Born
in Chicago on October 22, 1900, Edward Stettinius divided
his time as a youth between Chicago and New York City. He
attended the Pomfret School until 1920, and the University
of Virginia until 1924, but left college without a degree
after having spent most of his time engaging in social work
and neglecting his studies.
By 1926, Stettinius had succeeded in becoming the assistant
to John Lee Pratt, the vice-president of General Motors
and a friend of the Stettinius family. Seeking to improve
the lives of GM's workers, Stettinius developed a program
of employee benefits that was so successful he was named
a vice-president in 1931.
Although a corporate businessman, Stettinius continued
to do work for unemployment relief projects and as a result
he became acquainted with Franklin
Roosevelt. When FDR was elected president, he earmarked
Stettinius for a position with the National Recovery Administration,
but his government service during the early New Deal would
be short lived. In 1934, Stettinius accepted a position
with United States Steel as a senior administrator and left
the New Deal; however, his strong sense of social responsibility
coupled with his successful business career insured that
FDR would continue to seek out Stettinius for government
service so long as he was president. In 1940 FDR succeeded
in enticing Stettinius back to his administration, this
time as a director in the Office of Production Management.
Two years later the president asked Stettinius to oversee
the administration of Lend-Lease Aid to the allies, a position
he held until he replaced Sumner
Welles as undersecretary of state in 1943.
As undersecretary, Stettinius headed the U.S. delegation
to the Dumbarton Oaks Conference, where he succeeded in
brokering agreement on the structure of the proposed United
Nations Organization. A few months later, Secretary
of State Cordell Hull became too ill to remain at the State
Department, and in November 1944 the Senate confirmed Stettinius
as his replacement.
Stettinius was a popular secretary of state, and he busily
occupied himself with laying the groundwork for the conference
in San Francisco that would officially create the United
Nations. He developed provisional rules of procedure for
the Security Council, achieved agreement on those rules
at the Yalta Conference, lined up Latin American support
for the UN, and was named to lead the U.S. delegation in
San Francisco. Stettinius was present at the UN's official
founding, on June 26, 1945, and resigned his office the
following day. President Truman
had made clear to Stettinius that he wanted his own candidate,
James Byrnes, to head the
State Department, and offered him the position of U.S. representative
to the UN. Stettinius accepted, and led a distinguished
American delegation to the first UN General Assembly that
included Senator Arthur Vandenburg, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Adlai
Stevenson.
Although Eleanor Roosevelt had been acquainted with Stettinius
for some time, it was not until January 1946 that she had
the opportunity to work with him closely. Having admired
his record of government service and committed social awareness
from afar, ER was touched by Stettinius' sincere devotion
to FDR's legacy. Both soon found that they also shared a
deep commitment to the success of the United Nations, and
their relationship was characterized by a warm professional
respect for one another. Disgruntled to learn of Stettinius'
resignation as secretary of state, ER was heartened to know
that he would be able to devote his full attention to the
UN. To her disappointment, however, Stettinius' tenure as
UN ambassador would be almost as brief as his term as secretary
of state had been. Frustrated with Truman's failure to use
the UN as a means of resolving tension between the U.S.
and the Soviet Union, Stettinius resigned his position in
June 1946.
In retirement, he remained an active alumnus of the University of Virginia, wrote a book
defending FDR's conduct at the Yalta Conference, and founded a company to encourage
American commercial activity in Liberia. He died in February 1949, at the age of 49.
Sources:
American National Biography. Vol. 20. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999, 687-689.
The Dictionary of American Biography. Supplement 4. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons,
1974, 776-778.