William Bullitt
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William Christian Bullitt, Jr. | |
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In office 1933 – 1936 |
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Under President | Franklin D. Roosevelt |
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Preceded by | David R. Francis |
Succeeded by | Joseph E. Davies |
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Born | January 25, 1891 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
Died | February 15, 1967 Neuilly, France |
William Christian Bullitt, Jr. (born January 25, 1891 in Philadelphia; died February 15, 1967, Neuilly) was an American diplomat, journalist, and novelist. Although in his youth he was considered something of a radical, he later became an outspoken anticommunist.
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[edit] Early Years
Bullitt was born to a well-to-do old Philadelphia family. He was graduated from Yale in 1913, after having been voted "most brilliant" in his class. He briefly attended Harvard Law School, but dropped out on the death of his father in 1914.
Bullitt went to Europe to became a foreign correspondant and novelist.
[edit] Early Diplomatic Career
Working for Woodrow Wilson at the Paris Peace Conference Bullitt was a strong supporter of legalistic internationalism, subsequently known as Wilsonianism. Prior to the negotiation of the Versailles accords, Bullitt engaged, along with journalist Lincoln Steffens, in a special mission to Soviet Russia together with the Swedish Communist Karl Kilbom, to negotiate diplomatic relations between the Bolshevik regime and the Supreme Council. Having failed to convince Wilson to support establishment of relations with the Bolsheviks, Bullitt resigned from Wilson's staff.
He later returned to the United States and testified in the United State Senate against the Treaty of Versailles, having his report from his Russian trip placed into the record.
He married socialite Aimee Ernesta Drinker in 1916. She gave birth to a son in 1917, but the baby died after two days. They divorced in 1923. In 1924 he married Louise Bryant, widow of radical journalist John Reed, with whom he had a daughter, Anne. They divorced in 1930.
[edit] First US Ambassador to the Soviet Union
Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed him as the fist US ambassador to the Soviet Union, a post that lasted from 1933 to 1936. At the time of his appointment, Bullitt was known as a liberal, and thought by some to be something of a radical. The Soviets welcomed him as an old friend because of his diplomatic efforts at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919. But although Bullitt arrived in the Soviet Union with high hopes for Soviet-American relations, his view of the Soviet leadership soured on closer inspection. By the end of his tenure he was openly hostile to the Soviet government. He remained an outspoken anticommunist for the rest of his life.[1]
Bullitt was re-posted to France in 1936 as Ambassador. In 1939 Prime Minister Édouard Daladier informed him French intelligence knew Alger Hiss and Donald Hiss in the United States Department of State were both working for Soviet intelligence.
[edit] Post-Diplomatic Career
After the Nazi invasion of France in 1940 he returned to America and unsuccessfully ran for the position of Mayor of Philadelphia. After his political defeat, Bullitt joined the Free French Forces to oppose Nazi and Vichy government control over France and her colonial holdings. This period was likely the most productive from a literary standpoint.
Between 1941 and 1945 Bullitt wrote volumes of stories and social commentary on the dangers of both fascism and communism.
[edit] Bullitt and Freud
Bullitt had been psychoanalyzed by Sigmund Freud in Vienna in the 1920s. The patient and the analyst became such good friends that they decided to write a book together, a psychobiographical study of Woodrow Wilson. This was quite exceptional, as Freud very rarely cooperated with other authors. The book, first published in Europe in the 1930's did not appear until 1967 in the U.S. When it did, many psychoanalysts doubted that Freud had had much to do with it. Recent research indicates, however, that Freud was an active co-writer. The book nevertheless received an almost unanimously hostile reception, renowned historian A.J.P. Taylor calling it a "disgrace," and concluding with the question: "How did anyone ever manage to take Freud seriously?"
Freud's view of Wilson was that of a naive American politician whose foreign policy ideas were driven by religious fanaticism. Bullitt had been dismissed by Wilson late in the battle for the League of Nations, and Bullitt never forgave the slight. It is not clear how much of the book was really written by Bullitt, as he was skilled in several languages, while Freud wrote only in German and had died by the time it was published. Several references attributed to Freud are uniquely American, such as his introduction in which he compared Wilson's naiveté to Christian Science.
[edit] Books by William C. Bullitt
- The Bullitt Mission to Russia, New York: Huebsch (1919).
- It's Not Done, New York: Harcourt Brace (1926).
- The Great Globe Itself, New York: Scribner's (1946).
- (with Sigmund Freud) Thomas Woodrow Wilson - A Psychological Study, Boston: Houghton Mifflin (1967).
[edit] References
- ^ Will Brownell and Richard N. Billings (1987) So Close to Greatness, New York: Macmillan.
[edit] External links
- William C. Bullitt: Diplomat and Prophet – Documents Bullitt's opposition to the Nazis throughout the 1930s and period leading up to the war.
- Works by William Bullitt at Project Gutenberg
Preceded by Jesse I. Straus |
U.S. Ambassador to France 1936–1940 |
Succeeded by William D. Leahy |