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Rexford Tugwell

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Rexford Tugwell
Governor of Puerto Rico
In office
September 19, 1941 – September 2, 1946
Preceded byJosé Miguel Gallardo
Succeeded byJesús T. Piñero
Personal details
Born
Rexford Guy Tugwell

(1891-07-10)July 10, 1891
Sinclairville,New York,U.S.
DiedJuly 21, 1979(1979-07-21)(aged 88)
Santa Barbara,California,U.S.
Political party
Alma mater
Profession

Rexford Guy Tugwell(July 10, 1891 – July 21, 1979) was an Americaneconomistwho became part ofFranklin D. Roosevelt's first "Brain Trust",a group ofColumbia Universityacademics who helped develop policy recommendations leading up to Roosevelt'sNew Deal.Tugwell served in FDR's administration until he was forced out in 1936. He was a specialist on planning and believed the government should have large-scale plans to move the economy out of theGreat Depressionbecause private businesses were too frozen in place to do the job. He helped design the New Deal farm program and theResettlement Administrationthat moved subsistence farmers into small rented farms under close supervision. His ideas on suburban planning resulted in the construction ofGreenbelt, Maryland,with low-cost rents for relief families. He was denounced by conservatives for advocating state-directed economic planning to overcome the Great Depression.

Roosevelt appointed Tugwell as thegovernor of Puerto RicoduringWorld War II(1941–1945). He became a professor at various universities, with lengthy service at theUniversity of Chicagoand theUniversity of California at Santa Barbara.He wrote twenty books, covering the politics of the New Deal, biographies of major politicians, issues in planning, and memoirs of his experiences.

Early life and education

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Rexford Tugwell was born in 1891 inSinclairville, New York.In his youth, he gained an appreciation for workers' rights and liberal politics from the works ofUpton Sinclair,James Bryce,Edward Bellamy,[1]Frederick Winslow Taylor,[2]andCharles Richard van Hise.[3][4]Tugwell began studying economics in graduate work at theWharton School of the University of Pennsylvania,and completed his doctorate atColumbia University.At university, he was influenced by the teaching ofScott NearingandSimon Patten,as well as the writings ofJohn Deweyin philosophy.[5]

Career

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Tugwell in 1922.

Academic economist

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After graduation, Tugwell served as junior faculty at theUniversity of Washington,American University in Paris,andColumbia University.At Columbia University he taught economics from 1920 to 1932.[6]

Tugwell's approach to economics was experimentalist, and he viewed the industrial planning ofWorld War Ias a successful experiment. He advocated agricultural planning (led by industry) to stop the rural poverty that had become prevalent due to a crop surplus after theFirst World War.This method of controlling production, prices, and costs was especially relevant as theGreat Depressionbegan.[7]

Roosevelt administration

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In 1932 Tugwell was invited to join PresidentFranklin Roosevelt's team of advisers known as theBrain Trust.After Roosevelt's inauguration in 1933, Tugwell was appointed first as Assistant Secretary and then in 1934 as Undersecretary of theUnited States Department of Agriculture.He helped create theAgricultural Adjustment Administration(AAA) and served as its director. The AAA included a domestic allotment program, which paid farmers to voluntarily reduce their production by roughly 30% so that reduced supply would increase the price they received. It was funded with a tax on processing companies that used farm commodities. Tugwell's department managed the production of key crops by adjusting the subsidies for non-production.[8]The act was ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1936 inUnited States v. Butler,and had to be replaced in 1938.

Tugwell was also instrumental in creating theSoil Conservation Servicein 1933, to restrict cultivation, restore poor-quality land, and introduce better agricultural practices to farmers to conserve the soil.[9]This was especially necessary given the widespread damage of the 1930s'Dust Bowls.He additionally played a key role in crafting the 1938Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act.

In April 1935 Tugwell and Roosevelt created theResettlement Administration(RA), a unit of theFederal Emergency Relief Administration.Directed by Tugwell, the RA sought to create healthy communities for the rural unemployed by relocating them to new communities for access to urban opportunities. Some of the RA's activities dealt with land conservation and rural aid, but the construction of new suburban satellite cities was the most prominent. In her book,The Death and Life of Great American Cities,the authorJane Jacobscritically quotes Tugwell on the program: "My idea is to go just outside centers of population, pick up cheap land, build a whole community and entice people into it. Then go back into the cities and tear down whole slums and make parks of them."[10]She believed that he underestimated the strengths of complex urban communities and caused too much social displacement in "tearing down" neighborhoods that might have been renovated. This resulted in greater damage toinner cityneighborhoods.[11]

The RA completed three "Greenbelt" towns before theUnited States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuitfound the program unconstitutional inFranklin Township v. Tugwell.It ruled that housing construction was a state power, and the RA was an illegal delegation of the Federal Emergency Relief Administration's power.[12][13]

Tugwell had previously been denounced as "Rex the Red".[14]The RA's suburban resettlement program earned him condemnation as Communist and un-American because of its social planning aspects. Historians agree he was at all times a loyal American and was never affiliated in any way with the Communist Party.[15]

Tugwell and President Roosevelt inspecting the construction progress at theGreenbelt,Maryland town site, in February 1937.

American Molasses Co.

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Given the opposition to his policies, Tugwell resigned from the Roosevelt administration at the end of 1936. He was appointed as a vice president at the American Molasses Co. At this time, he divorced his first wife and married Grace Falke, his former assistant.[16]

Director of New York City Planning Commission

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In 1938 Tugwell was appointed as the first director of theNew York City Planning Commission.New York's reformist mayor,Fiorello LaGuardia,created the commission as part of a city charter reform aimed at reducing corruption and inefficiency. The Planning Commission had relatively limited powers: all actions needed approval from the legislativeBoard of Estimate.Tugwell tried to assert the commission's power. He tried to retroactively enforce nonconforming land uses, despite a lack of public or legal support. His commission sought to establishpublic housingat moderate densities, yet repeatedly approved FHA requests for greater density.Robert Moseskilled Tugwell's proposed fifty-yearmaster planwith a fiery public denouncement of its open-space protections.[17]

Governor of Puerto Rico

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Tugwell served as the last appointed AmericanGovernor of Puerto Rico,from 1941 to 1946. He worked with the legislature to create thePuerto Rico Planning, Urbanization, and Zoning Boardin 1942. Tugwell supported Puerto Rican self-government through amendment to theOrganic Actin 1948 but fiercely opposed decentralizing government agencies and services away from the city of San Juan "despite most Puerto Ricans in need of such services not residing in the capital." In one case, he vetoed a bill approved by both chambers of the Puerto Rico Legislature, and supported by 59 of 77[a]municipalities, establishing a state medical school in the city of Ponce, calling it "regionalism."[18]He publicly supportedLuis Muñoz Marín'sPopular Democratic Party,which wanted a Commonwealth status.[19]

As he prepared to retire from the Governorship, Tugwell was instrumental in getting the first Puerto Rican appointed to the job,Jesús T. Piñero,then serving asResident Commissionerin Washington, D.C. Tugwell also served as Chancellor of theUniversity of Puerto Rico.

Return to academia

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After his stint as governor, Tugwell returned to teaching at a variety of institutions. He had years of service at theUniversity of Chicago,where he helped develop their planning program. He moved toGreenbelt, Maryland,one of the new suburbs designed and built by the Resettlement Administration under his direction.

After theatomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki,Tugwell believed thatglobal planningwas the only sure way to prevent a nuclear apocalypse. He participated in theCommittee to Frame a World Constitutionfrom 1945 to 1948. He also thought the national constitution needed to be amended to enableeconomic planning.

Progressive Party (1948)

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In 1948, Tugwell served as chair of the platform committee for theProgressive Party.During itsconvention(July 23–25, 1948), he recounted a conversation with presidential candidateFranklin D. Rooseveltin 1942 during which Roosevelt warned him of internal clashes that might destroy the Democratic Party but might also create a "Progressive Party", adding in his own words that Roosevelt "would have led a movement like that which we now join." Tugwell pled for party unity under a platform thatThe New York Timessummed up as "endorsing Red foreign policy".[20]

Later life

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Late in life, Tugwell drafted a constitution for the Newstates of America. In it, planning would become a new branch of federal government, alongside the regulatory and electoral branches.[21]During this time, he wrote several books, including abiographyofGrover Cleveland,subtitled:A Biography of the President Whose Uncompromising Honesty and Integrity Failed America in a Time of Crisis(1968). His biography of Franklin D. Roosevelt was entitledFDR: An Architect of an Era.A Stricken Landwas his memoir about his years in Puerto Rico. This book was reprinted in 2007 by theMuñoz Marín Foundation.

Representation in other media

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Books and articles by Tugwell

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  • The Economic Basis of Public Interest,Menasha, Wisconsin: George Banta Publishing Company, 1922.
  • Industry's Coming of Age,New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1927.
  • "Russian Agriculture," in Stuart Chase, Robert Dunn, and R. G. Tugwell, eds.Soviet Russia in the second decade: a joint survey by the technical staff of the first American Trade Union Delegation(The John Day Company, 1928)
  • "The Principle of Planning and the Institution of Laissez Faire."American Economic Review: Supplement, Papers and Proceedings of the Forty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the American Economic Association(1932) 22#1 pp. 75–92in JSTOR
  • "Experimental Control in Russian Industry."Political Science Quarterly(1928): 161–187.in JSTOR
  • Mr. Hoover's Economic Policy,New York: John Day, 1932.
  • The Industrial Discipline and the Governmental Arts,New York: Columbia University Press, 1933.
  • with Howard Copeland Hill.Our economic society and its problems: a study of American levels of living and how to improve them(NY: Harcourt, Brace, 1934)
  • The Battle for Democracy,New York: Columbia University Press, 1935.
  • Changing the Colonial Climate: the Story, from His Official Messages, of Governor Rexford Guy Tugwell's Efforts to Bring Democracy to an Island Possession Which Serves the United Nations as a Warbase,selection and explanatory comments by J. San Juan Lear: Bureau of Supplies, Printing, and Transportation, 1942.
  • Puerto Rican Public Papers of R. G. Tugwell, Governor, San Juan:Service Office of the Government of Puerto Rico, Printing Division, 1945.
  • Forty-Fifth Annual Report of the Governor, 1945,San Juan: Government of Puerto Rico, 1945.
  • The Stricken Land: The Story of Puerto Rico,Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1947.ISBN978-0-8371-0252-8
  • The Place of Planning in Society: Seven Lectures, San Juan:Office of the Government Planning Board, 1954.
  • A Chronicle of Jeopardy, 1945–1955,Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1955.
  • The Democratic Roosevelt: A Biography of Franklin D. Roosevelt,Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1957.
  • The Art of Politics, As Practiced by Three Great Americans: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Luis Munoz Marin, and Fiorell H. LaGuardia,Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1958.
  • The Enlargement of the Presidency,Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1960.
  • The Light of Other Days,Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1962.
  • How They Became President,Simon & Schuster, 1964.
  • FDR: An Architect of an Era,Macmillan, 1967.
  • The Brains Trust,Viking Press, 1968.ISBN978-0-670-00273-3
  • Grover Cleveland,Macmillan, 1968.
  • In Search of Roosevelt,Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1972.ISBN978-0-674-44625-0
  • The Emerging Constitution,Harper's Magazine Press, 1974.ISBN978-0-06-128225-6.
  • The Diary of Rexford G. Tugwell: The New Deal, 1932–1935(Greenwood, 1992)

Tugwell also wrote the foreword toEdward C. Banfield's first published work,Government Project(Free Press, 1951), a history of one of Tugwell's collective farm programs in California.

Tugwell's autobiographies includeThe Light of Other Days(1962),To the Lesser Heights of Morningside(1982),The Stricken Land(1947),A Chronicle of Jeopardy(1955),The Brains Trust(1968),Off Course(1971), andRoosevelt's Revolution: The First Year, a Personal Perspective(1977).

References

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  1. ^Namorato, Michael.Rexford G. Tugwell: A Biography.1988. 11–18.
  2. ^The Crisis of the Old Order: 1919–1933, The Age of Roosevelt,By Arthur M. Schlesinger, p. 210
  3. ^A Commonwealth of Hope: The New Deal Response to Crisis
  4. ^The American People in the Great Depression: Freedom from Fear, Part One
  5. ^Namorato,Rexford G. Tugwell: A Biography,pp 21–54.
  6. ^Caves, R. W. (2004).Encyclopedia of the City.Routledge. p. 680.ISBN978-0415862875.
  7. ^Namorato, Michael.Rexford G. Tugwell: A Biography.1988. 35–54.
  8. ^Sternsher, Bernard.Rexford Tugwell and the New Deal.Rutgers University Press, 1964. 183–193.
  9. ^Namorato,Rexford G. Tugwell: A Biography.pp. 81–82.
  10. ^Chapter 16, "Gradual Money and Cataclysmic Money," p. 310
  11. ^Chapter 16, "Gradual Money and Cataclysmic Money," p. 310
  12. ^Myhra, David. "Rexford Guy Tugwell: Initiator of America's Greenbelt New Towns, 1935 to 1936,"Journal of the American Planning Association,Vol. 40, no. 3 (1974).
  13. ^Arnold, Joseph.The New Deal in the Suburbs.Ohio State University Press, 1971.
  14. ^Gilbert, Jess and Carolyn Howe. "Beyond" State vs. Society ": Theories of the State and New Deal Agricultural Policies."American Sociological Review56, no. 2 (1991): 216.
  15. ^Namorato,Rexford G. Tugwell: A Biography.1988. 114–115.
  16. ^Milestones, Dec. 5, 1938 "Rexford Tugwell,Time,1938
  17. ^Gelfand, Mark. "Rexford G. Tugwell and the Frustration of Planning in New York City,"Journal of the American Planning Association51, no. 2 (1985): 151–159.
  18. ^Carmelo Rosario Nadal.Ponce en su Historia Moderna: 1945–2002.Secretaria de Cultura y Turismo. Gobierno Municipal de Ponce. 2003. pp. 75–76.
  19. ^Namorato, Michael.Rexford G. Tugwell: A Biography.1988. 138–143.
  20. ^Lawrence, W. H. (July 26, 1948)."New Party Blocks Ban on Endorsing Red Foreign Policy: With Communists in Control, Platform Is Adopted Avoiding Any Criticism of Russia".The New York Times.p. 1.RetrievedMarch 18,2016.
  21. ^Namorato, Michael.Rexford G. Tugwell: A Biography.1988. 149–162.
  22. ^"Mank (2020) - IMDb".IMDb.RetrievedDecember 5,2020.

Notes

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  1. ^Floridawas not yet a municipality

Further reading

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  • Chichester, Steven A. "Making America Over: Rexford Guy Tugwell and his thoughts on central planning," (MA thesis Department of History. "Liberty University Lynchburg, Virginia, 2011)online
  • Gelfand, Mark. "Rexford G. Tugwell and the Frustration of Planning in New York City,"Journal of the American Planning Association51, no. 2 (1985): 151–159.
  • Myhra, David. "Rexford Guy Tugwell: Initiator of America's Greenbelt New Towns, 1935 to 1936,"Journal of the American Planning Association,Vol. 40, no. 3 (1974).
  • Namorato, Michael.Rexford G. Tugwell: A Biography(1988)
    • review by Ellis W. Hawley,Reviews in American History(1990) 18#2 pp 229–234.in JSTOR
  • Namorato, Michael. "Tugwell, Rexford Guy";American National Biography OnlineFeb. 2000Access Aug 23 2014
  • Sternsher, Bernard.Rexford Tugwell and the New Deal(Rutgers University Press, 1964)
  • Whitten, David O. "Tugwell after Eighty Years."Essays in Economic & Business History22 (2012). [online]
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Government offices
Preceded by Governor of Puerto Rico
September 19, 1941 – September 2, 1946
Succeeded by