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Davies, John Paton, Jr. Papers

Dates: 1916-1997

Foreign Service Officer, 1931-1954

The John Paton Davies, Jr. Papers include correspondence, printed materials, diaries, handwritten notes, photographs, transcripts, articles, reports, and other items relating to Davies’s life and career as a diplomat, government official, author, and expert on China.

[Administrative Information | Biographical Sketch | Collection Description | Series Descriptions | Folder Title List]

ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION

Size: 5 linear feet, 8 linear inches (about 10,400 pages).
Access: Open, with the exception of a few documents that are closed for reasons of national security.
Copyright: The donor gave her copyrights in this collection to the U.S. government. Documents created by U.S. government officials in the course of their duties are also in the public domain. Copyrights in documents that do not fall into these two categories presumably belong to the creators of those documents, or their heirs.
Processed by: Randy Sowell, Janice Davis, Kamera Moore, Amy Crossley, and Sharie Simon (2010); Janice Davis and David Clark (2015).


[ Top of the page | Administrative Information | Biographical Sketch | Collection Description | Series Descriptions | Folder Title List ]

BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH

1908 (April 6)

 

Born, Kiating, China

1931

 

Received B.S. Degree from Columbia University

1931-1954

 

Foreign Service Officer, U.S. Government

1932-1933

 

Vice Consul, Windsor, Ontario

1933

 

Vice Consul, Yunnanfu, China

1933-1935

 

Language Attache, Peiping, China

1935-1938

 

Vice Consul, Mukden, China

1938-1940

 

Vice Consul, Hankow, China

1940-1942

 

Assigned to the State Department, Washington, D.C.

1942 (August 24)

 

Married Patricia Grady

1942-1945

 

Assigned to the U.S. Embassy, Chungking, China, and detailed to Joseph Stilwell, Commanding General of U.S. Forces in the China-Burma-India Theater

1945-1947

 

Second and (later) First Secretary, U.S. Embassy, Moscow, U.S.S.R.

1947-1952

 

Member, Policy Planning Staff, State Department, Washington, D.C.

1948

 

Awarded Medal of Freedom for wartime service in China and India

1952-1953

 

Director, Office of Political Affairs, U.S. High Commissioner for Germany

1953-1954

 

Counselor, U.S. Embassy, Lima, Peru

1954 (November 5)

 

Dismissed from the Foreign Service as a security risk by Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, on the recommendation of a Security Hearing Board that found him to be loyal to the United States but lacking in “judgment, discretion and reliability”

1955-1965

 

Head of furniture business in Lima, Peru

1964

 

Published memoir, Foreign and Other Affairs

1969

 

Received security clearance from the State Department

1972

 

Published memoir, Dragon by the Tail

1999 (December 23)

 

Died, Asheville, North Carolina

[ Top of the page | Administrative Information | Biographical Sketch | Collection Description | Series Descriptions | Folder Title List ]

COLLECTION DESCRIPTION

The Papers of John Paton Davies, Jr. contain materials relating to his life and career as a diplomat, government official, author, and expert on China. The papers include correspondence, newspaper clippings, other printed materials, diaries, handwritten notes, photographs, transcripts, articles, reports, speeches, lectures, and other items.

The Davies Papers are especially rich in information concerning two topics: the history of China and U.S.-Chinese relations from the 1930s to the 1990s; and the loyalty and security investigations of U.S. government officials that occurred during the 1940s and 1950s. Davies was a prominent figure in both of these historical narratives. As a diplomat in China during the 1930s, and as an advisor to General Joseph “Vinegar Joe” Stilwell in the China-Burma-India Theater during World War II, Davies was involved in the development of U.S. policy toward China during a critical and contentious period. In the process, he became embroiled in a dispute with General Patrick Hurley, the U.S. Ambassador to China, who accused him of favoring Mao Tse-tung’s Chinese Communists in their struggle with Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalists.

After the war, Davies was formally charged with disloyalty and subjected to a series of investigations by the State Department and other government agencies. Prompted in part by allegations that Communist sympathizers in the State Department had contributed to the loss of China to the Communists, the investigations ultimately led to the dismissal of Davies from the government as a “security risk”—even though each investigation confirmed Davies’s loyalty to the United States.

The collection is organized into two series, a Subject File and a Chronological File. The Subject File includes correspondence between Davies; his wife, Patricia Grady Davies; his father-in law, Henry Grady, who served as U.S. Ambassador to India, Greece, and Iran during the presidency of Harry S. Truman; and other relatives. Also included is Davies’s correspondence over the years with fellow “China hands” from the State Department, other friends and associates, journalists, organizers of lecture tours, motion picture producers, graduate students, and historians. Among the persons whose correspondence appears in the series are Dean Acheson, George F. Kennan, Rodney Loehr, Paul Nitze, Eric Sevareid, John Stewart Service, Joseph Stilwell, Cy Sulzberger, Walter Sterling Surrey, John Carter Vincent, and Theodore H. White.

Newspaper clippings and other printed materials in the Subject File mostly pertain to China, U.S. foreign policy, the security investigations of Davies, and the aftermath of the investigations, including Davies’s success in obtaining a security clearance from the State Department in 1969, and the public rehabilitation of Davies and other “China hands” that followed President Richard Nixon’s rapprochement with the People’s Republic of China during the early 1970s.

The Subject File also contains a diary kept by Davies from 1942 to 1945, recording his activities as General Stilwell’s advisor and his wartime meetings with Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, and other Indian leaders; published and unpublished articles by Davies on foreign affairs and other topics; transcripts of testimony before the 1954 Security Hearing Board that recommended Davies’s dismissal; photographs from his travels in China; notes for his speeches and lectures; reports prepared by Davies while serving in Asia or on the State Department’s Policy Planning Staff from 1947 to 1952; and documents relating to his security case that Davies later obtained from the government.

The Chronological File contains materials that are similar in type to those that are included in the Subject File: correspondence, newspaper clippings, speeches, reports, handwritten notes, and State Department documents. Among the correspondents in this series (in addition to Davies’s wife and other members of his family) are Soong Ching-ling (Madame Sun Yat-sen), Chou En-lai, Frank Merrill, Dean Rusk, and Charles Bohlen. The Chronological File contains a number of newspaper clippings concerning Davies’s adventures in August 1943, when he was forced to parachute from a disabled aircraft into the Burmese jungle. (Davies and the rest of his party, which included the journalist Eric Sevareid, were assisted by Naga tribesmen and eventually rescued.) This series also contains material relating to the loyalty investigations of Davies, including drafts of a speech he intended to deliver on television in 1953, in response to allegations made against him by Senator Joseph McCarthy in an earlier television broadcast. (Davies’s superiors in the State Department dissuaded him from making the speech.) Other materials in the series relate to Davies’s efforts to obtain a pension and a security clearance from the State Department after his dismissal.

For the most part, Davies’s own folder titles were used in arranging the collection. Whenever necessary, additional information was added to the folder titles in brackets.

Related collections at the Truman Library include the Henry Grady Papers, the John Melby Papers, the John Stewart Service and Charles Rhetts Papers, and the Sally Cahalan Papers.

[ Top of the page | Administrative Information | Biographical Sketch | Collection Description | Series Descriptions | Folder Title List ]

SERIES DESCRIPTIONS

Container Nos.

 

Series

1-11

  SUBJECT FILE, 1916-1997
Correspondence, newspaper clippings, other printed materials, diaries, handwritten notes, photographs, transcripts, articles, reports, and other items. Arranged alphabetically.

11-13

  CHRONOLOGICAL FILE, 1928- 1992
Correspondence, newspaper clippings, speeches, and other items. Arranged chronologically.

 

[ Top of the page | Administrative Information | Biographical Sketch | Collection Description | Series Descriptions | Folder Title List ]

 


FOLDER TITLE LIST