AMERICAN RELIEF ADMINISTRATION
With the coming of the armistice victorious
America and the Allies found themselves face to face
with a terrible situation in Eastern Europe. The
liberated peoples of the Baltic states, Poland, Czecho-Slovakia,
Jugo-Slavia, and the Near East, were in a dreadful
state of starvation and economic wreckage. A
great, responsibility and pressing duty devolved on
America, Great Britain, France, and Italy to act promptly
for the relief of these peoples who had become temporarily,
by the hazards of war, their wards. But the Allies
themselves were in no enviable position to relieve
others. Their own troubles were many. It
was on America that the major part of this relief work
would fall.
No man knew this situation, as far
as it could be known before the veil of blockade and
military control was lifted from it, better than Hoover.
And no man realized more clearly than he the direful
consequences that it threatened not only to the peoples
of the suffering countries themselves but to the peace
and stability of the world, to restore which every
effort had now to be exerted. Hoover was not only
the man logically indicated to the President of the
United States to undertake this saving relief on the
part of America, but he was the man whom all of Europe
recognized as the source of hope in this critical
moment. He came to the gigantic endeavor as the
man of the hour.
Hoover naturally made Paris his headquarters,
for the Peace Conference was sitting here, and here
also were the representatives of the Allies with whom
he was to associate himself in the combined effort
to save the peoples of Eastern Europe from starvation
and help them make a beginning of self-government
and economic rehabilitation.
His first steps were directed toward:
First, securing cooerdination with the Allied Governments
by setting up a council of the associated governments;
second, finding the necessary financial support from
the United States for making the American contribution
to this relief; third, setting up a special organization
for the administration of the American food and funds;
and, fourth, urging the provision of funds and shipping
by the Allied Governments.
The special American organization
for assisting in this general European relief was
quickly organized under the name of the American Relief
Administration, of which Hoover was formally named
by the President Director-General, and Congress on
the recommendation of the President appropriated,
on February 24, 1919, $100,000,000 as a working fund
for the new organization. In addition to this
the United States Treasury was already making monthly
loans of several million dollars each to Roumania,
Serbia, and Czecho-Slovakia. But while waiting
for the Congressional appropriation the work had to
be got going, and for this the President contributed
$5,000,000 from his special funds available for extraordinary
expenses.
Before actual relief work could be
intelligently begun, however, it was necessary to
find out by personal inspection just what the actual
food situation in each of the Eastern European countries
was, and for that purpose investigating missions were
sent out in December, 1918, and January, 1919, to
all of the suffering countries.
Hoover had quickly gathered about
him, as nucleus of a staff, a number of men already
experienced in relief work and food matters who had
worked with him in the Belgian relief and the American
Food Administration. Others were rapidly added,
both civilians of business or technical experience
and army officers, detached at his request, especially
from the Quartermaster and Service of Supplies corps.
From these men he was able to select small groups
eager to begin with him the actual work. His
own impatience and readiness to make a real start was
like that of a race-horse at the starting gate or a
runner with his toes on the line awaiting the pistol
shot.
The atmosphere of Paris was an irritating
one. The men in control were always saying “wait.”
There were a thousand considerations of old-time diplomacy,
of present and future political and commercial considerations
in their minds. They were conferring with each
other and referring back to their governments for
instructions and then conferring again. Common
sense and necessity were being restrained by political
sensitiveness and inertia. In Hoover’s
mind one thing was perfectly clear. Time was of
the essence of his contract. Every day of delay
meant more difficulty. The Eastern countries,
struggling to find themselves in the chaos of disorganization,
waiting for an official determination of their new
borders, were already becoming entangled in frontier
brawls and quarreling over the control of local sources
of food and fuel. Their people were suffering
terribly and were clamoring for help. Hoover was
there to help; he wanted to begin helping. So
he began.
Hoover had already taken the position
that the day of hate was passed. With the end
of mutual slaughter and destruction came immediately
the time for help. It was like that pitiful period
after the battle when the bloody field is taken over
by the stretcher-bearers, the Red Cross nurses, and
the tireless surgeons. So Hoover had already clearly
in mind that the hand of charity was going to be extended
to the sufferers in Hungary and Austria and Germany
as well as to the people who were suffering because
of the ravages of the armies of these nations.
Dr. Alonzo Taylor and I, whom he had sent early in
December to Switzerland to get into close touch with
the situation in Eastern and Central Europe, listened,
for him, in Berne to the pitiful pleas of the representatives
of starving Vienna. By January Hoover’s
missions were installed and at work in Trieste, Belgrade,
Vienna, Prague, Buda-Pest, and Warsaw. In February
Dr. Taylor and I were reporting the German situation
from Berlin.
The attitude of the people in these
countries was one of pathetic dependence on American
aid and confidence that it would be forthcoming.
The name of Hoover was already known all over Europe
because of his Belgian work, and the swiftly-spread
news that he was in charge of the new relief work
acted like magic in restoring hope to these despairing
millions.
When the first food mission to Poland,
making its way in the first week of January, 1919,
with difficulty and discomfort because of the demoralized
transportation conditions, had reached that part of
its journey north of Vienna towards Cracow which brought
it into Czecho-Slovakia, our train halted at a station
gaily decorated with flags and bunting among which
the American colors were conspicuous. A band
was playing vigorously something that sounded like
the Star-Spangled Banner, and a group of top-hatted
and frock-coated gentlemen were the front figures
in a great crowd that covered the station platform.
I was somewhat dismayed by these evident preparations
for a reception, for we were not coming to try to help
Czecho-Slovakia, but Poland, between which two countries
sharp feeling was already developing in connection
with the dispute over the Teschen coal fields.
I told my interpreter, therefore, to hurry off the
train and explain the situation.
He returned with one of the gentlemen
of high hat and long coat who said, in broken French:
“Well, anyway, you are the food mission, aren’t
you?” I replied, “Yes, but we are going
to Warsaw; we are only passing through your country;
we can’t do anything for you.”
“But,” he persisted, “you are the
Americans, aren’t you?”
“Yes, we are the Americans.”
“Well, then, it’s all
right.” And he waved an encouraging hand
to the band, which responded with increased endeavor,
while the crowd cheered and waved the home-made American
flags. And we were received and addressed, and
given curious things to drink and a little food we
gave them in return some Red Cross prisoner packages
we carried along for our own maintenance and
then we were sent on with more cheers and hearty Godspeeds.
Delay so plainly meant sharper suffering
and more deaths that even before the necessary financial
and other arrangements were completed or even well
under way, Hoover had made arrangements with the Secretary
of War by which vessels carrying 135,000 tons of American
food were diverted from French to Mediterranean ports,
and with the Grain Corporation, under authority of
the Treasury, by which 145,000 tons were started for
northern European ports. Thus by the time arrangements
had been made for financing the shipments and for internal
transportation and safe control and fair distribution,
the food cargoes were already arriving at the nearest
available ports. Within a few weeks from the
time the first mission arrived in Warsaw and had reported
back to Hoover the terrible situation of the Polish
people, the relief food was flowing into Poland through
Dantzig, the German port for the use of which for
this purpose a special article in the terms of the
armistice had provided, but which was only most reluctantly
and by dint of strong pressure made available to us.
Similarly from Trieste the food trains
began moving north while there still remained countless
details of arrangement to settle. I was in Vienna
when the first train of American relief food came in
from the South. The Italians were also attempting
to send in some supplies, but so far all the trains
which had started north had been blocked at some border
point. The American train was in charge of two
snappy doughboys, a corporal and a private. When
it reached the point of blockade the corporal was
told that he could go no farther. He asked why,
but only got for answer a curt statement that trains
were not moving just now. “But this one
is,” he replied, and called to his private:
“Let me have my gun.” With revolver
in hand he instructed the engineer to pull out.
And the train went on. When I asked him in Vienna
if he had worried any at the border about the customs
and military regulations of the governments concerned
which he was disregarding, he answered with a cheerful
smile: “Not a worry; Mr. Hoover’s
representative at Trieste told me to take the train
through and it was up to me to take her, wasn’t
it? These wop kings and generals don’t count
with me. I’m working for Hoover.”
But the whole situation in these southeastern
countries because of their utter disorganization and
their hopeless embroilment in conflict with each other,
was too impossible. Whatever degree of peace the
capitals of these countries recognized as the diplomatic
status of the moment, the frontiers had no illusions.
There were trenches out there and machine-guns and
bayonets. Men were shooting at each other across
the lines. Either the trains or cars of one country
would be stopped at the border, or if they got across
they did not get back. Some countries had enough
cars and locomotives; some did not. If one country
had some coal to spare but was starving for lack of
the wheat which could be spared by its neighbor, which
was freezing, there was no way of making the needed
exchange. The money of each country became valueless
in the others and of less and less value
in its own land. Everything was going to pieces,
including the relief. It simply could not go on
this way.
Finally, as a result of Hoover’s
insistence at Paris on the terrible danger of delay
both to the lives of the people and the budding democracy
of Europe, the Supreme Economic Council took the drastic
measure of temporarily taking over the control of the
whole transportation system of Southeastern Europe
which was put into Hoover’s hands, leaving him
to arrange by agreement, as best he could, according
to his own ideas and opportunities, the other matters
of finance, coal, the interchange of native commodities
between adjacent countries and the distribution of
imported food.
Hoover became, in a word, general
economic and life-saving manager for the Eastern European
countries. It is from my personal knowledge of
his achievements in this extraordinary position during
the first eight months after the Armistice that I
have declared my belief earlier in this account that
it was owing more to Hoover and his work than to any
other single influence that utter anarchy and chaos
and complete Bolshevik domination in Eastern Europe
(west of Russia) were averted. In other words,
Hoover not only saved lives, but nations and civilizations
by his superhuman efforts. The political results
of his work were but incidental to his life-saving
activities, but from an historical and international
point of view they were even more important.
Before, however, referring to them
more specifically, something of the scope and special
character of the general European relief and supply
work should be briefly explained.
Altogether, twenty countries received
supplies of food and clothing under Hoover’s
control acting as Director-General of Relief for the
Supreme Economic Council. The total amount of
these supplies delivered from December 1, 1918, to
June 1, 1919, was about three and a quarter million
tons, comprising over six hundred shiploads, of a total
approximate value of eight hundred million dollars.
There were, in addition, on June 1, port stocks of
over 100,000 tons ready for internal delivery, and
other supplies came later.
The twenty countries sharing in the
supplies included Belgium and Northern France (through
the C. R. B.), the Baltic states of Finland, Esthonia,
Latvia, and Lithuania, a small part of Russia, Poland,
Czecho-Slovakia, Germany, German Austria, Hungary,
Roumania, Bulgaria, Greater Servia, Turkey, Armenia,
Italy, and the neutrals, Denmark and Holland.
By the terms of the Congressional Act appropriating
the hundred million dollars for the relief of Eastern
Europe, no part of the money could be used for the
relief of Germany, Austria, Hungary, Bulgaria, or
Turkey. But Vienna needed help more quickly and
imperatively than any other eastern capital.
Hoover arranged that money should be advanced by England
and France for food purchases in America for Austria
and Hungary. This food was put into Hoover’s
hands, and to him was left the problem of getting
it into the suffering countries. Germany was supplied
under the approval of the Allies in accordance with
the armistice agreement.
The “relief” of Eastern
and Central Europe was, of course, not all charity
in the usually accepted meaning of the term. The
American hundred million dollars and the British sixty
million dollars could not buy the needed eight hundred
millions’ worth of food and clothing. In
fact, of that American hundred million all but about
fifteen are now again in the U. S. Treasury in the
form of promises to pay signed by various Eastern
European Governments. About ten millions of it
were given by Hoover outright, in the form of special
food for child nutrition, to the under-nourished children
from the Baltic to the Black Sea. By additions
made to this charity by the Eastern European Governments
themselves and by the nationals of these countries
resident in America, and from other sources, two and
a half million weak children are today still being
given (May, 1920) a daily supplementary meal of special
food.
Hoover’s experience in Belgium
and Northern France had taught him how necessary was
the special care of the children. All the war-ravaged
countries have lost a material part of their present
generation. In some of them the drainage of human
life and strength approaches that of Germany after
the Thirty Years War and of France after the Napoleonic
wars. If they are not to suffer a racial deterioration
the coming generation must be nursed to strength.
The children, then, who are the immediately coming
generation and the producers of the ones to follow,
must be particularly cared for. That is what Hoover
gave special attention to from the beginning of his
relief work and it is what he is now still giving
most of his time and energy to.
For the general re-provisioning of
the peoples of Eastern and Central Europe all of the
various countries supplied were called on to pay for
the food at cost, plus transportation, to the extent
of their possibilities. Gold, if they had it all
of Germany’s supply was paid for in gold paper
money at current exchange, government promissory notes,
and commodities which could be sold to other countries,
made up the payments. The charity was in making
loans, providing the food, getting ships and barges
and trains and coal for its transportation, selling
it at cost, and giving the service of several hundred
active, intelligent, and sympathetic Americans, mostly
young and khaki-clothed, and a lesser group of Allied
officers, all devoted to getting the food where it
was needed and seeing that it was fairly distributed.
It is impossible to depict the utter
bewilderment and helplessness of the governments of
the liberated nations of Eastern Europe at the beginning
of the armistice period. Nor is it possible to
explain adequately the enormous difficulties they
faced in any attempt at organizing, controlling, and
caring for their peoples. With uncertain boundaries for
the demarcation of these they were waiting on a hardly
less bewildered group of eminent gentlemen in Paris;
with a financial and economic situation presenting
such appalling features of demoralization that they
could only be realized one at a time; with their people
clamoring for the immediately necessary food, fuel
and clothing, and demanding a swift realization of
all the benefits that their new freedom was to bring
them; and with an ever more menacing whistling wind
of terror blowing over them from the East with
all this, how the responsible men of the governments
which rapidly succeeded each other in these countries
retained any persistent vestiges of sanity is beyond
the comprehension of those of us who viewed the scene
at close range.
For a single but sufficient illustration
let us take the situation in the split apart fragments
of the former great Austro-Hungarian Empire,
which now constitute all or parts of German Austria,
Hungary, Czecho-Slovakia, Jugo-Slavia and Roumania.
For all these regions (except Roumania) Vienna had
for years been the center of political authority and
chief economic control. In Vienna were many of
the land-owners, most of the heads of the great industries,
and the directors of the transportation system.
It was the financial and market center, the hub of
a vast, intricate, and delicate orb-web of economic
organization. But the people and the goods of
the various separated regions, except German Austria,
the smallest, weakest, and most afflicted one of them
all, were cut off from it and all were cut off from
each other. The final political boundaries were
not yet fixed, to be sure, but actual military frontiers
were already established with all their limitations
on inter-communication and their disregard of personal
needs. Shut up within their frontiers these regions
found themselves varyingly with or without money if
they had any it was of ever-decreasing purchasing
power with or without food, fuel, and raw
materials for industry; and with lesser or larger
numbers of locomotives and railway cars, mostly lesser.
But of everything the distribution bore no calculated
relation to the needs of the industry and commerce
or even to the actual necessities of the people for
the preservation of health and life.
Vienna, itself, “die lustige
schoene Stadt Wien” was, as it still is
today and for long will be, the saddest great capital
in Europe. Reduced from its position of being
the governing, spending, and singing and dancing capital
of an empire of fifty-five million people it
never was a producing capital to be the
capital of a small, helpless nation of scant seven
million people concentrated in a region unable to meet
even their needs of food and coal Vienna
represents the pathetic extreme of the cataclysmic
results of War.
But if the situation was most complex
and hopeless in the south, it was far from simple
or hopeful in the north. Poland, the smaller Baltic
states and Finland were all in desperate plight and
their new governments were all aghast at the magnitude
of the problem before them. To add to the difficulties
of general disorganization of peoples, lack of the
necessities of life, and helplessness of governments,
there was ever continuing war. Armistice meant
something real on the West and Austro-Italian
fronts, but it meant little to Eastern Europe.
There was a score of very lively little wars going
on at once over there: Poland alone was fighting
with four different adversaries, one at each corner
of her land.
But the climax of the situation was
reached in the realization by all immediately concerned
that something saving had to be done at once, or the
whole thing would become literal anarchy, with red
and howling death rampant over all. Bolshevik
Russia, just over the Eastern borders, was not only
a vivid reality to these countries, but it was constantly
threatening to come across the borders and engulf them.
Its agents were working continuously
among their peoples; there were everywhere the sinister
signs of the possibility of a swift removal of the
frontiers of Bolshevism from their Eastern to their
Western borders. In Paris the eminent statesmen
and famous generals of the Peace Conference and the
Supreme Council sat and debated. They sent out
occasional ultimata ordering the cessation of fighting,
the retirement from a far advanced frontier, and what
not else. Inter-Allied Economic and Military
Missions came and looked on and conferred and returned.
But nobody stopped fighting, and the conferences settled
nothing. The Allies were not in a position this
need be no secret now to send adequate
forces to enforce their ultimata. An Inter-Allied
Military Mission of four generals of America, Great
Britain, France and Italy started by special train
from Cracow to Lemberg to convey personally an ultimatum
to the Ruthenians and Poles ordering them to stop fighting.
The train was shelled by the Ruthenians east of Przemsyl,
and the generals came back. Eastern Europe expected
the great powers to do something about this, but nothing
happened, and the discount on ultimata became still
more marked.
Somebody had to do something that
counted. So Hoover did it. It was not only
lives that had to be saved; it was nations. It
was not only starvation that had to be fought; it
was approaching anarchy, it was Bolshevism.
As already stated, Hoover’s
food ships had left America for Southern and Northern
European ports before Hoover’s men had even got
into the countries to be fed. As a consequence,
food deliveries closely followed food investigations.
That counted with the people. One of Hoover’s
rules was that food could only go into regions where
it could be safeguarded and controlled. That
counted against Bolshevism. Shrewd Bela Kun was
able to play a winning game in Hungary against the
Peace Conference and Supreme Councils at Paris, but
he was out-played by soft-voiced, square-jawed Captain
“Tommy” Gregory, Hoover’s general
director for Southeast Europe, and it was this same
California lawyer in khaki, turned food man, who,
when the communist Kun had passed and the pendulum
had swung as dangerously far in the other direction,
allowing the audacious Hapsburg, Archduke Joseph,
to slip into power, had done most to unseat him.
Gregory had been able to commandeer
all the former military wires in the Austro-Hungarian
countries for use in the relief work. So he was
able to keep Hoover advised of all the news, not only
promptly, but in good Americanese. His laconic
but fully descriptive message to Paris announcing
the Archduke’s passing read: “August
24th, Archie went through the hoop at 8 P. M. today.”
Relief in Eastern Europe was spelled
by Hoover with a capital R and several additional
letters. It really spelled Rehabilitation.
It meant, in addition to sending in food, straightening
out transportation, getting coal mines going, and
the starting up of direct exchange of commodities
among the unevenly supplied countries. There was
some surplus wheat in the Banat, some surplus coal
in Czecho-Slovakia, some extra locomotives in Vienna.
So under the arbitrage of himself and his lieutenants
there was set up a wholesale international bartering,
a curious reversion to the primitive ways of early
human society.
This exchange of needed goods by barter
solved in some degree the impossible financial situation,
gave the people an incentive to work, and helped reduce
political inflammation. It was practical statesmanship
meeting things as they were and not as they might more
desirably be, but were not. I say again, and
many men in the governments of Eastern Europe, and
even in the councils in Paris have said, that Hoover
saved Eastern Europe from anarchy, and held active
Bolshevism to its original frontiers. That meant
saving Western Europe, too.
Then Hoover came back to America to
be an American private citizen again. That is
what he is today. He is still carrying on two
great charities in Eastern Europe: the daily
feeding of millions of under-nourished children, and
the making possible, through his American Relief Warehouses,
for anyone in America to help any relatives or friends
anywhere in Eastern Europe by direct food gifts.
But he is doing it as private citizen. The story
of Hoover as far as I can write it today is
that of an American who saw a particular kind of service
he could render his country and Europe and humanity
in a great crisis. He rendered it, and thus most
truly helped make the world safe for Democracy and
human ideals. It would only be fair to add to
his Belgian citation the larger one of American Citizen
of the World and Friend of All the People. But
he would only be embarrassed if anyone attempted to
do it now. We can safely leave the matter to History.