The National Civil Liberties Bureau and the Woodrow Wilson Administration

by: Pro­fes­sor Samuel Walker
School of Crim­i­nal Justice
Uni­ver­sity of Nebraska at Omaha

This is part of a series that was intro­duced ear­lier.

Roger Bald­win and Crys­tal East­man began their work with the Civil Lib­er­ties Bureau con­fi­dent that they had good rela­tions with offi­cials in the Woodrow Wil­son admin­is­tra­tion. Many of these peo­ple knew each other from their pre-war work on Pro­gres­sive Era reform. Begin­ning in early 1918, how­ever, Mil­i­tary Intel­li­gence and the Jus­tice Depart­ment began to regard the Bureau’s work as a vio­la­tion of the Espi­onage Act, on the grounds that it encour­aged draft age young men to either not reg­is­ter for the draft or refuse to par­tic­i­pate if drafted. The doc­u­ments in this sec­tion reveal the dete­ri­o­ra­tion of the rela­tion­ship between the Bureau and the Wil­son admin­is­tra­tion and the final break. Par­tic­u­larly shock­ing to mod­ern per­spec­tives, Bald­win tried to main­tain the rela­tion­ship by coop­er­at­ing with the gov­ern­ment, even to the point of offer­ing to cease cer­tain actions and also by pro­vid­ing con­fi­den­tial infor­ma­tion to gov­ern­ment offi­cials. In the end, the Jus­tice Depart­ment raided the Civil Lib­er­ties Bureau office (along with the offices of many other orga­ni­za­tions) on August 30, 1918.

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These let­ters from Roger Bald­win to Fred­er­ick Kep­pel, Third Assis­tant Sec­re­tary of War and New­ton D. Baker, Sec­re­tary of War, June 1917, offers his assur­ance of his eager­ness to coop­er­ate with the Wil­son admin­is­tra­tion. Kep­pel had been a Dean at Colum­bia Uni­ver­sity, and Baker had been a noted reform mayor of Cleve­land, Ohio. Bald­win states that “We are entirely at the ser­vice of the War Department.”

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This cor­dial let­ter of July 7, 1917 from Sec­re­tary of War Baker to Roger Bald­win indi­cates the degree of trust and coop­er­a­tion that pre­vailed in the early months of the war.

 

 

 

 

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This cor­dial let­ter to Roger Bald­win of Sep­tem­ber 27, 1917 from Felix Frank­furter, an offi­cial in the War Depart­ment, thanks Bald­win and other civil lib­er­tar­i­ans for their help­ful efforts and expresses con­fi­dence that the con­cerns of the Civil Lib­er­ties Bureau will be resolved. Frank­furter was not directly involved in any civil lib­er­ties issues dur­ing the war, and did not object to the government’s actions. He became a mem­ber of the ACLU National Com­mit­tee in 1920 and was appointed a Jus­tice of the U.S. Supreme Court in 1939.

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