Leland B. Harrison Explained

Leland B. Harrison
Minister From:United States
Country:Switzerland
Termstart:September 10, 1937
Termend:October 14, 1947
Predecessor:Hugh R. Wilson
Successor:John Carter Vincent
President:Franklin D. Roosevelt
Harry S. Truman
Minister From1:United States
Country1:Romania
Termstart1:July 24, 1935
Termend1:September 3, 1937
Predecessor1:Alvin M. Owsley
Successor1:Franklin Mott Gunther
President1:Franklin D. Roosevelt
Minister From2:United States
Country2:Uruguay
Termstart2:April 11, 1930
Termend2:October 9, 1930
Predecessor2:Ulysses Grant-Smith
Successor2:J. Butler Wright
President2:Herbert Hoover
Minister From3:United States
Country3:Sweden
Termstart3:May 31, 1927
Termend3:November 11, 1929
Predecessor3:Robert Woods Bliss
Successor3:John Motley Morehead III
President3:Calvin Coolidge
Herbert Hoover
Office4:United States Assistant Secretary of State
Termend4:June 30, 1924
Termstart4:March 31, 1922
President4:Warren G. Harding
Calvin Coolidge
Predecessor4:Fred Morris Dearing
Successor4:Wilbur J. Carr
Birth Date:April 25, 1883
Birth Place:New York City
Death Place:Washington, D.C., United States
Education:Harvard College
Harvard Law School

Leland B. Harrison (April 25, 1883 – June 6, 1951) was a United States diplomat. He held several high appointments in the foreign service, most notably as U.S. minister to Switzerland throughout World War II.

Family and education

The son of W. Henry Harrison and Helen (Skidmore) Harrison, he was educated at Eton College, Harvard College, and Harvard Law School.

Career

After law school, Harrison became the private secretary of United States Ambassador to Japan Thomas J. O'Brien. He was appointed Third Secretary of the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo on June 10, 1908. He later filled posts in the United States embassies in Peking, London, and Bogotá. In 1918, he became diplomatic secretary of the American Commission to Negotiate Peace. He later became counselor of the U.S. Embassy in Paris.

In 1916 President Woodrow Wilson allowed Secretary of State Robert Lansing and Frank Polk quietly and informally to channel the flow of military and law enforcement material into the State Department's Bureau of Secret Intelligence (U-1), what is now known as the Diplomatic Security Service. The two men picked Leland Harrison "to take charge of the collection and examination of all information of a secret nature coming into the Department from various sources and also to direct the work of the agents specially employed for that purpose."[1] [2]

In 1921, Harrison moved to Washington, D.C. to become assistant to the Conference on the Limitation on Armament. On March 21, 1922, Harrison was named United States Assistant Secretary of State and he held this office from March 31, 1922, to June 30, 1924.In 1927, Harrison was named Minister to Sweden, a post he held from May 31, 1927, to November 11, 1929. He also headed the U.S. delegation to the International Telegraph Conference in Brussels in 1928. In 1929, he became Minister to Uruguay, holding this post from April 11, 1930, to October 9, 1930. He then resigned temporarily from the United States Foreign Service. A short time later, however, he returned to government service as chief of the International Relations Division of the United States Tariff Commission. On May 15, 1935, he was named Minister to Romania, serving there from July 24, 1935, to September 3, 1937.

Ambassador to Switzerland

He was then Minister to Switzerland from September 10, 1937, to October 14, 1947.

As Ambassador to Switzerland, Harrison was sympathetic to Jewish rescue and relief operations and worked closely with Gerhardt Riegner, the representative of the World Jewish Congress in Geneva and sent several reports regarding the murder of the Jews of Europe to the United States Department of State in Washington D.C.

He endorsed many of these reports as being credible and recommended action be taken to assist in the relief and rescue of Jews in Nazi-controlled territories.[3] [4]

Personal life, retirement and death

He married Anne C. Coleman on June 27, 1925.

Harrison retired on February 29, 1948. After his death in June 1951,[5] he was buried in the cemetery of the Church of St. James the Less in Philadelphia.

References

Notes and References

  1. Book: Allen Dulles – Master of Spies by James Srodes 1999; Page 83
  2. History of the Bureau of Diplomatic Security of the United States Department of State, Page 6
  3. Book: Feingold . Henry . The Politics of Rescue: The Roosevelt Administration and the Holocaust, 1938–1944 . 1970 . Rutgers University Press . New Brunswick, NJ . 180–181, 239–240.
  4. Book: Bauer . Yehuda . American Jewry and the Holocaust . 1981 . Wayne State University Press . Detroit . 401, 404.
  5. News: LELAND HARRISON EX-DIPLOMAT, DIES; Former Assistant Secretary of State Dies at Capital-- Held Other Major Posts . June 8, 1951 . The New York Times . September 28, 2019 . 0362-4331.