Chester B. Bowles
Chester B. Bowles | |
---|---|
Governor of Connecticut | |
In office January 5, 1949 – January 3, 1951 | |
Lieutenant | William T. Carroll |
Preceded by | James C. Shannon |
Succeeded by | John Davis Lodge |
Administrator of the Office of Price Administration | |
In office 1943–1946 | |
President | Franklin D. Roosevelt Harry S. Truman |
Preceded by | Prentiss M. Brown |
Succeeded by | Office abolished |
Personal details | |
Born | Chester Bliss Bowles April 5, 1901 Springfield, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Died | May 25, 1986 Essex, Connecticut, U.S. | (aged 85)
Political party | Democratic |
Spouses |
|
Children | 5, including Sam |
Education | Yale University (BS) |
Chester Bliss Bowles (April 5, 1901 – May 25, 1986) was an American diplomat and ambassador, governor of Connecticut, congressman and co-founder of a major advertising agency, Benton & Bowles, now part of Publicis Groupe. Bowles is best known for his influence on American foreign policy during Cold War years, when he argued that economic assistance to the Third World was the best means to fight communism, and even more important, to create a more peaceable world order. During World War II, he held high office in Washington as director of the Office of Price Administration, and control of setting consumer prices. Just after the war, he was the chief of the Office of Economic Stabilization, but had great difficulty controlling inflation. Moving into state politics, he served a term as governor of Connecticut from 1949 to 1951. He promoted liberal programs in education and housing, but was defeated for reelection by conservative backlash.
As ambassador to India, he established a good relationship with Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, an emerging leader of the nonalignment movement. Bowles promoted rapid economic industrialization in India, and repeatedly called on Washington to help finance it. However, Washington was angered by India's neutrality, and limited funding to literacy and health programs. During the Eisenhower years, 1953–1960, Bowles organized liberal Democratic opposition, and served as a foreign policy advisor to Adlai Stevenson and John F. Kennedy. His reward was Under Secretary of State (1961), which enabled him to staff American embassies with liberal intellectuals and activists. However his liberalism proved too strong for Kennedy, who demoted him to a nominal job as roving ambassador to the Third World in 1961. Kennedy named him as ambassador to India again, 1963–1969, where he helped improve agricultural productivity and fight local famines.[1]
Education and early career
Chester Bowles was born in Springfield, Massachusetts, to Charles Allen Bowles and Nellie Seaver (Harris). Theirs was an old Yankee family. His grandfather Samuel Bowles was a leading Republican spokesman as editor of the Springfield Republican. His father made a middle-class living as a salesmen for the wood pulp industry. Chester's parents were arch-conservative Republicans who hated and feared big government. However, Chester's political views were shaped more by his aunt Ruth Standish Baldwin, who was a socialist, pacifist, friend of Norman Thomas, and leader in the early civil rights movements for Blacks. She inspired him to read deeply in politics, civil rights, and international affairs. Chester attended elite private schools – The Choate School (now Choate Rosemary Hall) in Wallingford, Connecticut, graduating in 1919. He matriculated at the Sheffield Scientific School at Yale University, earning a Bachelor of Science degree in 1924. Decades later he recalled the Yale years "as a period of overwork, confusion and missed opportunities....It was unfashionable in or out of college to think much about anything."[2]
After working after graduation as a reporter for the newspaper in Springfield, Massachusetts owned by his family, Bowles took a minor position with the United States consulate in Shanghai, but soon returned to the U.S. because of his father's illness.[3]
Advertising career success
Bowles became a copywriter for $25 per week at the Batten Company, an advertising agency in New York City that later became
- I honestly believe that I would have been happier and more effective if I had gone into public service immediately following my graduation from college. On the other hand, I realize that the grinding effort that I put into those early years enabled my family and me to build a capital reserve which has assured us far greater independence and made it possible for me to travel, to write, to speak my mind, and to move from one career to the next as various challenges presented themselves.[6]
Because of his strong support for the New Deal Domestic policies of the Roosevelt Administration, Bowles worked closely with First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt on several key policy initiatives and programs, while continuing his job at Benton & Bowles.[7]
Career during World War II
Initially, Bowles was opposed to the United States getting involved in World War II and joined an opposition group, the America First Committee. When the United States entered World War II in December 1941, he was rejected for health reasons when he tried to join the Navy.
Bowles then took a job as the state of Connecticut's rationing administrator in 1942. He becoming state director of price administration later that year, and then general manager. He was appointed by President
Diplomatic and political career
In 1946, he was appointed director of the
Bowles was elected to the governorship of Connecticut in 1948, defeating James C. Shannon, and served one term, during which time he signed into law an end to segregation in the state national guard. During his term, Bowles was also active in improving education, mental health, housing and workmen's compensation. He lost a bitter re-election campaign to John Davis Lodge, during which his opponent painted him as an extreme liberal.[10]
He was appointed as
During the Eisenhower years, Bowles was a leading Democratic liberal intellectual, especially on foreign policy matters, writing numerous articles, giving speeches, and advising Adlai Stevenson and John F. Kennedy. Bowles won a seat in the House of Representatives for Connecticut's second district and served one term, from January 3, 1959, to January 3, 1961.
Bowles was selected in 1960 as a foreign policy adviser to Senator John F. Kennedy during Kennedy's campaign for president of the US. Bowles served as chairman of the platform committee for the Democratic National Convention that year in Los Angeles, California.
President Kennedy appointed Bowles to the post of
In March 1967, Bowles was formally petitioned for
Bowles completed his service as Ambassador to India on April 21, 1969, during the early days of the presidency of Richard Nixon.
Political commitment
Chester Bowles was well known for his oft-repeated phrase, that he always had "a feeling for the people's side." He said that his grandfather and great-grandfather also used that phrase in their careers in journalism as newspaper owners.[5] Bowles showed expertise in stagecraft, public relations and promotion, both during his career in advertising, and throughout his work as a diplomat, elected official and appointed official. For many years he was a successful author and lecturer, giving him platforms to promote his beliefs and views of politics, policy and the quest for peace. Early on, while a student at Yale College, his goal was to join the United States foreign service to become a career diplomat. Even while a business executive in the late 1920s and throughout the 1930s, he fostered a keen, growing interest in domestic issues, international issues, and a wide array of other political issues of the day. With the election of Franklin Roosevelt to the presidency in 1932, Bowles saw in the New Deal policies many ideas and concepts that he liked and would promote for decades.[5]
Because of the strength and wealth of the United States, Bowles believed that it was essential for America to further develop vigorous, sizable foreign aid programs to a large number of countries. Bowles was a long-time advocate for peace. Because of that deep-rooted sense that peace was vital to survival and happiness of the world's population, Bowles was opposed to the Vietnam War and to the involvement of the United States in Southeast Asia. European reconstruction was vital, he believed, after the massive devastation of World War II. That devastation was due in no small measure to the bombing and other military activities conducted by the US and its Allies over the years of conflict in Europe, in his view. Bowles understood that the
Civil rights was of paramount importance to Chester Bowles. As a white liberal from the Northeast, he used various tools to foment change that encouraged independence, freedom and equality for African-Americans and other minorities, supporting changes in the laws advocating for enlightened judicial decisions affecting civil rights. He wrote articles and books that promoted civil rights and agitation for change and improvement, including in a book entitled "What Negroes Can Learn from Gandhi" published in 1958. He advanced these rights by supporting various government programs and private philanthropic initiatives.[14]
Personal life
Bowles married twice and had children by both marriages. His first wife was Julia Fisk. They married in 1925 and divorced in 1933. The marriage produced two children, a son, Chester Jr., and a daughter, Barbara. Chester Bowles Jr. was an architect in San Francisco.
In 1934, the year after his divorce, Bowles married Dorothy Stebbens. They had three children together: two daughters, Cynthia and Sally, and a son, Samuel.[15] Samuel Bowles is a well-known economist, while Sally Bowles (1938-2011) continued her father's tradition of public service, which lifelong dedication she attributed to her years as a school-girl studying in a public school in India, where she and her siblings were the only non-Indian students.[16]
A public housing project in northwest Hartford, Connecticut, Bowles Park, is named in Bowles's honor. Connecticut Route 9 between Old Saybrook and Cromwell is also designated as the Chester Bowles Highway.
Death
Bowles died at the age of 85, on May 25, 1986, in Essex, Connecticut. He had had Parkinson's disease for 22 years (diagnosed when he was Ambassador to India). He also had a cerebrovascular accident (a stroke) the week prior to his death.[5] His grave is in the River View Cemetery in Essex.
Bibliography
- Tomorrow Without Fear (1946)
- Ambassador's Report (1954)
- The New Dimensions of Peace (1955)
- Africa's Challenge to America (1956)
- What Negroes Can Learn From Gandhi (1958)
- Ideas, People, and Peace (1958)
- The Coming Political Breakthrough (1959)
- The Conscience of a Liberal (1962)
- The Makings of a Just Society(1963)
- Promises to Keep: My Years in Public Life (1971)
References
- ^ Bruce W. Jentleson and Thomas G. Paterson, eds. Encyclopedia of US foreign relations. (1997) 1:168-69.
- ^ Chester Bowles, Promises to Keep (1971) pp. 15–18, quoting page 17.
- ^ Howard B. Schaffer, Chester Bowles: New Dealer in the Cold War, (1993) pp 7–12.
- ^ "About Benton: History". 2007-02-05. Archived from the original on 2007-02-05. Retrieved 2019-04-03.
- ^ a b c d Krebs, Albin (May 26, 1986). "Chester Bowles Is Dead at 85; Served in 4 Administrations". The New York Times.
- ^ Chester Bowles, Promises to Keep (1971), p. 24.
- ISBN 9780816053681.
- ^ a b Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. "BOWLES, Chester Bliss, (1901–1986)".
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has generic name (help) - ^ Sciboz, Joëlle. "Research Guides: General Assembly – Quick Links: 2nd Session (1947–1948)". research.un.org.
- ISBN 9781878592590.
- ISBN 9780674113909.
- ^ Schaffer, Chester Bowles (1993)
- ^ Richard P. Dauer, A North-South Mind in an East-West World: Chester Bowles and the Making of United States Cold War Foreign Policy, 1951–1969 (Greenwood, 2005). online
- ISBN 9781932792546.
- ^ Schaffer, Chester Bowles p. 13.
- ^ Hamilton, Anne M. (July 31, 2011). "Extraordinary Life: Sally Bowles, 73, of Essex, died June 11". Hartford Courant.
John Kenneth Galbraith review of "Promises to Keep" New York Times April 25, 1971
Further reading
- Ahlberg, Kristin. “'Machiavelli With a Heart': The Johnson Administration’s Food for Peace Program in India, 1965–1966,” Diplomatic History 31, no. 4 (2007): 665–701.
- D'Auria, Gregory T. "A Connecticut Cassandra in Camelot: Chester Bowles, John F. Kennedy, and the Vietnam War." Connecticut History Review (1987): 39–57. online
- Dauer, Richard P. A North-South Mind in an East-West World: Chester Bowles and the Making of United States Cold War Foreign Policy, 1951–1969 (Greenwood, 2005). online
- Kux, Dennis. Estranged Democracies: India and the United States, 1941–1991 (1994)
- McGarr, Paul. “'India’s Rasputin'? V.K. Krishna Menon and Anglo-American Misperceptions of Indian Foreign Policymaking, 1947–1964,” Diplomacy and Statecraft 22#2 (2011): 239–260
- McMahon, Robert. The Cold War on the Periphery: The United States, India, and Pakistan (1994)
- Sankaran, Sahaj. "Ambassadors Extraordinary: Chester Bowles, BK Nehru, and Ambassadorial Agency in Indo-American Relations, 1961–1969." (2020). online
- Schaffer, Howard B. Chester Bowles: New Dealer in the Cold War, (Harvard University Press, 1993)
Primary sources
- Bowles, Paul, and Gena Dagel Caponi. Conversations with Paul Bowles (Univ. Press of Mississippi, 1993).
- Bowles, Paul, and Jeffrey Miller. In touch: the letters of Paul Bowles (2014).
External links
- United States Congress. "Chester B. Bowles (id: B000699)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
- A film clip "Longines Chronoscope with Chester Bowles" is available for viewing at the Internet Archive
- A film clip "Longines Chronoscope with Chester Bowles" is available for viewing at the Internet Archive
- Newspaper clippings about Chester B. Bowles in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW