Logo for Sumner Welles Papers | Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library & Museum

Sumner Welles Papers | Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library & Museum

Collection Overview

Title: Sumner Welles PapersAdd to your cart.

Primary Creator: Welles, Sumner

Extent: 113.14 Cubic Feet

Arrangement:

The Papers are divided into 14 series.

Prior to accession into the FDR Library, the collection was in the possession of Benjamin Welles, son of Sumner Welles. While in Benjamin Welles’ possession, the collection was arranged through the work of several scholars, as well as Benjamin Welles himself. This work resulted in the creation of several indexes. The scholars included Terry E. Nadeau of the Ford Foundation who did the basic organizing of the collection: removing it from storage containers, placing it in filing cabinets, and creating most of the card file, 1919-1943. The card file was completed by Mrs. Frank W. Graff, whose husband did extensive research in the papers during 1972-74. Mrs. Graff also developed the cross-filing system while assisting in the research of her husband and Mr. Benjamin Welles.

Researchers should note several filing inconsistencies in the Welles Papers. (1) Names beginning with de or d', such as D'Alessandro, were filed both under the letter D and the letter A. (2) Again, correspondence with an individual may be filed under the person's name or the institution. (3) Finally, in cases of Spanish double surnames, e.g. Maximino Avila Camacho, letters were filed under both names. Although efforts were made to regularize (1) and (3), researchers should check under both letters to be certain, and also consult the card file.

Abstract

The Sumner Welles Papers contain historical manuscript materials ranging in date from 1909 to 1959. The bulk relate to Welles' tenure as Assistant Secretary of State and Under Secretary of State, from 1933-1943. Materials include personal and official correspondence, speech and article files, scrapbooks, and documentation from other repositories gathered by family and scholars following Welles' death.

Scope and Contents of the Materials

The Sumner Welles Papers contain approximately 113 cu. ft. of historical manuscript materials, ranging in date from 1909 to 1959, the bulk related to Welles' tenure as Assistant Secretary of State and Under Secretary of State, from 1933-1943. Materials include personal and official correspondence, speech and article files, scrapbooks, and documentation from Welles' work abroad. There is also a small subject index, and special card indexes for Cuba, the Dominican Republic, and Major Correspondents, and a carded chronology of major events in the life of Sumner Welles. There is also information pertaining to his resignation in 1943. Box 91 contains some of these papers, including one folder with the title “Resignation Letters.”

Finally, there are copies of correspondence from various repositories which Mr. Benjamin Welles accumulated during the course of his research on his father's life. These are filed in chronological order at the end of the collection (Series 13).

Additional information may be found in the Barbara L. Gellman Collection. The Gellman collection consists of documents, notes, and other materials assembled by Irwin F. Gellman for his book Secret Affairs, Franklin Roosevelt, Cordell Hull, and Sumner Welles (The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995).

Collection Historical Note

Benjamin Sumner Welles (October 14, 1892 – September 24, 1961) was a US diplomat and government official, who served in the presidential administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt from 1933 until 1943.

Born in New York City on October 14, 1892, he was the son of Benjamin Sumner Welles Jr. and Frances Wyeth Swan. Welles preferred to go by the name Sumner, as opposed to his given name of Benjamin.

Sumner attended Harvard College, in the study of economics, as well as Iberian literature and culture. After graduation in 1914, Sumner entered the US State Department in the Foreign Service, on the advice of family friend, Franklin D. Roosevelt. The Welles and Roosevelt families were connected through marriage and other acquaintances. Welles’ first assignment overseas was as the third secretary in the US Embassy in Tokyo, Japan.

On April 14, 1915, Welles married Esther Slater. They had two children: Benjamin (1916) and Arnold (1918).

Welles became a specialist in Latin American affairs, also becoming fluent in Spanish. In 1919, he served in an appointment in Buenos Aires, Argentina. In 1921, Welles was appointed head of the Division of Latin American Affairs, by Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes. In March 1922, Welles resigned from the State Department over disagreement with the US Policy of using the military to protect business interests. In 1923, he returned at the request of Secretary Hughes, as special commissioner to the Dominican Republic.

Also in 1923, Welles’ wife, Esther, obtained a divorce from him on grounds of abandonment.

In 1924, President Coolidge appointed Welles mediator of a political dispute in Honduras, which resulted in a treaty. Welles then married Mathilde Scott Townsend on June 27, 1925. He was shortly thereafter dismissed by President Coolidge concerning Mathilde, who was recently divorced from the President’s friend, U.S. Senator Peter Gerry of Rhode Island.

Over the next seven years, Welles turned to writing a history of the Dominican Republic, Naboth’s Vineyard: The Dominican Republic, 1844-1924 (1928). He also served as an unofficial advisor to the Dominican Republic’s President, Horacio Vásquez.

In 1932, Welles assisted the Roosevelt presidential campaign on issues of foreign policy. The following year, President Roosevelt appointed Welles Assistant Secretary of State for Latin American Affairs. Within weeks however, he would be appointed special envoy to Cuba, to help resolve political unrest there.

In 1937, Welles was appointed Under Secretary of State by Roosevelt. As Under Secretary, Welles would become a trusted advisor of the President on foreign affairs. He developed a rivalry with Secretary of State Cordell Hull, which led to conflict within the department, as Roosevelt tended to favor both men. Welles led the U.S. delegation to the Pan American Conference in September, 1939. He would visit Europe in early 1940, to assess conditions there and to present U.S. peacemaking proposals to the war’s combatants. During his time as Under Secretary, Welles opposed the adjustment of immigration quotas to allow more Jews to escape from Germany in the late 1930s.

On July 23, 1940, while in the role of Acting Secretary of State, Welles publicly condemned the Soviet Union’s annexation of the Baltic States. Known as the “Welles Declaration,” it refused US recognition of Soviet control there.

In September, 1940, Welles accompanied FDR to Alabama for the funeral of House Speaker William B. Bankhead. On the return journey by train, while intoxicated, Welles solicited sex from two male African American porters. Reports of the incident were leaked to former US Ambassador to France, William Bullitt. Bullitt, who disliked Welles, and who sided with Hull in his rivalry with Welles, met with President Roosevelt to persuade Welles’ removal. Roosevelt felt the story was a libel campaign, and refused. Bullitt then reached out to Vice President Henry A. Wallace and Secretary Hull. Hull moved to dismiss Welles, and Bullitt next leaked the information to U.S. Senator Owen Brewster, a Roosevelt opponent. Brewster threatened a Senate inquiry. Now on the edge of a scandal, Roosevelt accepted Welles’ resignation on September 30, 1943.

After his resignation, Welles returned to speak for international causes, such as the formation of what would become the United Nations, an end to colonialism, and the establishment of Israel.

In 1944, he authored the book A Time for Decision (Harper & Brothers, 1944), in which he advocated the realignment of Germany’s borders, and the relocation of ethnic Germans, as well as the political division of Germany into 3 separate states. He also advocated for a European customs union, and the transfer of populations in Europe to align closer to international boundaries.

Welles also served as a commentator of international affairs, working with ABC Radio to provide radio commentary of the San Francisco Conference of the United Nations, in April, 1945.

He authored We Need Not Fail (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1948) which advocated a two state solution for Palestine and the establishment of the State of Israel, within an economic union. He received praise for his support of the establishment of Israel.

On December 7, 1948, Welles appeared before the House Un-American Activities Committee. He was questioned on concerns of Soviet espionage in the State Department over the Alger Hiss Case. Later that month he suffered a heart attack. He continued to be both directly and indirectly effected by the investigations into Communist activity in the Federal Government by US Senator Joseph McCarthy, for several years. His wife, Mathilde, died of peritonitis in 1949 while on vacation in Switzerland with Welles.

Welles married a third time, this time to Harriette Appleton Post, a childhood friend, on January 8, 1952.

Welles died on September 24, 1961, at age 68, in Bernardsville, New Jersey. He is buried in Rock Creek Cemetery, in Washington, D.C.

Administrative Information

Repository: Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library & Museum

Access Restrictions: None

Use Restrictions: The writings of Franklin D. Roosevelt within this collection are in the public domain. The official writings of United States government officials within this collection are in the public domain. The writings of Eleanor Roosevelt within this collection are subject to Mrs. Roosevelt's literary estate. All other materials are subject to the United States Copyright law, 17 U.S.C. 101, et seq. Copyright in the unpublished writings of Sumner Welles was donated to the United States Government

Acquisition Source: Benjamin Welles

Acquisition Method:

The Sumner Welles Papers arrived at the Roosevelt Library in July 1995 and were processed by the archives staff and opened in the spring of 1996.

The collection was donated by Mr. Benjamin Welles.

Related Materials: The Papers of Anna Eleanor Roosevelt; Franklin D. Roosevelt: Papers pertaining to Family, Business and Personal Affairs; Franklin D. Roosevelt: Papers as Assistant Secretary of the Navy; and Franklin D. Roosevelt: Papers as President of the United States, 1933 -1945; also the papers of Adolf A. Berle, Francis P. Corrigan, Herbert C. Pell, Isador Lubin, Rexford G. Tugwell, Lowell Mellet, Samuel I. Rosenman, David Gray and Henry Wallace; Louis Fischer Papers, 1938-1948; Barbara F. Gellman Papers, 1940-1991; Sumner Welles: FDR’s Global Strategist (Benjamin Welles, St. Martin’s Press, 1997); Secret Affairs: Franklin Roosevelt, Cordell Hull, and Sumner Welles (Irwin F. Gellman, The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995).

Box and Folder Listing


Browse by Series:

[Series 1: Personal Business, 1909-1950],
[Series 2: Office Correspondence, 1920-1943],
[Series 3: Personal Correspondence, 1943-1950],
[Series 4: Major Correspondents, 1925-1950],
[Series 5: Welles Mission, January-April 1940],
[Series 6: State Department Posts, 1920-1932],
[Series 7: Europe Files, 1933-1943],
[Series 8: Latin America Files, 1933-1943],
[Series 9: Postwar Foreign Policy Files, 1940-1943],
[Series 10: Speeches and Articles Files, 1928-1951],
[Series 11: Appointment Diaries, 1934-1943],
[Series 12: Scrapbooks],
[Series 13: Copies of Sumner Welles Documents, 1915-1943],
[Series 14: Additional Subject Indexes],
[All]


Series 8: Latin America Files, 1933-1943Add to your cart.

Arranged alphabetically by country. Includes files on the conferences at Buenos Aires (1936), Panama (1939) and Rio de Janeiro (1942). Additional information is also located in Office Correspondence under the name of the chief of mission.

(Boxes 167-188)


Box 167Add to your cart.

Argentina, 1919Add to your cart.

Argentina, 1919Add to your cart.

Argentina, 1919Add to your cart.

Argentina, 1934Add to your cart.

Argentina, 1935-1937Add to your cart.

Argentina, 1938Add to your cart.

Argentina, 1939-1940Add to your cart.

Argentina, 1941Add to your cart.

Argentina, 1942Add to your cart.

Argentina, 1943-1944Add to your cart.

Bolivia, 1934Add to your cart.

Box 168Add to your cart.

Bolivia, 1935-1937Add to your cart.

Bolivia, 1938-1943Add to your cart.

Brazil, 1934Add to your cart.

Brazil, 1935Add to your cart.

Brazil, 1936Add to your cart.

Brazil, Visit, December 30, 1936-December 31, 1936Add to your cart.

Brazil, 1938-1939Add to your cart.

Brazil, confidential from safe, 1938-1940Add to your cart.

Brazil, 1939Add to your cart.

Box 169Add to your cart.

Brazil, 1940Add to your cart.

Brazil, 1941Add to your cart.

Brazil, 1942Add to your cart.

Brazil, Mimary and Naval Requirements under Lend Lease, 1942Add to your cart.

Chaco, 1934-1935Add to your cart.

Chile, 1934-1936Add to your cart.

Chile, 1937-1940Add to your cart.

Chile, 1941Add to your cart.

Chile, 1942Add to your cart.

Chile, 1942Add to your cart.

Chile, 1943Add to your cart.

Columbia, 1934-1943Add to your cart.

Costa Rica, 1934-1943Add to your cart.

Box 170Add to your cart.

Cuba, 1934-1935Add to your cart.

Cuba, 1936-1937Add to your cart.

Cuba, January-September 1938Add to your cart.

Cuba, October-November 1938Add to your cart.

Cuba, November-December 1938Add to your cart.

Cuba, 1939Add to your cart.

Cuba, 1940-1941Add to your cart.

Cuba, 1942-1943Add to your cart.

Cuba, A, 1933Add to your cart.

Cuba, B, 1933Add to your cart.

Cuba, C, 1933Add to your cart.

Box 171Add to your cart.

Cuba, Congratulations, 1933Add to your cart.

Cuba, D, 1933Add to your cart.

Cuba, Duggan, Lawrence, 1933Add to your cart.

Cuba, E-F, 1933Add to your cart.

Cuba, G, 1933Add to your cart.

Cuba, H, 1933Add to your cart.

Cuba, J-K, 1933Add to your cart.

Cuba, Kent, Alexander, 1933Add to your cart.

Cuba, L, 1933Add to your cart.

Cuba, M, 1933Add to your cart.

Cuba, N-O-P, 1933Add to your cart.

Cuba, R-W, 1933Add to your cart.

Cuba, A, 1934Add to your cart.

Box 172Add to your cart.

Cuba, B, 1934Add to your cart.

Cuba, C-D, 1934Add to your cart.

Cuba, E-F, 1934Add to your cart.

Cuba, G, 1934Add to your cart.

Cuba, H, 1934Add to your cart.

Cuba, J-K, 1934Add to your cart.

Cuba, L, 1934Add to your cart.

Cuba, Ma, 1934Add to your cart.

Cuba, Me-Mu, 1934Add to your cart.

Cuba, N, 1934Add to your cart.

Cuba, P, 1934Add to your cart.

Cuba, R-Sh, 1934Add to your cart.

Box 173Add to your cart.

Cuba, Si-W, 1934Add to your cart.

Cuba, A-B, 1935Add to your cart.

Cuba, C-F, 1935Add to your cart.

Cuba, G-L, 1935Add to your cart.

Cuba, M, 1935Add to your cart.

Cuba, N-R, 1935Add to your cart.

Cuba, S, 1935Add to your cart.

Cuba, T-W, 1935Add to your cart.

Box 174Add to your cart.

Cuba, A-B, 1936Add to your cart.

Cuba, C-F, 1936Add to your cart.

Cuba, G-M, 1936Add to your cart.

Cuba, N-Z, 1936Add to your cart.

Cuba, Arbitration Treaty, 1934-1935Add to your cart.

Cuba, ClippingsAdd to your cart.

Cuba, Comercial Agreement Negotiations, 1934Add to your cart.

Cuba Commercial Treaty, 1934Add to your cart.

Cuba Commercial Treaty, 1934Add to your cart.

Box 175Add to your cart.

Cuba, Congratulations, 1933-1934Add to your cart.

Cuba, ConstitutionAdd to your cart.

Cuba, ConstitutionAdd to your cart.

Cuba, Conversations, 1933-1934Add to your cart.

Cuba, Election Decree Law, DraftAdd to your cart.

Cuba, Election Decree Law, DraftAdd to your cart.

Cuba, Electoral Reform, McBain ReportAdd to your cart.

Cuba, Codigo ElectoralAdd to your cart.

Box 176Add to your cart.

Cuba, Encyclopedia Article, 1934Add to your cart.

Cuba, Essentials, 1933Add to your cart.

Cuba, Financial AidAdd to your cart.

Cuba, GeneralAdd to your cart.

Cuba, GeneralAdd to your cart.

Cuba, History, 1929Add to your cart.

Cuba, Political (Personal & Confidential)Add to your cart.

Cuba, Political (Personal & Confidential)Add to your cart.

Cuba, Political (Personal & Confidential)Add to your cart.

Cuba, Political (Personal & Confidential)Add to your cart.

Box 177Add to your cart.

Cuba, SugarAdd to your cart.

Cuba, Telephone NumbersAdd to your cart.

Cuba, Treaty of RelationsAdd to your cart.

Dominican Republic, 1925Add to your cart.

Dominican Republic, 1934-1936Add to your cart.

Dominican Republic, 1937-1942Add to your cart.

Ecuador, 1934-1936Add to your cart.

Ecuador, 1937Add to your cart.

Ecuador, 1939-1940Add to your cart.

Ecuador, 1941Add to your cart.

Ecuador, 1942-1943Add to your cart.

Box 178Add to your cart.

El Salvador, 1934-1943Add to your cart.

Estrada DoctrineAdd to your cart.

Guatemala, 1934-1943Add to your cart.

Haiti, 1934-1937Add to your cart.

Haiti, 1938-1939Add to your cart.

Haiti, 1940-1941Add to your cart.

Haiti, 1942-1943Add to your cart.

Honduras, 1937-1942Add to your cart.

Mexico, 1935-1937Add to your cart.

Mexico, 1937Add to your cart.

Mexico Water TreatyAdd to your cart.

Mexico OilAdd to your cart.

Box 179Add to your cart.

Mexico, January-March 1938Add to your cart.

Mexico, April-November 1938Add to your cart.

Mexico, 1939Add to your cart.

Mexico, 1940Add to your cart.

Mexico, 1941Add to your cart.

Mexico, 1942Add to your cart.

Mexico, 1943Add to your cart.

Mexico City Conference, 1945Add to your cart.

Nicaragua, 1937-1943Add to your cart.

Box 180Add to your cart.

Panama, 1934Add to your cart.

Panama, 1934Add to your cart.

Panama, January-July 1935Add to your cart.

Panama, August-December 1935Add to your cart.

Panama, Drafts of Agreements with the United States, March 1935Add to your cart.

Panama Conferences: Mr. Castle's Memoranda, 1934-1936Add to your cart.

Panama, 1936Add to your cart.

Box 181Add to your cart.

Panama, Treaty with, 1936Add to your cart.

Panama, 1938-1943Add to your cart.

Panama, Printed MaterialsAdd to your cart.

Paraguay, 1934-1935Add to your cart.

Paraguay, 1936-1940Add to your cart.

Paraguay, 1941Add to your cart.

Paraguay, 1942-1943Add to your cart.

Peru, 1934-1936Add to your cart.

Peru, 1937Add to your cart.

Peru, 1938-1940Add to your cart.

Peru, 1941Add to your cart.

Peru, 1942-1943Add to your cart.

Box 182Add to your cart.

Uruguay, 1934-1940Add to your cart.

Uruguay, 1941Add to your cart.

Uruguay, 1942-1943Add to your cart.

Venezuela, 1935-1939Add to your cart.

Venezuela, 1940-1941Add to your cart.

Venezuela, 1942-1943Add to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference: Invitations, 1936Add to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference: Responses, 1936Add to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference: Translations of Responses, 1936Add to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference: Published Replies to Invitations, 1936Add to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference: Personnel, 1936Add to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference: Inter-American HighwayAdd to your cart.

Box 183Add to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference, Draft ProjectsAdd to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference, Economic MattersAdd to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference, Program CommitteeAdd to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference, L.S. Rowe MemorandaAdd to your cart.

Bueno Aires Conference, Memoranda re AgendaAdd to your cart.

Bueno Aires Conference, Memoranda re AgendaAdd to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference, NeutralityAdd to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference, Women's OrganizationAdd to your cart.

Box 184Add to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference, ClippingsAdd to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference, ClippingsAdd to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference, Printed MaterialsAdd to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference, U.S. Printed DocumentsAdd to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference, Miscellaneous Printed DocumentsAdd to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference, Resolutions, Recommendations, DeclarationsAdd to your cart.

Box 185Add to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference, Project of Program, May 19, 1936Add to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference, Proyecto de Reglamento, May 19, 1936Add to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference, Project of Regulations, July 22, 1936Add to your cart.

Buenos Aires Conference, Final Act, December 1936Add to your cart.

Panama Conference, Diario, September 1939Add to your cart.

Box 186Add to your cart.

Panama Conference, 1939Add to your cart.

Panama Conference, 1939Add to your cart.

Panama Conference, 1939Add to your cart.

Panama Conference, 1939Add to your cart.

Panama Conference, 1939Add to your cart.

Panama Conference, 1939Add to your cart.

Panama Conference, 1939Add to your cart.

Rio Conference, 1942Add to your cart.

Rio Conference, 1942Add to your cart.

Box 187Add to your cart.

Rio Conference, 1942Add to your cart.

Rio Conference, 1942Add to your cart.

Rio Conference, 1942Add to your cart.

Rio Conference, Chiefs of Mission Correspondence, 1942Add to your cart.

Rio Conference, Chiefs of Mission Correspondence, 1942Add to your cart.

Rio Conference, Final Act, 1942Add to your cart.

Rio Conference, Final Act, 1942Add to your cart.

Washington Conference, 1922Add to your cart.

Box 188Add to your cart.

Castle, H. Bayne: Correspondence, 1934-1936Add to your cart.

Castle Memoranda: Cuba-Santo DomingoAdd to your cart.

Castle Memoranda: Panama, 1934Add to your cart.

Castle Memoranda, 1935-1936Add to your cart.

Lozada, Enrique: Writings on Bolivia and HondurasAdd to your cart.

Lozada, Enrique: Writings on HondurasAdd to your cart.

Browse by Series:

[Series 1: Personal Business, 1909-1950],
[Series 2: Office Correspondence, 1920-1943],
[Series 3: Personal Correspondence, 1943-1950],
[Series 4: Major Correspondents, 1925-1950],
[Series 5: Welles Mission, January-April 1940],
[Series 6: State Department Posts, 1920-1932],
[Series 7: Europe Files, 1933-1943],
[Series 8: Latin America Files, 1933-1943],
[Series 9: Postwar Foreign Policy Files, 1940-1943],
[Series 10: Speeches and Articles Files, 1928-1951],
[Series 11: Appointment Diaries, 1934-1943],
[Series 12: Scrapbooks],
[Series 13: Copies of Sumner Welles Documents, 1915-1943],
[Series 14: Additional Subject Indexes],
[All]