'Henry Hammill Fowler' (
September 5,
1908–
January 3,
2000) was an
American lawyer and politician.
Born in
Roanoke, Virginia, he graduated from
Roanoke College in 1929 and received his law degree from
Yale Law in 1932.
Fowler joined the legal staff of the
Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) in 1934. There he assisted in the preparation and successful conduct of the four-year litigation establishing the constitutionality of that program. By 1939, he had risen to Assistant General Counsel of the TVA and subsequently served as chief counsel of a subcommittee of the
U.S. Senate Committee on Education and Labor.
From 1941 to 1944, he was an assistant general counsel of the Office of Production Management and afterward of the
War Production Board. He then served in the
United Kingdom and
Germany in 1944 and 1945. He then returned to private practice and then in 1951 rejoined the government to work on the mobilization of troops during the
Korean War. During this period he was an administrator of the National Production Authority, administrator of the Defense Production Administration, Director of the Office of Defense Mobilization and member of the
National Security Council.
Fowler served as a member of the Commission on Money and Credit from 1958 to 1961, and of the National Committee on Government Finance of the
Brookings Institution from 1960 to 1961. He was a Trustee of Roanoke College and of the Funds of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Virginia.
He served as Under Secretary of the Treasury from February 3, 1961, until April 10, 1964, when he returned to private law practice as senior member of the Washington firm of Fowler, Leva, Hawes and Symington.
As
U.S. Secretary of the Treasury from 1965 to 1968, Fowler organized a two-tier system for gold in 1968, and participated in the 1967-68 international agreements, which created a new international monetary reserve system called "Special Drawing Rights."
After leaving the Treasury Department, Fowler joined
Goldman Sachs in
New York City as a partner.
External links
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''TIME'' Magazine Cover: Henry H. Fowler, Sept. 10, 1965
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Roanoke College: Henry H. Fowler Public Policy Program