FERDINAND L. MAYER PAPERS
Scope and Content Note
Ferdinand Lathrop Mayer became a Foreign Service Officer in 1916 after
earlier studying and practicing law. He was a member of the delegation to the
Conference on Limitation of Armament held in Washington in 1921-1922, and also
served in Peking and other posts in the 1920's. Mr. Mayer was an advisor to the
U. S. delegation at the Disarmament Conference held in Geneva from 1933-1935, and
he was named Counsel of the Berlin Embassy in 1935 where he served until his
appointment as Ambassador to Haiti in 1937. He resigned from the Foreign Service
in 1940 and later served in the Office of Strategic Services during World War II.
The materials held by the Herbert Hoover Presidential Library consist of
electrostatic copies of selected files from his papers which reflect his long
standing interest and participation in American foreign policy and diplomacy.
While an advisor in the Geneva Disarmament talks, Mr. Mayer recorded many
of the details of what he saw and heard in "daily reports." Written as informal
information letters to the State Department in Washington, these reports provide an
inside view of the negotiations taking place. Mr. Mayer's correspondence with
diplomats James C. Dunn and Hugh R. Wilson gives additional insight into the
activities of American diplomats in Europe during the increasingly tense 1930's.
Mr. Mayer's service with the O. S. S. during World War II is reflected in two folders
of documents and memoranda.
After the war Mr. Mayer's activities in foreign policy continued through writing
and participation in Republican Party affairs. He contributed articles to Barron's
and wrote editorials for the Bennington Banner. Many of his letters on foreign policy
were published in the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal.
In Republican Party politics Mr. Mayer supported Robert Taft for the 1952
presidential nomination. His correspondence with Ben E.Tate and David Ingalls
document that support. His support of Barry Goldwater in 1964 is revealed in a
large file of correspondence with him. He had a long standing relationship with
John Foster Dulles and assisted in the drafting of some of Dulles's speeches.
Other prominent Republicans Mr. Mayer corresponded with include Lucius C. Clay,
Thomas E. Dewey, Dwight D. Eisenhower, and William F. Knowland. In 1959 and
1960 Mr. Mayer-became interested in attempting to unify many conservative
Republican groups into a single movement. His activities in this undertaking
can be found in the Conservative Movement file.
The Mayer papers are a rich source of documentation to the student of
American diplomacy of the 1930's and of post-war American Republican politics.
They complement other collections at the Hoover Library such as the papers
of Hugh R. Wilson, Truman Smith, and Felix Morley.
Literary property in his writings are now in the public domain
Folder List
Box Contents
1
Barron's
1951 Jan.-March
1951 April
1951 May-1952 & undated ms.
Bennington (Vt ) Banner
Editorials, 1954
"C" Miscellaneous correspondence, 1960-1973
Campaigne, Jameson G. 1960-1967
Clay, Lucius D. 1965-1961
Clippings 1941
Conde, Art
See: Conservative Movement
Conservative Movement, 1959-1960
Crane, Philip 1977-1978
"D" Miscellaneous correspondence, 1937-1945
Department of State, 1940-1960
Dewey, Thomas E. 1942
Disarmament Conference (Geneva)-Daily Reports and Correspondence
1932 Sept.-Nov.
1933 March-July 19
1933 July 29-Dec.
1934 Jan.-April
1934 May-Dec.
1935 Jan.-July 18
2
1935 July 30-Oct.
Dulles, John Foster
1941-1946
1947-1948 Feb.
1948 March-Nov.
1949
1950-1951
1952-1958
Dunn, James C.
See Also: Disarmament Conference, 1935 July 30-Oct.
1935-1936
1937
1941
Eisenhower, Dwight 0. 1950-1963
Goldwater, Barry
1959-1961
1962-1963
1964
1965-1974
3
Grew, Joseph C. 1945
Hanighen, Frank
See:
1. Conservative Movement
2. Human Events
Ingalls, David S. 1951-1952
Knowland, William F. 1954-1958
MacMurray, John Van A.
1947-1953
1964-1971 (subject file)
Moffat, Pierrepont
See: Disarmament Conference, 1932-1935 July 19
Morley, Felix
See Also: Barron's
1950-1960
1961-1963
1964-1975
New York Times
1955-1958
1959-1963
Pell, Robert
1963
1964
1965
1966-1969
Regnery, Henry
See: Conservative Movement
Smith, Truman
1955-1960
1961-1970
Tate, Ben E.
1949-1951
4
1952-1957
1958-1964
Thompson, Llewellyn E., Jr. 1952
Wall Street Journal
1954-1955
1956-1959
1960-1961
1962
Wilson, Hugh R.,
1926-1933
1934-1935
1936
1937-1940
Wilson, Hugh.R., Jr. 1958-1960
Woodward, Stanley 1932-1940
World War II
Documents relating to, 1944-1945 & undated
Post-war intelligence plans, 1945