Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr.: A Remembrance
By Charles Lewis
In the last hours of February, at the age of 89, Arthur M.
Schlesinger Jr. passed from this world. Not only did America
lose its last great public historian, as Sam Tanenhaus
recently wrote in the New York Times, but on a much more
personal level, The Fund for Independence in Journalism and
the Center for Public Integrity in Washington lost a
wonderful, devoted friend.
When I quit 60 Minutes and decided to start a nonpartisan,
investigative reporting "watchdog" organization called the
Center for Public Integrity, beyond our tiny Board of
Directors (myself and two journalist friends who didn't know
each other initially, Alex Benes and Charlie Piller) it was
clear that we needed an Advisory Board to lend stature and
credibility to such an improbable, quixotic enterprise. From
my home, I sent out scores of letters to well-known,
highly-respected people who I had greatly admired for years
- Republicans, Democrats, liberals, conservatives,
historians, political scientists, journalists - inviting
them to lend their name along with occasional wisdom and
advice to this effort. Arthur Schlesinger was one of the
very first "luminaries" to accept my invitation, in 1989. It
is difficult to overstate the psychological impact of
receiving such news in your daily mail, after weeks and
months of slogging in silence and solitude. I wanted to
start a new enterprise "quasi-journalistic and
quasi-academic" and as a recently practicing journalist,
enlisting well-regarded journalists seemed entirely possible
and we were indeed fortunate when Bill Kovach, Hodding
Carter and later others agreed to join the Advisory Board.
Other respected social scientists followed Arthur - James
McGregor Burns, James David Barber, Kathleen Hall Jamieson,
Father Theodore Hesburgh and William Julius Wilson, among
others.
My first meeting with him was in 1989 at his office at the
City College of New York, amidst his musty, floor to ceiling
books and papers. It was of course great fun, and honestly
couldn't have been much more exciting. He could not have
been nicer or more encouraging, and even in that first
meeting, imparted some very wise advice I took to heart. I
was inflamed by the latest corruption outrages in
Washington, including one particular issue I recently had
investigated, and Arthur gently reminded me to consider the
broader, historic issues - not this scandal or that agency,
but what had been happening over many years to public
service and democracy itself. Process, the system, the macro
political landscape began over time to interest me and the
Center the most, and frankly differentiate the research
organization and its comprehensive approach from daily news
organizations and issue-driven advocacy groups. At one point
after publishing our first studies in those early years, the
Boston Globe described the Center as "an investigative think
tank."
Raised in a Republican family, I had come of age reading A
Thousand Days, The Imperial Presidency and later
Robert
Kennedy and His Times, and numerous articles among his
prodigious output of shorter writing over the years. His
diminutive size, with, of course, the ubiquitous bow tie,
belied his enormous output and public impact over many
decades. Consider that he wrote 18 books, winning the first
of two Pulitzer Prizes at age 27 for his second book, The
Age of Jackson, published in 1945, and writing War and the
American Presidency, published in 2004, 59 years later.
Over the ensuing years, I had many conversations with him in
numerous settings, most enjoyably over lunches at his
unofficial table at the Century Association in New York or
breakfasts in a small restaurant a block from his eastside
Manhattan apartment. One especially memorable evening was
his 85th birthday party, attended by some of the most
important figures in American politics and journalism the
preceding 40 years. His eating habits always privately
amused me - how so small a man could eat so much, always
eggs at breakfast, often steak at dinner, and of course his
beloved martinis. That his last hours and minutes on earth
were at Bobby Van's restaurant in New York was some kind of
metaphor for the extraordinary personal, social,
professional life to the fullest he had led, which included
serving in the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) in World
War II to the White House with President John F. Kennedy.
Arthur was indefatigable on behalf of the Center for Public
Integrity. On one occasion, he spoke to the staff and
interns at our office in Washington. In 1996 he very kindly
flew to Los Angeles to speak at a public forum with me and
others at UCLA to discuss the state of democracy and the
price of power in America's brutal presidential campaign
process, pegged to the publication of my first book (written
with the Center staff), The Buying of the President. That
evening he extolled the Center's work to 60-70 people at a
reception about the Center. In 1998, he and his wonderful
wife Alexandra hosted a book party for us at their apartment
to celebrate the release of The Buying of the Congress. It
was there that I met Bevis Longstreth, who later joined the
Center Advisory Board and whose extraordinary idea it was to
create the Fund for Independence in Journalism, of which he
is chairman.
Getting to know some of Arthur's family has been very
special; in particular, for a few years at the Center, we
benefited from the innate journalistic talent and
irrepressible humor and spirit of his youngest son Robert,
who went from the Center to The Hill newspaper to the
Boston
Globe and beyond. A gifted, facile writer like his father,
Rob is now completing a book for Simon & Schuster about
presidential speechwriters.
The "keep up the good work" encouragement was always there,
from the heart. Weeks after I had been awarded a MacArthur
Fellowship, in July 1998, Arthur wrote a poignant, personal
letter to me, saying, among other things, that "you and the
Center have maintained high standards of rigor, purpose and
reliability . . . with honesty, impartiality and plain
speaking." At the 10-year anniversary of the Center for
Public Integrity, he wrote another magnificent missive
(published in full in the 2000 Annual Report, on the Center
Web site with the other annual reports), describing the
Center as "an indispensable truth-teller in a treacherous
time." In his last book, written and published during the
Iraq war, he mentioned the Center's publication online of
secret draft legislation written by top aides to
then-Attorney General John Ashcroft, which became known as
the "Patriot II" sequel to the controversial Patriot Act of
2001.
In 2005, with great reluctance because of his increasingly
frail health and his already stalwart support of the Center
over the years, on behalf of the Fund Board of Directors, I
sheepishly asked Arthur if he would mind lending his fine
name to be a member of the Fund's new Advisory Council,
which also includes Columbia University president Lee
Bollinger and Yale Law Dean Harold Koh. Offended that in its
work the Center had come under siege from expensive libel
litigation brought by powerful interests, of course the ever
gracious Arthur agreed, with the understanding that travel
and attending meetings would not be possible.
We often hear about nonprofit organizations and robust civil
society in America, but rarely do even informed citizens
fully appreciate how difficult such enterprises are to
initiate and sustain. Or how many people - comprising
Boards, Advisory Boards, becoming members, providing
financial support, doing the actual work - and how much of
their time and energy are required for any emerging
institution to make a national or international impact. Or
the vital importance of factual information and public
accountability in a free and open society. Thankfully Arthur
Schlesinger was, like the President on whose staff he
served, an "idealist without illusions." And he understood
that democracy is not a spectator sport for any citizen. The
advice and mentoring he gave to me was not dissimilar to
decades of similar fellowship he tirelessly gave to
generations of authors, historians, presidents, White House
speechwriters, would-be politicians, college students, etc.
We are all, at the Fund and at the Center, forever in his
debt.
