STRAUSS, Lewis, RADM

Deceased
 
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Last Rank
Rear Admiral Upper Half
Last Rating/NEC Group
Line Officer
Primary Unit
1944-1945, Under Secretary of the Navy (UNSECNAV), Secretary of the Navy (SECNAV)
Service Years
1925 - 1946
Rear Admiral Upper Half Rear Admiral Upper Half

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Home State
West Virginia
West Virginia
Year of Birth
1896
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by Steven Loomis (SaigonShipyard), IC3 to remember STRAUSS, Lewis (DSM / PMOF), RADM.

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Contact Info
Home Town
Charleston, Kanawha County, WV
Last Address
Strauss died in Brandy Station,
Culpeper County Virginia, USA

Burial: Hebrew Cemetery
Richmond/Richmond City Virginia
Date of Passing
Jan 21, 1974
 

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Office of the Secretary of Defense WW II Honorable Discharge Pin


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 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

Rear Admiral Lewis L. Strauss

Awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Eisenhower in 1958
The Distinguished Service Medal, Legion of Merit, French Legion of Honor
and the Belgian Order of Leopold.



Lewis Lichtenstein Strauss (January 31, 1896 – January 21, 1974) (pronounced "straws") was an American  Jewish  businessman, public official, and naval officer. He was a major figure in the development of nuclear weapons and nuclear power in the U.S.

"Lewis Lichtenstein Strauss, Jr. was born on January 31, 1896 in Charleston, West Virginia, to Lewis and Rosa (Lichtenstein) Strauss. He grew up in Richmond, and became a traveling salesman for his family's wholesale shoe business. In 1917, he presented himself to Herbert C. Hoover. At the time, Hoover was organizing volunteers in the cause of Belgian relief. Later, when Hoover became head of the Food Administration, Lewis L. Strauss became his personal secretary and accompanied him on several European missions. He worked for Hoover's election to the presidency in 1928, and maintained a life-long friendship with President Hoover until the latter's death in 1964.

"In 1958, President Eisenhower appointed Lewis L. Strauss to be Acting Secretary of Commerce, and in 1959 he nominated him for the position. After a protracted public debate concerning ethical considerations, and one in which the specter of anti-Semitism was also raised, the Senate refused to confirm Lewis L. Strauss' nomination. Following this episode, Lewis L. Strauss returned to private life. On January 21,1974, Lewis L. Strauss died at the age of 78 at his home in Brandy Station, West Virginia."

In 1925 Strauss was commissioned in the naval reserve as an intelligence officer; in 1941 he was called up for active duty. He soon wound up working for Secretary of the Navy Frank Know. [Knox, formerly of the Chicago Daily News, was an old friend of Albert Lasker; Lasker's son Edward also served in his office -cast.] "Soon after Knox's death in May 1944, Forrestal created a special position in the Navy Department for Strauss as his personal 'trouble shooter'. Strauss also came to the attention of President Truman as a result of his tenure on an inter-service committee on the future role of atomic energy. [Mary Lasker's close connections to Truman perhaps also helped -cast.] A few months later, in July 1946, Truman appointed Strauss as one of the commissioners of the new and highly controversial Atomic Energy Commission," where he served from 1946-50 and 1953-58.

   
Other Comments:

Strauss' mother had also encouraged him to perform some kind of public or humanitarian service. It was 1917. World War I was raging in Europe, and Herbert Hoover was head of the Committee for Relief in Belgium  (CRB). Strauss volunteered to serve without pay as Hoover's assistant. Strauss worked hard and well, and soon was promoted to Hoover's private secretary, a post in which he made powerful contacts that would serve him later on. His service with the CRB lasted till 1919.

Despite his disqualification for regular military duty --he was valedictorian of his high school class, though due to typhoid fever in his senior year, he was unable to graduate with his class --Strauss applied to join the Navy Reserve in 1925, and received an officer's commission. In 1939 and 1940, as World War II began, he volunteered for active duty, and in 1941, he was called up. He was assigned to the Bureau of Ordance, where he helped organize and manage Navy munitions work. His contributions were recognized by Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox, and he served on the Army-Navy Munitions Board and the Naval Reserve Policy Board.

When James V. Forrestal succeeded Knox in 1944, he employed Strauss as his personal trouble-shooter. and he became  adviser to Navy Undersecretary Forrestal. He directed the development of the radar proximity fuse, conceived of the Big "E" war production incentive program, and in  November 1945, after the war, he was promoted to Rear Admiral by President Truman. In 1946, Truman appointed Lewis L. Strauss to serve on the Atomic Energy Commission, on which he served through 1950. In 1953, President Eisenhower reappointed Lewis L. Strauss to the commission, this time as its chairman.

   

  Lewis Lichtenstein Strauss
   
Date
Not Specified

Last Updated:
Jun 23, 2010
   
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Lewis Lichtenstein Strauss Born in Charleston, Kanawha County, WV. Republican. Member of Republican National Committee from Virginia, 1928; served in the U.S. Navy during World War II; U.S. Secretary of Commerce, 1958-59. American financier, chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission (1953-58), In World War I he served under Herbert Hoover on the Belgian Relief Commission and the Allied Supreme Economic Council. He was a special assistant to Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal in World War II, rising to the rank of rear admiral. Associated with Kuhn, Loeb & Company from 1919, as a partner after 1929, he resigned in 1946. Strauss was a member of the Atomic Energy Commission from 1946 to 1950 and returned as its chairman in 1953. His service on the AEC was marked by several controversies, including one with the atomic physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer, who had opposed development of the hydrogen bomb, a project Strauss strongly advocated. His term as AEC chairman ended in June, 1958, and President Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed him (Nov., 1958) Secretary of Commerce. Strauss held this office until June, 1959, when the Senate, in a close vote, refused to confirm the appointment. Died January 21, 1974, Brandy Station, Culpeper Co., Virginia. Lewis Lichtenstein Strauss, Jr. was born on January 31, 1896 to Lewis and Rosa (Lichtenstein) Strauss. He grew up in Richmond, and became a traveling salesman for his family's wholesale shoe business. In 1917, he presented himself to Herbert C. Hoover. At the time, Hoover was organizing volunteers in the cause of Belgian relief. Later, when Hoover became head of the Food Administration, Lewis L. Strauss became his personal secretary and accompanied him on several European missions. He worked for Hoover's election to the presidency in 1928, and maintained a life-long friendship with President Hoover until the latter's death in 1964. In 1919, Lewis L. Strauss was hired by the investment firm Kuhn, Loeb & Company, and in 1923 he married Alice Hanauer, a daughter of a partner in the firm. In 1929, he himself became a partner in the firm. One of Kuhn, Loeb & Company's founders was Jacob Schiff, the important American Jewish leader and philanthropist. As a result of Lewis L. Strauss' association with Kuhn, Loeb &. Company, he became friendly with many wealthy and influential American Jewish figures, especially the core members of the American Jewish Committee. Between 1950 and 1953, he served as financial adviser to the Rockefeller family. Lewis L. Strauss maintained a keen interest in scientific and technological advancements, and was an early investor in Kodachrome. After the death of his parents from cancer, his interest in the atom led him to fund the construction of a surge generator to produce isotopes for cancer treatment. Beginning in 1926, Lewis L. Strauss was in the Navy Reserve, and he entered active duty in 1941, becoming adviser to Navy Undersecretary James Forrestal. He directed the development of the radar proximity fuse, conceived of the Big "E" war production incentive program, and in 1945 was promoted to the rank of Rear Admiral by President Truman. In 1946, Truman appointed Lewis L. Strauss to serve on the Atomic Energy Commission, on which he served through 1950. In 1953, President Eisenhower reappointed Lewis L. Strauss to the commission, this time as its chairman. As the breadth of the Papers of Admiral Lewis L. Strauss illustrates, Lewis L. Strauss was deeply committed to American Jewish life and Jewish welfare generally. He served as a member of the board of directors of several important Jewish philanthropic, academic and communal organizations, and he also maintained a special interest in inter-religious affairs. In his lifetime, Lewis L. Strauss was thrust into public controversy on several occasions. In the 1920s and 1930s, he played a central role in combating the anti-Semitic propaganda of Henry Ford and Father Charles E. Coughlin. Also beginning in this period, he became a leading member of the American Jewish Committee and embroiled in disputes over Zionism and American Jewish politics, notably the American Jewish Conference. Later, during his tenure as chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, he attracted public attention when the White House suspended the security clearance of Commissioner J. Robert Oppenheimer. Lewis L. Strauss eventually voted against Oppenheimer's reinstatement to the Atomic Energy Commission, but he did seek to have him retained in the Princeton Institute for Advanced Study and other nuclear research enterprises. In 1954, another controversy flared when the Atomic Energy Commission engaged the Dixon-Yates combine to erect a power plant in West Memphis, Arkansas. Lewis L. Strauss, a deeply conservative Republican, was eager then to admit private industry into the nuclear field. But liberals saw in the Dixon-Yates contract a threat to the Tennessee Valley Authority and public power. They attacked the contract so vigorously that President Eisenhower canceled it in 1955. In 1958, President Eisenhower appointed Lewis L. Strauss to be Acting Secretary of Commerce, and in 1959 he nominated him for the position. After a protracted public debate concerning ethical considerations, and one in which the specter of anti-Semitism was also raised, the Senate refused to confirm Lewis L. Strauss' nomination. Following this episode, Lewis L. Strauss returned to private life. On January 21,1974, Lewis L. Strauss died at the age of 78 at his home in Brandy Station, Culpeper Co., Virginia.

   
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Eisenhower and Strauss
RADM L.L. Strauss
RADM L.L. Strauss
RADM L.L. Strauss

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