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Service, John Stewart and Rhetts, Charles Edward Papers

Dates: 1945-1963, Bulk Dates: 1950-1957

United States Foreign Service Officer, 1935-1951, 1957-1962

The papers of John Stewart Service and Charles Edward Rhetts include a wealth of materials relating to and documenting John S. Service's experiences with loyalty investigations during the 1950s. The collection also represents the work of Charles E. Rhetts, Service's attorney during his loyalty hearings and in the aftermath of his discharge from the U.S. Foreign Service. The collection's one series, a Subject File arranged alphabetically, includes documentation accumulated by Service and Rhetts during Service's loyalty hearings, his dismissal from the U.S. Foreign Service, and the ensuing court cases seeking reinstatement and correction of Service's record. Principally, the collection contains copies of Service's and Rhetts's correspondence, legal and government documents, and newspaper articles pertaining to the Service case. Other documents found in the collection are memoranda, press releases, transcripts, printed material, handwritten notes, and various publications relating to the Service case.

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

ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION

Size: 1.6 linear feet (approximately 3,200 pages).
Access: Open.
Copyright: Mrs. Ruth F. Rhetts, wife and heir of the late Charles E. Rhetts, and John S. Service donated their copyright interest in any unpublished writings in this collection to the United States Government. Documents prepared by United States Government employees in the course of their official duties are also in the public domain. Copyright interest in documents which do not fall into the above categories is presumed to remain with the writers of their documents, or their heirs.
Processed by: Erwin J. Mueller (May 1977)
Updated by: Marcia Kottemann (2004) as part of the Truman Library Internship Program.
Supervising Archivists: Randy Sowell and Amy Williams.


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

BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
John Stewart Service

1909 (August 3)

 

Born in Chengtu, China to American parents

1920-1924

 

Student, American school, Shanghai, China

1925

 

Graduated, Berkeley, California high school

1931

 

A.B., Oberlin College

1931-1932

 

Post-graduate student

1933

 

Married Caroline E. Schulz

1933

 

Foreign Service Clerk, Kunming, China

1935-1951, 1957-1962

 

Foreign Service Officer

1935-1938

 

Language Attache, American Embassy, Peiping, China

1938-1941

 

Vice-Consul, Shanghai, China

1941-1943

 

Third Secretary of Embassy, Chungking, China

1943

 

Second Secretary of Embassy, Chungking, China

1943-1945

 

Political officer attached to staff of General Joseph W. Stilwell, Commander of U.S. Army Forces, China-Burma-India

1945

 

Duty at Department of State, Washington, D.C.

1945

 

Arrested for connection to the

Amerasia

Case

1945-1946

 

Executive officer to U.S. political adviser, Supreme Commander for Allied Powers, Tokyo, Japan

1946-1948

 

First Secretary, American Legation, Wellington, New Zealand

1948-1951, 1957-1959

 

Duty at Department of State

1952-1957

 

President, Sarco International Corporation, New York City, New York

1959-1962

 

American Consul, Liverpool, Great Britain

c. 1960s

 

Resident China Scholar, University of California, Berkeley

1999 (February 3)

 

Died

BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
Charles Edward Rhetts

1910 (May 21)

 

Born in Columbus, Indiana

1931

 

A.B., Darmouth College

1934

 

L.L. B., Harvard University

1938 (April 9)

 

Married Ruth Fischer

1934-1935

 

Counsel, National Rifle Association

1935-1937

 

Resettlement Administration

1937-1938

 

Private practice

1938-1939

 

Counsel, Power Division, Federal Emergency Administration, Public Works

1939-1941

 

Associate Solicitor, U.S. Department of Labor

1941-1942

 

Executive Assistant, Director of Materials, War Production Board

1942

 

Director, Foreign Division

1942-1944

 

Special Assistant to Attorney General, U.S. Department of Justice

1944

 

Lieutenant, Junior Grade, U.S. Naval Reserve

1944-1946

 

First Assistant, War Division, U.S. Department of Justice

1945

 

Acting Assistant Attorney General

1946

 

Director, U.S. Department of Justice, Mission in Europe

1946-1962, 1964-1971

 

General practice law

1962-1964

 

U.S. Ambassador to Liberia

1963

 

L.L. D., Cuttington College, Liberia

1971 (November 15)

 

Died in London, England

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

COLLECTION DESCRIPTION

The Papers of John Stewart Service and Charles Edward Rhetts document John S. Service’s experiences with loyalty hearings, his dismissal from the U.S. Foreign Service, and the various court cases which ensued. Following his involvement in the Amerasia incident of 1945, Service underwent a series of investigations by the State Department, all of which pronounced Service to be a loyal U.S. Government employee. Accusations from Senator Joseph McCarthy, however, incited another hearing before the Loyalty Review Board in 1951. The Review Board ruled there was “reasonable doubt” concerning Service’s loyalty and he was subsequently discharged in late 1951. Following this action, Service and Rhetts appealed the State Department’s decision to dismiss Service in Service v. Bingham, et al. (also entitled Service v. Dulles, et al.). The men fought for Service’s eventual reinstatement into the Foreign Service with back pay and benefits. In 1957, Service was reinstated as a Foreign Service officer as a result of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Service v. Dulles, et al.

The Papers of Service and Rhetts thoroughly document the men’s legal activities during Service’s loyalty investigations and the appeals process. During this time, Service and Rhetts accumulated many materials pertaining to the Service case, including correspondence, legal and government documents, newspaper clippings, memoranda, press releases, transcripts, printed material (primarily articles and editorials), handwritten notes, telegrams, transcripts of Service’s hearings and court cases, and various publications. The collection includes correspondence with prominent liberals such as Edward F. Prichard, Jr. and Joseph L. Rauh, Jr. (who assisted Service and Rhetts in their legal efforts), and information concerning donations to a fund that was established to help pay Service’s legal expenses. The majority of the correspondence and legal documents are carbon copies of originals.

The collection spans the period from Service’s involvement in the Amerasia case in 1945; through Senator McCarthy’s original accusation of Service’s disloyalty in 1950, basing his claim on evidence from the Amerasia incident to infer that Service was pro-communist; through Service’s retirement from the Foreign Service in 1963. Most of the documentation, however, falls between 1950 and 1957, detailing the loyalty hearings and the Service v. Dulles, et al. appeals case. The collection measures 1.6 linear feet (approximately 3,200 pages). The entire collection is organized into one series, a Subject File, which is arranged alphabetically according to folder title.

One of the most notable features of this collection is the high concentration of newspaper clippings concerning the Service case as well as documents connected to Service and Rhetts’s legal activities. The newspaper clippings, gathered as the Service case progressed, are useful in understanding public reaction to the Amerasia incident, Service’s loyalty hearings, and the rash of communist accusations associated with McCarthyism. The bulk of these newspaper clippings date from 1950 and 1951. Similarly, the collection contains a good deal of relevant legal and government documents, including transcripts of Service’s 1951 hearing before the Loyalty Review Board and the later appeals case, Service v. Dulles, et al. before the Supreme Court. Additionally, Service and Rhetts collected and compiled all pertinent sections of the Congressional Record, which can be found in several locations within the collection. As a result, much of the official documentation of the Service proceedings is centralized and easily accessible.

Other information relating to the Service case or