William Conrad Gibbons
William Conrad Gibbons (September 26, 1926 – July 4, 2015) was an American historian and foreign policy expert.[1]
Life and career
Gibbons was born in 1926 in
He worked in
) from 1960–63.Gibbons ran for Congress from the Western District of Virginia, which covered his hometown of Harrisonburg but was defeated. He then returned to Washington to work as legislative program staff (1962–63); Deputy Director (1963–65) and Director (1965–68) of Congressional Liaison for the Agency for International Development, Department of State.
At the beginning of the Nixon Administration, William Gibbons left Washington to set up and head the political science department at Texas A&M University. He went on to be a visiting professor at Wellesley College and worked briefly as the Senior Program Officer in charge of all historical activities for the American Revolution Bicentennial Commission. In 1972, Dr. Gibbons became a senior analyst for the Foreign Affairs Division ("FAND") of the Library of Congress, where he stayed for twenty years.
It was as a senior analyst at FAND that he authored the four-volume set entitled "The U.S. Government and the Vietnam War."[2]
The series has been described by historians and journalists as: "By far the best books on the subject" (William Bundy), "The master of Vietnam research" (David Maraniss), "Magisterial" (Brian VanDeMark), "Bill is an overlooked hero...for people like myself, well, just watch how much his name comes up in the footnotes" (Paul Hendrickson), "One of the most valuable studies of the formulation of Vietnam policy during the Kennedy and Johnson administrations" (Stanley Karnow).[3]
This series was a major resource for Robert McNamara's book In Retrospect and for Stanley Karnow's book, Vietnam, A History and his subsequent 26-part PBS series, Vietnam: A Television History. Senator Mansfield and TET, both written by Don Oberdorfer, were greatly aided by the research from the Vietnam series by Gibbons.
In 1980 he became a visiting professor at George Mason University where he continued work on the series. On July 4, 2015, Gibbons died at the age of 88 after a stroke at his farm in Monroe, Virginia.[4]
Papers
(Deposited at the Lyndon B. Johnson Library)[5]
Collection of fifteen linear feet (35 archive boxes) comprising copies of old original documents, being the files of historian William Conrad Gibbons, assembled during the research and writing of his multi-volume scholarly work The U.S. Government and the Vietnam War: Executive and Legislative Roles and Relationships (Princeton University Press).
Filed in chronological order, the documents cover the presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson, from November 1963 to December 1968. The documents are concerned primarily with the background, formulation, and implementation of high-level policy by officials in the White House, the Congress, the State Department, the Defense Department, and the armed forces during the Vietnam War.
The documents were copied at several libraries and repositories across the country, including the Johnson Library, the National Archives, the
Publications
- Gibbons, William Conrad (2014). The U.S. Government and the Vietnam War: Executive and Legislative Roles and Relationships, Part I: 1945-1960. Princeton University Press. Project MUSE book 34359.
- Gibbons, William Conrad (2014). The U.S. Government and the Vietnam War: Executive and Legislative Roles and Relationships, Part II: 1961-1964. Princeton University Press. Project MUSE book 34303.
- Gibbons, William Conrad (2014). The U.S. Government and the Vietnam War: Executive and Legislative Roles and Relationships, Part III: 1965-1966. Princeton University Press. Project MUSE book 34425.
- Gibbons, William Conrad (2014). The U.S. Government and the Vietnam War: Executive and Legislative Roles and Relationships, Part IV: July 1965-January 1968. Princeton University Press. Project MUSE book 34074.
- Gibbons, William C.; Melanson, Richard A.; Thompson, Kenneth W. (1985). Vietnam and the Breakdown of Consensus. Foreign Policy and Domestic Consensus: The Credibility of Institutions, Policies and Leadership.
Paper on "The Origin of the War Power Provision of the Constitution" for a conference at the State University of New York at Stonybrook honoring Jacob Javits, published in Michael Barnhart (Ed.), Congress and U.S. Foreign Policy (Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York, 1987).[full citation needed]
Paper on "The 1965 Decision to Send U.S. Ground Forces to Vietnam," for the Annual Meeting of the International Studies Association, April 16, 1987 in Washington D.C.[full citation needed]
External links
- Papers of William Conrad Gibbons at the Lyndon B. Johnson Library
- Dr. William Conrad Gibbons' website
References
- ^ Grimes, William (11 July 2015). "William Conrad Gibbons, Dogged Writer About Vietnam War, Dies at 88". The New York Times.
- ^ http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/vietrev.htm[full citation needed] Archived 2010-08-13 at the Wayback Machine A Failure of Political Intelligence
- ]
- ^ Langer, Emily (10 April 2023). "William Conrad Gibbons, author of history of the Vietnam War, dies at 88". Washington Post.
- ^ http://www.lbjlib.utexas.edu/johnson/archives.hom/searches.hom/forpol.hom/vietnam.asp William Conrad Gibbons' papers at the Lyndon B. Johnson Library