and Bowles was sent to Congress by a healthy majority. With Bowles' move to Washington, Part IV ends and Part V begins.

    he papers of Part IV are divided into five series:

    Correspondence

    Speeches, Statements, and Writings

    Campaigns for Senatorial Nomination and for Congress

    Schedules, Itineraries, Appointment Books

    Newspaper Clippings

    PART V -- 1959 January - 1960 December

    Bowles spent two years (1959-1960) in Washington not only as a Congressman representing Connecticut's Second District, but as an ever more active and involved supporter of John F. Kennedy for President. These are the years that are covered in Part V.

    Congressman Bowles was especially fortunate in drawing a competent staff composed of Thomas L. Hughes, James C. Thomson, Jr., Patricia Durand, and Robert Downer into his Washington office. Bowles hoped for and received assignments to the House Foreign Affairs Committee, where he worked hard on foreign policy issues giving special attention to the Mutual Security Act. Among the issues of more direct concern to his District, Bowles sponsored the Area Redevelopment Act to alleviate conditions of unemployment and underemployment in economically depressed areas, and introduced legislation on housing and social security. He used the Congress as a podium to speak out on racial discrimination, national priorities, and inflation. He joined the Democratic Study Group, an organization of key liberal Democratic Congressmen.

    In the summer of 1959 Bowles published a book, The Coming Political Breakthrough, in which he discussed the approaching election and the issues of critical importance to America's future. Bowles' strong opinions in the book, in Congress, and in numerous public appearances throughout the country brought him increasing prominence.

    In October, 1959, John F. Kennedy met with Bowles to discuss the Senator's presidential candidacy and his desire to have Bowles serve as his foreign policy advisor. After consulting first with Adlai Stevenson and learning that Stevenson had no intention of seeking the presidential nomination a third time, Bowles accepted Kennedy's offer. His only condition was that he not be asked to campaign directly against Stevenson or Humphrey. Announcement of Bowles' appointment by Kennedy was made in February, 1960, roughly a month after Kennedy had declared his candidacy. Though Bowles' designation was foreign policy advisor, in fact his most important function was to help Kennedy win the support of the liberal wing of the party, which had so far withheld its endorsement of Kennedy.

    Late in February, Bowles was asked by Paul Butler, head of the Democratic National Committee, to chair theDemocratic platform committee for the coming presidential convention. After a series of preliminary regional hearings to allow citizens a chance to propose their ideas, Bowles was able to put together a specific, forthright platform, which included a strong civil rights plank, and push it through the committee with surprisingly little difficulty. In addition, he convinced the Democratic National Committee to forego the usual word-for-word reading of the platform in favor of a documentary film, geared to the T.V. audience, on the party's accomplishments, coupled with a reading of a shortened form of the platform.

    Kennedy's nomination at the convention was a disappointment to several of Bowles' supporters who believed the "grass roots were rooting for Bowles," and had organized Bowles-for-President Clubs, chiefly in the Midwest and on the West Coast. Bowles had discouraged these groups, asserting that Kennedy was the strongest candidate.

    With Kennedy nominated, Bowles had to decide about his own seat in the Congress. If Kennedy won, Bowles was virtually assured of an important role in the new administration. After debating the possibilities, including his prospects if Kennedy were defeated, Bowles withdrew from the Connecticut race.

    In the months between the convention and the election, Bowles kept up a heavy schedule of campaign speeches for the national ticket. He also met with Secretary of State Christian Herter for the briefings on critical foreign policy situations, traditionally held for presidential candidates, and submitted speech material to the Kennedy campaign staff.

    With Kennedy's election, Washington was flooded with rumors of possible Kennedy appointees. Bowles, along with Senator William J. Fulbright and Adlai Stevenson, were frequently mentioned as choices for the post of Secretary of State. Dean Rusk, however, was the eventual appointee. Bowles was selected as his Under Secretary for Political Affairs. With Bowles' move into the State Department at the end of 1960, Part V ends.

    Part V is organized in four series:

    Correspondence

    Speeches, Statements and Writings

    Special Subjects

    Clippings

    PART VI -- 1961 January - 1963 June

    Followers were disappointed when Kennedy chose Dean Rusk to be Secretary of State, but Bowles saw great potential for shaping a more forward-looking U.S. foreign policy in the offered post of Under Secretary for Political Affairs. He had no reason to doubt that he could work well with Rusk whom he had known as president of the Rockefeller Foundation while Bowles was a trustee.

    Bowles and Rusk moved into the State Department at the end of December, 1960, which is when Part VI begins. Bowles felt the first requirement for an enlightened new foreign policy was to find high-level talent to head up the embassies abroad and State Department bureaus in Washington. Bowles succeeded in enlisting a distinguished group of people to serve in U.S. Missions, particularly in the developing nations of Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Bowles was especially proud of securing, among others, Edwin O. Reischauer to serve in Japan and George Kennan to become ambassador to Yugoslavia. Bowles also helped promote an important redefinition of the role of a U.S. ambassador as overseer and coordinator of all U.S. government activities in his country of assignment.

    Several crises occurred in the first months of the new administration: the Bay of Pigs, Laos, Soviet resumption of nuclear testing, and civil strife in the Dominican Republic. On the question of the Bay of Pigs, Bowles opposed the invasion and similarly opposed any retaliatory measures after its stunning failure. The press learned of Bowles' opposition, to the sharp annoyance of the Kennedys.

    The Bowles-Rusk relationship never successfully worked out, and many detailed letters and memoranda from Bowles to Rusk (see State Department correspondence) bear witness to this deteriorating situation. By July 1961, rumors were circulating in Washington that Bowles would resign or be reassigned. Rusk did in fact offer Bowles an ambassadorial post in Latin America, an offer which Bowles declined. Kennedy, however, affirmed his desire to keep Bowles in the Administration and the rumors were temporarily quieted. Returning to "work as usual" he left for Africa, the Middle East and Asia to conduct regional conferences of U.S. Ambassadors in those areas, the first of a series of such conferences initiated by Bowles.

    On the weekend of Thanksgiving, Bowles was suddenly called back from his home in Connecticut to Washington where Rusk informed him that the State Department was being reorganized. George Ball was to replace Bowles as Under Secretary and Bowles was asked to replace Averell Harriman as a roving ambassador. Bowles' new title would be President's Special Representative and Advisor on Asian, African, and Latin American Affairs. The announcement to the press emphasized Bowles' new office in the White House complex and the raise in salary and rank. But Bowles was dubious about the new position and his ability to get the President's attention.

    During the next year Bowles traveled widely in Africa, Asia, and Latin America, meeting with the Shah of Iran, Nasser, Haile Selassie, Nehru, Ayub Khan, and Prince Sihanouk, among others. He inspected rural and community development projects and AID-sponsored programs, visited with Peace Corps volunteers, and saw the results of the African independence movement. Often he sent suggestions back to the President in detailed memoranda.

    But, in December 1962, Bowles transmitted to Kennedy a letter of resignation. He felt strongly that his position had placed him outside the policy-making structure and he was exasperated with the lack of progress on or even high level attention to a positive policy geared to the developing nations. Kennedy asked Bowles to withhold his resignation until they could meet again. In early January, Kennedy met with Bowles with a new proposal; John Kenneth Galbraith was about to leave as ambassador to India and Kennedy hoped Bowles would agree to replace him. Before accepting the offer, Bowles sent Kennedy a memo outlining his thoughts on policies toward India and its relations with the rest of Asia. With Kennedy's concurrence on these policies, he felt able to accept the offer.

    With Bowles' departure for India in July of 1963, this part of the Papers ends and Part VII begins.

    Part VI consists of three series:

    Correspondence

    Speeches, Statements and Writings

    Clippings

    Note 1: The researcher should also consult Part IX for additional materials related to this period, including photographs, diaries, and oral histories.

    Note 2: The researcher might also be interested in a Yale senior essay (Spring, 1974) on Bowles during this period. See: Stephen Heintz, Frustrations at Foggy Bottom: Chester Bowles as Under Secretary of State, January - November 1961, in Miscellaneous Mss., No. 170.

    PART VII -- 1963 Jul - 1969 May

    Bowles' second term as Ambassador to India began in July, 1963. This is the beginning date for Part VII. Bowles thought that he would be in India no more than two years, but his tour lasted until the spring of 1969. On arrival, the Bowles' moved into the recently-built ambassadorial residence, Roosevelt House, but found this highly stylized architecture ill-suited to their more informal mode of life. As during Bowles' first ambassadorship, they moved into the pleasant home-like bungalow at Ratendon Road. They used Roovevelt House as a place for official entertaining and hospitality functions for members of the Mission and the Indian people.

    During his tenure in New Delhi, Bowles brought all programs of the U.S. Mission in India under his direction. He oversaw the functioning not only of the Embassy and consulates, but also of the U.S. Information Service, the Peace Corps, the Agency for International Development, and the military and intelligence missions. Bowles again made numerous attempts to get Senators and Congressmen to come to India to see firsthand what had been and what needed to be done in developing nations like India. When he first arrived, a top priority was negotiations between the U.S. and India to develop an agreement for substantial U.S. military assistance to India. Kennedy's death in November 1963, followed by that of Prime Minister Nehru only six months later, plus resistance in U.S. State and Defense Departments, delayed this agreement.

    Learning to adjust to India's changing leadership was a special aspect of this period. Jawaharlal Nehru, aging and ill on Bowles' arrival, died in May 1964. Lal Bahadur Shastri, Nehru's successor, had been in office less than two years when he too died in 1966. His death brought yet another new Prime Minister, Indira Gandhi, Nehru's daughter. Similarly the assassination of Kennedy and the subsequent efforts to ascertain the Johnson Administration's views and assure Johnson's positive stance on India were critical issues during Bowles' second ambassadorship.

    In addition to continuing problems of economic development, India was confronted in this period with major problems which demanded immediate U.S. attention. In September 1965, Pakistan launched an attack in Kashmir using tanks and other war material supplied by the U.S. In 1965 and 1966 two successive droughts brought severe food shortages. The U.S., with its then abundant food surpluses, was able to help, but President Johnson attempted to use U.S., grain for political leverage. Despite repeated pleas by Bowles and U.S. friends of India, food shipments were delayed until there was a virtual "ship-to-mouth" schedule of deliveries.

    Two other events brought diplomatic and Indo-U.S. relations problems to the U.S. Mission. One was the 1967 public exposure in the U.S. of C.I.A. funding of U.S. educational and scholarly activities in India and elsewhere. The second was the sudden appearance of Svetlana Allilueva, Joseph Stalin's daughter, at the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi in March 1967, where she sought U.S. assistance to remain in India or at least to prevent her return to the Soviet Union. Bowles' efforts to aid Svetlana prevent her return to the Soviet Union. Bowles' efforts to aid Svetlana ended with her eventual settlement in the U.S.

    The papers for this period are an important source of information on the changing aspects of Indo-U.S. relations; on Bowles' guidance of the U.S. Mission in New Delhi; and also on the change of administration in the U.S. following the assassination of John Kennedy, the 1964 U.S. presidential election, the ever-widening war in Vietnam, Bowles' mission to Prince Sihanouk in Cambodia in 1968 to discuss North Vietnamese military violations of the Cambodia border, and the 1968 U.S. presidential election. The papers also record the onset of Bowles' affliction with Parkinson's disease and his efforts to control it.

    The papers in this Part (VII) are smaller in quantity than one would expect for a six-year period. It is possible that a large quantity of correspondence and other documentation that passed through the Ambassador's hands was left in the Embassy files in New Delhi on Bowles' departure.

    Part VII is arranged in four series:

    Correspondence

    Speeches, Statements and Writings

    Special Subjects:

    U.S. Mission in India

    India

    Other Countries and Areas

    Clippings

    PART VIII -- 1969 June -

    Part VIII is composed of papers dating from Bowles' return from India in the spring of 1969. While most of Bowles' public correspondence for 1969 and 1970 is included here, this part is incomplete and unprocessed and will remain so until Bowles' death when any additional papers can be processed with what is already in Manuscripts and Archives.

    Although Bowles had left India and throughout most of 1969 and 1970 was almost totally occupied with preparing his autobiography Promises to Keep, he kept in close touch with India and U.S. foreign policy, particularly in regard to South and Southeast Asia. See especially his correspondence with President Nixon, Henry Kissinger, Secretary of State William Rogers, General William C. Westmoreland, Dean Rusk and Lucius Battle.

    The papers in this section contain drafts, and correspondence and critiques of various stages of the manuscripts for the autobiography, Promises to Keep. Also included are drafts, correspondence and the final manuscript of Bowles' book, "Mission to India," published in India in 1974. Copies of both books, as published, have been incorporated with these files.

    Part IX is arranged in five series as follows:

    Photographs and Memorabilia

    Informational Files

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    147

    Part I, Series I. Correspondence, 1942-1946

    The correspondence series is arranged alphabetically by name of the correspondent. Correspondents with whom Bowles had significant exchanges in terms of quantity and/or quality have been individually listed in this register; the remaining correspondence has been placed in general letter folders. The correspondence between Bowles and OPA or OES officials is arranged in two ways. Routine correspondence is filed under "U.S. Government," in folders marked "OPA File" or "OES File." Correspondence with other OPA-OES personnel is filed by name, the individuals being identified in the folder listing as "OPA official" or "OPA consultant."

    The James G. Rogers, Jr., folders are the best single source on OPA operations. Folders for Douglas J. Bennet, Sr., Robert R. R. Brooks, James Brownlee, Bice Clemow, Marcella Eastman, Richard H. Field, and Donald H. Wallace are also useful. OPA-OES matters are also discussed in Bowles' correspondence with Presidents Truman and Roosevelt, the White House staff, Congressmen, other government officials (James F. Byrnes, John Snyder) and private citizens (James Patton, Clarence Francis) and organizations (Committee on Economic Development). On the politics and day-to-day problems of OPA, the correspondence with Connecticut's Senator Francis Maloney, and Democratic National Chairman, Robert Hannegan, is especially rich. The J. Francis Smith correspondence traces an interesting case study of a Connecticut businessman alienated by OPA policies.

    The Office of Economic Stabilization and OPA continued after July 1946, the termination date of Part I of the Bowles papers. Further correspondence on these agencies and on their post war problems and eventual demise will be found in Part II. See especially the Everett W. Reimer and Roderick Riley correspondence on OPA. The Robert R. R. Brooks correspondence, also in Part II, contains an interesting memorandum on the history of OPA. (Note: The researcher should also consult the James G. Rogers, Jr. Papers in Manuscripts and Archives for his correspondence concerning the recruitment of people from the advertising field to staff OPA.

    Bowles' position, convictions, and aspirations encouraged him to range beyond price control issues. Deeply concerned with the expected problems of post-war conversion, Bowles suggested President Roosevelt's famous State of the Union address setting forth the "Economic Bill of Rights" and sought to commit Roosevelt, Truman and the Congress to a policy of government intervention in the economy to secure full employment and economic growth. Bowles' desire to prevent confrontation with Russia, to expand foreign trade, and to recognize the needs of the emerging colonial areas clearly foreshadowed his dissenting position on foreign policy in the 1950's and 1960's. The White House, Roosevelt, Samuel Rosenman and Truman folders shed light on Bowles' official contribution to policy on these issues. The Marcella Eastman, Beneta Cox, and especially the William Benton correspondence reflect the wide range of Bowles' political and professional interests and some aspects of his personal life. Other valuable personal commentary is expressed in correspondence with Alfred Bingham.

    At the end of the series there are folders of form letters, mailing lists, correspondence relating to Bowles' travel and expense accounts, and correspondence of others. The researcher will notice occasional photocopies of letters from the National Archives in the files. These copies, were made by Bowles or a member of his staff for Bowles' use in writing his memoirs, Promises to Keep.

    Description
    Box
    Folder

    A

    1

    1

    American Retail Federation, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/2

    1

    2

    American Veterans Committee, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 0/5

    1

    3

    Anderson, Clinton, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/10

    1

    4

    Arpaia, Anthony (OPA official), 1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 9/12

    1

    5

    Arpaia, Anthony (OPA official), 1944 - 1945 Jan

    Letters To CB/From CB: 23/22

    1

    6

    B

    1

    7

    Backman, Kenneth (OPA consultant), 1942, 1944

    Letters To CB/From CB: 23/13

    1

    8

    Backman, Kenneth (OPA consultant), 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 11/17

    1

    9

    Baker, William, 1942-1944, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 6/6

    1

    10

    Baldwin, C. B., 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 0/6

    1

    11

    Baldwin, Raymond E., 1943-1944

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/9

    1

    12

    Baldwin, Roger, 1944-1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/2

    1

    13

    Baldwin, William, 1943-1944

    Letters To CB/From CB: 48/27

    1

    14

    Baldwin, William, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 18/11

    1

    15

    Barkley, Alben, 1944, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/2

    1

    16

    Baruch, Bernard, 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 10/11

    1

    17

    Bates, Ted, 1942-1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 13/7

    2

    18

    Bennet, Douglas J., Sr. (OPA official), 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 37/7

    2

    19

    Bennett, Charles Dana, 1944-1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 9/4

    2

    20

    Benton, William - Speech, 1941 Mar 27

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/0

    2

    21

    Benton, William, 1942

    Letters To CB/From CB: 23/21


    See also: Part IX, Series II

    2

    22

    Benton, William, 1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 38/19

    2

    23

    Benton, William, 1944 Jan-Jun

    Letters To CB/From CB: 35/37

    2

    24

    Benton, William, 1944 Jul-Dec

    Letters To CB/From CB: 8/39

    2

    25

    Benton, William, 1945 Jan-Jul

    Letters To CB/From CB: 46/14

    2

    26

    Benton, William, 1945 Aug-Dec

    Letters To CB/From CB: 25/8

    2

    27

    Benton, William, 1946 Jan-Jun

    Letters To CB/From CB: 10/12

    2

    28

    Benton and Bowles, Incorporated, 1941

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/0


    See also: Part IX, Series II
    See also: box 1, folder 10
    See also: box 1, folder 7
    See also: box 3, folder 47
    See also: box 4, folder 59
    See also: box 4, folder 60
    See also: box 3, folder 47
    See also: box 4, folder 60
    See also: box 5, folder 70
    See also: box 4, folder 60
    See also: box 6, folder 83
    See also: box 6, folder 103
    See also: box 7, folder 111
    See also: box 7, folder 117
    See also: box 7, folder 118
    See also: box 6, folder 107
    See also: box 7, folder 133
    See also: box 7, folder 133
    See also: box 8, folder 166
    See also: box 9, folder 185
    See also: box 10, folder 211
    See also: box 11, folder 213
    See also: box 10, folder 205
    See also: box 12, folder 246

    2

    29

    Biddle, Francis, 1943-1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 10/19

    3

    30

    Bingham, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred M., 1941-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 16/22


    See also: box 2, folder 23

    3

    31

    Bliven, Bruce, 1944-1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/3

    3

    32

    Boettiger, Anna (Roosevelt)
    See: box 10, folder 196

    x-ref

    Bower, Martin (OPA Consultant), 1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/1

    3

    33

    Bowles Family Correspondence, 1942-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 8/13

    3

    34

    Bowles, Mrs. Charles Allen, Letters of Condolence on death of, 1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 32/32

    3

    35

    Bridges, Styles, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/2

    3

    36

    Brooks, Robert R.R. (OPA official), 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 32/12

    3

    37

    Brown, Prentiss (Bowles' predecessor as OPA Administrator), 1943, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/9

    3

    38

    Brownlee, James (OPA-OES official), 1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 10/26

    3

    39

    Brownlee, James (OPA-OES official), 1944

    Letters To CB/From CB: 30/69

    3

    40

    Brownlee, James (OPA-OES official), 1945 Jan-May

    Letters To CB/From CB: 22/31

    3

    41

    Brownlee, James (OPA-OES official), 1945 Jun-Dec

    Letters To CB/From CB: 8/8

    3

    42

    Brownlee, James (OPA-OES official), 1946 Feb-Jun

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/3

    3

    43

    Butler, Ralph Starr, 1943-1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 10/10

    3

    44

    Butterworth, Paul
    See: box 11, folder 217

    x-ref

    Bye, George T., 1944-1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 12/10

    3

    45

    Byrnes, James F., 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/14

    3

    46

    C

    3

    47

    Chapman, Oscar L., 1940-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 12/1

    4

    48

    The Choate School, 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 11/5

    4

    49

    Clemow, Bice (OPA-OES official), 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 15/7

    4

    50

    Cohen, Benjamin, 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 4/10

    4

    51

    Collet, J. Caskie (OES official: Stabilization Administrator), 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 0/5

    4

    52

    Committee for Economic Development, 1944

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/2

    4

    53

    Committee for Economic Development, 1945 Jan-Jul

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/3

    4

    54

    Committee for Economic Development, 1945 Aug-Oct

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/2

    4

    55

    Committee for Economic Development, 1945 Nov

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/1

    4

    56

    Committee for Economic Development, 1945 Dec-1946 Jul

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/2

    4

    57

    Connelly, Matthew
    See: box 12, folder 245

    x-ref

    Cowles, Gardner and John, 1942-1943, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/6

    4

    58

    Cox, Beneta, 1942-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 57/53

    4

    59

    D

    4

    60

    Daniels, Jonathan, 1944-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/9

    4

    61

    Davies, Joseph E., 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/2

    5

    62

    Davies, Ralph K., 1944-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/4

    5

    63

    Davis, A. M. and Gilbert, A. M. (Lawyers), 1942-1943, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 28/10

    5

    64

    Davis, Elmer, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/2

    5

    65

    Davis, John W., 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/1

    5

    66

    Davis, William H., 1944-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 4/12

    5

    67

    Democratic National Committee
    See: box 1, folder 7
    See: box 5, folder 72
    See: box 6, folder 108
    See: box 9, folder 173

    x-ref

    Dobberteen, H. H., 1942-1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 4/5

    5

    68

    Dodderidge, Helendeen H., 1942-1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/2

    5

    69

    Dombrowski, James
    See: box 11, folder 218
    See: box 7, folder 116

    x-ref

    Dudley, Chester, 1942-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 17/12

    5

    70

    Dudley, H. Andrew, 1942-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 7/6

    5

    71

    E

    5

    72

    Early, Stephen
    See: box 12, folder 245

    x-ref

    Eastman, Marcella (OPA official), 1942-1944

    Letters To CB/From CB: 6/2

    5

    73

    Eastman, Marcella (OPA official), 1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 27/9

    5

    74

    Eastman, Marcella (OPA official), 1946 Jan-Jun

    Letters To CB/From CB: 32/7

    5

    75

    Eccles, Marriner, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 0/5

    5

    76

    Emerson, Thomas (OPA official), 1944-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 9/1

    5

    77

    Encyclopedia Britannica, 1944 Apr-Jul

    Letters To CB/From CB: 8/3

    5

    78

    Encyclopedia Britannica, 1944 Aug-Nov

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/4

    5

    79

    Encyclopedia Britannica, 1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 14/7

    5

    80

    Encyclopedia Britannica, 1946 Jan-Mar

    Letters To CB/From CB: 6/5

    5

    81

    Encyclopedia Britannica, 1946 Apr-Jul

    Letters To CB/From CB: 13/9


    See also: box 2, folder 21

    5

    82

    F

    6

    83

    Field, Richard (OPA official), 1943 Nov-1944 Apr

    Letters To CB/From CB: 16/8

    6

    84

    Field, Richard (OPA official), 1944 Jun-Dec

    Letters To CB/From CB: 11/8

    6

    85

    Field, Richard (OPA official), 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 16/14

    6

    86

    Forrestal, James, 1942, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/2

    6

    87

    Fortas, Abe, 1944-1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 7/2

    6

    88

    Francis, Clarence, 1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 9/7

    6

    89

    Francis, Clarence, 1944

    Letters To CB/From CB: 17/20

    6

    90

    Francis, Clarence, 1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 12/14

    6

    91

    Freedom House, 1943, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/2

    6

    92

    G

    6

    93

    Gaer, Joseph, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 0/4

    6

    94

    Galbraith, John Kenneth, 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 12/17


    See also: box 23, folder 427

    6

    95

    Gaston, William, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/5

    6

    96

    Gibbs, Marston, 1942-1944

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/4

    6

    97

    Gilbert, A. M.
    See: box 5, folder 64

    x-ref

    Gilbert, Richard V. (OPA official), 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/4

    6

    98

    Ginsburg, David, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/2

    6

    99

    Glazier, William, 1943-1944

    Letters To CB/From CB: 6/4

    6

    100

    Goddard College, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 9/7

    6

    101

    Goldstein, Robert, 1942, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/3

    6

    102

    Goshorn, Clarence, 1943-1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 11/8

    6

    103

    Gould, Jay, 1942

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/2

    6

    104

    Green, William, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/3

    6

    105

    Guptill, Page, 1942, 1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 4/3

    6

    106

    H

    6

    107

    Hannegan, Robert, 1944-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 33/47

    6

    108

    Hart, Clyde W. (OPA official), 1944-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 4/1

    6

    109

    Hart, Henry M., Jr. ( OPA official), 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 16/7

    7

    110

    Hassett, William
    See: box 12, folder 245

    x-ref

    Hawkes, Kirby, 1942-1944

    Letters To CB/From CB: 4/4

    7

    111

    Hemenway, C. C. (The Hartford Times) , 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/3

    7

    112

    Henderson, Leon (first OPA Administrator), 1942-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/14

    7

    113

    Herrick, Elinore, 1942-1943, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/6

    7

    114

    Hertzberg, Sidney, 1942, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/2

    7

    115

    Highlander Folk School, 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/5

    7

    116

    Hobler, Atherton, 1942-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 20/33

    7

    117

    Hoffman, Paul
    See: box 4, folder 53

    x-ref

    Holmes, Mildred, 1942, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/2

    7

    118

    Holt, Guy, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/3

    7

    119

    Hooker, Richard, 1942-1943, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 4/5

    7

    120

    Hoover, Herbert, 1944

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/1

    7

    121

    Hopkins, Harry
    See: box 12, folder 245

    x-ref

    Hutchins, Robert M., 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 6/7


    See also: box 12, folder 237

    7

    122

    I

    7

    123

    Ickes, Harold, 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 52/7

    7

    124

    Independent Citizens Committee of Arts, Sciences and Professions, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 0/6

    7

    125

    J

    7

    126

    Johnston, Eric, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 0/4

    7

    127

    Jones, Marvin, 1944-1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/5

    7

    128

    K

    7

    129

    Kent, Frank, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/2

    7

    130

    Krock, Arthur, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 4/2

    7

    131

    Krug, Julius A., 1944-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 4/3

    7

    132

    L

    7

    133

    LaFollette, Robert and Philip, 1942, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/5

    7

    134

    LaGuardia, Fiorello, 1944, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/6

    7

    135

    LaRoche, Chester, 1942, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/6

    7

    136

    Larsen, Roy (Time-Life), 1942

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/3

    7

    137

    Lubin, Isador, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/1


    See also: box 12, folder 245

    7

    138

    Lucas, Joseph W., Jr., 1944-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/4

    7

    139

    M

    7

    140

    McCormack, John M., 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/4

    7

    141

    McGraw, James (McGraw-Hill), 1944-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/2

    7

    142

    McGuire, Francis and Frank, 1942-1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/3

    7

    143

    McGuire, John, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 0/6

    7

    144

    McMahon, Brian, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/8

    7

    145

    Maloney, Francis, 1942

    Letters To CB/From CB: 37/27

    8

    146

    Maloney, Francis, 1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 49/56

    8

    Maloney, Francis, 1944 Jan-May

    Letters To CB/From CB: 17/26

    8

    148

    Maloney, Francis, 1944 Jun-Dec

    Letters To CB/From CB: 13/21

    8

    149

    Maloney, Francis, 1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/3

    8

    150

    McIntyre, William
    See: box 12, folder 245

    x-ref

    Montgomery, Donald (OPA consultant), 1942-1943, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 6/10

    8

    151

    Moody, Blair, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 0/5

    8

    152

    Morgenthau, Henry, Jr., 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/4

    8

    153

    Mortensen, William H., 1942-1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/3

    8

    154

    Mortimer, Charles G., 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 14/21

    8

    155

    Munro, David A., 1943, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/3

    8

    156

    Murray, James, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/3

    8

    157

    Murray, Philip, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/3

    8

    158

    Myers, Howard
    See: box 4, folder 53

    x-ref

    N

    8

    159

    Nahum, Milton, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/4

    8

    160

    Nathan, Robert, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 0/7

    8

    161

    National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
    See: box 8, folder 154
    See: box 12, folder 244

    x-ref

    National Association of Manufacturers, 1942, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/0

    8

    162

    National Urban League
    See: box 1, folder 14

    x-ref

    Nelson, Donald M., 1943-1944

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/7

    8

    163

    Niles, David
    See: box 12, folder 245

    x-ref

    Norwich State Hospital, 1942

    Letters To CB/From CB: 7/3

    8

    164

    O

    8

    165

    P

    8

    166

    Palmer, Howard S. (New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company), 1942-1943, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/2

    9

    167

    Pastore, John, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/1

    9

    168

    Patman, Wright, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/3

    9

    169

    Patton, James, 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 34/31

    9

    170

    Pepper, Claude, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/2

    9

    171

    Pitkin, Royce
    See: box 6, folder 101

    x-ref

    Pomfret School, 1942, 1944-1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 6/4

    9

    172

    Porter, Paul (OPA official; Bowles' successor as OPA Administrator), 1942-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 9/30

    9

    173

    Potter, Zenas (OPA official), 1944-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/6

    9

    174

    Prettyman, E. Barrett (OPA legal advisor), 1943-1944

    Letters To CB/From CB: 13/6

    9

    175

    Q

    9

    176

    Quinlan, Frank (OPA official), 1942-1944, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 7/8

    9

    177

    R

    9

    178

    Reuther, Walter, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/6

    9

    179

    Revere, Tom, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/4

    9

    180

    Robbins, William M., 1942-1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/2

    9

    181

    Roberts, Helen, 1942-1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/2

    9

    182

    Rockefeller, Nelson, 1944, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/5

    9

    183

    Rodman, Selden, 1944-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 6/2

    9

    184

    Rogers, James G., Jr. (OPA official), 1942

    Letters To CB/From CB: 13/17

    9

    185

    Rogers, James G., Jr. (OPA official), 1943 Jan-Jul

    Letters To CB/From CB: 18/23

    9

    186

    Rogers, James G., Jr. (OPA official), 1943 Aug-Sep

    Letters To CB/From CB: 34/5

    9

    187

    Rogers, James G., Jr. (OPA official), 1944 Jan-Apr

    Letters To CB/From CB: 40/32

    9

    188

    Rogers, James G., Jr. (OPA official), 1944 May-Jun

    Letters To CB/From CB: 25/12

    9

    189

    Rogers, James G., Jr. (OPA official), 1944 Jul

    Letters To CB/From CB: 16/20

    9

    190

    Rogers, James G., Jr. (OPA official), 1944 Aug-Oct

    Letters To CB/From CB: 28/49

    9

    191

    Rogers, James G., Jr. (OPA official), 1944 Nov-Dec

    Letters To CB/From CB: 21/12

    9

    192

    Rogers, James G., Jr. (OPA official), 1945 Jan-Feb

    Letters To CB/From CB: 36/27

    10

    192a

    Rogers, James G., Jr. (OPA official), 1945 Mar-Jun

    Letters To CB/From CB: 45/11

    10

    193

    Rogers, James G., Jr. (OPA official), 1945 Jul-Dec

    Letters To CB/From CB: 63/11

    10

    194

    Rogers, James G., Jr. (OPA official), 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/4

    10

    195

    Boettiger, Anna (Roosevelt), 1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 0/1

    10

    196

    Roosevelt, Eleanor, 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 21/28

    10

    197

    Roosevelt, Franklin D., 1941, 1943-1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 10/12

    10

    198

    Roosevelt, Franklin D., Club, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 0/1

    10

    199

    Roosevelt Memorial, 1945

    10

    200

    Roosevelt, Franklin D., Jr.
    See: box 1, folder 3

    x-ref

    Rosenberg, Anna M., 1944-1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/6

    10

    201

    Rosenman, Samuel and Dorothy, 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 13/27

    10

    202

    Rubicam, Raymond, 1944-1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 11/8

    10

    203

    Ruhm, H. D., Jr., 1943, 1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/2

    10

    204

    S

    10

    205

    St. John, George
    See: Box 126, folder 126

    x-ref

    Schneeberg, Edwin, 1943-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/3

    10

    206

    Seid, Herman, 1942, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 0/4

    10

    207

    Seymour, Charles, 1942-1943, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 4/4

    10

    208

    Shepard, Odell, 1944, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/3

    10

    209

    Sherman, Harry, 1942, 1944

    Letters To CB/From CB: 4/4

    10

    210

    Shinnick, William, 1942-1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/2

    10

    211

    Simon and Schuster (publishers of Tomorrow Without Fear ), 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 26/28

    11

    212

    Smith, Frank, 1943-1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 4/4

    11

    213

    Smith, Harold, 1944, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/5

    11

    214

    Smith, J. Francis, 1942-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 26/28

    11

    215

    Snyder, John, 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/7

    11

    216

    Society of Friends, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/3

    11

    217

    Southern Conference for Human Welfare (James Dombrowski), 1942

    Letters To CB/From CB: 4/3

    11

    218

    Spadea, James V., 1942

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/1

    11

    219

    Spence, Brent, 1945, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 0/5

    11

    220

    Stanford, Dorothy and Alfred (OPA official), 1942-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 12/10

    11

    221

    Stanley, Morris, 1942

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/1

    11

    222

    Steelman, John
    See: box 12, folder 245

    x-ref

    T

    11

    223

    Taylor, Mary, 1942-1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/3

    11

    224

    Thomas, Norman, 1942-1943

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/4

    11

    225

    Thompson, Dorothy, 1944, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/1

    11

    226

    Timm, Tyrus R. (OPA official), 1945-1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 2/5

    11

    227

    Time-Life
    See: box 7, folder 137
    See: Part II, Series I., box 40, folder 297
    See: box 9, folder 205

    x-ref

    Tracy, William B., 1942

    Letters To CB/From CB: 3/2

    11

    228

    Truman, Harry S., 1945

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/11

    11

    229

    Truman, Harry S., 1946 Jan-May

    Letters To CB/From CB: 5/16

    11

    230

    Truman, Harry S., 1946 Jun-Jul

    Letters To CB/From CB: 1/4

    11

    231

    Tally, Grace
    See: box 12, folder 245

    x-ref

    U

    11

    232

    United States Government Agencies, 1942-1944, 1946

    Letters To CB/From CB: 7/14

    11

    233

    United States Government: OPA File : Connecticut Period, 1942 Jan-1943 Jun

    Letters To CB/From CB: 24/21

    11

    234

    United States Government: OPA File : Correspondence and materials on reorganization of OPA management turned over to Bowles when he became OPA General Manager, 1943 Jun-Jul

    Letters To CB/From CB: 21 items

    11

    235

    United States Government: OPA File : Washington Period, 1943 Aug-1946 Feb

    Letters To CB/From CB: 43/20

    12

    235a

    United States Government: OES File , 1946 Feb 26-Jul 15

    Letters To CB/From CB: 10/111


    See also: box 1, folder 5
    See also: box 1, folder 8
    See also: box 2, folder 19
    See also: box 3, folder 33
    See also: box 3, folder 37
    See also: box 3, folder 38
    See also: box 3, folder 39
    See also: box 4, folder 50