- Arthur Larson
Lewis Arthur Larson (
July 4 ,1910 —March 27 ,1993 ) was an Americanlawyer , law professor, United States Under Secretary of Labor from 1954 to 1956, director of theUnited States Information Agency from 1956 to 1957, and Executive Assistant to the President for Speeches from 1957 to 1958.Lewis Arthur Larson (his first name was never used) was born in
Sioux Falls, South Dakota . He was the third of five children of Lewis Larson and Anna Huseboe Larson, both of whom were second-generation Americans of Norwegian descent. Larson's father was a family court judge in Sioux Falls. Arthur Larson attended the public schools there and the local Lutheran college, Augustana, and then studied law atPembroke College, Oxford (1932-1935) as a Rhodes Scholar. He was married to Florence Newcomb on July 31, 1935.He then worked as a lawyer for four years (1935-1939) with the firm of Quarles, Spence and Quarles in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin . When depression-era conditions led to his layoff in the summer of 1939, Larson found a job as assistant professor of law at theUniversity of Tennessee Law School inKnoxville, Tennessee . While there, he and Florence Newcomb Larson had two children.In 1941, during
World War II , Larson moved on toWashington, D.C. , when he mostly worked as a lumber industry regulator at theOffice of Price Administration (OPA). In 1945 he became an assistant professor of law atCornell Law School . Over the next seven years he produced a legal treatise on the "Law ofWorkmen's Compensation " (Mathew Bender: 1952), which led to his being named dean of theUniversity of Pittsburgh School of Law in 1953.Larson's growing fame as a moderately conservative expert on the law of the
welfare state and his strong public speaking abilities led to appointment as Under Secretary of Labor (in March 1954) in theDwight Eisenhower administration. There he emerged as the most articulate spokesman for Eisenhower-era Republicanism. Larson's most popular book, "A Republican Looks at His Party" (Harper and Row: 1956) was personally endorsed by Eisenhower, who hired Larson to write speeches for him. Eisenhower named Larson the director of the United States Information Agency (USIA) in December 1956 and as his topspeechwriter in October 1957.After leaving the Eisenhower administration in the fall of 1958, Larson became a law professor at
Duke University , where he specialized ininternational law ,arms control anddisarmament efforts. He died there on March 27, 1993.Larson's rise to fame from relative obscurity and then gradual return to it reflected the changing fortunes of moderate conservatives within the Republican Party and the nation during his lifetime.
Larson is criticized as a prototypical big government Republican in
Barry Goldwater 's landmark small government Republican manifesto, "The Conscience of a Conservative ". Larson's life and work are treated at length in a biography byDavid Stebenne , "Modern Republican: Arthur Larson and the Eisenhower Years" (Indiana University Press, 2006).External links
* [http://www.eisenhower.archives.gov/listofholdingshtml/finding_aids_l.html Records and Papers of Arthur Larson, Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library]
* [http://www.iupress.indiana.edu/catalog/product_info.php?cPath=1037_1169_1955&products_id=40825 Web page for the book "Modern Republican: Arthur Larson and the Eisenhower Years" (Indiana University Press, 2006)]
* [http://larsonpubs.com/ Larson's Worker's Compensation Pages]
* [http://millercenter.virginia.edu/scripps/diglibrary/forums/forum_detail.php?forum_gid=134 1983 Audio recording of a presentation by Arthur Larson on the Eisenhower Presidency]
* [http://time-proxy.yaga.com/time/magazine/printout/0,8816,891733,00.html Time Magazine, 1956: "The Authentic American Center" - about Arthur Larson and Eisenhower]
* [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,810484,00.html Time Magazine, 1958: Arthur's resignation from the Eisenhower Administration, and founding of the Rule of Law Center at Duke University]
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