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Nightmare in red: the McCarthy era in perspective PDF

251 Pages·1991·1.58 MB·English
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NIGHTMARE IN RED NIGHTMARE IN RED The McCarthy Era in Perspective RICHARD M. FRIED Oxford University Press Oxford New York Toronto Delhi Bombay Calcutta Madras Karachi Petaling Jaya Singapore Hong Kong Tokyo Nairobi Dar es Salaam Cape Town Melbourne Auckland and associated companies in Berlin Ibadan Copyright © 1990 by Oxford University Press First published in 1990 by Oxford University Press, Inc., 198 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016–4314 First issued as an Oxford University Press paperback, 1991 Oxford is a registered trademark of Oxford University Press All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of Oxford University Press, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Fried, Richard M., 1941– Nightmare in red: the McCarthy era in perspective/Richard M. Fried, p. cm. Bibliography: p. Includes index. ISBN-13 978–0-19–504360-0 1. Anti-Communist movements—United States—History—20th century. 2. McCarthy, Joseph, 1908–1957. 3. United States—Politics and government— 1945–1953. I. Title. E743.5.F67 1990 973.921—dc20 89–32891 CIP ISBN-13 978–0-19–504361-7 (PBK.) 13 15 17 19 18 16 14 Printed in the United States of America For Barbara Preface There was far more to the “McCarthy era” than Senator Joseph R. McCarthy. We have sensed this, on one or another level, for some time. In the five years McCarthy bestrode American politics, some of his savvier opponents realized that exaggerated impressions of his importance made their task harder, but the capacity to perceive him on a merely human scale was not altogether commonplace. Although the premise that McCarthy was only part of a larger whole carries a burden of some banality, it is nonetheless crucial to an understanding of anti-communism in mid-twentieth-century America. In this book, I have sought to place McCarthy and “his” era in perspective. Thus I have attempted to locate him chronologically in the continuum of twentieth-century anti-Communist politics. With deep roots in American culture, anti-communism flourished long before the Senator from Wisconsin adopted the issue in 1950. It was a hardy perennial in American politics before 1947, when historians who blame President Harry S. Truman and the Democratic Party for McCarthyism date the onset of anti-Communist extremism; before 1944, when the presidential campaign gave Americans an early sample of a political style commonly associated with the 1950s; before World War II, when the instrumentalities of the government’s later loyalty and security programs were improvised; and even before 1938, when Congressman Martin Dies’s Special House Committee on Un-American Activities pioneered techniques that prefigured McCarthy’s. Similarly, coverage of anti-communism does not end with McCarthy’s censure by the Senate in 1954. Though that event did contribute to anti-communism’s decline as a force in American life, the death scene was a lingering one. In dwelling on the early stages of the development of the anti-Communist impulse, my point is not simply to argue that McCarthyism always existed—a sort of malign Snow White to be awakened by the right demagogue’s kiss. Such an explanation risks oversimplification, because extreme anti-communism appeared in different forms at various times. The events of 1950 were not a carbon copy of the Palmer raids of 1919 or the various anti-subversive activities of 1938–40, even though the resemblances are instructive. I have also sought to put anti-communism in perspective by sketching a crowded canvas, one which contains not only McCarthy but also his predecessors, instructors, and imitators—as well as the targets and victims of these political entrepreneurs. Moreover, I have tried to depict the broader culture of anti-communism of which anti-Communist politics was a part. The variety of anti-communism—the investigations, the accusations, the candidacies, and the other types of exertions—helps to convey its pervasiveness in American life. To illustrate the origins and consequences of McCarthyism (that imprecise blunderbuss of a word again), I have gratefully used and synthesized the growing body of scholarship on this broad subject. I have endeavored to examine a number of interrelated topics: the role of partisan politics, the Truman Administration, the FBI, and numerous interest groups in elevating the Communist issue to national prominence; the effect of that style of politics upon some of the groups it targeted and upon American life in general; and the waning of McCarthyism. The demands of brevity have forced me at many points to provide only a sampling of issues and events of importance. The desire to write a book of moderate length has also led to a compressed mode of reference notes, which I have used primarily to indicate sources of quotations and particular data. I hope that the bibliographical essay locates the origins of the larger interpretive schemes which inform the book. I have incurred many scholarly debts in writing this book. A number of fellow historians have shared information and research nuggets with me, lent me work in progress, and/or provided useful commentary on fragments of this work in preliminary form. For assisting me in one way or another, I wish to thank James T. Patterson, Alonzo L. Hamby, Thomas C. Reeves, David M. Oshinsky, James L. Baughman, Charles H. McCormick, Justus D. Doenecke, Robert P. Newman, and William F. Vandercook. William E. Leuchtenburg provided a valuable critique of the original proposal for this book, numerous suggestions, and a model in his own scholarship. Thomas Bender and David Reimers first suggested that I write the book and later gave the manuscript two careful readings. Colleagues at the University of Illinois at Chicago, in conversations too casual to be documented, have tolerated my fixations and helped me to rethink aspects of this project. I am grateful to the administration and trustees of the University of Illinois for a sabbatical leave in the early stages of my research and to the Eleanor Roosevelt Institute and Harry S. Truman Library Institute for research grants which expedited it. I am also beholden to archivists at many libraries and wish to thank in particular the staffs of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library, the Harry S. Truman Library, the Dwight D. Eisenhower Library, and the State Historical Society of Wisconsin. I owe thanks as well to many staff members at the University Library of the University of Illinois at Chicago, particularly of the Interlibrary Loan Department. The Glen Ellyn Public Library staff was also helpful. At Oxford University Press, Nancy Lane exhibited saintlike patience and gave good counsel during this book’s long gestation. Marion Osmun’s editing did much to improve it. Finally, the members of my family have endured their own bout with the McCarthy era, albeit by distant echo. Though Duffy remained underfoot while the book took form, Rocky and Gail have matured more rapidly and engagingly than the work itself. My mother and my late father instilled in me a taste for history and a distaste for many of the events chronicled in these pages. My wife, Barbara, tolerated years of prattle about the book, the mounds of clutter it generated, and the nomadic research junkets, all the while presiding over an environment that made the work pleasurable. To her this book is dedicated, though words cannot convey the requisite gratitude and love. R.M.F. Glen Ellyn, III. June 1989 Contents 1. Two Eras and Some Victims, 2. Trojan Horses and Fifth Columns, 3. “What Do You Think of Female Chastity?” Disloyalty in American Politics, 4. The Rise of the Communist Issue, 5. The Age Finds Its Name, 6. “Bitter Days”: The Heyday of Anti-Communism, 7. “In Calmer Times.…,”, Epilogue. Where We Came Out, Notes, Bibliographical Essay, Index, NIGHTMARE IN RED

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According to newspaper headlines and television pundits, the cold war ended many months ago; the age of Big Two confrontation is over. But forty years ago, Americans were experiencing the beginnings of another era--of the fevered anti-communism that came to be known as McCarthyism. During this perio
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