James Francis Byrnes (May 2, 1879 – April 9, 1972) was a confidant of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and one of the most powerful men in American domestic and foreign policy in the mid-1940s.
"I admit I am a New Dealer, and if New Deal takes money from the few who have controlled the country and gives it back to the average man, I am going to Washington to help the President work for the people of South Carolina and the country."In 1937 he supported Roosevelt on the highly controversial court packing plan, but voted against the minimum wage law of 1938 that would have made textile mills in his state uncompetitive. He opposed Roosevelt's efforts to purge conservative Democrats in 1938. On foreign policy, however, he was a champion of Roosevelt's positions of helping Britain and France against Germany in 1939-41. Byrnes also served briefly as a Justice of the Supreme Court, a role which bored him at a time when the country was about to go to war. He only served in that position for a year and a half from 1941 to 1942.
Byrnes left the Supreme Court to head Roosevelt's Economic Stabilization Office, which dealt with the vitally important issues of prices and taxes. How powerful the new office would become depended entirely on Byrnes's political skills, and Washington insiders soon reported he was in full charge. In May 1943 he added another hat as head of the War Mobilization Board; people called him "assistant president."
He was a serious possibility for vice president in 1944. While Roosevelt preferred him, he was too conservative for the labor unions, big city bosses vetoed any ex-Catholic, and blacks were wary of his opposition to racial integration. The nomination went to Harry S Truman, who had fewer assets than Byrnes, and far fewer liabilities. Roosevelt brought him to the Yalta Conference in early 1945, where he seemed to favor Soviet plans. Truman appointed him as Secretary of State in June 1945. He played a major role at the Potsdam Conference and other major postwar conferences. In 1946, he took an increasingly hardline position in opposition to Stalin. Byrnes was named TIME magazine's Person of the Year. After a falling out between Byrnes and Truman, Byrnes left his post in 1947.
Byrnes was elected governor of South Carolina, serving from 1951 to 1955, in which capacity he vigorously criticized the Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education. He endorsed Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1952 and 1956, Richard Nixon in 1960 and 1968 and Barry Goldwater in 1964. He eventually switched allegiances to the Republican Party. In 1968, he secretly advised Nixon on how to win over old-time Southern Democrats to the Republican Party.
Today, a building housing international programs is named after Byrnes at the University of South Carolina in Columbia, South Carolina, and former U.S. ambassador to South Korea, Richard L. Walker, was the James F. Byrnes Professor Emeritus of International Studies there. An auditorium is named after him at Winthrop University in Rock Hill, South Carolina. A dormitory on the east campus of Clemson University in Clemson, South Carolina is named for him and he was on the board of trustees there. A high school in Spartanburg, James F. Byrnes High School, is also named after him.
Governors of South Carolina | United States Secretaries of State | United States Senators from South Carolina | United States Supreme Court justices | Members of the United States House of Representatives from South Carolina | Irish-American politicians | Time magazine Persons of the Year | American Episcopalians | American Freemasons | Knights of Pythias | People from South Carolina | 1879 births | 1972 deaths
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