Access is granted in accordance with the
Protocols for the University Archives and Records Center.
PROVENANCE
This collection, originally filed under UPA 5.1 S896, was refiled under
the new classification number on August 20, 1997.
The papers of Harold E. Stassen, former President of the University
of Pennsylvania, consist primarily of Stassen's public speeches arranged
chronologically from 1945 to 1957. Included in the collection are two
additional items relating to Stassen's tenure as University president:
a presentation to the Ford Foundation, n.d., and a letter to Mrs. Jane
Seymour Blomfield, dated October 24, 1950.
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
Harold E. Stassen - national political leader, president of the University
of Pennsylvania, and later, perennial candidate for public office -
was born on April 13, 1907 in West St. Paul, Minnesota to William Andrew
Stassen, a farmer, and Elsie Emma Mueller. Stassen's political aspirations
began early in his life. He graduated from high school at the age of
fifteen and entered the University of Minnesota a year later. While
in school, he served as president of the student body and chairman of
the Minnesota Young Republican League, an organization that he founded
and would later draw from as his political base.
Upon completion of his undergraduate degree, Stassen entered the University
of Minnesota's law school, graduating in 1929. Almost immediately, Stassen
and a classmate opened law offices in South St. Paul. In the same year,
Stassen made the first move in a political career that was as remarkable
for its early triumphs as it was bewildering in its string of later
defeats. He won the race for Dakota County attorney (located just south
of Minneapolis-St. Paul), assuming office at the age of twenty-three
and holding the post through a series of reelections.
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In 1938, Stassen, with the support of his Young Republicans, successfully
wrested power from the state's old-guard Republicans to become, at the
age of thirty one, the youngest governor in Minnesota's history. After
he delivered the keynote address at the Republican National Convention,
during which he helped to clinch the nomination for Wendell Willkie,
Stassen was reelected governor of Minnesota in 1940 and 1942. He did
not finish his last term, instead joining the Navy in 1943 as a lieutenant
commander and serving as chief of staff to Admiral William Halsey in
the South Pacific. In 1945, President Roosevelt named Stassen to the
American delegation to the first United Nations conference in San Francisco,
where he helped to write the UN Charter.
In 1948, Stassen made his first and strongest bid for the White House.
His early victories in Republican primaries seemed to indicate that
Stassen would beat President Harry Truman, but that summer, at the GOP
convention in Philadelphia, Stassen lost the nomination to New York
Governor Thomas Dewey.
In the wake of his unsuccessful bid for the Republican nomination,
the Board of Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania chose Stassen
to fill the office of the president, left vacant by the sudden retirement
of George McClelland. When Stassen assumed office, Penn was in the middle
of a long-term financial crisis. As a skilled fundraiser, Stassen helped
to raise money and cut costs, channeling Penn's financial resources
into a few prestigious departments at the expense of others. Stassen
also focused on fulfilling McClelland's campus expansion plan, as well
as reforming intercollegiate athletics in order to conform to the requirements
of the new Ivy League.
Stassen's emphasis on athletics focused primarily on Penn's football
teams, for which he attempted to garner maximum national exposure. Believing
that academic excellence was not incompatible with gridiron success,
Stassen engaged in a highly-publicized fight with the NCAA over televising
Quaker home games. When the NCAA voted to restrict the number of televised
games in order to stop the slide in gate attendance, Stassen defied
the order and signed a $200,000 contract with ABC. Eventually, however,
Stassen was forced to back down when the NCAA threatened to expel the
Quakers. His actions left Penn's national reputation damaged and relations
with its peer institutions profoundly frayed.
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Stassen was frequently absent from campus, particularly during the
1952 spring semester when he made another bid for the Republican Presidential
nomination; Stassen also took an extended leave of absence for a speaking
tour in Asia. On campus, he was heavily criticized for using Penn as
a political staging ground. When newly-elected President Eisenhower
offered Stassen a position in his American foreign aid administration,
neither the Board nor the University at large was surprised when he
accepted. Stassen kept few ties to the University after his term ended.
Following his initial appointment by Eisenhower, he continued to dabble
in politics. When Stassen left the Eisenhower administration in 1958,
he became a candidate for the Republican nomination for governor of
Pennsylvania. His defeat by a large margin signaled the end of his importance
as a political figure, despite his candidacy for a number of positions
in the following years. Between 1948 and 1992, he campaigned nine times
for the Republican Party nomination for President, never coming close
to winning after 1948. He also ran for governor of Minnesota four times
(winning his first two attempts), governor of Pennsylvania twice, the
United States Senate twice, and mayor of Philadelphia once. Throughout
his political trials, Stassen maintained a successful law practice in
Philadelphia.
Despite his political defeats, Stassen remained active in politics
until his death. He gained a reputation as a liberal Republican when,
as president of the American Baptist Convention in 1963, he joined Martin
Luther King in his march on Washington, D.C. On his 90th birthday in
1998, Stassen was still working on a 129-page proposal to revise the
United Nations Charter. He even filed for the 1998 Minnesota gubernatorial
race eventually won by Jesse Ventura.
Stassen married Esther Glewwe in 1929, with whom he had two children.
He died on March 4, 2001 at the age of ninety three.
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SCOPE AND CONTENT
The Harold E. Stassen Papers document the political and professional
career of the national political leader and brief University President.
The bulk of the collection consists of speeches made by Stassen between
1945 and 1950 delivered at local and statewide organizations and functions.
Most of the speeches relate to Stassen's failed political campaign for
the Republican Presidential nomination in 1948 and again in 1952.
The majority of the speeches treat issues in postwar international
affairs - Cold War politics, the threat of Communism, the prevention
of a third world war - with a particular emphasis on Stassen's role
in drafting the United Nations Charter. Other topics addressed by Stassen
include domestic labor and agricultural policy and progressive reform
of the Republican platform. All of the speeches are typed transcripts,
and most are designated for release to the press and radio. A large
number of the speeches were later read as statewide and national radio
broadcasts.
Most widely documented are Stassen's speeches while President of the
University of Pennsylvania from 1948 to 1953. During those years, Stassen's
speeches are designated as originating from 101 College Hall. The majority
of the material from Stassen's tenure as President continues to treat
national and international political issues, though Stassen does give
a greater emphasis to education in his speeches.
An index of Stassen's speeches from 1940 to 1951 lists the date and
place of every speech made by Stassen during that period. That majority
of the speeches, which took place throughout the country, were delivered
at small-scale conventions, association meetings, and community events.
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