Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
law

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Joseph E. Davies

American diplomat (1876–1958)

Joseph E. Davies

American diplomat (1876–1958)

FieldValue
image928.Joseph E. Davies 1939.jpg
order2nd
ambassador_fromUnited States
countrythe Soviet Union
presidentFranklin D. Roosevelt
term_startNovember 16, 1936
term_endJune 11, 1938
predecessorWilliam C. Bullitt
successorLaurence A. Steinhardt
order27th
ambassador_from2United States
country2Belgium
president2Franklin D. Roosevelt
term_start2May 14, 1938
term_end2November 30, 1939
predecessor2Hugh S. Gibson
successor2John Cudahy
order314th
office3United States Envoy to Luxembourg
president3Franklin D. Roosevelt
term_start3May 14, 1938
term_end3November 30, 1939
predecessor3Hugh S. Gibson
successor3John Cudahy
office4Chair of the Federal Trade Commission
term_start4March 16, 1915
term_end4June 15, 1916
predecessor4Position Established
successor4Edward N. Hurley
president4Woodrow Wilson
birth_nameJoseph Edward Davies
birth_date
birth_placeWatertown, Wisconsin, U.S.
death_date
death_placeWashington, D.C., U.S.
restingplaceWashington National Cathedral
partyDemocrat
spouse{{ubl
*{{marriageMary Emlen KnightSeptember 10, 1902September 23, 1935enddivorced}}
*{{marriageMarjorie Merriweather PostDecember 15, 1935March 9, 1955enddivorced}}
children3; Eleanor Tydings Ditzen, Emlen Davies, Rahel Davies
parentsEdward Davies
Rachel Davies
captionDavies in 1939

Rachel Davies

Joseph Edward Davies (November 29, 1876 – May 9, 1958) was an American lawyer and diplomat. He was appointed by President Woodrow Wilson in 1915 to be the first chairman of the Federal Trade Commission. From 1936 to 1938, Davies was the second-ever United States Ambassador to the Soviet Union. His book about the experience, Mission to Moscow, and its subsequent film adaptation, made him widely known.

After his posting in the USSR, Davies became U.S. Ambassador to Belgium and Luxembourg. From 1939 to 1941, he was special assistant to Secretary of State Cordell Hull, in charge of War Emergency Problems and Policies. From 1942 through 1946, Davies was chairman of the President's War Relief Control Board. He was also special advisor to President Harry Truman and Secretary of State James F. Byrnes with rank of Ambassador at the Potsdam Conference in 1945.

Early life

Davies was born in 1876 in Watertown, Wisconsin to Welsh-born parents Edward and Rachel (Paynter) Davies. He attended the University of Wisconsin Law School from 1898 to 1901, where he graduated with honors. Upon graduation, he returned to Watertown and began a private practice. He served as a delegate to the Wisconsin Democratic Convention in 1902. He moved to Madison in 1907, and became chairman of the Democratic Party of Wisconsin.

Wilson administration

Davies played an important role in ensuring that the western states and Wisconsin gave Woodrow Wilson their delegate votes at the 1912 Democratic National Convention. Wilson made Davies head of his entire western campaign. Later, as a reward for his vital aid in winning Wilson the presidency, Davies was appointed head of the Bureau of Corporations agency. He was instrumental in merging it into the new Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and became the FTC's first chairman from 1915 to 1916. During his time in the Wilson administration, Davies developed a warm friendship with the young Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Franklin D. Roosevelt.

When Senator Paul O. Husting of Wisconsin died unexpectedly in 1917, President Wilson asked Davies to run for the open Wisconsin seat. Davies resigned from the FTC and launched his campaign for the special election that was held on 2 April 1918, but he lost to Republican Irvine Lenroot. It turned out to be a pivotal election which denied Democrats control of the U.S. Senate. Wilson then appointed Davies to serve as an economic advisor for the United States during the Paris Peace Conference following World War I.

Family

In 1901 Davies married Mary Emlen Knight. They had three daughters: Eleanor, Rahel, and Emlen. Mary was the daughter of Civil War Union Colonel John Henry Knight, a leading conservative Democrat and business associate of William Freeman Vilas and Jay Cooke. Davies and Mary divorced in 1935.

Davies married his second wife Marjorie Merriweather Post in December 1935. She was an heiress to the Postum Cereal Company (which later turned into General Foods). When Charles William Post died in 1914, Marjorie, as his only child, reportedly became the wealthiest woman in the United States. In the 1920s, she had a mansion named Mar-a-Lago built for her in Palm Beach, Florida; it was later sold by the Post Foundation to Donald Trump. She also owned Camp Topridge next to Upper Saint Regis Lake, New York in the Adirondack Mountains. When Joseph and Marjorie returned to the U.S. from his diplomatic posting in the Soviet Union, she oversaw construction of a dacha for him at Camp Topridge. The couple divorced in 1955.

Diplomatic career

On 25 August 1936, President Roosevelt telephoned Davies at the Adirondack retreat and requested he come to Washington. When they met, Roosevelt said he had decided he would like Davies to serve as an ambassador, and asked whether Davies had a preference for a particular country. The latter replied, "Either to Russia or Germany", since they were "the most dynamic spots in Europe." The German post was not open, but the ambassadorship to the Soviet Union had recently become available (William Bullitt resigned in May) and so it was agreed Davies would go to Russia. He took the oath of office in November 1936. He, Marjorie, and daughter Eleanor sailed for Europe in early January 1937.

Davies' appointment as the second-ever Ambassador to the Soviet Union was in part based on his skills as a corporate lawyer who had handled international cases, his longtime friendship with FDR since the Woodrow Wilson administration, and his steadfast political loyalty to the President. But as an outsider in diplomatic circles, Davies was an unconventional choice for such a politically sensitive job. In his memoirs, George F. Kennan recalls the animosity toward Davies that existed in the State Department's Division of Eastern European Affairs:

Before leaving for the Soviet Union, Davies was directed by FDR to "make every effort to get all the firsthand information, from personal observation where possible, bearing upon the strength of the regime, from a military and economic point of view; also seek to ascertain what the policy of their government would be in the event of European war."

Davies' predecessor, William Christian Bullitt Jr., had been an early admirer of the Soviet Union who gradually came to loathe Stalin's brutality and repression. By contrast, Davies remained unaffected by reports of the disappearance of thousands of Russians and foreigners in the Soviet Union throughout his stay as U.S. Ambassador. His dispatches from the Soviet Union were pragmatic, optimistic, and usually devoid of criticism of Stalin and his policies. While he briefly noted the USSR's "authoritarian" form of government, Davies praised the nation's boundless natural resources and the contentment of Soviet workers while "building socialism". He went on numerous tours of the country, carefully prearranged by Soviet officials. In one of his final memos from Moscow to Washington D.C., Davies assessed:

Communism holds no serious threat to the United States. Friendly relations in the future may be of great general value.

Davies attended the Trial of the Twenty One, one of the Stalinist purge trials of the late 1930s. He was convinced of the guilt of the accused. According to Davies, "the Kremlin's fears [regarding treason in the Army and Party] were well justified". His opinions were at odds with much of the Western press of the day, as well as those of his own staff, many of whom had been in the country far longer than Davies. The career diplomat Charles Bohlen, who served under Davies in Moscow, later wrote:

Davies even claimed that communism was "protecting the Christian world of free men", and he urged all Christians "by the faith you have found at your mother's knee, in the name of the faith you have found in temples of worship" to embrace the Soviet Union.

''Mission to Moscow'' book

Davies leveraged his diplomatic work in the Soviet Union to produce a popular book, Mission to Moscow. It was first published by Simon & Schuster in December 1941 and had thirteen reprintings. For the year 1942, the book ranked second in the U.S. in hardcover nonfiction sales. Sales were boosted when an excerpt appeared in the large-circulation Reader's Digest magazine in March 1942. In 1943, editions of the book started being printed every month in the recently introduced mass-market paperback format from Pocket Books.

Mission to Moscow is a compilation, organized chronologically, of Davies' journal and diary entries, his personal and official correspondences, and his State Department dispatches (which FDR allowed him to use in the book). The first eight chapters span the period from November 1936 to his departure from Moscow in June 1938. During that time, Davies did not always remain in the USSR. He also made trips to London, Berlin, and to Washington, D.C. to confer with President Roosevelt and Secretary of State Cordell Hull, and there are journal entries covering those visits as well. Part of the book's interest to readers is that it offers an inside look at the life of a high-level diplomat operating in a tense, politically treacherous, pre-war environment. Among the chapters are "The Purge Hits the Red Army", "The Purge Hits Bukharin", and "Moscow Hears the Drums of War".

In a chapter titled "Climax of the Mission", Davies describes a surprising meeting on 5 June 1938. He was visiting Premier Molotov in the Kremlin to make a formal parting before Davies ended his ambassadorship in the USSR and began a new assignment in Belgium. Without any forewarning, Stalin walked into the room, greeted Davies (they had not met before), and initiated a wide-ranging two-hour conversation through an interpreter. When Davies reported this event to the State Department, it "created nothing short of a sensation in the Diplomatic Corps." Davies' account in Mission to Moscow of the topics he discussed with Stalin had to be restricted for reasons of confidentiality, but it was clear that Stalin wished to use Davies as a messenger back to Roosevelt. Recounting one anecdote from the meeting, Davies writes:In the course of our talk, I explained that I had always made it clear to the members of the Soviet government that I was a capitalist—this by way of not having any misunderstanding as to my point of view. 'Yes,' he [Stalin] said, laughingly, 'we know you are a capitalist—there can be no doubt about that.'"

The book's final chapter is called "Harvest of the Mission". It covers the time period from September 1938 to October 1941 when Davies served concurrently as Ambassador to Belgium (1938–39) and Minister to Luxembourg before being recalled to the U.S. following the declaration of war in Europe in September 1939. During the war, he was a special assistant to Secretary Hull. In a diary entry made shortly after the June 1941 Nazi-led multinational invasion of the Soviet Union, Davies records a recent meeting with FDR in the White House: "He had noticed that the press had carried the story that in my opinion the extent of the resistance of the Russian army would 'amaze the world,' and that this opinion was at variance with that of most military experts and others who knew Russia. I outlined to him, at length, the reasons for my opinion and amplified certain facts which had not been contained in my reports to the Department." Given the future course of the Eastern Front war, Davies provided prescient advice to the President.

''Mission to Moscow'' movie

In 1943, Mission to Moscow was adapted as a Warner Brothers movie starring Walter Huston as Davies and Ann Harding as his wife Marjorie. When granting the studio the rights to his book, Davies retained absolute control of the script. His rejection of the original script caused Warner Brothers to hire a new screenwriter, Howard Koch, to do a rewrite in order to gain Davies' approval. The movie, made during World War II, showed the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin in a positive light. Completed in late April 1943, the film was, in the words of Robert Buckner, the film's producer, "an expedient lie for political purposes, glossily covering up important facts with full or partial knowledge of their false presentation.

I did not fully respect Mr. Davies' integrity, both before, during and after the film. I knew that FDR had brainwashed him ...

The movie gave a one-sided view of the Moscow trials, rationalized Moscow's participation in the German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact and its unprovoked invasion of Finland. The movie also portrayed the Soviet Union as a state that was moving towards a democratic model, a Soviet Union committed to internationalism. As did the book, the final screenplay portrayed the defendants in the Moscow trials as guilty in Davies' view. It also portrayed some of the purges as an attempt by Stalin to rid his country of pro-German fifth columnists. During the 1947 House Un-American Activities Committee hearings into the motion picture industry, Mission to Moscow was often cited as a movie demonstrating Communist propaganda in Hollywood.

Second Mission to Moscow

Davies with Soviet leader Joseph Stalin during his second "Mission to Moscow," May 1943.

In May 1943, Roosevelt sent Davies on a second mission to Moscow. He was gone 27 days and travelled 25,779 miles, carrying a secret letter from the President to Stalin. Because of the war raging in Europe, Davies could not fly over Europe, and so flew from New York to Brazil, to Dakar; Luxor, Egypt; Baghdad, Iraq; Teheran, Iran; Kuibyshev, Russia; Stalingrad, Russia and on to Moscow. He returned to the States via Novosibirsk and Alaska.

FDR wanted to discuss matters with Stalin—one on one—and felt that setting up such a meeting could be done more easily through a mutual and trusted friend—Davies. In the letter, FDR asked for a visit between himself and Stalin where they could talk over matters without restraint. It would only include an interpreter and stenographer. Prime Minister Churchill and Foreign Minister Eden had often met with Stalin and Molotov. FDR and Secretary Hull had not. Stalin agreed to a meeting in Fairbanks, Alaska on July 15 or August 15. He asked that Davies stress to FDR that Hitler was massing his armies for an all-out drive and that they needed more of everything through Lend-Lease.

Davies was surprised to find much the same hostility and what he regarded as prejudice in the U.S. diplomatic corps in Moscow toward the Russians as when he was there in 1937–1938. He complained to them that public criticism of America's Soviet ally might be harmful to the war effort.

Postwar career

Following World War II, the Davies took up residence in Washington, D.C. at Tregaron (named after the village in Wales where Davies' father was born), where they entertained extensively.

In 1945, he was made Special Envoy of President Harry Truman, with rank of Ambassador, to confer with Prime Minister Churchill, and Special Advisor of Truman and Secretary of State James F. Byrnes, with rank of Ambassador, at the Potsdam Conference. Davies' papers from this period were deposited in the Library of Congress, but were long marked as classified.

Davies was divorced by Marjorie in 1955. She sold her yacht, the Sea Cloud, to the dictator of the Dominican Republic, Rafael Trujillo. Davies continued to live at Tregaron until his death from a cerebral hemorrhage on May 9, 1958.

Coat of Arms of Joseph E. Davies

Ambassador Davies' ashes are buried in the crypt at the National Cathedral, in Washington, D.C. He had donated both the 50 foot baptistery stained glass window to the Cathedral in honor of his mother, Rachel Davies (Rahel o Fôn), as well as his collection of Russian icons and chalices for their newly formed museum—created by the Dean of the cathedral, Frank Sayre (President Woodrow Wilson's grandson). These rare articles were sold at auction by Sotheby's in 1976 to help cover the cathedral's debt.

Honors

  • Joseph E. Davies' coat of arms granted in 1939 by the College of Arms. It was later used in slightly altered form as a logo by the Trump Organization.
  • United States United States – Medal for Merit, 1946
  • Soviet Union Soviet Union – Order of Lenin
  • France France – Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor, May 1950
  • Belgium Belgium – Grand Cordon de l'Ordre de Léopold, Feb 1940
  • Awards from the governments of Luxembourg; Greece; Yugoslavia; the Dominican Republic; Peru; Panama; and Mexico.

References

References

  1. "Joseph Edward Davies". United States Department of State.
  2. Jones, Evan David. (2001). "Davies, Joseph Edward (1876 - 1958), international lawyer".
  3. MacLean, Elizabeth Kimball. (1992). "Joseph E. Davies: Envoy to the Soviets". Praeger Publishers.
  4. Davies, Joseph E.. (1943). "Mission to Moscow". Pocket Books.
  5. "Davies, Joseph". Watertown Historical Society.
  6. (7 December 1925). "Shenandoah Case".
  7. Crassweller RD. "Trujillo. The Life and Times of a Caribbean Dictator.". MacMillan Co, New York, 1966.
  8. "Collection: Eleanor Tydings Ditzen papers {{!}} Archival Collections".
  9. (17 December 1935). "Watertown Boy and The Battle Creek Girl". The Milwaukee Journal.
  10. Barrett, William P.. "Lawsuits Nibble Away At Famous Fortune".
  11. Mayhew, Augustus. (19 January 2021). "Building Mar-a-Lago: Marjorie Merriweather Post's Palm Beach showplace". The Palm Beach Post.
  12. Kennan, George F.. (1967). "Memoirs 1925-1950". Pantheon Books.
  13. Evers, Emlen Davies and Grosjean, Mia – ''Spaso House – 75th Anniversary'', Public Affairs Section, Embassy of the USA, Moscow, June 2008
  14. Manuscript Division, Library of Congress; Joseph Edward Davies Papers: A Finding Aid to the Collection in the Library of Congress
  15. Barmine, Alexander, ''One Who Survived'', New York: G.P. Putnam (1945), p. 208
  16. Joseph Davies (April 20, 1938) ''Memorandum'', Declassified, 1980.
  17. Archie Brown (2011) ''The Rise and Fall of Communism'', New York: Ecco and HarperCollins. p.75
  18. Charles E. Bohlen (1973) ''Witness to History'', New York: Norton.
  19. Louis F. Budenz. (1952). "The Cry Is Peace". H. Regnery Company.
  20. (March 1943). "Mission to Moscow". Pocket Books.
  21. Korda, Michael. (2001). "Making the List: A Cultural History of the American Bestseller, 1900-1999". Barnes & Noble Books.
  22. (March 1942). "What We Didn't Know About Russia".
  23. Giffin, Frederick C.. (Winter 1977). "Improving the Image of Stalin's Russia: Joseph Davies's ''Mission to Moscow''". Social Science.
  24. Culbert, David H., ''Mission to Moscow'', [[University of Wisconsin Press]] (1980), {{ISBN. 0-299-08384-5, {{ISBN. 978-0-299-08384-7
  25. Bennett, Todd, ''Culture, Power, and Mission to Moscow: Film and Soviet-American Relations during World War II'', The Journal of American History, Bloomington, IN (Sep 2001), Vol. 88, Iss. 2
  26. Navasky, Victor S.. (1981). "Naming Names". Penguin Books.
  27. ''Life Magazine'', 4 October 1943.
  28. Davies, Joseph E., ''MISSIONS FOR PEACE – 1940–1950''; Unpublished manuscript in Library of Congress
  29. Gunter, Joel. (31 May 2017). "Right to bear arms? Trump accused of plagiarising family crest".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Joseph E. Davies — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report