- Harold L. Ickes
Infobox US Cabinet official
name=Harold LeClair Ickes
order=32nd
title=United States Secretary of the Interior
president=Franklin D. Roosevelt Harry S. Truman
term_start=March 4 ,1933
term_end=February 15 ,1946
predecessor=Ray Lyman Wilbur
successor=Julius Albert Krug
birth_date=March 15 ,1874
birth_place=nearAltoona, Pennsylvania
death_date=February 3 ,1952 (aged 77)
death_place=Washington D.C.
spouse=Anna Wilmarth Thompson (1911-1935, dec.)
Jane Dahlman (m. 1938)
children= Raymond IckesHarold M. Ickes (b. 1939)
Elizabeth Jane Ickes
education=University of Chicago
party=Republican
Progressive
Democratic [ [http://www.nndb.com/people/751/000055586/ Harold Ickes ] ]Harold LeClair Ickes (
March 15 ,1874 –February 3 ,1952 ) was aUnited States administrator andpolitician . He served as Secretary of the Interior for thirteen years, from 1933 to 1946, making him the longest serving Cabinet officer of any department in U.S. history. Ickes was responsible for implementing much of PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt 's "New Deal " and is the father ofHarold M. Ickes , who was deputy Chief of Staff under PresidentBill Clinton and is an adviser to SenatorHillary Clinton .Early years
Ickes was born on a farm near
Altoona, Pennsylvania . He moved toChicago at the age of 16 and attended Englewood High School there. After graduating, he worked his way through theUniversity of Chicago , finishing with an B.A. in 1897.He first worked as a newspaper reporter for "The Chicago Record" and later for the "
Chicago Tribune ". He obtained a law degree from the University of Chicago in 1907, but rarely practised. Instead, he became active in reform politics.Politics
Initially a Republican in
Chicago , Ickes was never part of the establishment. He was unsatisfied with Republican policies and joinedTheodore Roosevelt 's Bull Moose movement in 1912. After returning to the Republican fold, he campaigned for progressive RepublicansCharles Evans Hughes (1916) andHiram Johnson (1920 and 1924).He fought lengthy and legendary battles first with Chicago figures
Samuel Insull , the utilities magnate,William Hale Thompson , the mayor, andRobert R. McCormick , the owner of The Chicago Tribune. Later he had an ongoing battle withThomas E. Dewey , the presidential candidate.Although locally active in Chicago politics, he was unknown nationally until 1933. As part of this involvement, Ickes was very involved in Chicago's social and political affairs; among his many activities include his work for the
City Club of Chicago . After Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected president in 1932, he began putting together his cabinet. His advisers thought the Democratic president needed a progressive Republican to attract middle of the road voters. He sought out Hiram Johnson, a Republican Senator at the time who had supported Roosevelt in the campaign, but Johnson was uninterested. Johnson did, however, recommend an old ally, Ickes.Ickes was a strong supporter of both
civil rights andcivil liberties . He had been the president of the Chicago NAACP, and supportedAfrican American contralto Marian Anderson when theDaughters of the American Revolution prohibited her from performing in theirDAR Constitution Hall . He also was an outspoken critic of theJapanese American internment duringWorld War II .ecretary of the Interior
Ickes served simultaneously in several major roles for President Roosevelt. Although he was the Secretary of the Interior, he was better known to the public for other roles in which he served simultaneously. He was the director of the
Public Works Administration . Here he directed billions of dollars of projects designed to lure private investment and provide employment at the depth of theGreat Depression . His management of the PWA budget and his opposition to corruption earned him the name "Honest Harold". He regularly presented projects to President Roosevelt for the President's personal approval. Ickes' support of PWA power plants put increased financial pressure on private power companies during the Great Depression, and some historiansWho|date=May 2008 believe it did more harm than good. He tried to enforce theRaker Act against the city of San Francisco, an act of Congress which specified that because the dam atHetch Hetchy Valley inYosemite National Park was on public land, no private profit could be derived from the development. The city continues selling the power to PG&E which is then resold at a profit.After the "Hindenburg" disaster,
Nazi Germany sought to obtainhelium to replace the flammablehydrogen in their fleet of dirigibles. Ickes opposed the sale, although practically every other member of the Cabinet supported it, along with the President himself. Ickes would not back down, fearing military use of the dirigible. Germany could not obtain the helium from other sources. Hence, Ickes virtually shut down the German dirigible program himself.The
Saudi Aramco oil corporation, through Secretary of the Interior Ickes, got Roosevelt to agree toLend-Lease aid to Saudi Arabia, which would involve the U.S. government there and create a shield for the interests of ARAMCO.Between June and October 1941, during a projected oil shortage, Ickes was successful in issuing orders to close gasoline stations in the Eastern United States between the hours of 7 p.m. and 7 a.m. [ "Current Biography 1941", p 426 ]
Ickes was a terrific orator and the only man in the Roosevelt administration who could rebut John L. Lewis of the United Mine Workers. Lewis would often deliver radio addresses critical of the Roosevelt Administration. Since Lewis was such a great speaker himself, few in Roosevelt's administration, including the president himself, had the courage to rebut Lewis. FDR always left this task to Ickes who was able to put Lewis in his place with elegantly worded answers.Fact|date=June 2008
Jewish refugees in Alaska
In a
news conference on the eve ofThanksgiving , 1938, Ickes proposed offeringAlaska as a "haven forJewish refugees from Germany and other areas in Europe where the Jews are subjected to oppressive restrictions." This would bypass normalimmigration quota s, because Alaska had not yet become a state. Ickes had, that summer, toured Alaska, meeting with local officials to discuss how to attract greater development to the region, both for economic reasons, and to bolster security in an area so close toJapan andRussia , and developed a plan to attract international professionals, including European Jews. In his press conference, he pointed out that 200 families had been relocated from theDust Bowl to Alaska'sMatanuska-Susitna Valley . The Department of the Interior prepared a report detailing the advantages of the plan, which was introduced as a bill byUtah 's SenatorWilliam H. King and California's Democratic RepresentativeFranck R. Havenner . The plan met with little support from American Jewry, however, with the exception of theLabor Zionists of America ; most Jews agreed with RabbiStephen Samuel Wise of theAmerican Jewish Congress that the plan, if implemented, would deliver "a wrong and hurtful impression ... that Jews are taking over some part of the country for settlement". The final blow was dealt when President Roosevelt suggested a limit of only 10,000 immigrants a year for five years, with a maximum of only 10% Jews; he later reduced even that limit, and never publicly mentioned the plan." [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,802762-3,00 Old Veteran] ", Time, April 26, 1943 ] [" [http://www.jstandard.com/articles/3470/1/A-Thanksgiving-plan-to-save-Europe%92s-Jews A Thanksgiving plan to save Europe’s Jews] ",Raphael Medoff , The Jewish Standard, November 16, 2007]During World War II Ickes told the Congress of American-SovietFriendship in November 1943, "In certain respects we could do well tolearn from Russia; yes, even to imitate Russia."
Although he stayed on in President
Harry S. Truman 's cabinet after Roosevelt died in April 1945, he resigned from office within a year. In February 1946, Truman nominatedEdwin W. Pauley to be Secretary of the Navy. Pauley was the former Democratic Party national treasurer. He once suggested to Ickes that $300,000 in campaign funds could be raised if Ickes would drop his fight for title to oil-rich offshore lands. Ickes wrote a 2,000-word resignation letter, reading in part: "I don't care to stay in an Administration where I am expected to commit perjury for the sake of the party. . . I do not have a reputation for dealing recklessly with the truth." [ [http://www.archives.gov/research/voices-of-postwar.html] 1946, February 13. Resignation speech. United States National Archives and Records Administration, The Crucial Decade: Voices of the Postwar Era, 1945-1954, Select Audiovisual Records] [ [http://select.nytimes.com/mem/archive/pdf?res=F30713FE385D107A93C6A81789D85F428485F9] Ickes Resigns Post, Berating Truman in Acid Farewell; Mr. Ickes says Good-by,The New York Times ,February 14 ,1946 , Thomas J. Hamilton] [ [http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FA0D16FF385D107A93C6A81789D85F428485F9] Text of Secretary Ickes' Letter of Resignation to the President Ending 13 Years in Office,The New York Times ,February 14 ,1946 ]Critiques and battles
Ickes was known for his acerbic wit and took joy in verbal battles. He often took verbal abuse too. For instance, Roosevelt selected Ickes to deliver a response following the nomination of
Wendell Willkie . In response to Ickes' comments, SenatorStyles Bridges called Ickes "a common scold puffed up by high office." Republican CongresswomanClare Boothe Luce once famously remarked that Ickes had "the mind of a commissar and the soul of a meataxe."In September 1944,
Thomas E. Dewey , the Republican nominee for president, promised to fire Ickes if elected. Ickes penned a letter of resignation to Dewey and it was widely printed in the press. Ickes wrote, in part::Hence, I hereby resign as Secretary of the Interior effective, if, as and when the incredible comes to pass and you become the President of the United States. However, as a candidate for that office you should have known the primary school fact that the Cabinet of an outgoing President automatically retires with its chief.Family
He married Anna Wilmarth Thompson in 1911. She died in an automobile accident on
August 31 ,1935 . He married Jane Dahlman, who was 25 to his 64 at the time, onMay 24 ,1938 . He had one son, Raymond, by his first wife and two children by his second wife: Harold McEwen Ickes and Elizabeth Jane. He also had a foster son, Robert Harold Ickes, born in 1913.Pronunciation and spelling of name
Asked how to say his name, he told "The
Literary Digest " "I think you come as close as anybody when you suggest that it rhymes with "sickness" with the "n" omitted. The "e" is halfway between a short "e" and short "u": hence, "ick'iss", with second "i" as in "habit". (Charles Earle Funk, "What's the Name, Please?",Funk & Wagnalls , 1936.)The correct spelling of Ickes' middle name is undetermined, sometimes spelled Le Clair, Le Claire or LeClare.
In fiction
*In the musical play "
Annie ", Roosevelt demands that Ickes sing "Tomorrow" in the Oval Office, and orders him to get louder. Ickes was largely a comic figure in the play, despite acting rude, vulgar, and arrogant. Annie helps him to sing, and he gets somewhat carried away. He ends the song on his knees, much to the dismay of the Cabinet and the President.*Harold Ickes plays a key part in the backstory of
Michael Chabon 's alternate history noir "The Yiddish Policemen's Union ".Books
By Ickes
*"New Democracy" (1934). W. W. Norton
*with Arno B. Cammerer (coauthor), "Yellowstone National Park (Wyoming)" (1937). U.S. Government Printing Office
*"The Third Term Bugaboo. A Cheerful Anthology" (1940)
*(editor). "Freedom of the Press Today: A Clinical Examination By 28 Specialists" (1941). Vanguard Press
*"Minerals Yearbook 1941" (1943). U.S. Government Printing Office
*"Fightin' Oil" (1943). Alfred A. Knopf
*"The Autobiography of a Curmudgeon" (1943). Greenwood Press 1985 reprint: ISBN 0313249881
*"The Secret Diary of Harold L. Ickes". Simon and Schuster
**"Volume I: The First Thousand Days 1933–1936" (1953)
**"Volume II: The Inside Struggle 1936–1939" (1954)
**"Volume III: The Lowering Clouds 1939–1941" (1954)About Ickes
*Jeanne Nienaber Clarke. "Roosevelt's Warrior: Harold L. Ickes and the New Deal" (1996). The Johns Hopkins University Press, ISBN 0801850940
*Linda J. Lear. "Harold L. Ickes: The Aggressive Progressive, 1874-1933" (1982). Taylor & Francis, ISBN 0824048601
* T. H. Watkins. "Righteous Pilgrim: The Life and Times of Harold L. Ickes, 1874-1952" (1990). Henry Holt & Co., ISBN 0805009175; 1992 reprint: ISBN 0805021124
* Graham White and John Maze. "Harold Ickes of the New Deal: His Private Life and Public Career" (1985). Harvard University Press, ISBN 0674372859References
* [http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F10C17FF3D5E177B93C6A91789D85F468585F9] Obituary: Harold L. Ickes Dead at 77; Colorful Figure in New Deal; Self-Styled 'Curmudgeon' Was Secretary of Interior in Long, Stormy Career,The New York Times ,February 4 ,1952 External links
* [http://www.nps.gov/elro/glossary/ickes-harold.htm Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site]
*Raker Act
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