Advising Ike
The Memoirs of Attorney General Herbert Brownell
Herbert Brownell with John P. Burke
Foreword by John Chancellor
408 pages, 26 photographs
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0590-3, $29.95
In this enlightening volume, Herbert
Brownell recounts his achievements and trials as the GOP's most
successful presidential operative of the 1940s and 1950s and
as Attorney General at a crucial time in American history.
Instrumental in getting Dwight D. Eisenhower to run for office
and wielding considerable influence over many of the president's
decisions, Brownell had to make many tough and controversial
recommendations. In his memoirs he recalls his relationship with
the president and provides firsthand insight into an administration
that faced not only the wrath of segregationists and Communist
witch-hunters but also the resolution of an increasingly unpopular
war in Korea and a new definition of American-Soviet relations
following Joseph Stalin's death. Particularly notable for Brownell
were the gains made in civil rights. Despite personal attacks
by the opposition on his integrity, he tenaciously supported
and enforced the Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. the
Board of Education and Little Rock desegregation.
Going beyond the years he spent on Eisenhower's cabinet, Brownell
describes the events and people that have influenced his colorful
life, including his stints as chairman of the Republican party
and manager of Thomas Dewey's two unsuccessful presidential campaigns
and his 62-year private law career.
"Herbert Brownell's memoirs read like a mystery novel
as he describes some of Eisenhower's most exciting moves and
the motives behind them. Historians and others alike will find
rich lodes in this book."--Warren E. Burger, Chief
Justice of the United States, 19691986
"A fascinating firsthand account of the Eisenhower years
written by a man who knows more about those years than anyone
alive."--William P. Rogers, former U.S. Attorney
General and Secretary of State
"Brownell's contributions to America go far beyond his
years at the Justice Department. He memorably re-creates the
Nebraska of William Jennings Bryan and George Norris and the
Manhattan of Al Smith and Fiorello La Guardia. His accounts of
Tom Dewey's unsuccessful campaigns and of the much happier effort
to nominate the Eisenhower-Nixon ticket are invaluable. It's
only fitting that the man who served in many ways as the conscience
of the Eisenhower administration should help us to understand
both the man and his era as never before."--Richard Norton
Smith, director of the Hoover Presidential Library and author
of Thomas E. Dewey and His Times
"The presidential Republican party of this era could
aptly be named the 'Brownell Party' rather than the 'Dewey' or
'Eisenhower Party.' These recollections are particularly important
because in Brownell's day-before the opening up of political
processes to more 'outsider' influences-the role of internal
party brokers and strategists like him was crucial."--Robert
F. Burk, author of The Eisenhower Administration and Civil
Rights
"Herbert Brownell was a superb Attorney General who played
a major role in this country's difficult journey to eradicate
legally sanctioned racism. His extraordinary memoirs demonstrate
that a competent and fair Attorney General, even with a conservative
president, can be a major factor in assuring equal justice for
all Americans."--A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr., Chief
Judge Emeritus, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
JOHN P. BURKE is associate professor of political science
at the University of Vermont. He is the author of Bureaucratic
Responsibility and The Institutional Presidency and
coauthor of How Presidents Test Reality: Decisions on Vietnam,
1954-1965, which won the Richard E. Neustadt Book Award of
the American Political Science Association.
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