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OCR Page 1 of 2PSF Great Britain : Joseph Kennedy July 1939-1940
PSF Kemody
fallsmed
London, July 20, 1939
Dear Mr. President,
I think you are up to date on everything I know
about the international situation, but I thought you
would be interested to get my observations on the
political situation in England.
My own belief is that the Chamberlain Government,
coming down the last stages of a hectic career, is hav-
ing some difficulty with their representatives, but not
nearly enough to challenge their leadership. The at-
tempt to put Churchill in the Cabinet, supported by
the Opposition Conservatives in Chamberlain's own Party
backed by some of the prominent newspapers, reached a
high about last Sunday and has been rather going down
hill. The demand is very much like the demand there
is in the United States: when there is dissatisfaction
if anybody brings out any kind of an idea backed by a
newspaper campaign, it receives considerable impetus,
but, unless it is very sound, falls of its own weight.
I talked to Eden about this. Of course he feels
that the Government should have been broadened a long
time ago. By that he means representatives of Labor,
representatives of the anti-Chamberlain group in his
own Party, and representatives of the Liberal Party.
But Chamberlain's idea always has been that the diffi-
culties for which he would want an All Party Cabinet
would be for international reasons and, since the pro-
gram he is carrying out is practically the one that
they have all wanted, if he broadened it at this time
he would merely make his internal policies the subject
of continual football playing.
I
The President,
The White House.
-2-
I talked to Lord Baldwin about what he thought of
the political situation and he felt strongly that, after
all, Chamberlain was responsible to the Country and that
if Churchill were admitted to the Government, he would,
being entirely different from Chemberlain, so irritate
Chamberlain that it might mean a very serious situation
and result in a very bad mess.
Today I talked with Chamberlain about it. He told
me he is unwilling to admit Churchill, because he does
not believe in the first place that he could deliver
nearly one-tenth as much as people think he could; he
has developed into a fine two-handed drinker and his
judgment has never been proven to be good. Chamberlain
is also convinced that if Churchill had been in the Cabi-'
net, England would have been at war before this.
There is one issue, however, that is giving Chamber-
lain a good deal of concern, and that is a demand through-
out the Country for an increase in old-age pensions and
up to the minute he has not been willing to do anything
on this because of the increased cost. He told me to-
day that he was giving it very careful consideration and
thought he would probably have to do something in order
that the Party would not run the risk of being licked on
an issue that the world would not at all understand.
I would think that, on the basis of the present situa-
tion and their willingness to patch up their fences before
they go to a national election, which may be in October,
assuming there are no international difficulties, the Con-
servative Party under Chamberlain would win quite easily.
I thought you would be interested in getting this
brief survey of the political situation.
With my warmest regards, I am,
Sincerely yours,
Joe
Original of this memo
1
.
in Bullitt folder-
PSF: Kennedy
not sent
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
July 28, 1939.
MEMORANDUM FOR
AMBASSADOR BULLITT
AMBASSADOR KENNEDY
I have been asked if there is
any objection to private purchasing
agencies being set up in this country
by certain European powers, in order
to centralize purchases of various
kinds which they may wish to make
over here. It seems to me that we
should remember that these nations
and the United States are at peace
with the world, and that there can
be no objection to the setting up
of such purchasing agencies pro-
vided (a) their operations do not
violate the Johnson Act, and (b)
that in the event they become in-
volved in war, their operations
will not violate Section #1 of
the Neutrality Law, commonly re-
ferred to as the Embargo Clause.
F. D. R.
THE WHITE HOUSE
CONF IDENTIAL
Honorable Joseph P. Kennedy,
American Embassy,
London,
England.
BY POUCH
Memo from the President
To Ambsaadors Bullitt and Kennedy
July 28, 1939
In re-if any objection to private purchasing
agencies being set up in this country
by certain European powers in order to
centralize purchases of various kinds which
they may wish to make over here etc.
See: Bullitt folder-Drawer 1--1939 (Foreign File)
August 5, 1939.
Dear Joe:-
I think you are absolutely right in
what you say in yours of July twentieth. The
big question is what can we best do to keep
our financial position strong for, as you say,
at least one more year. We have out down
greatly on WPA and a number of cther things,
but the silly Congress gave no three hundred
million more than I wanted for farm subsidies
and now has eliminated a lending program (for
which we would have got approximately 100%
return) and will try to add a PWA spending
program of which 46% will come out of the
Treasury and never be paid back. All some-
what confusing, isn't it?
At least we can say that our
financial position is stronger than that
of most other countries. We should keep
it so.
I hope you are having a good
holiday and that the storm will not break.
As ever yours,
Honorable Joseph P. Kennedy,
American Embassy,
London,
England.
London, July 20, 1939
Dear Mr. President,
I am leaving tomorrow for a holiday and before
I go, I would like to write you about what I regard
as the makings of the worst economic condition the
world has ever seen. As you know, I have been
constantly bearish for the last two or three years
and I see nothing tonight that makes me change my
opinion, but, on the contrary, I feel more pessi-
mistic than ever.
I will start off by saying that I know of few
cases in history where a complete collapse of agri-
cultural prices has not been the beginning of a ter-
rific depression. We are now faced with the possi-
bility of the world's worst agricultural prices.
Coupled with that are the facts that -
1. The German financial situation is only kept sound
by the strength of the political government;
2. France is spending approximately 50% of its
national income on unproductive items;
3. England today will have to go out and borrow five
hundred million pounds between now and the end of the
year - a fact which will really try their financial
resources severely;
4. All the so-called allies of Great Britain are
asking for prohibitive sums to be loaned them in order
that they may keep their economy going to be of service
to Great Britain in the event of trouble with Germany;
5. The Japanese financial picture is a frightfully
bad one;
6.
The President,
The White House.
-2-
6. The Chinese financial picture is only kept alive
with the help of the United States and Great Britain: and
7. The Spaniards and Italians certainly do not pre-
sent very bright financial pictures.
Now, as I say, considering all these problems on top
of a frightful agricultural picture, it seems to me that
there is only one position that the United States should
hold and insist upon to the limit of their power and that
is - that at least for one year they keep themselves fi-
nancially strong. You will say, "Of course, that's ob-
vious" and I say it is obvious, but the position of the
United States in any catastrophe that is bound to take
place over here will become that much more important if
their own financial picture is relatively strong and by
that I mean that the time has gone by when agitation
should be made for changes in the tax laws, changes in
the Securities Act, changes in the Social Security Act,
balanced budgets, etc., etc. What I do think is most
necessary is that every piece of legislation -- farm sub-
sidies, WPA works -- all should be looked at with the idea
of conserving our financial position at least for one more
year. I feel like the fellow who has one thousand dollars
in his pocket with a great many demands on him from his
relations, his friends, business requirements, and all
that sort of thing, but sees everything around him going
to hell, and says, "No matter what happens, I can help all
these people if I can weather this storn and hold on to my
thousand dollars.
The financial picture, as I view it, in the United
States is not a happy one. The city and state financing
are, to me, going to be the cracks in the cement sooner
or later and, while it is most presumptuous on my part
to write you this, because I am sure there is nothing
new or that you haven't thought of, nevertheless I feel
that, seeing this picture as I do and realizing the fi-
nancial mess it is going to be in soon, I want to add
this thought to your own - that the difficulties of the
United States will be proportionately less as their fi-
nancial position is proportionately strong.
Please forgive me if I am writing about something
that is none of my business, but I feel it most strongly.
With warmest regards, I am,
Sincerely yours,
Joe
PSF:Kmming
Cannes, 9th August 1939
Canner.
Dear Mr. President,
Your letter made me happy - not only what
you said but the whole tone of it. By now you will
have received my last wire despatch and my two letters.
They constitute my latest thoughts, with any degree of
accuracy, on the present situation. But, in the mood
of your letter, I should like to add some personal
observations and comments.
The chief thing I have noticed in the South
of France, on the part of caddies, waiters and residents,
is a very strong anti-semitic feeling. Beyond that, and
a general sense of wary waiting for almost anything to
happen, I can contribute nothing to an understanding of
the inter-national state of affairs.
As I told you when I was home, over here one
feels out of touch with conditions at home, and reading
these rotten reports by columnists anyone "with a
temperament like mine" feels very unhappy. I am sure
you know that no job in the United States Government
appeals to me in the slightest degree except as it
affords an opportunity to work for you. I have said
repeatedly that in the two important positions I held
in the United States I never received one word of
dictation or even suggestion as to the policy I should
adopt, and that it is only working under such conditions
that I could be at all happy.
I realize that certain friends of mine
have occasionally put me in very embarrassing positions.
At such times I have felt it silly to be in a place where
I could not straighten matters out with my boss at a
minute's notice.
About my position in England my only thought
was to wonder whether my experience and knowledge were
not being completely wasted. After all, I recognize that
in this day and age an Ambassador may be hardly more than
a glorified errand boy.
I do get a bit discouraged for, although I
have worked harder and longer hours in this job than on
any job I ever held, it seems that three quarters of my
efforts are wasted because of the terrific number of things
to be done which seem to have no close connection with the
real job at hand.
Of this one thing, though, you may be sure.
Regardless of any personal inconvenience, as long as I am
of any assistance to you, I shall remain for whatever
time you like.
I had a talk with Steve when he was in London
and I dare say he told you what I said.
When I was a youngster, my father taught me
two principles: gratitude and loyalty. About the first,
he told me that I should never let any act of kindness
go by without in some way returning it. Because, he
said, 90 % of people seem to forget favors and kindnesses
done them. Of the second principle, he said, no matter
how you may fail in ability you can make it up by being
unfailingly loyal to your friends.
I have tried to live up to those two principles
and, to you personally, I owe a debt on both counts.
That I have carried out your assignments to
me in a way that merited your approval pleases me no end.
Have a good holiday, and remember that
whatever you want to do, I always "stay put".
Again my warm appreciation for your
letter and your thoughts, and many thanks from
the entire Kennedy family.
Linencely
Jun
Hon. Franklin D. Roosevelt
White House
Washington D.C.
PSF: Kemety
Aug 24, 1939
Memo to President
From John W. Hanes-Acting Sec of Treasury
Attaches message from Kennedy =-London
In re-British decision to let the sterling
depreciate as the drain upon theirgold
resources has been proceeding at an
alarming rate.
See-Hanes-Treasury folder-Drawer 1-1939
London, September 10,1939
Personal and
Confidential
full
Dear Mr. President,
Since the war is a week old, I would like to give
you a few of my impressions as to what is taking place
here.
First of all, the high Government officials are de-
pressed beyond words that it has become necessary for
the United States to revert to its old Neutrality Law.
They contend, at least for the time being, that all they
want to do is to buy equipment already on order or what-
ever other equipment they may need, for which they are
willing to pay cash and carry away. They feel as they
did when the new Neutrality Bill was licked - that America
has talked a lot about her sympathies, but, when called on
for action, have only given assistance to Britain's enemy.
All of this, of course, you know and I merely reiterate it
because I suppose one of my jobs is to let you know what
the people in power here are saying. However, this hasn't
yet reached the stage of bitterness because the war hasn't
yet been fought on this front. And such anti-Americaniam
as exists is carefully concealed.
There is no question that the war is going to be con-
ducted with eyes constantly on the United States. Unless
the war comes to a standstill and it is a stalemate be-
tween the Germans and the French on the Maginot and Sieg-
fried Lines, the English are going to think of every way
of maintaining favorable public opinion in the United
States, figuring that sooner or later they can obtain
real help from America. I talked with Commander Critchley,
who was General Critchley in the last war, and who is now
in charge of all training of the Royal Air Force, and he
is thoroughly convinced that, since the Siegfried Line is
at least ten times stronger than any German line was during
the
The President,
The White House.
-2-
the last war and the Maginot Line even a greater number
of times stronger than any French line was during the
last war, the fight will be in the air and it will not
be decisive for either side, even though he admits that
the German air force is probably better than the British.
However, no one really knows what the effect of air bom-
bardment will be. The British admit that within three
days after the outbreak of war, the Germans had not only
done great damage to Poland's communications, but had
destroyed all aircraft producing centers and many aero-
dromes. To my mind it is a very open question as to
what will be the effect on this country of air bombard-
ment, coupled with submarine warfare.
There is another part of informed opinion that feels
if Russia kept out as an ally of Germany, England and
France could lick Germany, and that some way will be
found to get at Germany through one of the neutral States.
Of course, when you mention this to anybody in official
quarters, they hold up their hands in horror, but if
Russia indicated support of Germany, Italy might then
decide it was the stronger side and might well kick up
herself. Then England might just dig in for protection
instead of even contemplating some way of getting at
Germany. There is no question that the active forces,
particularly in the army and air forces, were anxious
to take a shot at Italy, and the Admiralty would be also
if they had better control of the submarine warfare car-
ried on by Germany, which might be notably aided in the
Mediterranean by the large Italian submarine fleet.
As it stands so far, outside of the rush at the
American Embassy and the mad desire of the Americans to
get home, the most noticeable thing in London is the
blackout, and the service in the high-class hotels is
probably a little worse, but beyond that there is no
real indication of a war.
The place where the real works are going on is in
the economic and financial departments. There the best
brains in England have been concentrated. Every means
which can be used to gain the main objective is being
considered. At the moment there is a lot of hasty
improvisation, but they have executive powers and the
man-power. There is no question that Mr. Hull's Trade
Agreements program is completely out of the window.
England
-3-
England is as much a totalitarian country tonight from
an economic and trade point of view as any other country
in Europe -- all that is needed is time to perfect the
organization. All trade will be directly or indirectly
controlled by the Government and I expect in due course
to see a great deal of it conducted by barter or compen-
sation arrangements. The British have a line on every
country in the world from which they can get the supplies
they need and the Government controls the shipping to
transport them. They have in many cases predominant re-
sources of commodities in the Empire which they can virtu-
ally take over and use for bargaining to get other goods
they need. They have already taken over the surplus
wool supplies in Australia, for example. It seems to
me that we should make a careful survey of the supplies
of raw materials of which we have a surplus and study our
competitive position vis-à-vis other producers with whom
England may make compensation or special agreements. In
making this survey we should also keep in mind the agree-
ments England may make with our principal markets for
these goods. We should also consider the importance
that the British Fleet and the ships they can charter
will have on world trade and their ability to buy and
sell goods if certain provisions of our Neutrality Bill
make it difficult for our ships to function.
I think that we will have to exercise the greatest
caution in any piece of legislation that we pass so its
far-reaching ramifications may not result in doing our
own economic situation untold harm. As long as we are
out of war and the possibility is still present that we
might ever come in, England will be as considerate as
she can not to upset us too much. Because, of course,
she wants to drag us in. And my own impression is
that if by any chance she should succeed, the burden will
be placed more completely on our shoulders by 100% than
it was in 1917.
Incidentally, we must remember that England and France
have approximately four and a half billion dollars worth
of gold and that, if we are willing to accept this gold,
we are left with practically the whole world's supply and
there won't be the slightest incentive in the world for
these countries to resume trading with gold as a standard.
It strikes me that we should let them spend their gold
last and we should first take over all other assets,
particularly those in the United States, against the
supplies which they must purchase from us.
This
-4-
This all adds up into one suggestion: That we
should be on our guard to protect our own interests.
In the economic and financial field the best possible
brains should be concentrated on the problems which
the European war is bound to raise. I remember
Schwab saying in 1915, after a conference in Washington
between the representatives of labor and industry, that
labor always seemed to be able to put it over industry's
representatives. I asked him why, and he said, "Joe,
because that's their problem 365 days of the year."
That's the way I feel about the economic and financial
picture here. It is their problem now twenty-four hours
a day and we have got to think, and think most intelli-
gently, to be able to maintain the right kind of trade
and to maintain the strength of our financial system.
With warmest personal regards, I am,
Sincerely yours,
Jar Humany
PSFiKennedy
London, September 30, 1939
Dear Mr. President,
Although such officials as Vansittart anticipated
that the signing of the Russian-German Agreement meant,
as I reported in my telegrams of the time, the fourth
division of Poland, nevertheless, when the event took
place, it created a great shock here. But the facility
with which the Anglo-Saxon can play power politics while
talking in terms of philanthropy is triumphing. Where-
as at the beginning of the war the protection of the
independence and preservation of the territorial integ-
rity of Poland was headlined as the immediate cause of
the war and the reason for attempting to overthrow Hitler,
now the restoration of Poland - certainly Russian Poland -
is being pushed gently but very firmly into obscurity.
Of course, the real fact is that England is fight-
ing for her possessions and place in the sun, just as
she has in the past. I got out The Times' editorial
of
The President,
The White House
-2-
of August 5, 1914 and compared it with the one on Septem-
ber 4, 1939, and they are practically identical, except
for the substitution of the word "Nazi" for "Junker".
Regardless of the God-awful behavior of the Nazis, surely
the fact is that the English people are not fighting
Hitler - they are fighting the German people, just as
they fought them twenty-five years ago, because forty-
five million Britons controlling the greatest far-flung
maritime empire in the world and eighty million Germans
dominating continental Europe haven't learned to live to-
gether peacefully.
I personally am convinced that, win, lose or draw,
England never will be the England that she was and no
one can help her to be. Technicological changes, like
the invention of the airplane and the increase in indus-
trial power of other countries, have conspired with the
decline in English ability and forcefulness to push her
well past the peak and down to another level.
There are signs of decay, if not decadence, here,
both in men and institutions. For example, no one in
power over the past dozen years has really told the
English people where they stand politically, economically
and financially - and they are reaping the result of that
now. Furthermore, the Parliamentary machine is not
operating to throw up real, able leaders. Many people
doubt,
-3-
doubt, and I share those doubts, whether the Chamberlain
Government can survive a single serious reverse, and who
is to replace the Prime Minister? Possibly Halifax,
possibly Churchill. But for all Halifax's mystical,
Christian character and Churchill's prophecies in respect
to Germany, I can't imagine them adequately leading the
people out of the valley of the shadow of death. And
after that, who is there? It is the question that all
the English are asking themselves and the answer seems
to be that there is no adequate person within the Parlia-
mentary ranks. And therefore it would not be surprising
if the maelstrom of war had to cast up extra-Parliamentary
leaders.
I am afraid that I can't conceive the results that
this war will bring as running counter to the evolution-
ary process. England passed her peak as a world power
some years ago and has been steadily on the decline.
War, regardless of the outcome, will merely hasten the
process. And even the concommitant changes which the
war will bring to all the world, such as the breakdown
of the international mechanism of trading and the substi-
tution of barter and other state control arrangements,
were really started when Russia began to operate in this
wise
-4-
wise a couple of decades ago and have been the develop-
ment of the future ever since.
Nor do I think t his war is a holy war, despite the
fact that most of the people I see here sincerely believe
that it is and they talk in public and in private equally
sincerely about the awfulness of force in international
affairs and how it must be forever done away with, as if
force hadn't always been the underlying basis in most all
international dealings of any vital, life and death im-
portance, and as if any means had been found for peace-
fully settling vital, life and death international dis-
putes. I regret it, but I can't honestly believe that
such will not still be the case long after Hitler's
"body lies amouldering in the grave." I sometimes
feel that, living as we do in a sparsely inhabited
country with great natural resources and no natural
enemies, we attach too much importance to,say, the Ala-
bama Claims settlement as a precedent in international
procedure. Enlightened nations, particularly those
where the pressure for existence isn't all powerful, can
emulate the behavior of more civilized individuals. But
where there are two hungry dogs to eat a bone sufficient
for one, arbitration doesn't decide the issue.
In
-5-
In this connection, let me say two things about
democracy - the only form of government I want to live
under: First, that the so-called democracies of Europe
have conducted themselves in such a way as to make auto-
cracy flourish. By forcing democracy upon the conquered
nations after the last war, they aligned democracy and
the status quo together. By resisting change, they
ensured that all the forces within those countries mak-
ing for change should of necessity take on an anti-demo-
cratic character. Just as the force making for change
after the Treaty of Vienna had to take on an anti-auto-
cratic, i.e., democratic character. Since the dynamic
always triumphs over the statie, Fascism and Communism
were left to move ahead. And moving ahead they are!
Secondly, democracy as we now conceive it in the United
States will not exist in France and England after the
war, regardless of which side wins or loses. In fact,
it hardly does now. France is ruled by a dictatorship
which has just this week made illegal one of the largest
Parliamentary parties, and England, which has always had
a concentration of power in the so-called governing class,
will certainly not be a democracy in our sense of the
word, in the post-war world to come.
All
-6-
All this and more leads me to believe that we should
curb our sentiments and sentimentality and look to our
own vital interests. It may not be convenient for us
to face a world without a strong British Empire. But
whatever we do or don't do, we shall have to face it.
Neither we nor any other Power can re-create what has
disappeared, and the leadership of the English-speaking
world will, willy-nilly, be ours. Certainly it is going
to be a hard, difficult and dangerous world in which to
live, and the United States will only be able to thrive
in it by pulling itself together as a nation and being
ready and prepared to protect its own vital interests.
These, to my mind, lie in the Western Hemisphere.
With my warmest personal regards,
John Hennely Sincerely yours,
Humany
PSF: Kennedy
London, September 30, 1939
Dear Mr. President,
Referring to my cable to you and your answer re-
garding the possibility of peace proposals, I feel
nevertheless that I should write you as I see this
picture at the minute. I also ask you to read this
in conjunction with my cable of September 30th, tell-
ing of my interview with Montagu Norman. As you re-
member, this interview was bitterly bearish and with
most of it I am in complete accord.
Russia and Germany have today served notice of
their intentions. In talking to John Simon last night,
he said two things had struck them very forcibly: (1)
The ability of the Russians to mobilize and move their
large army, because up to now they had rather been under
the impression that the Russians could not do very much
outside of their own country; (2) The very conclusive
proof that the Prime Minister's attitude in delaying
making
The President,
The White House.
-2-
making a deal with Russia that involved the independence
of the small Baltic States was a worthwhile one, because
Russia had proven by its move into Poland and its mighty
claw over Rumania that that is just the kind of tactics
they intended to adopt towards the Baltic States, given
half a chance. However, Simon said, having double-
crossed everybody, they will probably turn around and
start all over again, so it is not known just exactly
what form a new tie-up with Germany might take. He
thinks they will know better when the Turkish delegation
returns from Moscow.
As to the Italian situation, he says it is very defi-
nitely to Britain's advantage to keep Italy at peace. In
the first place, it permits free movement of ships in the
Mediterranean; it gives them much less to worry about
with regard to Malta, Gibraltar and Spain; it permits
the French to move their troops freely from Algiers with-
out danger of submarining; it makes it unnecessary to
move troops up from India and it makes Egypt and Pales-
tine much more comfortable by being a long way from the
scene of action. So it is much to their advantage to
keep Italy out of the trouble. Simon added, "Of course,
if they go in with Germany, we are prepared to move at a
minute's
-3-
minute's notice", but it was very apparent from listening
to him that this is one spot they hope to keep peaceful.
As to the German situation on the Western Front, he
is still of the opinion that Germany may definitely move
through Belgium and Holland, or, what is much more serious,
the present peace offer. I asked him, as I asked Halifax,
"Just what are you fighting for now? You can't restore
Poland to the Poles, can you?" He said, "No, not all of
it." I said, "Well, then, that will be a failure; you
can't talk about aggression and permit Russia to retain
half of Poland and have its claw over the Balkan States
as well as the Baltic States" and he said, "Possibly not."
I told him that as to the removal of Hitler, people from
Germany in the last few days had told me that if Hitler
goes, chaos will result and Germany might, in the absence
of food and the possibility of a desperate economic out-
look, very well go communistic and be a menace to Europe,
because, after all, beating them isn't going to solve the
problem of eighty million people who have no economic re-
sources and nothing very much to look forward to; that
the cost to England and France will be so great that it
will reduce them to a mere shell of their present selves.
Simon said he agreed and so does the Prime Minister that
that is the long-distance outlook. He said they had an
immediate problem, however, which there does not seem to
be
-4-
be any way of sidestepping; if they were to advocate
any type of peace, they would be yelled down by their
own people, who are determined to go on.
Now there is no question in my mind that the British
can see no way they can give up the struggle even though
they are more and more confused in their own minds just
what they are fighting for and what they will attain even
if they win.
The topside people don't relish the possibility of
the Russian submarines, of which there are a very consider-
able number, joining the German submarine fleet, and they
don't like the prospect of Russian flyers and Russian air-
planes going up with the German, with the possibility al-
ways that Italy might hop in feeling Germany looked like a
winner. Topside people don't like leaning on the Turks,
who, Simon told me, were continually blackmailing England
for financial and economic assistance. There is also a
prevalent idea amongst a number of English newspaper men,
who feel that the French may decide that they don't like
the looks of things and ask themselves, what are we fight-
"
ing for, the echo will answer, " the British, and they'll
say, " no more for us. Montagu Norman, in speaking of the
French, felt this would probably not happen, because the
French always acted much better when things got tough.
On
-5-
On the other hand, many important people are saying,
what has England and France to look forward to? The de-
feat of Germany; O.K; that will take some time and
England and France will go bust, as well as lose millions
of lives, and then what do they propose to do with eighty
million Germans who have a communist neighbor - Russia?
Well, you say, I know all that, so what? I answer
that by saying, we all keep repeating in the United States
that we don't want any part of this mess. Well, we cer-
tainly won't want any part of it if we think clearly of
what happens even if the Allies win and the problems that
will have to be met in the arrangement of Europe and also
the bills that will have to be met to keep the beaten
countries functioning. And we are all vitally concerned
in what happens to the United States if the fight goes to
a finish and the Allies are beaten. The prospect of our
best customer beaten and finished as a Power and the at-
tendant difficulty of arranging our place in the world
with Powers who know we hate them.
Some people are saying here, the United States will
get all this business from the Allies and of course they
want the war to go on. I answer that by pointing out
the temporary fillip we get to our own economic structure
is only a pleasant interlude before chaos that is to fol-
low if this war goes on.
Well
-6-
"Well then, America says, we demand an end to this
aggression and this complete disregard of international
law." Mind you, they speak of something that is happen-
ing in Europe and in the same breath say, of course, you
over there settle it, we don't want any part in it. And
I don't disagree with this point of view entirely, but,
if this is the case, that by continuing a hopeless
struggle means the complete collapse of everything we
hope and live for, then it seems to me that perhaps
another thought should be given to the whole problem by
the American people. I have yet to talk to any military
or naval expert of any nationality this week who thinks
that, with the present and prospective set-up of England
and France on one side and Germany and Russia and their
potential allies on the other, England has a Chinaman's
chance.
So you ask, what do you suggest I do? I answer, at
the minute do nothing but consider two things: How you
can point out to the American people just what the posi-
tion of England and France is and what their possibilities
are to achieve the aims we all hoped they would attain
and by pointing out that, since we do not intend to get
in the war, we must be considerate of our friends who
are in it. Secondly, I would start thinking how you
can help save face for the Allies and yet at the same
time
-7-
time be the factor in getting the position of the
United States a topside one as a result of your inter-
vention.
England and France can't quit whether they would
like to or not and I am convinced, because I live here,
that England will go down fighting. Unfortunately, I
am one who does not believe that is going to do the
slightest bit of good in this case.
The whole problem needs a master mind and that soon
if you don't want the world's greatest calamity to fall
on our friends and subsequently on us. Please don't
think I am unduly pessimistic. I'm not, but I feel as
your friend on the job I must urge you to give this your
consideration.
Sincerely yours,
Joe
London, September 30, 1939.
Dear Mr. President:
I have been a witness to the swift evacuation of
England's schoolchildren, and its long term implications
may, in my opinion, do much to reshape the population
distribution and social structure of this old country.
During the two days preceding Great Britain's entry
into the war, and the two succeeding days, over three-
quarters of a million schoolchildren with their teachers,
nearly half & million mothers and children under five,
11,000 expectant mothers, 5,000 blind adults and about
1,000 cripples were moved from London and thirty-four
other densely populated vulnerable areas and scattered
over the length and breadth of England, Scotland and
Wales.
The plan was based on the possibility of a "blitz-
krieg" breaking loose from the air without warning and
was designed to take care of a maximum of three million
people. Actually only a million and a half were moved,
the remainder being away, making their own arrangements,
or being unwilling to go. Incidentally, had the
"blitzkrieg" come at this time, I would have had a
terrific job in getting 10,000 Americans to places of
safety since the British transport authorities had in-
formed me that the evacuation of women and children
would have priority over all other demands.
The objectives of the scheme, which had been in
preparation since the crisis of September 1938, were
(1) dispersal, to save as many lives as possible without
disturbing essential work, (2) the preservation of the
morale of the civilian population, enabling the country
to develop its maximum war capacity at the outset by
removing from the minds of workers fear as to what was
happening to their children, (3) the assurance of
continued/
The President,
The White House,
Washington.
-2-
continued care and education for the children despite
disorganization and (4) insulation of the children from
the psychological shocks of air bombardment.
The movement was carried through without a single
casualty and with a minimum of mistakes and inconven-
ience. The ECONOMIST hails it as "the first triumph
of the war". Practically every individual evacuated is
housed in a private home. Every effort has been made to
keep families together, to house neighbors in the same
communities and to fit individuals into suitable environ-
ments wherever possible. Special arrangements were made
for groups of blind, crippled and mentally defective
children.
In general, the Ministry of Health did a magnificent
job of planning and execution, but they had, of course,
several headaches. Eastside and Westside were suddenly
brought into too close contact. Many children had
never been off pavements, many were dirty and some had
a liberal supply of insect life. (The B.B.C. has
seized the occasion for a nation-wide drive against
head-lice). The evacuees were billeted in the homes
of middle-class shopkeepers, county families and clean
self-respecting rural artisans.
Of course, following English traditions, the inev-
itable collisions received an airing in the press. The
subject of vermin was discussed pro and con in many
letters to editors, not only in the provincial press
but in the London TIMES. But the children, especially
the younger ones, have shown great adaptability and have
responded quickly to soap and kindness. The receiving
communities have given ample evidence of their desire to
do something for the country and to share their own
greater measure of safety with those less fortunately
placed.
The worst problems have arisen with the mothers who
were evacuated with young children. There are lurid
tales of some of these spending mornings in bed with a
packet of cigarettes and a newspaper and the rest of
the day at the nearest pub. Perhaps evacuation ap-
pealed most to the less domesticated mothers and these
have found the greatest difficulty in fitting into the
new households. It is not surprising that there has
been a steady flow back to the cities of perhaps 30
per cent of the mothers evacuated, despite continued
public appeals that they stay where they are. What
is more surprising is that so many have remained and
appear to be settling down to country life, if not
with/
-3-
with enthusiasm at least with a resigned determination
to put up with a lack of sidewalks, movies and street cars.
The schools in the evacuation areas are closed and
the teachers are for the most part with the children in
the country. The local schools in reception areas are
frequently working two shifts, a morning one for the
local children and an afternoon one for the visitors.
While there will inevitably be disorganization of formal
education, the children are learning a lot they would
never get from books. The Government recognizes that
evacuated mothers cannot remain away from home indefin-
itely and nursery schools for all children over six
months are being set up as rapidly as possible. As
fast as these are opened the mothers are advised to
return home. Special clinics have been started and
extensive arrangements made for medical care of the
children by local doctors.
Of course inevitable adjustments will come only
slowly and of their own accord. Evacuation has meant
the artificial severance of family and trade ties.
These migrants must be placed on as nearly a self-sup-
porting economic footing as possible. The Government
is spending a million pounds a week, and yet the Govern-
ment allowance of 10s.6d. a week for full board and
lodging if there is only one individual and 8s.6d. if
there are more than one, is proving inadequate. Country
families are dipping into their own pockets to make the
youngsters more comfortable, happy and healthy.
The contemplated course of development in the next
several months will be towards (1) increased allowances
for certain classes of billeted refugees, (2) official
canteens, possibly even official markets, (3) greater
requisitioning of public buildings to ease the strain
on overcrowded private dwellings and (4) the erection
of about fifty national camps to replace the more over-
crowded billets. There is an urgent need also for an
immediate overhaul of the rural and small town drainage
systems, water supplies and medical services in some
reception areas.
There is in all this, however, the potentiality of
a broad new social order. The policy of population
dispersal forced upon the authorities by the air raid
danger offers some hope of permanently gathering the
population into a larger number of smaller communities
and eliminating the great congested urban centers of
London/
-4-
London and the Midlands cities which were created by
a series of industrial revolutions. There will be
also an opportunity of organizing these communities so
that industry and agriculture will better supplement
each other.
If the war lasts any length of time a new social
solvent will have been assimilated into country life.
The health of the under-privileged classes of children
will be immeasurably improved while the inhabitants of
the smaller towns and villages will have had their
horizons widened. As Geoffrey Crowther, editor of the
ECONOMIST, said: "The springboards of a healthy and
national decentralisation and recasting of our social
structure may even now be being fashioned by the threat
of German bombers."
With warmest regards,
Faithfully yours,
Jone Hurnedy
PSF:Kennedy
London, October 2, 1939.
My dear Mr. President:
I have just sent Miss Perkins a description of
the dislocation caused in the employment situation here
as a result of the swing-over from & peace to a war
time economy. I thought it might interest you and
am therefore enclosing a copy in memorandum form but
somewhat abbreviated to save your time.
With warmest regards,
Faithfully yours,
The President,
The White House,
Washington, D.C.
Memorandum.
October 2, 1939.
The Employment Situation in Britain Resulting
from the Swing-over from a Peace to a War
Economy.
Though there have been no German bombers over London,
as yet, the mere threat of their presence has already resulted
in severe economic casualties on the British employment front.
White collar clerical workers and retail sales personnel
(known here are the "Black Coated Brigade") together with
the employees of the amusement and service trades have been
discharged by the thousand since September 3rd in consequence
of air raid precautions, air raid fears and gasoline ration-
ing.
The net result has been to disarrange completely the
customary pattern of retail trade, to bring the amusement
industry to an almost complete halt and to curtail very
heavily the intake of the service trades. On the other
hand, there has been no call for a rush of recruits for
the Services and even the defence and armament trades,
since they have been working at pressure for many months
already, have yet made no extensive further demand for hands.
The result is a grave short-term problem of labor dislocation.
Hundreds of neighborhood shops have had their turnover
cut 75 to 90 per cent. Gordon Selfridge Jr. tells me that
as a result of evacuation and the decline in public buying,
the business of the London department stores has fallen
about 50 per cent in volume. Bond Street on weekdays now
looks like Wall Street on Sundays and many of the luxury
shops have just folded up for the duration of the war.
The "City" is a pale shadow of its former self. If the
brokerage boys in New York think they are having a tough
time, one glance at a "City" office here would make them
realize that, by comparison, they were in clover.
The initial closing of urban cinemas and theatres
left nearly all their employees without jobs and their
recent restricted re-opening within limited hours has, of
course, only partially restored the "status quo ante".
The impact of evacuation upon the restaurant, hotel,
laundry, hairdressing and similar service trades dependent
upon/
-2-
upon an urban clientele has, also, added heavily to the
unemployment mortality.
According to the FINANCIAL NEWS, firms have transferred
their offices to the country, leaving behind up to three-
quarters of their staff unemployed. This situation, to-
gether with the drastic decline in all luxury industries,
has suddenly thrown upon the market a horde of office
workers.
Finally, gasoline rationing has dealt a body blow
to the garage and filling station trades. One estimate
is that 70 per cent of the workers in these callings are
now superfluous. Furthermore petrol rationing has meant
the discharge of a large number of the delivery personnel
of all distribution organizations and even motor transport
concerns have been forced to cut down with only & 75 per
cent allowance of their normal gasoline needs.
Women have been the main sufferers. According to
the Ministry of Labour, the net statistical effect of these
conditions up to September 11th only, was an increase of
about 60 per cent (175,000) in the number of women on the
unemployment register since the same date a month ago, and
the situation has deteriorated further since the first
fortnight of last month. The same statistical returns
showed 76,000 less men unemployed as a result of defence
orders accruing to the engineering, shipbuilding and steel
trades. These figures for males, however, cover only
manual workers and the clerical help whose incomes are
not above £250 per year. Unemployment is, now, rife in
the ranks of the better-paid male clerical, sales, super-
visory and managerial groups, with the result that the
middle-class have been heavily hit during the past month.
This is shown by the rush for full-time work at around
£3 per week as Air Raid Wardens, Auxiliary Firemen, St.
John's Ambulance Workers, etc., by individuals who would
normally never consider such pay or occupations.
The extent of this dislocation of employment was not
sufficiently anticipated by officials here who, at first,
were inclined to pass over the problem as a necessary war
re-adjustment which would soon be solved.
The intervening period, however, has been one of great
hardship/
-3-
hardship for most of the people affected. Their fixed
obligations remain and their essential expenses have in-
creased, while the labor market, as yet, shows little sign
of being prepared to re-absorb them into war industries.
Their plight, in fact, has become sufficiently a
public question to require the Government, through a radio
address of Sam Hoare, to request that employers refrain
from panic dismissals until they know with greater certainty
how the situation will affect them.
With thousands of small business men and many large
establishments struggling - during this transition period -
to meet merely current overhead charges, my hunch is that
this plea won't carry very far.
I hear that Ernest Brown, Minister of Labour, has now
ordered a private survey of this situation with the intent
of trying to formulate a rapid plan to tide these people
over until their services are needed in war time work.
The original intention of Brown and Lord Rushcliffe, Chair-
man of the Unemployment Assistance Board, had be en that
these temporarily unemployed people should receive some
limited help with their food and rent. I gather that
local officials of the U.A.B. have been pretty bureau-
cratic in interpreting the regulations and the scheme has
fallen rather flat with the result that the private survey
now underway is being made.
The ECONOMIST considers that a "far reaching labour
plan (is needed) to tide: over the current transition wi th
the minimum of loss and misery, and to set the new model
war economy smoothly in motion at the earliest date".
It hits the nail on the head but it's easier said than done.
The action to be taken will probably be along the
lines of instructing the Unemployment Assistance Board
to take a more generous view of unemployed families'
requirements with possibly a broadcast by the Minister
of Labour emphasising the present situation as "only
temporary" and stating that staff dismissals which are
not absolutely necessary are against the national inter-
est during the present transition period. Some of the
Press have advocated a temporary subsidy for these
people/
-4-
people. The very heavy demands on the Treasury lead me
to doubt that any such action will be taken unless the
expected absorption of these individuals into the war
time economy lasts much longer than anyone here now
anticipates.
-5-
P.S.
Evacuation has, of course, produced a crop of stories
relating to the reactions of the slum dwellers to country
life. I've been too busy to garner many, but here are a
couple which are reputed to be authentic.
One of the developments of evacuation has been the
difficulty in getting the East End Londoner used to the
quiet of the country village. One Cockney mother turned
up at the local billeting officer's headquarters with
her child and announced: "I'm goin' back to Lunnon.
Them there Germans will at least make some noise with
their bloody bombs. I fair get the creeps with the
bloomin' quiet out 'ere. I'd rather take a chance with
the 'Uns droppin' them h'eggs than feel like & corpse
already in the dead quiet out 'ere".
One little boy sent to a village in Surrey was
asked by his hostess to go into the garden and pick
some flowers for the table. Half an hour later she
found him in the garden looking furtively about, but
no flowers had been picked. She asked him why he
hadn't done what he was told. The reply was: "I'm
waitin' for that there copper on the corner to move
along so as I don't get pinched".
A little girl of ten billetted on a well-to-do
county family was given a lovely bed-room to herself
and shared the attention of the family nurse.
When bedtime came the first evening, the nurse
showed her the bed-room and left her to undress. Return-
ing half an hour later, she found the light out but
no one in the bed and the room apparently deserted. A
thorough search, however, revealed the child half asleep
under the bed.
After pulling her out, the nurse naturally inquired
what had frightened her so hadly that she had to hide
there. "I'm not frightened", said the little girl,
"Our room is very small so Mamma and Papa sleep on the
bed and I always sleep underneath."
file pussel.
Kennedy
TELEGRAM
The White House
18wuab Cable 33
Mashington
London Oct.9, 1939.
LC., THE PRESIDENT:
Your dear remembrance was brightest spot in day which Roses presence
here would have made perfect. Deep thanks and affectionate regards to
you both.
Joe Kennedy
fillional
Kennedy
294 PONDFIELD ROAD
BRONXVILLE, new YORK
Dear 17th Presiclent:
Detober 10-1939
9 want to thank you
most sincerely for the telegra m
of congratulations which you suit
to Joe and me on our twenty fifth
anniversary-
All the children send their
lane to you and to 17hrs. Roosevelt
We shall remember always that
you made it possible for us to
enjoy a year of of the rarest opportunities
very sincerely,
Rose Kennedy
NORTH OCEAN BOULEVARD
PALM BEACH, FLORIDA
Ilear 17th. Tresident:
film
I want to thank you
and 77hrs. Rousevelt for the very
lavely flowers which you both
rent to me during my convalisence
in Boston. They made my room
very gay, and they helped to
make me feel wonderfully well
9 am learning here Suriday and
9 expect to go to England very soon.
My best wishes te you and Mrs. Roosevelt
yours respectfully,
Rose Kennedy
full
Kinnedy-
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
WASHINGTON
October 21, 1939
My dear Mr. President:
In accordance with my letter of October 7, 1939,
with which you concurred, a telegraphic instruction
was sent to the Embassy at London to approach the
British Government concerning the quantity and price
of Australasian wool which it intends to release to
the United States.
I enclose for your information the substance of
the reply which has now been received from the Embassy.
Faithfully yours,
Carree shuel
Enclosure:
Paraphrase of telegram
from London
The President,
The White House.
Department of State
BUREAU
TA
DIVISION
ENCLOSURE
TO
10/19/39
Letter drafted
ADDRESSED TO
The President
. . FAINTING office
1-1083
London
October 17, 1939
Secretary of State,
Washington.
The directorate in the Ministry of Supply for raw
materials states that the development of its plans has
not yet reached the point at which a definite statement
can be made as to the pride and quantity of wool which
may be made available to the United States but in a week
or ten days it hopes to be able to indicate its attitude.
However, the official interviewed stated informally
that he thought we might remain assured that the
British authorities anticipated meeting our requirements
for the wool in question and that the British policy would
not be to "sting" us.
I was given the opportunity to intimate that naturally
we hoped that the price policy of the British on the sales
would be consistent with the policies adopted in connection
with purchasing imported products, and that in their poli-
cies with respect to wool there might be certain aspects
which before being put into operation it might be to our
mutual interest to communicate to us.
KENNEDY
PSF:Kennedy
October 30, 1939.
Dear Joe:-
Those letters of yoursare extraordinarily
interesting and I am particularly thrilled by your
vivid account of the children evacuated from city
to country. Apparently the British did an amazingly
good Job in the face of a difficult physical and
social problem. The whole procedure, with the
discovery of unsanitary conditions among the
children from the slums and unsanitary conditions
in drainage systems, water supplies and medical
services in the small towns, makes me think back
to the belief I began to hold a quarter of a
century ago. The big cities of the world are
too big and here in this country, because more
and more people recognize that fact, there is a
growing demand for decentralization. As I see
it, a certain decrease in manufacturing efficiency
because of decentralization will be more than
offset by the reduction in cost of utilities
and cost of government. In New York City, as
you know, every time we add a half million
people to the population we have to build a new
subway, a new sewage disposal plant, and a new
water supply.
I do not think people in England should
worry about Germany going Communist in the
Russian manner. They might blow up and have
chaos for a while but the manyupbringing for
centuries, their insistence on independence of
family life, and the right to hold property in
a small way, would not, in my judgment, permit
the Russian form of brutality for any length of
time.
Also, while the World War did not
bring forth strong leadership in Great Britain,
this war may do so, because I am inclined to
think the British public has more humility than
before and is slowly but surely getting rid of
the "muddle through" attitude of the past.
We over here, in spite of the great
strides toward national unity during the past
six years, still have much to learn of the
"relativity" of world geography and the rapid
annihilation of distance and purely local
economics.
I was amused and delighted to hear
you say over the telephone that it is actually
boring in London now that you have got rid of
most of the returning Americans. Here in
Washington the White House is very quiet --
and though business continues an increase,
which I regard as wholesome because it is
slow, there is a general feeling of sitting
quiet and waiting to see what the morrow
will bring forth.
Here is one from Ambassador Daniels:
*Suppose you had two cowe. The Socialist would
take one and let you keep one. The Nazi would
let you keep both cows but would take all the
milk. The Communist would take both cows."
My best to you,
As ever yours,
Hon. Joseph P. Kennedy,
American Embassy,
London,
England.
Relations
belongs_to