ADLAI STEVENSON


'Adlai Ewing Stevenson II' (February 5, 1900July 14, 1965) was an American politician, noted for his intellectual demeanor and advocacy of liberal causes in the Democratic party. He served one term as governor of Illinois and ran, unsuccessfully, for president against Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1952 and 1956. He served as Ambassador to the United Nations from 1961 to 1965.

Contents
Childhood, education, and early career
Marriage and children
1933 to 1948
1948 election as Illinois governor
1952 presidential bid
1956 presidential bid
1960-1965
Additional facts of note
Stevenson in popular culture
See also
Trivia
References
Notes
External links

Childhood, education, and early career


Although Stevenson was born in Los Angeles, he was a member of a famous Illinois political family. His grandfather Adlai E. Stevenson I had been Vice President of the United States. His father, Lewis Green Stevenson, never held an elected office, but served as Secretary of State of Illinois and was considered a strong contender for the Democratic vice-presidential nomination in 1928. His mother was Helen Davis Stevenson.
Stevenson left Bloomington after his junior year in high school and received his diploma from University High School in Normal, Illinois, Bloomington's "twin city" just to the north. After high school, he attended preparatory school at The Choate School, where he participated in sports, acting and journalism, the last as business manager of the school paper ''The News'', where he was elected editor-in-chief. In 1918, he enlisted into the Navy and served at the rank of Seaman Apprentice.
He attended Princeton University, becoming managing editor of ''The Daily Princetonian'' and a member of the Quadrangle Club, and receiving a A.B. degree in 1922. He was a member of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity there. He then went to Harvard Law School under prodding from his father but he failed several classes and withdrew. He returned to Bloomington where he wrote for the family newspaper, ''The Daily Pantagraph'', which was founded by his maternal great grandfather Jesse Fell.
Stevenson became interested in law again a year or so after leaving Harvard after talking to Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.. When he returned home to Bloomington, he decided to finish his law degree at Northwestern University School of Law, attending classes during the week and returning to Bloomington on the weekends to write for the ''Pantagraph''. Stevenson received his LL.B. law degree from Northwestern in 1926 and passed the Illinois State Bar examination that year. He obtained a position at Cutting, Moore & Sidley, an old and conservative Chicago law firm, and became a popular member of Chicago's social scene.

Marriage and children


Stevenson married Ellen Borden, a wealthy socialite, in 1928. The couple had three sons, Adlai Stevenson III (1930), Borden (1932), and John Fell (1936). In September 1949, Stevenson announced that the two were separating, and that he would not contest a divorce, which occurred later that year.
Stevenson was rumored in some circles to be bisexual, but nearly all of his biographers strongly discount this notion, and the claim that he was bisexual was most likely due to rumors spread by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, who disliked Stevenson for political reasons. [1] Although he never remarried following his divorce, Stevenson did have relationships with numerous women during the rest of his life, including:

★ ''Washington Post'' publisher Katharine Graham

★ philanthropist Mary Lasker

★ publisher Alicia Patterson Guggenheim

★ socialite Brooke Astor, to whom he once proposed

★ socialite Ruth Field, the widow of Marshall Field

★ actress Lauren Bacall, the wife of Humphrey Bogart
But his constant companion from 1952 was Marietta Peabody Tree, who was the wife of multimillionaire bisexual Ronald Tree, the grandson of Marshall Field.

1933 to 1948


In July 1933, Stevenson took a position as special attorney and assistant to Jerome Frank, the general counsel of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA) a part of Roosevelt’s New Deal. Following the repeal of Prohibition in 1934, Stevenson changed jobs, becoming chief attorney for the Federal Alcohol Control Administration (FACA), a subsidiary of the AAA which regulated the activities of the alcohol industry.
In 1935, Stevenson returned to Chicago to practice law. He became involved in civic activities, particularly as chairman of the Chicago branch of the Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies (known often as the White Committee, after its founder, William Allen White). The Stevensons purchased a seventy-acre tract of land on the Des Plaines River near Libertyville, Illinois where they built a house. Although he spent comparatively little time at Libertyville, Stevenson considered the farm home.
In 1940, Colonel Frank Knox, newly appointed by President Franklin Roosevelt as Secretary of the Navy, offered Stevenson a position as Principal Attorney and special assistant. In this capacity, Stevenson wrote speeches, represented Secretary Knox and the Navy on committees, toured the various theaters of war, and handled many administrative duties. From December 1943 to January 1944, he participated in a special mission to Sicily and Italy for the Foreign Economic Administration to report on the country's economy. A report he wrote following that mission was very well regarded, and he was offered several jobs as a result.
After Knox died in April 1944, Stevenson returned to Chicago where he attempted to purchase Knox's controlling interest in the ''Chicago Daily News'', but his syndicate was outbid by another party.
In 1945, Stevenson accepted what he called a "temporary" position in the State Department, as special assistant to the Secretary of State to work with Assistant Secretary of State Archibald MacLeish on a proposed world organization. Later that year, he went to London as Deputy United States Delegate to the Preparatory Commission of the United Nations Organization, a position he held until February 1946. When the head of the delegation fell ill, Stevenson assumed his role. His work at the Commission, and in particular his dealings with the representatives of the Soviet Union, resulted in appointments to the US delegations to the UN in 1946 and 1947.

1948 election as Illinois governor


In 1948, Stevenson entered the Illinois gubernatorial race as a Democrat and, in the November 1948 Democratic landslide, defeated incumbent Republican Dwight H. Green. Principal among his achievements as Illinois governor were reorganizing the state police, cracking down on illegal gambling, and improving the state highways. He was a popular public speaker, gaining a reputation as an intellectual, with a self-deprecating sense of humor to match.
In 1949, Governor Stevenson appeared as a character witness in the first trial of Alger Hiss.

1952 presidential bid


Early in 1952, while Stevenson was still governor of Illinois, President Harry S. Truman proposed that he seek the Democratic nomination for president. In a fashion that was to become his trademark, Stevenson at first hesitated, arguing that he was committed to running for a second gubernatorial term. As governor of the host state, Stevenson delivered a welcoming address to the delegates to the 1952 Democratic National Convention in Chicago so stirring that it may have helped stampede his nomination. Despite his protestations, the delegates drafted him, and he accepted the nomination with a speech that according to contemporaries, "electrified the nation:"

''"When the tumult and the shouting die, when the bands are gone and the lights are dimmed, there is the stark reality of responsibility in an hour of history haunted with those gaunt, grim specters of strife, dissension, and materialism at home, and ruthless, inscrutable, and hostile power abroad. The ordeal of the twentieth century —the bloodiest, most turbulent age of the Christian era—is far from over. Sacrifice, patience, understanding, and implacable purpose may be our lot for years to come. … Let’s talk sense to the American people! Let’s tell them the truth, that there are no gains without pains, that we are now on the eve of great decisions."''

Stevenson's distinctive speaking style quickly earned him the reputation of an intellectual and endeared him to many Americans, while simultaneously alienating him from others.
Stevenson's intelligence was the subject of much ridicule; it was during the 1952 campaign that Republican vice presidential candidate Sen. Richard M. Nixon of California labeled Stevenson an "egghead." In the 1952 presidential election against Dwight D. Eisenhower, Stevenson lost heavily outside the Solid South; he won only nine states and lost the Electoral College vote 442 to 89.
Adlai Stevenson statue showing hole in sole of shoe

During the campaign, a photograph revealed a hole in the sole of Adlai's right shoe.[2] This became a well-known symbol of Adlai's frugality and earthiness. Photographer Bill Gallagher of the Flint Journal won the 1953 Pulitzer prize on the strength of the image.[3]
Following his defeat, Stevenson traveled throughout Asia, the Middle East and Europe, writing about his travels for ''Look magazine''. Although he was not sent as an official emissary of the U.S. government, Stevenson's international reputation gave him access to many foreign officials.

1956 presidential bid


With Eisenhower headed for another landslide, few Democrats wanted the 1956 nomination. Although challenged by Tennessee Senator Estes Kefauver and New York Governor W. Averell Harriman, Stevenson campaigned more aggressively to secure the nomination, and Kefauver conceded after losing several key primaries. To Stevenson's dismay, former president Truman endorsed Harriman, but the blow was softened by former first lady Eleanor Roosevelt's continued support. Stevenson again won the nomination at the 1956 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, aided by strong support from younger delegates, who were said to form the core of the "New Politics" movement. He permitted the convention delegates to choose Senator Kefauver as his running mate, despite stiff competition from Senator John F. Kennedy. Following his nomination, Stevenson waged a vigorous presidential campaign, delivering 300 speeches and traveling 55,000 miles. He called on the electorate to join him in a march to a "new America", based on a liberal agenda that anticipated the programs of the Kennedy and Johnson administrations. His call for an end to aboveground nuclear weapons tests proved premature and lost him support.
While President Eisenhower suffered heart problems, the economy enjoyed robust health. Stevenson's hopes for victory were dashed when, in October, President Eisenhower's doctors gave him a clean bill of health and the Suez and Hungary crises erupted simultaneously. The public was not convinced that a change in leadership was needed, and Stevenson lost his second bid for the presidency, winning only 73 electoral votes in the 1956 presidential election.
Despite his two defeats, Stevenson considered a third nomination. Early in 1957, he resumed law practice with associates W. Willard Wirtz, William McC. Blair Jr. and Newton N. Minow. He also accepted an appointment on the new Democratic Advisory Council, with other prominent Democrats. He was employed part-time by the ''Encyclopædia Britannica.''

1960-1965


Prior to the 1960 Democratic National Convention, Stevenson announced that he was not seeking the Democratic nomination for president, but would accept a draft. Because he still hoped to be a candidate, Stevenson refused to give the nominating address for relative newcomer John F. Kennedy, which strained relations between the two politicians. Once Kennedy won the nomination, Stevenson, always an enormously popular public speaker, campaigned actively for him. Due to his two presidential nominations and previous United Nations experience, Stevenson perceived himself an elder statesman and a natural choice for Secretary of State, an opinion shared by few in the Kennedy camp. The prestigious post went to the (then) little-known Dean Rusk and Stevenson was appointed U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. There, he worked hard to support U.S. foreign policy, even when he personally disagreed with some of Kennedy's actions. His most famous moment came on October 25, 1962, during the Cuban missile crisis, when he gave a presentation at an emergency session of the Security Council. He forcefully asked the Soviet representative, Valerian Zorin, if his country was installing missiles in Cuba, punctuated with the famous demand "Don't wait for the translation, answer 'yes' or 'no'!" in demanding an immediate answer. Following Zorin's refusal to answer the abrupt question, Stevenson retorted, "I am prepared to wait for my answer until Hell freezes over." In a diplomatic coup, Stevenson then showed photographs that proved the existence of missiles in Cuba, just after the Soviet ambassador had implied they did not exist.
Stevenson was assaulted by an anti-United Nations protester in Dallas, Texas, one month before the assassination of Kennedy in that same city on November 22, 1963. That assault contributed to the viewpoint that Dallas was filled with right-wingers hostile to JFK.
While walking in London with Marietta Tree, Stevenson suffered a heart attack on the afternoon of July 14, 1965, and later died that day of heart failure at St George's Hospital. That night in her diary, Marietta wrote, "Adlai is dead. We were together."[4] Following memorial services in Washington, D.C; Springfield, Illinois; and Bloomington, Illinois, Stevenson was interred in the family plot in Evergreen Cemetery, Bloomington, Illinois. The funeral in Bloomington's Unitarian Church was attended by many national figures, including President Lyndon Johnson, Vice President Hubert Humphrey, and Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren.

Additional facts of note


Stevenson's wit was legendary. During one of Stevenson's presidential campaigns, allegedly, a supporter told him that he was sure to "get the vote of every thinking man" in the U.S., to which Stevenson is said to have replied, "Thank you, but I need a majority to win."
Stevenson's father, Lewis G. Stevenson, was Illinois secretary of state (1914–1917). Stevenson's eldest son, Adlai E. Stevenson III, was a U.S. Senator from Illinois (1970–1981). Actor McLean Stevenson was a second cousin once removed.
The Central Illinois Regional Airport near Bloomington has a whimsical statue of Stevenson, sitting on a bench with his feet propped on his briefcase and his head in one hand, as if waiting for his flight. He is wearing the shoes that he famously displayed to reporters during one of his campaigns, a hole worn in the sole from all the miles he had walked in an effort to win the election.
Stevenson smoked a pack of cigarettes a day, before quitting in the mid-1950s. Friends say he resumed smoking at some point in the early 1960s, during his years at the United Nations.
Stevenson once showed in a World Series game between the New York Yankees and the Brooklyn Dodgers that he was neutral by wearing a hat from both teams.

Stevenson in popular culture



Illinois State University has a classroom hall named in honor of Adlai Stevenson; it is commonly referred to as Stevenson Hall.

Northern Illinois University has a student residence hall named in honor of Adlai Stevenson; it is commonly referred to as Stevenson Towers[5]

★ Stevenson Hall, a residence hall at Eastern Illinois University, is named after Adlai Stevenson.

★ A section of Interstate 55 in Chicago is named for Adlai Stevenson II in addition to the Adlai E. Stevenson High School located in Lincolnshire, Illinois

The Onion's compendium ''Our Dumb Century'' has a parody of the Charles Atlas ''Hero of the Beach'' cartoon advertisement woven into an article about Adlai Stevenson confronting General William Westmoreland.

Peter Sellers claimed that his portrayal of President Merkin Muffley in '' was modeled on Stevenson.

★ Stevenson's legendary "Don't wait for the translation" speech to the Soviet ambassador Valerian Zorin on 25 October 1962 in front of the Security Council of the United Nations during the Cuban Missile Crisis was in part replicated for dramatic effect in the sixth Star Trek film, ''. The speech is also a central part of the 2000 film ''Thirteen Days''.

Sufjan Stevens released a song titled ''Adlai Stevenson'' about Adlai Stevenson on his 2006 LP, ''The Avalanche''.

★ In the classic ''Mystery Science Theater 3000'' episode ''Manos, the Hands of Fate'', during the short feature ''Hired!'', the salesman is talking to a bald middle-aged man, which is followed by the comment "Adlai Stevenson buys a car!"

★ Ironically, Stevenson was visibly ''less'' bald than his two-time Presidential opponent, Dwight Eisenhower.

★ In an episode titled "The Secret War of Lisa Simpson" of ''The Simpsons'', Lisa Simpson watches a black and white educational film in class, from the 1950s, about the future of moon travel. In it, the narrator states "Will man ever walk on her fertile surface? Democratic hopeful Adlai Stevenson says so!" and the filmstrips cuts to a press conference for Stevenson, in which we hear him say "I have no objections to man walking on the moon." The press then falls into an uproar. In "Lisa the Iconoclast", a headstone bearing Stevenson's name is visible in the Springfield cemetery. Although Springfield shares the name of the Illinois capital, Stevenson is actually buried in Bloomington, Illinois.

★ Stevenson is referenced in Tom Perrotta's novel ''Election.'' Mr. M explains to Tammy that Stevenson lost in a landslide because the American people don't want to elect overly-intellectual people.

★ In Squaresoft's 1994 video game Final Fantasy VI (or Final Fantasy III in the USA), a mysterious character named Gogo was rumored to be Stevenson in disguise. There are many websites with quotes to support this theory, however it has been debunked, and is currently considered to be untrue.[6]

★ To fool Oracle in Identity Crisis, villains used recordings of speeches by Stevenson.

★ Comedian Stan Freberg uses Stevenson as a punchline in a sketch during the second-to-last show of Freberg's brilliant but short-lived radio show. In the sketch, Freberg talks to advertising men, trying to find a way to finance his show. The advertising man asks if he's got a hole in his shoe (to generate sympathy with the ladies). "That I've got," Freberg replies. "You'll be a cinch to win," the man tells him, to which Freberg says, "Have you talked to Stevenson lately?"

See also



Adlai E. Stevenson High School located in Lincolnshire, Illinois

★ Adlai Stevenson High School in Sterling Heights, Michigan

Interstate 55 - known as the Adlai E. Stevenson Expressway in Chicagoland

★ Adlai E. Stevenson High School in Livonia, Michigan

★ Adlai E. Stevenson High School in Bronx, New York

★ Adlai E. Stevenson Elementary School in Elk Grove Village, Illinois

Trivia


Stevenson was known throughout his political career as "The man from Libertyville", a reference to his hometown of Libertyville, IL.

References



The Stevensons: A Biography of An American Family, , Jean H., Baker, W. W. Norton & Co, 1996, ISBN 0-393-03874-2

★ Broadwater, Jeff. ''Adlai Stevenson and American Politics: The Odyssey of a Cold War Liberal.'' Twayne, 1994. 291 pp

★ Cowden, Jonathan A. ''Adlai Stevenson: a Retrospective.'' ''Princeton University Library Chronicle'' 2000 61(3): 322-359. ISSN 0032-8456

Adlai Stevenson: His Life and Legacy, , Porter, McKeever, William Morrow and Company, 1989, ISBN 0-688-06661-5

★ Martin, John Bartlow . ''Adlai Stevenson of Illinois: The Life of Adlai E. Stevenson'' (1976) and ''Adlai Stevenson and the World: The Life of Adlai E. Stevenson'' (1977), the standard scholarly biography

Murphy, John M. ''Civic Republicanism in the Modern Age: Adlai Stevenson in the 1952 Presidential Campaign'' ''Quarterly Journal of Speech'' 1994 80(3): 313-328. ISSN 0033-5630

★ Slaybaugh, Douglas. ''Adlai Stevenson, Television, and the Presidential Campaign of 1956'' ''Illinois Historical Journal'' 1996 89(1): 2-16. ISSN 0748-8149

★ Slaybaugh, Douglas. ''Political Philosophy or Partisanship: a Dilemma in Adlai Stevenson's Published Writings, 1953-1956.'' ''Wisconsin Magazine of History'' 1992 75(3): 163-194. ISSN 0043-6534. Argues by 1956, Stevenson had alienated many of his well-placed and well-educated supporters without winning over many new rank-and-file Democrats.

★ White, Mark J. ''Hamlet in New York: Adlai Stevenson During the First Week of the Cuban Missile Crisis" ''Illinois Historical Journal'' 1993 86(2): 70-84. ISSN 0748-8149

Adlai Stevenson Had a Peace Proposal.Shouldn't Democrats Today? by Lawrence S. Wittner

★ Stevenson, Adlai. ''The Papers of Adlai E. Stevenson'' (6 vol) 1972)

★ Blair, William McC. ed. ''Adlai Stevenson's Legacy: Reminiscences by His Friends and Family'' . ''Princeton University Library Chronicle'' (2000) 61(3): 360-403. ISSN 0032-8456 Reminiscences by Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., William McC. Blair, Adlai Stevenson III, Newton N. Minow, and Willard Wirtz.
Notes

1. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1316/is_n1_v30/ai_20239566
2. http://www.flintjournal.com/125/paper/galleries/history/source/14.html
3. http://www.pulitzer.org/cgi-bin/year.pl?805,25
4. http://nj.essortment.com/humansrightsco_rwkz.htm
5. http://www.niulib.niu.edu/reghist/UA%2042.htm
6. The alleged Stevenson quotes turned out to be fabricated, and can be read about here.

External links



★ Adapted parts from: Adlai E. Stevenson: A Voice of Conscience, part of a series on notable American Unitarians

Adlai Stevenson Last of the Beautiful Losers Early Influences: "A Bad Case of Hereditary Politics", biography, Mudd Library, Princeton University

Stevensons put stamp on history, www.pantagraph.com

NNDB biographical facts

A brief biography, United Nations Association - McLean County Chapter.

Booknotes, April 7, 1996

University of California, Santa Cruz: - Adlai E. Stevenson College

Text, Audio, Video of Stevenson's United Nations Security Council Address on the Buildup of Soviet Missiles in Cuba

★ Site of Stevenson's Funeral: - Unitarian Universalist Church of Bloomington-Normal

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