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House Speech Tribute to the Late Senator Arthur Vandenberg, April 18, 1961
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House Speech Tribute to the Late Senator Arthur Vandenberg, April 18, 1961
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The original documents are located in Box D15, folder "House Speech Tribute to the Late
Senator Arthur Vandenberg, April 18, 1961" of the Ford Congressional Papers: Press
Secretary and Speech File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.
Copyright Notice
The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of
photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. The Council donated to the United
States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections.
Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public
domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to
remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid
copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.
Digitized from Box D15 of The Ford Congressional Papers: Press Secretary and Speech File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library
REMARKS OF REP. GERALD R. FORD, JR.
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
April 18, 1961
Mr. Speaker, ten years ago today Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg of Michigan
passed away. At that time, the NEW YORK TIMES commented that "if America's adherence
to the United Nations, its decision to oppose the expansion of Communist aggression,
and its formulation of the Marshall Plan and the North Atlantic Treaty are among the
great events of our epoch, then Senator Vandenberg must retain a central place in con-
temporary history. The memory of his achievements is not likely to pass away for many
years to come."
I cannot let this occasion pass without paying tribute to this man whose
mind and spirit were great enough to put truth above consistency, conscience above pride
of opinion, and country above party. In reviewing Senator Vandenberg's life, I would
like to particularly stress five qualities which stood him in good stead during a career
of national service which knows few parallels.
First and foremost, Senator Arthur Hendrik Vandenberg became one of the archi-
tects of American foreign policy which now works for world peace by combined inter-
national effort to make the non-Communist countries of the world so strong that no
Soviet dictator would dare take the risk of starting a war of conquest. His historic
address in January, 1945, indicating that he, who had been a noninterwentionist before
World War II now clearly perceived that the world had changed and had contracted, led
the way to acceptance of America's role as a leader of the free nations of the earth.
In that great address, he stressed that "we cannot drift to victory. We must have
maximum united effort on all fronts. We must have maximum united effort in our councils
and we must deserve the continued united effort of our own people." Much of the united
effort we have undertaken since World War II has been due to the wisdom and efforts of
Senator Vandenberg.
Senator Vandenberg also forsaw the need for a sound, dynamic Republican Party.
He was six times that party's nominee for the post of President Pro-tem in the Senate
before elevation to that post in the 80th Congress. About his party he once said, "I
want the Republican Party to be liberal enough to march with the times, to dare new
answers to new problems and to use the power and strength and initiative of Government
to help citizens to help themselves." These words closely paralleled his personal
philosophy of government, which he expressed as follows: "At one point the dictionary
says, 'a conservative is one who seeks to prevent loss, decay or injury, and who protects
and preserves.' In that sense I want my party to be conservative. But at another point
it says that a conservative is 'one opposed to change or progress.' In that sense I do
LIBRAR
not want my party to be conservative. If it is static, it will die. It will promote
2.
and not prevent decay for itself and country. This is not a static country nor a
static age."
Again, Senator Arthur Vandenberg was not afraid to change his views when con-
vinced that another was right. He had a genius for seeing what was in the other man's
mind and in trying to get the best of that man's thought to formulate agreements which
embodied the best of everybody's thinking. He believed the great strength of democracy
lies in the fact that the best thoughts of a group of men lead to a stronger and wiser
result than can be achieved through the efforts of one man no matter how brilliant or
remarkable. His part in building a bridge from isolationism to internationalism, a
lasting example of an intelligent American's response to events, inspired columnist
Walter Lippman to say, "When a sudden and tremendous change of outlook has become
imperative in a crisis, it makes all the difference in the world to most of us to see
a man whom we have known and trusted going through the experience of changing his mind,
doing it with style and dash, and in a mood to shame the devils of his own weakness."
I would also remind the members of this body that Senator Vandenberg put
America above thoughts of personal gain, ambition and health. Those of us who were
acquainted with the Senator for some time knew of the personal sacrifice he had under-
gone on behalf of this country, but it was even further dramatized after his death when
the Senator's son reported, "The long interval between the discovering in 1948 of a
tumor and its removal in October 1949, was due to the Senator's firm insistence that
his health was of far less importance than his attention to affairs of government."
This was hardly surprising, for at Philadelphia in 1948 he steadfastly refused to become
a candidate for President for several reasons: the health of his wife, his concentration
on foreign policy in the recent past, his age, plus a tiny spot on his lung which had
been noted in his annual physical examination in Grand Rapids. And, most significantly
of all, he refused to become a candidate because he felt he should stay on the job where
he had demonstrated competence to serve the cause of fostering bipartisan unity in
behalf of collective peace and security for us and for the world. He thought of the
next administration rather than of the next election , and of the world rather than of
personal gain.
Finally, Senator Vandenberg was a man who did all he could to make the world
free and decent and honest. Besides his skill as a leader and a statesman, he was a
fine person and citizen. He was considerate and fair in doing what he thought was
right. He never failed to remember and serve his constituents in Michigan any more than
he did the people of the world. He gave sympathetic understanding and friendship to
those who knew him. As a newspaper man, as a writer, orator, and as an ameteur artist
and songwriter, and as a leader in the United States Senate, he exemplified nobility of
character and integrity of citizenship and public service.
IBRAR
3.
Mr. Speaker, I could go on for some time to stress other accomplishments in
the life of Senator Vandenberg, including his work on the domestic scene as the father
of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and an outstanding member of the Committees
on Finance and Interstate and Foreign Commerce in the Senate. At this point I ask
unanimous consent to revise and extend my remarks in order to include portions of an
article by Dean Acheson on Senator Vandenberg and others among his contemporaries as it
appeared in the April 1 issue of the SATURDAY EVENING POST. I certainly was pleased to
note the comments by the former Secretary of State regarding Senator Vandenberg and his
place in the emergence of the United States into world power and leadership.
Mr. Speaker, in Senator Vandenberg's personal office was a motto inscribed on a
desk piece, stating, "And this, too, shall pass." He always suggested that this
philosophy sustained him in adversity and restrained him in triumph. It gave him faith
to meet buoyantly the discouraging experiences of life; on the other hand, when he was
so often on the peak of success, victory and power, a glance at this motto had a leveling
effect. Senator Vandenberg, who planned to one day write a book on the life of St. Paul,
and who was a most loyal member of the First Congregational Church in Grand Rapids,
Michigan, lived in the unfailing belief that there are eternal values in the spiritual
things of life.
In his younger days he wrote a book titled, "If Hamilton Were Here Today." We
well might wonder as to how the responsibilities of future issues would be met if
Vandenberg were here today. I certainly cherish his memory and the many acts of friend-
ship which he accorded to me and to all others with which he came in contact. On this
tenth anniversary of his death I am most grateful for his outstanding contributions to
this country and to the world.
Following are excerpts from "My Adventures Among The U. S. Senators" by Dean
Acheson which appeared in the SATURDAY EVENING POST for April 1, 1961:
When, in 1957, a committee of the Senate picked the five most "outstanding"
Senators whose portraits should hang in the Senate reception room, it did not include
Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg. The choice fell on Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, John C.
Calhoun, Robert M. LaFollette and Robert A. Taft. Yet, in actual accomplishment, a good
case can be made that Vandenberg's achievements exceeded those of any of the five,
except Henry Clay. As a symbol of his times in the Senate, Vandenberg stands for
emergence of the United States into world power and leadership, as Clay typified the
growth of the country; Wester and Calhoun, the great debate of the ante-bellum days;
and Robert M. LaFollette, the turbulence of the Progressive Era.
Vandenberg did not furnish the ideas, the leadership or the drive to chart the
new course or to move the nation into it. But he made the result possible. What was
LIBRARY
4.
needed was a national consensus, at a time when the hot war, which had united the
nation, was over and the full consequences of the disruption caused by the war were
beginning to appear. How critical was the need can be judged by what happened after
Vandenberg's death--I do not say because of it--when the consensus fell apart.
Without Arthur Vandenberg, answers to these questions could not have been
brought into action. He had the capacity to learn and the capacity for action--
rare gifts in themselves. As important as either, and giving both scope, he carefully
maintained the preconditions for successful action. His prior history of isolationism
was an asset which he never allowed to die. His relations with Sen. Robert Taft were
carefully maintained. Vandenberg's respect for Taft's proprietorship of Republican
domestic policy led Taft to respect Vandenberg's position as Republican spokesman on
foreign policy, so long as the latter's health and vigor remained. Vandenberg kept the
friendship and respect of Senators Eugene D. Millikin of Colorado, Kennedy S. Wherry of
Nebraska and Styles Bridges of New Hampshire on the Republican Policy Committee. But,
perhaps most important of all, he was in the very heart of the inner circle that ran
the Senate.
****
His importance lies not in brilliance of mind or speech, but--in equal parts--
in himself, and in the time and place in which he lived and served. Without Vandenberg
in the Senate from 1943 to 1951 the history of the postwar period might have been very
different.
Was Arthur Vandenberg a likable man? Yes, he was. He had humor and warmth and
occasional bursts of self-revealing candor. He was not among the "popular" Senators.
His ego was too strong for that. Some regarded him as Mr. James B. Reston, of the NEW
YORK TIMES concedes he did for a time, as the "most pompous and prejudiced man in the
United States Senate." But this was wrong. He was not that; but he took a bit of
knowing. When I retired as Under Secretary of State in 1947 I wrote to thank him for
a warm note which I described as "another of the long list of kindnesses which you have
shown me" and "for your outstanding fairness and warm generosity." This was from the
heart; be was a good friend.
All these gifts and qualities were what fitted Senator Vandenberg so pre-
eminently to perform a service for which the country should be forever grateful; the
service of bringing together in support of a foreign policy, dictated by the necessity
of events, an Administration which could carry it out and an oppostion which could have
prevented it from doing SO. All the brilliance of Calhoun or the eloquence of Webster
could not have performed this service. It called for what Arthur Vandenberg had, and
was, and had spent a lifetime in acquiring and in being.
I salute his memory with affection and with honor.
REMARKS OF REP. GERALD R. FORD, JR.
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
April 18, 1961
Mr. Speaker, ten years ago today Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg of Michigan
passed away. At that time, the NEW YORK TIMES commented that "if America's adherence
to the United Nations, its decision to oppose the expansion of Communist aggression,
and its formulation of the Marshall Plan and the North Atlantic Treaty are among the
great events of our epoch, then Senator Vandenberg must retain a central place in con-
temporary history. The memory of his achievements is not likely to pass away for many
years to come."
I cannot let this occasion pass without paying tribute to this man whose
mind and spirit were great enough to put truth above consistency, conscience above pride
of opinion, and country above party. In reviewing Senator Vandenberg's life, I would
like to particularly stress five qualities which stood him in good stead during a career
of national service which knows few parallels.
First and foremost, Senator Arthur Hendrik Vandenberg became one of the archi-
tects of American foreign policy which now works for world peace by combined inter-
national effort to make the non-Communist countries of the world so strong that no
Soviet dictator would dare take the risk of starting a war of conquest. His historic
address in January, 1945, indicating that he, who had been a noninterwentionist before
World War II now clearly perceived that the world had changed and had contracted, led
the way to acceptance of America's role as a leader of the free nations of the earth.
In that great address, he stressed that "we cannot drift to victory. We must have
maximum united effort on all fronts. We must have maximum united effort in our councils
and we must deserve the continued united effort of our own people." Much of the united
effort we have undertaken since World War II has been due to the wisdom and efforts of
Senator Vandenberg.
Senator Vandenberg also forsaw the need for a sound, dynamic Republican Party.
He was six times that party's nominee for the post of President Pro-tem in the Senate
before elevation to that post in the 80th Congress. About his party he once said, "I
want the Republican Party to be liberal enough to march with the times, to dare new
answers to new problems and to use the power and strength and initiative of Government
to help citizens to help themselves." These words closely paralleled his personal
philosophy of government, which he expressed as follows: "At one point the dictionary
says, 'a conservative is one who seeks to prevent loss, decay or injury, and who protects
and preserves.' In that sense I want my party to be conservative. But at another point
it says that a conservative is 'one opposed to change or progress.' In that sense I do
not want my party to be conservative. If it is static, it will die. It will promote
2.
and not prevent decay for itself and country. This is not a static country nor a
static age."
Again, Senator Arthur Vandenberg was not afraid to change his views when con-
vinced that another was right. He had a genius for seeing what was in the other man's
mind and in trying to get the best of that man's thought to formulate agreements which
embodied the best of everybody's thinking. He believed the great strength of democracy
lies in the fact that the best thoughts of a group of men lead to a stronger and wiser
result than can be achieved through the efforts of one man no matter how brilliant or
remarkable. His part in building a bridge from isolationism to internationalism, a
lasting example of an intelligent American's response to events, inspired columnist
Walter Lippman to say, "When a sudden and tremendous change of outlook has become
imperative in a crisis, it makes all the difference in the world to most of us to see
a man whom we have known and trusted going through the experience of changing his mind,
doing it with style and dash, and in a mood to shame the devils of his own weakness."
I would also remind the members of this body that Senator Vandenberg put
America above thoughts of personal gain, ambition and health. Those of us who were
acquainted with the Senator for some time knew of the personal sacrifice he had under-
gone on behalf of this country, but it was even further dramatized after his death when
the Senator's son reported, "The long interval between the discovering in 1948 of a
tumor and its removal in October 1949, was due to the Senator's firm insistence that
his health was of far less importance than his attention to affairs of government."
This was hardly surprising, for at Philadelphia in 1948 he steadfastly refused to become
a candidate for President for several reasons: the health of his wife, his concentration
on foreign policy in the recent past, his age, plus a tiny spot on his lung which had
been noted in his annual physical examination in Grand Rapids. And, most significantly
of all, he refused to become a candidate because he felt he should stay on the job where
he had demonstrated competence to serve the cause of fostering bipartisan unity in
behalf of collective peace and security for us and for the world. He thought of the
next administration rather than of the next election , and of the world rather than of
personal gain.
Finally, Senator Vandenberg was a man who did all he could to make the world
free and decent and honest. Besides his skill as a leader and a statesman, he was a
fine person and citizen. He was considerate and fair in doing what he thought was
right. He never failed to remember and serve his constituents in Michigan any more than
he did the people of the world. He gave sympathetic understanding and friendship to
those who knew him. As a newspaper man, as a writer, orator, and as an amateur artist
and songwriter, and as a leader in the United States Senate, he exemplified nobility of
character and integrity of citizenship and public service.
3.
Mr. Speaker, I could go on for some time to stress other accomplishments in
the life of Senator Vandenberg, including his work on the domestic scene as the father
of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and an outstanding member of the Committees
on Finance and Interstate and Foreign Commerce in the Senate. At this point I ask
unanimous consent to revise and extend my remarks in order to include portions of an
article by Dean Acheson on Senator Vandenberg and others among his contemporaries as it
appeared in the April 1 issue of the SATURDAY EVENING POST. I certainly was pleased to
note the comments by the former Secretary of State regarding Senator Vandenberg and his
place in the emergence of the United States into world power and leadership.
Mr. Speaker, in Senator Vandenberg's personal office was a motto inscribed on a
desk piece, stating, "And this, too, shall pass." He always suggested that this
philosophy sustained him in adversity and restrained him in triumph. It gave him faith
to meet buoyantly the discouraging experiences of life; on the other hand, when he was
so often on the peak of success, victory and power, a glance at this motto had a leveling
effect. Senator Vandenberg, who planned to one day write a book on the life of St. Paul,
and who was a most loyal member of the First Congregational Church in Grand Rapids,
Michigan, lived in the unfailing belief that there are eternal values in the spiritual
things of life.
In his younger days he wrote a book titled, "If Hamilton Were Here Today." We
well might wonder as to how the responsibilities of future issues would be met if
Vandenberg were here today. I certainly cherish his memory and the many acts of friend-
ship which he accorded to me and to all others with which he came in contact. On this
tenth anniversary of his death I am most grateful for his outstanding contributions to
this country and to the world.
Following are excerpts from "My Adventures Among The U. S. Senators" by Dean
Acheson which appeared in the SATURDAY EVENING POST for April 1, 1961:
When, in 1957, a committee of the Senate picked the five most "outstanding"
Senators whose portraits should hang in the Senate reception room, it did not include
Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg. The choice fell on Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, John C.
Calhoun, Robert M. LaFollette and Robert A. Taft. Yet, in actual accomplishment, a good
case can be made that Vandenberg's achievements exceeded those of any of the five,
except Henry Clay. As a symbol of his times in the Senate, Vandenberg stands for
emergence of the United States into world power and leadership, as Clay typified the
growth of the country; Wester and Calhoun, the great debate of the ante-bellum days;
and Robert M. LaFollette, the turbulence of the Progressive Era.
Vandenberg did not furnish the ideas, the leadership or the drive to chart the
new course or to move the nation into it. But he made the result possible. What was
4.
needed was a national consensus, at a time when the hot war, which had united the
nation, was over and the full consequences of the disruption caused by the war were
beginning to appear. How critical was the need can be judged by what happened after
Vundenberg's death--I do not say because of it--when the consensus fell apart.
Without Arthur Vandenberg, answers to these questions could not have been
brought into action. He had the capacity to learn and the capacity for action--
rare gifts in themselves. As important as either, and giving both scope, he carefully
maintained the preconditions for successful action. His prior history of isolationism
was an asset which he never allowed to die. His relations with Sen. Robert Taft were
carefully maintained. Vandenberg's respect for Taft's proprietorship of Republican
domestic policy led Taft to respect Vandenberg's position as Republican spokesman on
foreign policy, so long as the latter's health and vigor remained. Vandenberg kept the
friendship and respect of Senators Eugene D. Millikin of Colorado, Kennedy S. Wherry of
Nebraska and Styles Bridges of New Hampshire on the Republican Policy Committee. But,
perhaps most important of all, he was in the very heart of the inner circle that ran
the Senate.
****
His importance lies not in brilliance of mind or speech, but--in equal parts--
in himself, and in the time and place in which he lived and served. Without Vandenberg
in the Senate from 1943 to 1951 the history of the postwar period might have been very
different.
Was Arthur Vandenberg a likable man? Yes, he was. He had humor and warmth and
occasional bursts of self-revealing candor. He was not among the "popular" Senators.
His ego was too strong for that. Some regarded him as Mr. James B. Reston, of the NEW
YORK TIMES concedes he did for a time, as the "most pompous and prejudiced man in the
United States Senate." But this was wrong. He was not that; but he took a bit of
knowing. When I retired as Under Secretary of State in 1947 I wrote to thank him for
a warm note which I described as "another of the long list of kindnesses which you have
shown me" and "for your outstanding fairness and warm generosity." This was from the
heart; be was a good friend.
All these gifts and qualities were what fitted Senator Vandenberg so pre-
eminently to perform a service for which the country should be forever grateful; the
service of bringing together in support of a foreign policy, dictated by the necessity
of events, an Administration which could carry it out and an oppostion which could have
prevented it from doing SO. All the brilliance of Calhoun or the eloquence of Webster
could not have performed this service. It called for what Arthur Vandenberg had, and
was, and had spent a lifetime in acquiring and in being.
I salute his memory with affection and with honor.