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'''William Smith Culbertson''' was an American diplomat and soldier.
{{Short description|American diplomat and soldier}}
[[File:William Smith Culbertson.jpg|thumb|upright|Culbertson in 1922]]


He was born in [[Greensburg, Pennsylvania|Greensburg]], [[Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania]], August 5, 1884 and died in 1966. U.S. Ambassador, Romania, 1925–1928, Chile, 1928 - 1933. Colonel, [[United States Army]]. President, [[United States Tariff Commission]] 1922 - 1925.<ref>{{cite journal |last= |first= |authorlink= |title=Notes | journal=The American Economic Review |volume=12 |issue=1 |pages=202–208 |date=March 1922 |id= |jstor=1801795}}</ref> Member, United States Tariff Commission, 1916–1922, American Bar Association, [[Council on Foreign Relations]], [[American Economic Association]], [[Phi Alpha Delta]], [[Phi Beta Kappa]]. Graduate, [[Yale Law School]], J.D., [[College of Emporia]], B.A.
'''William Smith Culbertson''' (August 5, 1884 – August 12, 1966)<ref>[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:V9YR-FXQ William Culbertson United States Social Security Death Index]</ref> was an American diplomat and soldier. U.S. Ambassador, Romania, 1925–1928, [[Chile]], 1928 - 1933. Colonel, [[United States Army]]. President, [[United States Tariff Commission]] 1922 - 1925.<ref>{{Cite journal
| title = Notes
| journal = The American Economic Review
| volume = 12 | issue = 1 | pages = 202–208
| date = March 1922
| jstor = 1801795
}}</ref> Member, United States Tariff Commission, 1916–1922, American Bar Association, [[Council on Foreign Relations]], [[American Economic Association]], [[Phi Alpha Delta]], [[Phi Beta Kappa]].

==Early history==
He was born in [[Greensburg, Pennsylvania|Greensburg]], [[Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania]] on August 5, 1884. He graduated from [[College of Emporia]] B.A.


== Alexander Hamilton Essay, 1910 ==
== Alexander Hamilton Essay, 1910 ==
In 1910, after graduation from the [[Yale Law School]] J.D., Culbertson's 153-page essay on [[Alexander Hamilton]] was awarded the [[John Addison Porter Prize]].<ref>{{Cite book
In 1910, after graduation from the [[Yale Law School]], Culbertson's 153-page essay on [[Alexander Hamilton]] was awarded the [[John Addison Porter Prize]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Culbertson |first=William S. |authorlink= |title=Alexander Hamilton |publisher=Yale University Press |year=1910 |location=New Haven, Connecticut |pages=153 }}</ref> The Porter Prize is awarded by The Kingsley Trust Association ([[Scroll and Key|The Scroll and Key Society]]) for a work of scholarship which, through original effort, gathers and relates facts and/or principles to make a product of general human interest. A review of this work by Worthington C. Ford appeared in September 1912.<ref>{{ cite journal |last=Ford |first=Worthington C. |authorlink= |title=Review of Alexander Hamilton |journal=The American Economic Review |volume=2 |issue=3 |pages=612–613 |date=September 1912 |id= |jstor=1804602}}</ref> Ford reviewed the essay positively, noting [[nationalism]] is the "key-note" of the essay, lauding its "breadth and candor," but stating that "more could be made of Hamilton's own venture into a manufacturing concern..."
| title = Alexander Hamilton
| last = Culbertson | first = William S.
| year = 1910
| publisher = Yale University Press | location = New Haven, Connecticut
| page = 153
}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Culbertson|first=William Smith|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MKQEAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA1|title=Alexander Hamilton: An Essay|date=1911|publisher=Yale University Press|isbn=978-0-7222-9118-4|language=en|page=[https://books.google.com/books?id=MKQEAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA1 1]}}</ref> The Porter Prize is awarded by The Kingsley Trust Association ([[Scroll and Key|The Scroll and Key Society]]) for a work of scholarship which, through original effort, gathers and relates facts and/or principles to make a product of general human interest. A review of this work by Worthington C. Ford appeared in September 1912.<ref>{{Cite journal
| title = Review of Alexander Hamilton
| last = Ford | first = Worthington C.
| journal = The American Economic Review
| volume = 2 | issue = 3 | pages = 612–613
| date = September 1912
| jstor = 1804602
}}</ref> Ford reviewed the essay positively, noting [[nationalism]] is the "key-note" of the essay, lauding its "breadth and candor," but stating that "more could be made of Hamilton's own venture into a manufacturing concern..."


== William S. Culbertson Papers, 1923 ==
== William S. Culbertson Papers, 1923 ==
Culbertson was a member of the Institute of Politics, an organization that promoted the study of international problems and relations "with a view to creating a more sympathetic understanding of the ideals and policies of other nations." To carry out its ideas, the Institute of Politics in July and August 1923 held a series of roundtable conferences at [[Williams College]], [[Massachusetts]]. In addition to the roundtable conferences, there were two open conferences, one of which was led by Culbertson who at that time was president of the [[United States International Trade Commission|U.S. Tariff Commission]] (now called the United States International Trade Commission). Culbertson discussed "Problems of Raw Materials and Foodstuffs in the Commercial Policies of Nations."<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Culbertson |first=William S. |authorlink= |title=Papers |year=1923 |publisher= |location= Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library |id= }}</ref>
Culbertson was a member of the Institute of Politics, an organization that promoted the study of international problems and relations "with a view to creating a more sympathetic understanding of the ideals and policies of other nations." To carry out its ideas, the Institute of Politics in July and August 1923 held a series of roundtable conferences at [[Williams College]], [[Massachusetts]]. In addition to the roundtable conferences, there were two open conferences, one of which was led by Culbertson who at that time was president of the [[United States International Trade Commission|U.S. Tariff Commission]] (now called the United States International Trade Commission). Culbertson discussed "Problems of Raw Materials and Foodstuffs in the Commercial Policies of Nations."<ref>{{Cite journal
| title = Papers
| last = Culbertson | first = William S.
| location = Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library
| year = 1923
}}</ref>


== International Economic Policies, A Survey of the Economics of Diplomacy, 1925 ==
== International Economic Policies, A Survey of the Economics of Diplomacy, 1925 ==
In 1925, Culbertson published a book looking at post [[World War I]] economics and international interests.<ref>{{Cite book
In 1925, Culbertson published a book looking at post [[World War I]] economics and international interests.<ref>{{cite book |last=Culbertson |first=William S. |authorlink= |title=International Economic Policies, A Survey of the Economics of Diplomacy |publisher=D. Appleton and Company |year=1925 |location=New York, New York |pages=575}}</ref> This book shows Culbertson's early leanings toward a U.S. foreign policy of [[Reciprocity (international relations)|reciprocity]]. According to a review by E. L. Bogart of the [[University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign|University of Illinois at Urbana]], Culbertson spends most of the book discussing commercial [[treaty|treaties]], [[tariff]]s, and [[open-door policy]]. Bogart believes that Culbertson truly understands the "gravity and complexity of the international problems presented by the unequal geographical distribution of raw materials and fuels." He believes that Culbertson disapproves of both [[laissez-faire economics]] and [[economic imperialism]], instead promoting a policy of international cooperation, to be effected through an organization such as the [[League of Nations]].<ref>{{ cite journal |last=Bogart |first=E. L. |authorlink= |title=Review of International Economic Policies, A Survey of the Economics of Diplomacy |journal=The Journal of Political Economy |volume=34 |issue=3 |pages=406–408 |id=|date=June 1926|doi=10.1086/253773 |jstor=1820598}}</ref>
| title = International Economic Policies, A Survey of the Economics of Diplomacy
| last = Culbertson | first = William S.
| year = 1925
| publisher = D. Appleton and Company | location = New York, New York
| page = 575
}}</ref> This book shows Culbertson's early leanings toward a U.S. foreign policy of [[Reciprocity (international relations)|reciprocity]]. According to a review by E. L. Bogart of the [[University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign|University of Illinois at Urbana]], Culbertson spends most of the book discussing commercial [[Treaty|treaties]], [[tariff]]s, and [[open-door policy]]. Bogart believes that Culbertson truly understands the "gravity and complexity of the international problems presented by the unequal geographical distribution of raw materials and fuels." He believes that Culbertson disapproves of both [[laissez-faire economics]] and [[economic imperialism]], instead promoting a policy of international cooperation, to be effected through an organization such as the [[League of Nations]].<ref>{{Cite journal
| title = Review of International Economic Policies, A Survey of the Economics of Diplomacy
| last = Bogart | first = E. L.
| journal = The Journal of Political Economy
| volume = 34 | issue = 3 | pages = 406–408
| date = June 1926
| doi = 10.1086/253773 | jstor = 1820598
}}</ref>


== Reciprocity, A National Policy for Foreign Trade, 1937 ==
== Reciprocity, A National Policy for Foreign Trade, 1937 ==
In 1937, Culbertson published a book supporting the [[Cordell Hull|Hull]] reciprocal trade policy.<ref>{{Cite book
In 1937, Culbertson published a book supporting the [[Cordell Hull|Hull]] reciprocal trade policy.<ref>{{cite book |last=Culbertson |first=William S. |authorlink= |title=Reciprocity, A National Policy for Foreign Trade |publisher=McGraw Hill Book Company |year=1937 |location=New York, New York |pages=298}}</ref> According to a review by George H. E. Smith, Culbertson's thesis is that "[The United States has] become a world state... Our overseas expansion will go on whether we like it or not... Our production, our finance, and our trade then must operate on a world stage. If they are confined within our [[Border|political frontiers]] by a narrow [[nationalism]], no amount of governmental regulation and of governmental generosity will bring about real prosperity... I have become convinced that we cannot possibly pay out nationally except through a tremendous revival in [[international trade|foreign trade]], both [[import]]s and [[export]]s, which in turn will stimulate and enlarge domestic trade and enterprise." The book continues by discussing the evolution of tariffs and the mechanisms through which they are made, and concludes with suggestions for a permanent foreign trade policy.<ref>{{ cite journal |last=Smith |first=George H. E. |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Review of Reciprocity, A National Policy for Foreign Trade |journal=The American Political Science Review |volume=31 |issue=3 |pages=543–544 |id=|date=June 1937|doi=10.2307/1948180 |last2=Culbertson |first2=William S. |jstor=1948180 |publisher=American Political Science Association }}</ref>
| title = Reciprocity, A National Policy for Foreign Trade
| last = Culbertson | first = William S.
| year = 1937
| publisher = McGraw Hill Book Company | location = New York, New York
| page = 298
}}</ref> According to a review by George H. E. Smith, Culbertson's thesis is that "[The United States has] become a world state... Our overseas expansion will go on whether we like it or not... Our production, our finance, and our trade then must operate on a world stage. If they are confined within our [[Border|political frontiers]] by a narrow [[nationalism]], no amount of governmental regulation and of governmental generosity will bring about real prosperity... I have become convinced that we cannot possibly pay out nationally except through a tremendous revival in [[International trade|foreign trade]], both [[import]]s and [[export]]s, which in turn will stimulate and enlarge domestic trade and enterprise." The book continues by discussing the evolution of tariffs and the mechanisms through which they are made, and concludes with suggestions for a permanent foreign trade policy.<ref>{{Cite journal
| title = Review of Reciprocity, A National Policy for Foreign Trade
| last1 = Smith | first1 = George H. E.
| last2 = Culbertson | first2 = William S.
| journal = The American Political Science Review
| publisher = American Political Science Association
| volume = 31 | issue = 3 | pages = 543–544
| date = June 1937
| doi = 10.2307/1948180 | jstor = 1948180
| s2cid = 154220362 }}</ref>


== The Culbertson Economic Mission, 1944 - 1945 ==
== The Culbertson Economic Mission, 1944 - 1945 ==
In the fall of 1944, Culbertson led an economic mission on behalf of the United States to [[North Africa]] and the [[Middle East]] to survey post war prospects for business. This trip also included an independent assignment to [[France]]. According to analysis by John A. DeNovo, the mission revealed a strong belief in the free market for the regulation of international trade, analyzed obstacles to U.S. business in the Middle East, and revealed a vision of expanded U.S. involvement in Middle-East affairs. DeNovo also claims that the Culbertson reports were "taken seriously by those charting American economic policies."<ref>{{cite journal |last=DeNovo |first=John A. |authorlink= |title=The Culbertson Economic Mission and Anglo-American Tensions in the Middle East, 1944-1945 | journal=The Journal of American History |volume=63 |issue=4 |pages=913–936 |doi=10.2307/1893616|date=March 1977 |jstor=1893616 |publisher=Organization of American Historians }}</ref>
In the fall of 1944, Culbertson led an economic mission on behalf of the United States to [[North Africa]] and the [[Middle East]] to survey post war prospects for business. This trip also included an independent assignment to [[France]]. According to analysis by John A. DeNovo, the mission revealed a strong belief in the free market for the regulation of international trade, analyzed obstacles to U.S. business in the Middle East, and revealed a vision of expanded U.S. involvement in Middle-East affairs. DeNovo also claims that the Culbertson reports were "taken seriously by those charting American economic policies."<ref>{{Cite journal
| title = The Culbertson Economic Mission and Anglo-American Tensions in the Middle East, 1944-1945
| last = DeNovo | first = John A.
| journal = The Journal of American History
| publisher = Organization of American Historians
| volume = 63 | issue = 4 | pages = 913–936
| date = March 1977
| doi = 10.2307/1893616 | jstor = 1893616
}}</ref>


== Liberation, The Threat and the Challenge of Power, 1953 ==
== Liberation, The Threat and the Challenge of Power, 1953 ==
Later in his life, Culbertson became a [[Colonel]] in the [[United States Army]], with a role of influencing the
Later in his life, Culbertson became a [[colonel]] in the [[United States Army]], with a role of influencing the
[[Presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower|Eisenhower Administration's]] [[global politics]]. In 1953, he published ''Liberation, The Threat and the Challenge of Power'',<ref>{{cite book |last=Culbertson |first=William S. |authorlink= |title=Liberation, The Threat and the Challenge of Power |publisher=Tupper and Love |year=1953 |location=Atlanta |pages=208}}</ref> in which he contrasts policies of liberation and [[containment]] of the [[Soviet Union]]. Culbertson supports liberation as a method of avoiding [[preemptive war]] and argues that containment would do nothing to stem Soviet development of "[[Weapons of mass destruction|super-weapons]]," but that American policies have considerable bearing on the practicality of liberation. Stefan T. Possony in a review of this work writes:
[[Presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower|Eisenhower Administration's]] [[global politics]]. In 1953, he published ''Liberation, The Threat and the Challenge of Power'',<ref>{{Cite book
| title = Liberation, The Threat and the Challenge of Power
| last = Culbertson | first = William S.
| year = 1953
| publisher = Tupper and Love | location = Atlanta
| page = 208
}}</ref> in which he contrasts policies of liberation and [[containment]] of the [[Soviet Union]]. Culbertson supports liberation as a method of avoiding [[preemptive war]] and argues that containment would do nothing to stem Soviet development of "[[Weapons of mass destruction|super-weapons]]," but that American policies have considerable bearing on the practicality of liberation. Stefan T. Possony in a review of this work writes:


<blockquote>
<blockquote>
"Colonel Culbertson views liberation as just such a practical though complex working philosophy -- the danger, as he sees it, is in failing to recognize that we no longer can espouse the moral foundations of our way of life without also embracing liberation. We cannot turn our backs on a world that is half slave and hope to retain our own freedom. Such an attitude does not necessarily entail global war. Colonel Culbertson would keep his powder dry first and foremost, but he also visualizes a step-by-step use of all our vast strengths -- moral, economic, political, spiritual and legal -- in a gradual and controlled manner. Nor is he wanting for means to employ these strengths: trade, dollar power, education, cultural intercourse, technology, [[Nuclear power|nuclear energy]] -- all these and many more would be used to improve the lot of [[Third World|underdeveloped peoples]], to promote industrial expansion and to counter the threat of [[communism]] at home and abroad. In this respect, Colonel Culbertson must qualify as one of that small but distinguished group who anticipated President [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]]'s atomic peacefare program."<ref>{{cite journal |last=Possony |first=Stefan T. |authorlink= |title=Review of Liberation, The Threat and the Challenge of Power | journal=Military Affairs |volume=18 |issue=2 |pages=90–91 |date=Summer 1954 |id=|date=October 1954 |jstor=1982479}}</ref>
"Colonel Culbertson views liberation as just such a practical though complex working philosophy -- the danger, as he sees it, is in failing to recognize that we no longer can espouse the moral foundations of our way of life without also embracing liberation. We cannot turn our backs on a world that is half slave and hope to retain our own freedom. Such an attitude does not necessarily entail global war. Colonel Culbertson would keep his powder dry first and foremost, but he also visualizes a step-by-step use of all our vast strengths -- moral, economic, political, spiritual and legal -- in a gradual and controlled manner. Nor is he wanting for means to employ these strengths: trade, dollar power, education, cultural intercourse, technology, [[Nuclear power|nuclear energy]] -- all these and many more would be used to improve the lot of [[Third World|underdeveloped peoples]], to promote industrial expansion and to counter the threat of [[communism]] at home and abroad. In this respect, Colonel Culbertson must qualify as one of that small but distinguished group who anticipated President [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]]'s atomic peacefare program."<ref>{{Cite journal
| title = Review of Liberation, The Threat and the Challenge of Power
| last = Possony | first = Stefan T.
| journal = Military Affairs
| volume = 18 | issue = 2 | pages = 90–91
| date = Summer 1954
| doi = 10.2307/1982479 | jstor = 1982479
}}</ref>
</blockquote>
</blockquote>

==External links==
* [https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/view.php?eadid=ICU.SPCL.CULBERTSON Guide to the William S. Culbertson Papers 1923] at the [https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/scrc/ University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center]


== References ==
== References ==
{{reflist}}
{{Reflist|30em}}


{{s-start}}
{{Ambassadors of the United States to Chile}}
{{s-dip}}
{{succession box|title=[[United States Ambassador to Romania]]|before=[[Peter Augustus Jay (diplomat) |Peter Augustus Jay]]|after=[[Charles S. Wilson ]]|years=1925–1928}}
{{succession box|title=[[United States Ambassador to Chile]]|before=[[William Miller Collier]]|after=[[Hal H. Sevier]]|years=1928–1933}}
{{s-end}}


{{Ambassadors of the United States to Chile|state=autocollapse}}
{{Authority control|VIAF=100372749}}


{{Authority control}}


{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = Culbertson, William Smith
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = American diplomat
| DATE OF BIRTH = 1884
| PLACE OF BIRTH =
| DATE OF DEATH = 1966
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Culbertson, William Smith}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Culbertson, William Smith}}
[[Category:1884 births]]
[[Category:1884 births]]
[[Category:1966 deaths]]
[[Category:1966 deaths]]
[[Category:Ambassadors of the United States to Romania]]
[[Category:Ambassadors of the United States to Chile]]
[[Category:Ambassadors of the United States to Chile]]
[[Category:Yale Law School alumni]]
[[Category:Ambassadors of the United States to Romania]]
[[Category:Council on Foreign Relations]]
[[Category:College of Emporia alumni]]
[[Category:Military personnel from Pennsylvania]]
[[Category:People from Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania]]
[[Category:People from Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania]]
[[Category:United States Army officers]]
[[Category:Yale Law School alumni]]

Latest revision as of 07:25, 15 July 2024

Culbertson in 1922

William Smith Culbertson (August 5, 1884 – August 12, 1966)[1] was an American diplomat and soldier. U.S. Ambassador, Romania, 1925–1928, Chile, 1928 - 1933. Colonel, United States Army. President, United States Tariff Commission 1922 - 1925.[2] Member, United States Tariff Commission, 1916–1922, American Bar Association, Council on Foreign Relations, American Economic Association, Phi Alpha Delta, Phi Beta Kappa.

Early history

[edit]

He was born in Greensburg, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania on August 5, 1884. He graduated from College of Emporia B.A.

Alexander Hamilton Essay, 1910

[edit]

In 1910, after graduation from the Yale Law School J.D., Culbertson's 153-page essay on Alexander Hamilton was awarded the John Addison Porter Prize.[3][4] The Porter Prize is awarded by The Kingsley Trust Association (The Scroll and Key Society) for a work of scholarship which, through original effort, gathers and relates facts and/or principles to make a product of general human interest. A review of this work by Worthington C. Ford appeared in September 1912.[5] Ford reviewed the essay positively, noting nationalism is the "key-note" of the essay, lauding its "breadth and candor," but stating that "more could be made of Hamilton's own venture into a manufacturing concern..."

William S. Culbertson Papers, 1923

[edit]

Culbertson was a member of the Institute of Politics, an organization that promoted the study of international problems and relations "with a view to creating a more sympathetic understanding of the ideals and policies of other nations." To carry out its ideas, the Institute of Politics in July and August 1923 held a series of roundtable conferences at Williams College, Massachusetts. In addition to the roundtable conferences, there were two open conferences, one of which was led by Culbertson who at that time was president of the U.S. Tariff Commission (now called the United States International Trade Commission). Culbertson discussed "Problems of Raw Materials and Foodstuffs in the Commercial Policies of Nations."[6]

International Economic Policies, A Survey of the Economics of Diplomacy, 1925

[edit]

In 1925, Culbertson published a book looking at post World War I economics and international interests.[7] This book shows Culbertson's early leanings toward a U.S. foreign policy of reciprocity. According to a review by E. L. Bogart of the University of Illinois at Urbana, Culbertson spends most of the book discussing commercial treaties, tariffs, and open-door policy. Bogart believes that Culbertson truly understands the "gravity and complexity of the international problems presented by the unequal geographical distribution of raw materials and fuels." He believes that Culbertson disapproves of both laissez-faire economics and economic imperialism, instead promoting a policy of international cooperation, to be effected through an organization such as the League of Nations.[8]

Reciprocity, A National Policy for Foreign Trade, 1937

[edit]

In 1937, Culbertson published a book supporting the Hull reciprocal trade policy.[9] According to a review by George H. E. Smith, Culbertson's thesis is that "[The United States has] become a world state... Our overseas expansion will go on whether we like it or not... Our production, our finance, and our trade then must operate on a world stage. If they are confined within our political frontiers by a narrow nationalism, no amount of governmental regulation and of governmental generosity will bring about real prosperity... I have become convinced that we cannot possibly pay out nationally except through a tremendous revival in foreign trade, both imports and exports, which in turn will stimulate and enlarge domestic trade and enterprise." The book continues by discussing the evolution of tariffs and the mechanisms through which they are made, and concludes with suggestions for a permanent foreign trade policy.[10]

The Culbertson Economic Mission, 1944 - 1945

[edit]

In the fall of 1944, Culbertson led an economic mission on behalf of the United States to North Africa and the Middle East to survey post war prospects for business. This trip also included an independent assignment to France. According to analysis by John A. DeNovo, the mission revealed a strong belief in the free market for the regulation of international trade, analyzed obstacles to U.S. business in the Middle East, and revealed a vision of expanded U.S. involvement in Middle-East affairs. DeNovo also claims that the Culbertson reports were "taken seriously by those charting American economic policies."[11]

Liberation, The Threat and the Challenge of Power, 1953

[edit]

Later in his life, Culbertson became a colonel in the United States Army, with a role of influencing the Eisenhower Administration's global politics. In 1953, he published Liberation, The Threat and the Challenge of Power,[12] in which he contrasts policies of liberation and containment of the Soviet Union. Culbertson supports liberation as a method of avoiding preemptive war and argues that containment would do nothing to stem Soviet development of "super-weapons," but that American policies have considerable bearing on the practicality of liberation. Stefan T. Possony in a review of this work writes:

"Colonel Culbertson views liberation as just such a practical though complex working philosophy -- the danger, as he sees it, is in failing to recognize that we no longer can espouse the moral foundations of our way of life without also embracing liberation. We cannot turn our backs on a world that is half slave and hope to retain our own freedom. Such an attitude does not necessarily entail global war. Colonel Culbertson would keep his powder dry first and foremost, but he also visualizes a step-by-step use of all our vast strengths -- moral, economic, political, spiritual and legal -- in a gradual and controlled manner. Nor is he wanting for means to employ these strengths: trade, dollar power, education, cultural intercourse, technology, nuclear energy -- all these and many more would be used to improve the lot of underdeveloped peoples, to promote industrial expansion and to counter the threat of communism at home and abroad. In this respect, Colonel Culbertson must qualify as one of that small but distinguished group who anticipated President Dwight D. Eisenhower's atomic peacefare program."[13]

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ William Culbertson United States Social Security Death Index
  2. ^ "Notes". The American Economic Review. 12 (1): 202–208. March 1922. JSTOR 1801795.
  3. ^ Culbertson, William S. (1910). Alexander Hamilton. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. p. 153.
  4. ^ Culbertson, William Smith (1911). Alexander Hamilton: An Essay. Yale University Press. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-7222-9118-4.
  5. ^ Ford, Worthington C. (September 1912). "Review of Alexander Hamilton". The American Economic Review. 2 (3): 612–613. JSTOR 1804602.
  6. ^ Culbertson, William S. (1923). "Papers". Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  7. ^ Culbertson, William S. (1925). International Economic Policies, A Survey of the Economics of Diplomacy. New York, New York: D. Appleton and Company. p. 575.
  8. ^ Bogart, E. L. (June 1926). "Review of International Economic Policies, A Survey of the Economics of Diplomacy". The Journal of Political Economy. 34 (3): 406–408. doi:10.1086/253773. JSTOR 1820598.
  9. ^ Culbertson, William S. (1937). Reciprocity, A National Policy for Foreign Trade. New York, New York: McGraw Hill Book Company. p. 298.
  10. ^ Smith, George H. E.; Culbertson, William S. (June 1937). "Review of Reciprocity, A National Policy for Foreign Trade". The American Political Science Review. 31 (3). American Political Science Association: 543–544. doi:10.2307/1948180. JSTOR 1948180. S2CID 154220362.
  11. ^ DeNovo, John A. (March 1977). "The Culbertson Economic Mission and Anglo-American Tensions in the Middle East, 1944-1945". The Journal of American History. 63 (4). Organization of American Historians: 913–936. doi:10.2307/1893616. JSTOR 1893616.
  12. ^ Culbertson, William S. (1953). Liberation, The Threat and the Challenge of Power. Atlanta: Tupper and Love. p. 208.
  13. ^ Possony, Stefan T. (Summer 1954). "Review of Liberation, The Threat and the Challenge of Power". Military Affairs. 18 (2): 90–91. doi:10.2307/1982479. JSTOR 1982479.
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by United States Ambassador to Romania
1925–1928
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Ambassador to Chile
1928–1933
Succeeded by