Adlai
Ewing Stevenson, Illinois governor (1948-1952),
two-time
Democratic presidential nominee (1952, 1956), United
States ambassador to the United Nations (1961-1965),
and close personal and political friend of Eleanor
Roosevelt, was born February 5, 1900 in Los Angeles,
California. The leading Democratic figure of the
1950s, Stevenson was known for his wit, intellectual
speeches,
and liberal political convictions. For many Americans
in the mid-twentieth century, he symbolized conscience
in politics.
A grandson and namesake of Grover Cleveland's vice-president,
Stevenson was raised in Illinois where his parents'
families had long been prominent politically, economically,
and socially. After graduating from Princeton and
Northwestern University School of Law, he
practiced law in Chicago. During World
War II, he was special assistant to the secretary
of the navy. In 1945 he went to the State Department
where he helped organize the United
Nations and served as an advisor to its first
American delegation, including Eleanor Roosevelt.
The two became good friends. Stevenson, with ER's
blessings, resigned from the delegation staff and
returned to Illinois to run for governor of Illinois
in 1948 on a platform of good government and opposition
to the "Green Machine," the corrupt administration
of Republican incumbent, Dwight H. Green. Stevenson's
substantial victoryhe won by a margin of 570,000
votes while President Harry
Truman carried Illinois by only 34,000made
him a national figure and led to his nomination
as the
Democratic candidate for president in 1952.
In 1952, the Democrats drafted Steveson to be their
presidential standard bearer. He campaigned on a continuation
of Franklin Roosevelt's
New Deal and Harry Truman's Fair Deal; however, he
could not make a dent in Republican candidate Dwight
Eisenhower's popularity or match his pledge to
go to Korea. Stevenson lost the election by a wide
margin.
Stevenson challenged Eisenhower again in 1956,
arguing that the president's policies ignored or
inadequately
handled such issues as nuclear testing in the atmosphere,
reduction of East-West tensions, the end of the
draft,
and increased assistance to underdeveloped countries
through the United Nations. Again, he lost decisively.
In 1960, ER, who actively campaigned for Stevenson
in 1952 and 1956 and who was concerned that no Democratic
candidate had Stevenson's understanding of foreign
affairs, urged him to run again. Against his wishes
she also chaired the Draft Stevenson Campaign.
Stevenson's ambivalence about seeking the Democratic
presidential nomination a third time strained his
friendship with ER, and their relationship was permanently
altered as a result. Nevertheless, they remained friendly
and ER strongly supported his appointment to the UN
ambassadorship in 1961. When she died, Stevenson
spoke at a memorial service held for her at the Cathedral
of St. John the Divine in New York City and served
as chair of the Eleanor Roosevelt Foundation.
Stevenon died in 1965.
Sources:
Black, Allida. Casting Her Own Shadow: Eleanor
Roosevelt and the Shaping of Postwar Liberalism.
New York: Columbia University Press, 1996, 182-187.
Boyer, Paul S., ed. The Oxford Companion to
United States History. New York: Oxford University
Press, 2001, 747.
Kirkendall, Richard S., ed. The Harry S. Truman
Encyclopedia. Boston: G.K. Hall & Co., 1989,
342.
Martin, John Bartlow. Adlai Stevenson of Illinois.
Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, 1977,
291.
Martin, John Bartlow. Adlai Stevenson and the
World. Garden City, New York: Doubleday &
Company, 1976, 748-749.