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HOOVER ARCHIVES: Europe Remembers Herbert Hoover, “Napoleon of Mercy”
By George H. Nash
An exhibit in Belgium celebrates the humanitarian
legacy of Herbert Hoover, who did so much to prevent starvation in Europe
during and after World War I. George H. Nash tells the story.
In less than eight years the nations of Europe and
North America will mark the centenary of the outbreak of the First World
War. For the people of the United States this occasion will evoke images of
terrible battles, valiant soldiers, and Flanders fields where poppies grow.
It will also remind some Americans of August 1914, the grim, chaotic month
when the indepen-dent kingdom of Belgium courageously resisted an invading
army, only to fall victim to a four-year ordeal of conquest.
U.S. Ambassador to Belgium Tom C. Korologos, left, shares the stage with Herbert “Pete” Hoover III, the president’s grandson, as Remembering Herbert Hoover and the Commission for Relief in Belgium is unveiled October 3, 2006, in Brussels.
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One American who will be forever linked in history
with Belgium’s travail in that awful war is Herbert Hoover. After the
Battle of the Marne, giant European armies bogged down in the trenches and
famine threatened beleaguered Belgium, a highly industrialized nation of
seven million people dependent on imports for three-quarters of its food.
On one side, the German army of occupation refused to take responsibility
for feeding the civilian population. Let Belgium import food as it had done
before the war, said the Germans. On the other side stood the tightening
British naval blockade of Belgian ports. Let the Germans, as occupiers of
Belgium, feed its people, said the British. Besides, they argued, how could
one be sure that the Germans would not seize imported food for themselves?
As the tense days passed in the early autumn of 1914,
food supplies inside Belgium dwindled ominously. To the outside world went
emissaries pleading for the Allies to permit food to filter through the
naval noose. Finally, on October 22, after weeks of negotiation, Hoover
established a neutral organization under diplomatic protection to procure
and distribute food to the Belgian people. Great Britain agreed to let the
food pass unmolested through its naval blockade. Germany, in turn, promised
not to requisition this food destined for helpless noncombatants.
Why Hoover? In the summer of 1914 he was a prosperous,
40-year-old, international mining engineer living in London—and
dreaming of a career of public service in the United States. This orphaned
son of an Iowa blacksmith had come far indeed from his humble beginnings in
the Midwest. Rising rapidly in his chosen profession, by 1914 he directed
or in part controlled a worldwide array of mining enterprises that employed
a hundred thousand men. “If a man has not made a fortune by 40 he is
not worth much,” Hoover had said, while still in his 30s. By August
1914 he had achieved his goal yet was not content. “Just making money
isn’t enough,” he confessed to a friend. Instead he wanted, as
he put it, to “get into the big game somewhere.”
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After the Battle of the Marne, giant European armies bogged down in the trenches,
and famine threatened beleaguered Belgium, a highly industrialized nation of
seven million people dependent on imports for three-quarters of its food.
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His opportunity came in a form he could not have
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A wartime thank you letter from Ernest Raemdonckse,
a schoolchild in Brussels.
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predicted. In the first tumultuous weeks of the war, tens of thousands of
American travelers in Europe fled the Continent for the comparative safety
of London—and, they hoped, passage home. Arriving in the British
capital, many Yankee tourists found themselves unable to cash their
instruments of credit or obtain temporary accommodation, let alone tickets
for ships no longer crossing the Atlantic. Responding to the
travelers’ panic and lack of necessities, Hoover and other American
residents of London organized an emergency relief effort that provided
food, temporary shelter, and financial assistance to their stranded fellow
countrymen. Eventually the passenger ships resumed their sailings, and more
than 100,000 weary travelers headed back to the United States.
Hoover’s efficient leadership during the crisis earned him the
gratitude of the American ambassador to Great Britain, Walter Hines Page.
And when a few weeks later the plight of Belgium became perilous,
Ambassador Page and others agreed on Hoover, a man of demonstrated
competence, to administer this new mission of mercy.
And so began an undertaking unprecedented in world
history: an orga-nized rescue of an entire nation from starvation.
Initially no one expected this humanitarian task to last more than a few
months. Few foresaw the gruesome stalemate that would develop on the
Western Front. As Hoover himself later wrote, “The knowledge that we
would have to go on for four years, to find a billion dollars, to transport
five million tons of concentrated food, to administer rationing, price
controls, agricultural production, to contend with combatant governments
and with world shortages of food and ships, was mercifully hidden from
us.”
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Eager for a fortune though he was, “Just making money isn’t enough,” Hoover
confided to a friend. He wanted to “get into the big game somewhere.”
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Within a few months Hoover and a team of mostly
American volunteers built up what one British government official called
“a piratical state orga-nized for benevolence.” Indeed, the
novel relief organization, which went by the name of the Commission for
Relief in Belgium (CRB), possessed some of the attributes of a government.
It had its own flag, it negotiated “treaties” with the warring
European powers, and its leaders parleyed regularly with diplomats and
cabinet ministers in several countries. It even had a “pirate”
leader in Hoover, who enjoyed informal diplomatic immunity and traveled
freely through enemy lines. He was probably the only American citizen
permitted to do so during the entire war.
As a historian and biographer of Mr. Hoover, I am
particularly impressed by four aspects of his wartime service to the people
of Belgium.
THE IMMENSE TASK
First, today we take for granted the prompt
intervention of humanitarian agencies in areas of distress. In 1914,
however, no institution for the succor of Belgium existed. It became
Hoover’s awesome responsibility to create one.
Consider the array of tasks that the Commission for
Relief in Belgium was obliged to perform. First, it had to raise money
throughout the world—partly through charitable appeals but primarily,
as the war went on, through subsidies from the Allied governments. With
this money it had to purchase wheat and other foodstuffs from North
America, South America, and Australia. Then it had to arrange for shipping
these foodstuffs to Belgium; eventually the CRB had a fleet of several
dozen ships continuously at its disposal. When these ships entered the
European war zone, they were required to navigate carefully lest they be
seized or subjected to submarine attack. And when the food-laden vessels
reached the neutral Dutch port of Rotterdam, their cargo had to be unloaded
for conveyance by canal into Belgium.
Hoover’s Commission for Relief in Belgium (CRB) eventually had several dozen ships at its disposal. This one is loaded with supplies for occupied Belgium.
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Once inside the occupied country the supplies had to
be prepared for consumption in mills, dairies, and bakeries. Then the food
had to be distributed equitably to an anxious population scattered over
more than 2,500 villages, cities, and towns. As part of its undertaking,
the CRB needed to verify that the daily rations did indeed reach their
intended recipients and not the German army of occupation. Working with
Hoover and his staff was a vast network of 40,000 Belgian volunteers who
handled the distribution of food throughout their land. This parallel
Belgian organization, known as the Comité National de Secours et
d’Alimentation, was headed by some of the country’s most
eminent business leaders. In early 1915, Hoover’s team was allowed to
extend its life-sustaining operations to two million desperate French
civilians caught behind the German battle lines on the Western Front. Thus
the CRB’s work came to encompass a total area of nearly 20,000 square
miles.
PRESSED FROM EVERY SIDE
No enterprise so massive, so multifaceted, so exposed
to the passions of war, could hope to function undisturbed. Pressures and
troubles beset Hoover at every turn. From the day of its inception, the CRB
had to cope with critics in the various belligerent governments who were
convinced that its work was enhancing the military strength of one side or
the other. Scarcely a month went by that did not witness some challenge to
the precarious existence of the commission. Time and again Hoover became
embroiled in exhausting negotiations in an endless race against famine and
malnutrition. At times, too, he had furious disagreements with his Belgian
counterpart, Emile Francqui, a man, like himself, of great ability and
formidable force of personality.
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Sometimes, weary from incessant conflicts with one or
another belligerent power, Hoover considered resigning. “Were it not
for the haunting picture in one’s mind of all the long line of people
standing outside the relief stations in Belgium,” he wrote early in
the war, “I would have thrown over the position long since.”
But Hoover did not quit. Ultimately it was his critics who yielded,
recognizing his indispensability, his growing stature, and the risk of
angering American public opinion that he had so skillfully mobilized.
“THE CHIEF” OF THE VOLUNTEERS
Third, I continue to be impressed—as were so
many observers at the time—by the energy, resourcefulness, and
public-relations acumen of the man at the apex of the CRB. Although the
relief commission had many volunteers—all, like Hoover, working
without pay—and although Hoover himself emphasized the value of
organization, his loyal subordinates knew that one man dominated their
endeavors: the man they called “the Chief.”
What kind of a person was he? Here is a description of
him by an acquaintance in this period, Edward Eyre Hunt:
In appearance he is astonishingly youthful,
smooth-shaven, dark haired, with cool, watchful eyes, clear brow, straight
nose, and firm, even mouth. His chin is round and hard.
One might not mark him in a crowd. There is nothing
theatrical or picturesque in his looks or bearing. . . . At work he seems
passive and receptive. He stands still or sits still when he talks, perhaps
jingling coins in his pocket or playing with a pencil. His repertory of
gestures is small. He can be so silent that it hurts.
Being an American he sometimes acts first and
explains afterwards. But his explanations, like his actions, are direct and
self-sufficient.
He was indeed a man of determination and force. Emile
Francqui called him une mâchoire (jaw).
When the United States entered the European conflict
in 1917, Hoover returned home to head a new wartime agency, the United
States Food Administration. But the relief commission that brought him fame
continued to function, although in a reorganized form necessitated by the
end of U.S. neutrality. Throughout the war the CRB and the Comité
National indefatigably fed more than nine million people a day in Belgium
and northern France. And when the commission finally closed its accounts,
it found that it had spent nearly a billion dollars sustaining the health
and morale of the Belgian people. It had made Herbert Hoover an
international symbol of practical idealism and had launched him on what he
later called “the slippery road of public life.” In Belgium
King Albert conferred upon him a specially created, unprecedented title:
“Ami de la nation belge,” friend of the Belgian nation.
FIRST STEP TOWARD GLOBAL PHILANTHROPY
Finally, the creation of the Commission for Relief in
Belgium turned out to be more than a passing episode in a great
war—and more than a springboard to one man’s political career.
Hoover’s endeavor was in fact a pioneering effort in global
philanthropy—a forerunner of the great network of transnational,
nongovernmental organizations with which we are familiar today. As Hoover
himself proudly declared in a speech in Brussels in 1958, his unprecedented
Belgian relief organization had brought “lasting benefits” to
the world. It had “pioneered the methods of relief of great
famines,” and it had developed a “system” for
“maintenance and rehabilitation” of children during war and
other social upheavals.
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“The knowledge that we would have to go on for four years, to find a billion
dollars, to transport five million tons of concentrated food, to administer
rationing, price controls, agricultural production, to contend with combatant
governments and with world shortages of food and ships, was mercifully hidden from us.”
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The CRB was also pioneering in another respect: It was
the first great institutional embodiment of a new force in
twentieth-century politics: American altruism in the form of humanitarian
relief missions and foreign-aid programs. Hoover himself later described
the CRB and his other relief enterprises as an “American epic,”
and he was not alone in thus assessing their significance. In 1916 Lord
Eustace Perry of the British Foreign Office described Hoover as “the
advance guard and symbol of the sense of responsibility of the American
people towards Europe.”
“We want food not clothes,” Hoover cables to his wife in October 1914, months after the war erupted. Within a year, the CRB was in charge of life-sustaining operations in an area covering 20,000 square miles.
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In more recent times the world has grown accustomed to
American action to save lives and restore the fractured economies of
far-off lands. Indeed, today such involvement is almost universally taken
for granted. One reason for this expectation, one reason for its
acceptance, is the institution created nearly one hundred years ago by
Herbert Hoover.
For Hoover, the Belgian experience was but a prologue.
In the years 1917 to 1921, he as well as his country moved even more
prominently onto the international stage. No longer just the almoner of
Belgium, in 1918 and 1919 he became (in the words of General John J.
Pershing) “the food regulator for the world.” He was acclaimed
as a “Master of Efficiency.” An admiring American called him a
“Napoleon of Mercy.” There was truth in this label. Between
1914 and 1923, more than 80 million people in more than 20 nations received
food allotments for which Hoover and his associates were at least partly
responsible. To put it another way, between 1914 and 1923, Hoover was
responsible for saving more lives than any other person in history.
Why did he do it? An autobiographical statement that
he composed sometime during World War I provides an important clue:
There is little importance to men’s lives
except the accomplishments they leave to posterity. What a man accomplishes
is of many categories and of many points of view; moral influence, example,
leadership in thought and inspiration are difficult to measure . . . and
the proportion of success to be attributed to their effort is always
indeterminate. In the origination or administration of tangible
institutions or constructive works men’s parts can be more certainly
defined. When all is said and done accomplishment is all that counts.
During his lifetime Hoover created and administered
many “tangible institutions,” the most remarkable of which was
the Commission for Relief in Belgium. He wanted this institution to be
remembered, and so it continues to be. But institutions, we know, are not
impersonal beings; they are animated by the spirit of their founders. Today
we celebrate not only an institution and its legacy but also the dedicated
individuals—both Belgian and American—who sustained its
constructive work and mitigated the horror of war. Men like Albert, king of
the Belgians. Emile Francqui and the volunteers of the Comité
National. The volunteers of the Commission for Relief in Belgium. And, in
the vortex of this magnificent effort, that indispensable American
benefactor, Herbert Hoover: ami de la nation
belge.
Adapted from an address by the author in Brussels on
October 4, 2006, in conjunction with the opening of the exhibit Remembering
Herbert Hoover and the Commission for Relief in Belgium. ©2006 George
H. Nash.
Available from the Hoover Press is Herbert Hoover and
Stanford University, by George H. Nash. To order, call 800.935.2882 or
visit www.hooverpress.org.
George H. Nash is the author of a multivolume scholarly biography of Herbert Hoover.
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