Background
David E. Lilienthal was born in Morton, Indiana, on July 8, 1899. His parents, Leo and Minnie (Rosenak) Lilienthal were Czechoslovakian immigrants. His father, a storekeeper, moved his family from town to town across the Midwest.
(This second volume of Mr. Lilienthal's journals covers th...)
This second volume of Mr. Lilienthal's journals covers the stormy period of America's atomic weapons monopoly, of spy scares and Congressional investigations, of a secret struggle between civilian and military leadership within the government, and finally, of he gravest of issues - the decision to make the H-bomb. Beginning the day after the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima in 1945 and ending in 1950 when Mr. Lilienthal retired as chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, these journals record his part in decision-making on disarmament, on the relation of the military to scientific development, and on secrecy in government. The decisions taken in those years still affect us, and any future account of the period will come to depend in large part on this record. The journals as a whole will ultimately record some forty-six years in Mr. Lilienthal's career in public and private life. Commenting on the project, Jonathan Daniels says, "This is one of the great journals of our time - and our history. I can think of nothing quite comparable with it in the American story."
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(The Journals of David E. Lilienthal, Vol. 5: The Harvest ...)
The Journals of David E. Lilienthal, Vol. 5: The Harvest Years 1959-1963 Hardcover David E. Lilienthal (Author)
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(For the first time within memory, one of the major - and ...)
For the first time within memory, one of the major - and most controversial - actors in American public life has permitted his personal journals to appear during his lifetime. Since no other form of writing allows an author to tell so much so frankly, these journals give us a unique and fascinating view of both public and private experience. As history they are invaluable. Mr. Lilienthal occupied two key government posts from 1930 to 1950. As head of the TVA, he brought to realization the dream of decades of progressives, despite constant attack from people inside and outside government. As chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission he participated in the formulation of postwar policies on disarmament, on the relation of the military to scientific development, on secrecy in government, and on the project which led to the development of the H-bomb.
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David E. Lilienthal was born in Morton, Indiana, on July 8, 1899. His parents, Leo and Minnie (Rosenak) Lilienthal were Czechoslovakian immigrants. His father, a storekeeper, moved his family from town to town across the Midwest.
Lilienthal graduated from high school in Michigan City, Indiana. He received his bachelor's degree in 1920 from De Pauw University, where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. Not only an intellectual, he also obtained a reputation as a light-heavyweight boxer. Three years later, Lilienthal earned a law degree from Harvard Law School.
He received honorary LL. D. degrees from DePauw University (1945), Michigan State University (1949), Boston University (1952), and the Universidad de Los Andes, Colombia (1954).
For a few years, Lilienthal was a member of a Chicago firm that specialized in labor law. In his own practice after 1926, he served as special counsel for the city of Chicago in a suit against the Bell Telephone System that eventually brought $20 million to the city. From 1926 to 1931, he also edited the Public Utilities Carriers Service for the Commerce Clearing House of Chicago. By 1931 Lilienthal had become known as an expert in public utilities law and administration. His reputation took him to Wisconsin, where Governor Philip F. LaFollette, asked him to reorganize the Public Service Commission. On Lilienthal's recommendation utilities statutes and the operation of the Public Service Commission were overhauled to give the state effective control over privately owned utilities. Lilienthal's success led several other states to employ his model for similar legislative changes. As an able administrator, he attracted President Franklin Roosevelt's attention to help lead America's first corporation created by an act of Congress.
In 1933 President Franklin Roosevelt chose Lilienthal as one of the three codirectors of the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA). Congress created the TVA to rehabilitate the entire valley of the Tennessee River and help its inhabitants out of poverty. Roosevelt envisioned programs for flood control, the provision of cheap electricity, the improvement of navigation, and the education of farmers in modern techniques. Lilienthal managed the power program and introduced an enormous hydroelectric dam building program. Lilienthal's vision of massive economic development of the valley conflicted with the views of Chairman Arthur Morgan. The controversy on the TVA board ended with Morgan's resignation in 1938. Lilienthal's changes also drew the wrath of private interests, who could do little to stem the TVA's developments. However, he forbade his employees from participating in politics, declaring that, "A river has no politics. " Three years later, on September 15, 1941, Lilienthal became board chairman. An earnest conservationist, he introduced programs to teach the valley's farmers techniques to stem soil erosion and the importance of cheap fertilizers.
Arter the U. S entered World War II, TVA took on added responsibilities to meet expanding wartime needs. TVA power made possible the creation of the vital nuclear research installation at Oak Ridge, Tennessee, and provided cheap power for high-energy consumption industries, such as wartime aluminum manufacturing. Through his contact at Oak Ridge, Lilienthal acquired new interests in the field of atomic power. By 1945 the TVA was America's largest producer of electric power and the per capita income of the region had risen 73% above its prewar level.
Congress established the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) in July of 1946 to develop America's nuclear resources under a civilian energy program. On October 28, President Truman named Lilienthal as the AEC's first chairman. In addition to developing nuclear energy he headed the commission in developing the atomic bomb. His years with the AEC were stormy. This was the era of steadily deteriorating Soviet-American relations, of frequent frustration of American power overseas, and of mounting national paranoia on the question of Communist infiltrators in the U. S. government. The AEC received its share of congressional investigations and accusations, and Lilienthal was personally under attack much of the time, countering accusations of Communism because of his Czechoslovakian ancestry and charges of mismanagement. Lilienthal tendered his resignation to Truman in November to take effect on December 31, 1949, ending nearly 20 years of government service.
In 1950 Lilienthal toured the United States delivering a series of lectures entitled Atoms for Peace, which advocated less government secrecy but continued government control in atomic energy and research. He then began a new career as a business executive. Initially he served as an industrial consultant to the Carrier Corporation and to the international banking firm of Lazard Frères and Company. Then he built up an aggregation of mineral and chemical patent companies, in the process accumulating a sizable personal fortune. In 1955, with Lazard Frères backing, Lilienthal and his TVA successor, Gordon Clapp, founded the Development and Resources (D&R) Corporation. It provided managerial and technical services to foreign nations for developing natural resources through TVA-like projects. By 1967 the company's fees totaled over $3 million a year. At President Lyndon Johnson's instigation, Lilienthal and his associates signed a three-year contract with the federal government to plan the development of the Mekong Delta in South Vietnam. Although D&R initially had with significant successes, it ultimately failed. D&R met its downfall in the late 1970s principally because of its associations with two of America's greatest foreign policy disasters: Vietnam and Iran. Lilienthal's optimism and faith in domestic success overshadowed the difficulty in transferring American economic values and technologies abroad.
Lilienthal published seven journals, Journals of David E. Lilienthal, covering most of his adult life, from meeting his wife until a few days before his death. During the war years he published his best-selling book TVA: Democracy on the March (1944), which defended the policies of the TVA when it was under threat. A few years later he produced This I Do Believe (1949) as a result of the congressional hearing in 1948.
He is remembered as first chairman (1941) of the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) and first chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC). He was bestowed with many awards, including the Freedom Award from Freedom House (1949) and the Public Welfare Medal of the National Academy of Sciences (1951).
(For the first time within memory, one of the major - and ...)
(White House discussions about postwar economic planning)
(This second volume of Mr. Lilienthal's journals covers th...)
(The Journals of David E. Lilienthal, Vol. 5: The Harvest ...)
(Vintage paperback)
(Biography)
He married Helen Marian Lamb. They later became the parents of a daughter, Nancy Alice, and a son, David Eli.