Joseph Raymond McCarthy
(November 14, 1908 – May 2, 1957) was an American
politician
who served as a Republican U.S. Senator from the state of Wisconsin
from 1947 until his death in 1957. Beginning
in 1950, McCarthy became the most visible public face of a period
in which
Cold War tensions fueled fears of
widespread
Communist subversion.For a history of this
period, see, for example:
He was
noted for making claims that there were large numbers of Communists
and Soviet
spies and
sympathizers inside the United States federal government and
elsewhere. Ultimately, McCarthy's tactics and his inability
to substantiate his claims led him to be
censured by the United States
Senate. The term
McCarthyism,
coined in 1950 in reference to McCarthy's practices, was soon
applied to similar
anti-communist
pursuits. Today the term is used more generally to describe
demagogic, reckless, and unsubstantiated
accusations, as well as public attacks on the character or
patriotism of political opponents.
Born and raised on a Wisconsin farm, McCarthy earned a law degree
at
Marquette
University in 1935 and was elected as a
circuit judge in 1939, the youngest
in state history. At age 33, McCarthy volunteered for the
United States Marine Corps and
served during
World War II. He
successfully ran for the United States Senate in 1946, defeating
Robert M. La Follette, Jr. After several
largely undistinguished years in the Senate, McCarthy rose suddenly
to national fame in February 1950 when he asserted in a speech that
he had a list of "members of the Communist Party and members of a
spy ring" who were employed in the State
Department
. McCarthy was never able to prove his
sensational charge.
In succeeding years, McCarthy made additional accusations of
Communist infiltration into the State Department, the
administration of
President Truman,
Voice of America, and the
United States Army. He also used charges
of communism, communist sympathies, or disloyalty to attack a
number of politicians and other individuals inside and outside of
government. With the highly publicized
Army–McCarthy hearings of
1954, McCarthy's support and popularity began to fade. On December
2, 1954, the Senate voted to censure Senator McCarthy by a vote of
67 to 22, making him one of the few senators ever to be disciplined
in this fashion.
McCarthy died in Bethesda Naval
Hospital
on May 2, 1957, at the age of 48. The
official cause of death was acute
hepatitis; it is widely accepted that this was
exacerbated by alcoholism.See, for example:
,
,
Early life and career
McCarthy
was born on a farm in the Town of Grand Chute,
Wisconsin
, near Appleton
, the fifth of seven children.His mother, Bridget
Tierney, was from County Tipperary
, Ireland. His father, Timothy McCarthy, was
born in the United States, the son of an Irish father and a German
mother. McCarthy dropped out of junior high school at age 14 to
help his parents manage their farm.
He entered Little Wolf High School, in
Manawa,
Wisconsin
, when he was
20 and graduated in one year. McCarthy worked his
way through college, from 1930 to 1935, studying first engineering,
then law, and eventually earning a law degree at Marquette
University
in Milwaukee
. He was admitted to the
bar in 1935.
While working in a law firm in Shawano,
Wisconsin
, he launched an unsuccessful campaign to become
district attorney as a Democrat in 1936.
However, in 1939, McCarthy had better success: he successfully vied
for the elected post of the non-partisan 10th District
circuit judge. During his years as
an attorney, McCarthy made money on the side by gambling.
McCarthy's judicial career attracted some controversy due to the
speed with which he dispatched many of his cases. He had inherited
a docket with a heavy backlog and he worked constantly to clear it.
At times he compensated for his lack of experience by demanding,
and relying heavily upon, precise briefs from the contesting
attorneys.
Significantly, the Wisconsin
Supreme Court
reversed a relatively low percentage of the cases
he heard.
Military service
Joseph McCarthy in his U.S.
In 1942, shortly after the U.S. entered World War II, McCarthy was
commissioned into the
United
States Marine Corps, despite the fact that his judicial office
exempted him from compulsory service. His position as a judge
qualified him for an automatic
commission as
an officer, and he became a
second lieutenant after
completing
basic training.
He served
as an intelligence briefing
officer for a dive bomber squadron in
the Solomon
Islands
and Bougainville
. McCarthy reportedly chose the Marines with
the hope that being a veteran of this branch of the military would
serve him best in his future political career. He would leave the
Marines with the rank of
captain.It is well documented that
McCarthy lied about his war record. Despite his automatic
commission, he claimed to have enlisted as a "buck private." He
flew twelve combat missions as a gunner-observer, earning the
nickname of "Tail-Gunner Joe" in the course of one of these
missions. He later claimed 32 missions in order to qualify for a
Distinguished
Flying Cross, which he received in 1952. McCarthy publicized a
letter of commendation which he claimed had been signed by his
commanding officer and countersigned by Admiral
Chester W. Nimitz, then Chief of Naval Operations.
However, it was revealed that McCarthy had written this letter
himself, in his capacity as intelligence officer. A "war wound"
that McCarthy made the subject of varying stories involving
airplane crashes or antiaircraft fire was in fact received aboard
ship during an
initiation
ceremony for sailors who cross the equator for the first
time.
McCarthy campaigned for the Republican Senate nomination in
Wisconsin while still on active duty in 1944 but was defeated for
the GOP
nomination by
Alexander Wiley, the incumbent. He resigned
his commission in April 1945, five months before the end of the
Pacific war in September 1945. He was then reelected unopposed to
his circuit court position, and began a much more systematic
campaign for the 1946 Republican Senate
primary nomination. In this race, he was
challenging three-term senator and
Wisconsin Progressive Party icon
Robert M. La Follette, Jr.
Senate campaign
In his
campaign, McCarthy attacked La Follette for not enlisting during
the war, although La Follette had been 46 when Pearl Harbor
was bombed. He also claimed La Follette had
made huge profits from his investments while he, McCarthy, had been
away fighting for his country. In fact, McCarthy had invested in
the stock market himself during the war, netting a profit of
$42,000 in 1943. La Follette's investments consisted of partial
interest in a radio station, which earned him a profit of $47,000
over two years. The suggestion that La Follette had been guilty of
war profiteering was deeply
damaging, and McCarthy won the primary nomination 207,935 votes to
202,557. It was during this campaign that McCarthy started
publicizing his war-time nickname "Tail-Gunner Joe," using the
slogan, "Congress needs a tail-gunner."
Arnold Beichman later reported that McCarthy
"was elected to his first term in the Senate with support from the
Communist-controlled
United
Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers,
CIO," which preferred
McCarthy to the anti-communist Robert M. La Follette.In the general
election against Democratic opponent
Howard J. McMurray, McCarthy won 61.2% to Democrat
McMurray's 37.3%, and thus joined Senator Wiley, whom he had
challenged unsuccessfully two years earlier, in the Senate.
United States Senate
McCarthy's first three years in the Senate were unremarkable.
McCarthy was a popular speaker, invited by many different
organizations, covering a wide range of topics. His aides and many
in the Washington social circle described him as charming and
friendly, and he was a popular guest at cocktail parties. He was
far less well-liked among fellow senators, however, who found him
quick-tempered and prone to impatience and even rage. Outside of a
small circle of colleagues, he was soon an isolated figure in the
Senate.
He was active in labor-management issues, with a reputation as a
moderate Republican. He fought against continuation of wartime
price controls, especially on sugar. His advocacy in this area was
associated by critics with a $20,000 personal loan McCarthy
received from a
Pepsi bottling executive,
earning the Senator the derisive nickname "The Pepsi Cola Kid."He
supported the
Taft–Hartley
Act over Truman's
veto, angering labor
unions in Wisconsin but solidifying his business base.
In an
incident for which he would be widely criticized, McCarthy lobbied
for the commutation of death sentences given to a group of Waffen-SS soldiers convicted of war crimes for
carrying out the 1944 Malmedy massacre
of American prisoners of war. McCarthy was
critical of the convictions because of allegations of torture
during the interrogations that led to the German soldiers'
confessions. He charged that the U.S. Army was engaged in a coverup
of judicial misconduct, but never presented any evidence to support
the accusation.Shortly after this, a poll of the Senate press corps
voted McCarthy "the worst U.S. senator" currently in office.
Wheeling speech
McCarthy
experienced a meteoric rise in national profile on February 9,
1950, when he gave a Lincoln Day speech
to the Republican Women's Club of Wheeling,
West Virginia
. His words in the speech are a matter of
some debate, as no audio recording was saved.
However, it is
generally agreed that he produced a piece of paper that he claimed
contained a list of known Communists working for the State
Department
. McCarthy is usually quoted to have said:
"The State Department is infested with communists. I have here in
my hand a list of 205—a list of names that were made known to the
Secretary of
State as being members of the Communist Party and who
nevertheless are still working and shaping policy in the State
Department."
There is some dispute about whether or not McCarthy actually gave
the number of people on the list as being "205" or "57". In a later
telegram to President Truman, and when entering the speech into the
Congressional Record, he used
the number 57.The origin of the number 205 can be traced: In later
debates on the Senate floor, McCarthy referred to a 1946 letter
that then–
Secretary of
State James Byrnes sent to
Congressman
Adolph J. Sabath. In that letter, Byrnes said State
Department security investigations had resulted in "recommendation
against permanent employment" for 284 persons, and that 79 of these
had been removed from their jobs; this left 205 still on the State
Department's payroll. In fact, by the time of McCarthy's speech
only about 65 of the employees mentioned in the Byrnes letter were
still with the State Department, and all of these had undergone
further security checks.
At the time of McCarthy's speech, communism was a growing concern
in the United States. This concern was exacerbated by the actions
of the Soviet Union in
Eastern
Europe, the
fall
of China to the communists, the Soviets' development of the
atomic bomb the year before, and by
the contemporary controversy surrounding
Alger Hiss and the confession of Soviet spy
Klaus Fuchs. With this background and
due to the sensational nature of McCarthy's charge against the
State Department, the Wheeling speech soon attracted a flood of
press interest in McCarthy.
Tydings Committee
McCarthy himself was taken aback by the massive media response to
the Wheeling speech, and he was accused of continually revising
both his charges and his figures.
In Salt Lake City
, Utah
, a few days
later, he cited a figure of 57, and in the Senate on February 20,
he claimed 81. During a five-hour speech, McCarthy presented
a case-by-case analysis of his 81 "loyalty risks" employed at the
State Department. It is widely accepted that most of McCarthy's
cases were selected from the so-called "Lee list", a report that
had been compiled three years earlier for the
House
Appropriations Committee.
Led by a former FBI
agent named Robert E. Lee, the House
investigators had reviewed security clearance documents on State
Department employees, and had determined that there were "incidents
of inefficiencies"in the security reviews of 108 employees.
McCarthy hid the source of his list, stating that he had penetrated
the "iron curtain" of State Department secrecy with the aid of
"some good, loyal Americans in the State Department." In reciting
the information from the Lee list cases, McCarthy consistently
exaggerated, representing the hearsay of witnesses as facts and
converting phrases such as "inclined towards Communism" to "a
Communist."
In response to McCarthy's charges, the
Tydings Committee hearings were called.
This was a subcommittee of the
United
States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations set up in February
1950 to conduct "a full and complete study and investigation as to
whether persons who are disloyal to the United States are, or have
been, employed by the Department of State."
Congressional
Record, 81st Congress, 2nd session, pp 2062-2068; quoted
in:
Many
Democratic
Party politicians were incensed at McCarthy's attack on the
State Department of a Democratic administration, and had hoped to
use the hearings to discredit him. The Democratic chairman of the
subcommittee, Senator
Millard
Tydings, was reported to have said, "Let me have him [McCarthy]
for three days in public hearings, and he'll never show his face in
the Senate again."
During the hearings, McCarthy moved on from his original unnamed
Lee list cases and used the hearings to make charges against nine
specific people:
Dorothy Kenyon,
Esther Brunauer, Haldore Hanson, Gustavo Duran,
Owen Lattimore,
Harlow Shapley, Frederick Schuman,
John S. Service, and
Philip
Jessup. Some of them no longer worked for the State Department,
or never had; all had previously been the subject of charges of
varying worth and validity. Owen Lattimore became a particular
focus of McCarthy's, who at one point described him as a "top
Russian spy." Throughout the hearings, McCarthy employed colorful
rhetoric, but produced no substantial evidence, to support his
accusations.
From its beginning, the Tydings Committee was marked by partisan
infighting. Its final report, written by the Democratic majority,
concluded that the individuals on McCarthy's list were neither
Communists nor pro-communist, and said the State Department had an
effective security program. The Tydings Report labeled McCarthy's
charges a "fraud and a hoax," and said that the result of
McCarthy's actions was to "confuse and divide the American people
[...] to a degree far beyond the hopes of the Communists
themselves." Republicans responded in kind, with
William E. Jenner stating that Tydings was guilty of
"the most brazen whitewash of treasonable conspiracy in our
history."The full Senate voted three times on whether to accept the
report, and each time the voting was precisely divided along party
lines.
Fame and notoriety
From 1950 onward, McCarthy continued to exploit the
fear of Communism and to press his accusations
that the government was failing to deal with Communism within its
ranks. These accusations received wide publicity, increased his
approval rating, and gained him a powerful national
following.
McCarthy's methods also brought on the disapproval and opposition
of many. Barely a month after McCarthy's Wheeling speech, the term
"McCarthyism" was coined by
Washington Post cartoonist
Herbert Block. Block and others used the word as a
synonym for
demagoguery, baseless
defamation, and mudslinging. Later, it would be embraced by
McCarthy and some of his supporters. "McCarthyism is Americanism
with its sleeves rolled," McCarthy said in a 1952 speech, and later
that year he published a book titled
McCarthyism: The Fight For
America.
McCarthy has been accused of attempting to discredit his critics
and political opponents by accusing them of being Communists or
communist sympathizers. In the 1950 Maryland Senate election,
McCarthy campaigned for
John
Marshall Butler in his race against four-term incumbent
Millard Tydings, with whom McCarthy
had been in conflict during the Tydings Committee hearings. In
speeches supporting Butler, McCarthy accused Tydings of "protecting
Communists" and "shielding traitors." McCarthy's staff was heavily
involved in the campaign, and collaborated in the production of a
campaign tabloid that contained a composite photograph doctored to
make it appear that Tydings was in intimate conversation with
Communist leader
Earl Russell
Browder.A Senate subcommittee later investigated this election
and referred to it as "a despicable, back-street type of campaign,"
as well as recommending that the use of defamatory literature in a
campaign be made grounds for expulsion from the Senate.
In addition to the Tydings-Butler race, McCarthy campaigned for
several other Republicans in the
1950 elections,
including that of
Everett Dirksen
against Democratic incumbent and Senate Majority Leader
Scott W. Lucas.
Dirksen, and indeed all the candidates McCarthy supported won their
elections, and those he opposed lost. The elections, including many
that McCarthy was not involved in, were an overall Republican
sweep. Although his impact on the elections was unclear, McCarthy
was credited as a key Republican campaigner. He was now regarded as
one of the most powerful men in the Senate and was treated with
new-found deference by his colleagues.In the 1952 Senate elections
McCarthy was returned to his Senate seat with 54.2% of the vote,
compared to Democrat Thomas Fairchild's 45.6%.
In 1950 McCarthy assaulted journalist
Drew Pearson in the cloakroom of a
Washington club, reportedly kneeing him in the groin. McCarthy, who
admitted the assault, claimed he merely "slapped" Pearson. In 1952,
using rumors collected by Pearson, Nevada publisher
Hank Greenspun wrote that McCarthy was a
homosexual. The major journalistic media refused to print the
story, and no notable McCarthy biographer has accepted the rumor as
probable. In 1953 McCarthy married Jean Kerr, a researcher in his
office. He and his wife adopted a baby girl, whom they named
Tierney Elizabeth McCarthy, in January 1957.
McCarthy and the Truman administration

President Harry S.
McCarthy and
President Truman
clashed often during the years both held office. McCarthy
characterized Truman and the Democratic Party as soft on, or even
in league with, Communists, and spoke of the Democrats' "twenty
years of treason".
Truman, in turn, once referred to McCarthy
as "the best asset the Kremlin
has," calling McCarthy's actions an attempt to
"sabotage the foreign policy of the United States" in a cold war
and comparing it to shooting American soldiers in the back in a hot
war.It was the Truman Administration's State Department that
McCarthy accused of harboring 205 (or 57 or 81) "known Communists,"
and Truman's
Secretary of Defense
George Catlett Marshall was the
target of some of McCarthy's most colorful rhetoric. Marshall was
also Truman's former
Secretary of State and had
been
Army Chief
of Staff during World War II. Marshall was a highly respected
statesman and general, best remembered today as the architect of
the
Marshall Plan for post-war
reconstruction of Europe, for which he was awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize in 1953. McCarthy made a
lengthy speech on Marshall, later published in 1951 as a book
titled
America's Retreat From Victory: The Story Of George
Catlett Marshall. Marshall had been involved in American
foreign policy with China, and McCarthy charged that Marshall was
directly responsible for the the loss of China to Communism. In the
speech McCarthy also implied that Marshall was guilty of
treason;declared that "if Marshall were merely stupid, the laws of
probability would dictate that part of his decisions would serve
this country's interest"; and most famously, accused him of being
part of "a conspiracy so immense and an infamy so black as to dwarf
any previous venture in the history of man."
During the
Korean War, when President
Truman dismissed General
Douglas
MacArthur, McCarthy charged that Truman and his advisors must
have planned the dismissal during late-night sessions when "they've
had time to get the President cheerful" on Bourbon and Benedictine.
McCarthy declared, "The son of a bitch should be impeached."
Support from Catholics and Kennedy family
One of the strongest bases of anti-Communist sentiment in the
United States was the
Catholic
community, which constituted over 20% of the national vote.
McCarthy identified himself as Catholic, and although the great
majority of Catholics were Democrats, as his fame as a leading
anti-Communist grew, he became popular in Catholic communities
across the country, with strong support from many leading
Catholics, diocesan newspapers, and Catholic journals.At the same
time, some Catholics did oppose McCarthy, notably the
anti-Communist author Father
John
Francis Cronin and the influential journal
Commonweal.
McCarthy established a bond with the powerful Kennedy family, which
had high visibility among Catholics. McCarthy became a close friend
of
Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr., himself a fervent
anti-Communist, and was a frequent guest at the Kennedy compound in
Hyannis Port. He
dated two of Kennedy's daughters, Patricia and Eunice, and was
godfather to
Robert F. Kennedy's first child,
Kathleen Kennedy. Robert was
chosen by McCarthy as a counsel for his investigatory committee.
Joseph Kennedy had a national network of contacts and became a
vocal supporter, building McCarthy's popularity among Catholics and
making sizable contributions to McCarthy's campaigns. The Kennedy
patriarch hoped that one of his sons would be president. Mindful of
the anti-Catholic prejudice
Al Smith faced
during his
1928 campaign for
that office, Joseph Kennedy supported McCarthy as a national
Catholic politician who might pave the way for a younger Kennedy's
presidential candidacy.
Unlike many Democrats,
John F.
Kennedy, who served in the Senate with McCarthy from 1953 until
the latter's death in 1957, never attacked McCarthy. McCarthy had
refused to campaign for Kennedy's
1952
opponent, Republican incumbent
Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., due to his
friendship with the Kennedys. Asked by
Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. why he avoided
criticism of McCarthy, Kennedy said, "Hell, half my voters in
Massachusetts look on McCarthy as a hero."
McCarthy and Eisenhower
During the
1952 Presidential
election, the Eisenhower campaign toured Wisconsin with
McCarthy.
In a speech delivered in Green
Bay
, Eisenhower declared that while he agreed with
McCarthy's goals, he disagreed with his methods. In draft
versions of his speech, Eisenhower had also included a strong
defense of his mentor, George Marshall, which was a direct rebuke
of McCarthy's frequent attacks. However, under the advice of
conservative
colleagues who were fearful that Eisenhower could lose Wisconsin if
he alienated McCarthy supporters, he deleted this defense from
later versions of his speech.The deletion was discovered by a
reporter for
The New York
Times and featured on their front page the next day.
Eisenhower was widely criticized for giving up his personal
convictions, and the incident became the low point of his
campaign.
With his victory in the 1952 presidential race, Dwight Eisenhower
became the first Republican president in 20 years. The Republican
party also held a majority in the House of Representatives and the
Senate. After being elected president, Eisenhower made it clear to
those close to him that he did not approve of McCarthy and he
worked actively to diminish his power and influence. Still, he
never directly confronted McCarthy or criticized him by name in any
speech, thus perhaps prolonging McCarthy's power by giving the
impression that even the President was afraid to criticize him
directly. Oshinsky disputes this, stating that "Eisenhower was
known as a harmonizer, a man who could get diverse factions to work
toward a common goal... Leadership, he explained, meant patience
and conciliation, not 'hitting people over the head.'"
McCarthy won reelection in 1952 with 54% of the vote, defeating
former Wisconsin State Attorney General
Thomas E. Fairchild but badly trailing a
Republican ticket which swept the state of Wisconsin; all the other
Republican winners, including Eisenhower himself, received at least
60% of the Wisconsin vote.Those who expected that party loyalty
would cause McCarthy to tone down his accusations of Communists
being harbored within the government were soon disappointed.
Eisenhower had never been an admirer of McCarthy, and their
relationship became more hostile once Eisenhower was in office. In
a November 1953 speech that was carried on national television,
McCarthy began by praising the Eisenhower Administration for
removing "1,456 Truman holdovers who were [...] gotten rid of
because of Communist connections and activities or perversion." He
then went on to complain that
John Paton Davies, Jr. was still "on
the payroll after eleven months of the Eisenhower Administration,"
even though Davies had actually been dismissed three weeks earlier,
and repeated an unsubstantiated accusation that Davies had tried to
"put Communists and espionage agents in key spots in the
Central Intelligence Agency." In
the same speech, he criticized Eisenhower for not doing enough to
secure the release of missing American pilots shot down over China
during the Korean War. By the end of 1953, McCarthy had altered the
"twenty years of treason" catchphrase he had coined for the
preceding Democratic administrations and began referring to
"twenty-
one years of treason" to include Eisenhower's
first year in office.
As McCarthy became increasingly combative towards the Eisenhower
Administration, Eisenhower faced repeated calls that he confront
McCarthy directly. Eisenhower refused, saying privately "nothing
would please him [McCarthy] more than to get the publicity that
would be generated by a public repudiation by the President." On
several occasions Eisenhower is reported to have said of McCarthy
that he did not want to "get down in the gutter with that
guy."
Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations
With the beginning of his second term as senator in 1953, McCarthy
was made chairman of the Senate Committee on Government Operations.
According to some reports, Republican leaders were growing wary of
McCarthy's methods and gave him this relatively mundane panel
rather than the
Internal
Security Subcommittee—the committee normally involved with
investigating Communists—thus putting McCarthy "where he can't do
any harm," in the words of Senate Majority Leader
Robert Taft.However, the Committee on Government
Operations included the
Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, and the
mandate of this subcommittee was sufficiently flexible to allow
McCarthy to use it for his own investigations of Communists in the
government. McCarthy appointed
Roy Cohn as
chief counsel and 27-year-old
Robert
F. Kennedy as an assistant
counsel to the subcommittee.
This subcommittee would be the scene of some of McCarthy's most
publicized exploits. When the records of the closed executive
sessions of the subcommittee under McCarthy's chairmanship were
made public in 2003–4,Senators
Susan
Collins and
Carl Levin wrote the
following in their preface to the documents:
Senator McCarthy’s zeal to uncover subversion and
espionage led to disturbing excesses.
His browbeating tactics destroyed careers of people who
were not involved in the infiltration of our
government.
His freewheeling style caused both the Senate and the
Subcommittee to revise the rules governing future investigations,
and prompted the courts to act to protect the Constitutional rights
of witnesses at Congressional hearings...
These hearings are a part of our national past that we
can neither afford to forget nor permit to reoccur.
The subcommittee first investigated allegations of Communist
influence in the
Voice of America
(VOA), at that time administered by the State Department's
United States Information
Agency. Many VOA personnel were questioned in front of
television cameras and a packed press gallery, with McCarthy lacing
his questions with hostile innuendo and false accusations.A few VOA
employees alleged Communist influence on the content of broadcasts,
but none of the charges were substantiated. Morale at VOA was badly
damaged, and one of its engineers committed suicide during
McCarthy's investigation. Ed Kretzman, a policy advisor for the
service, would later comment that it was VOA's "darkest hour when
Senator McCarthy and his chief hatchet man, Roy Cohn, almost
succeeded in muffling it."
The subcommittee then turned to the overseas library program of the
International Information Agency. Cohn toured Europe examining the
card catalogs of the State Department libraries looking for works
by authors he deemed inappropriate. McCarthy then recited the list
of supposedly pro-communist authors before his subcommittee and the
press. The State Department bowed to McCarthy and ordered its
overseas librarians to remove from their shelves "material by any
controversial persons, Communists,
fellow travelers, etc." Some libraries
actually burned the newly forbidden books.Shortly after this, in
one of his carefully oblique public criticisms of McCarthy,
President Eisenhower urged Americans: "Don't join the book burners.
[…] Don't be afraid to go in your library and read every
book."
Soon after receiving the chair to the Subcommittee on
Investigations, McCarthy appointed Joseph Brown Matthews (generally
known as
J. B. Matthews) as
staff director of the subcommittee. One of the nation's foremost
anti-communists, Matthews had formerly been staff director for the
House Un-American
Activities Committee. The appointment became controversial when
it was learned that Matthews had recently written an article titled
"Reds And Our Churches,"which opened with the sentence, "The
largest single group supporting the Communist apparatus in the
United States is composed of Protestant Clergymen." A group of
senators denounced this "shocking and unwarranted attack against
the American clergy" and demanded that McCarthy dismiss Matthews.
McCarthy at first refused to do this. But as the controversy
mounted, and the majority of his own subcommittee joined the call
for Matthews' ouster, McCarthy finally yielded and accepted his
resignation. For some McCarthy opponents, this was a signal defeat
of the senator, showing he was not as invincible as he had formerly
seemed.
Investigating the Army
In autumn 1953, McCarthy's committee began its ill-fated inquiry
into the
United States Army.
This
began with McCarthy opening an investigation into the Army Signal Corps
laboratory at Fort
Monmouth
.
McCarthy, newly married to Jean Kerr, had aborted his honeymoon to
open the investigation. He garnered some headlines with stories of
a dangerous spy ring among the Army researchers, but after weeks of
hearings, nothing came of his investigations.
Unable to expose any signs of subversion, McCarthy focused instead
on the case of Irving Peress, a New York dentist who had been
drafted into the Army in 1952 and promoted to major in November
1953. Shortly thereafter it came to the attention of the military
bureaucracy that Peress, who was a member of the left-wing
American Labor Party, had declined to
answer questions about his political affiliations on a
loyalty-review form. Peress' superiors were therefore ordered to
discharge him from the Army within 90 days. McCarthy subpoenaed
Peress to appear before his subcommittee on January 30, 1954.
Peress refused to answer McCarthy's questions, citing his rights
under the
Fifth
Amendment. McCarthy responded by sending a message to
Secretary of the Army,
Robert Stevens, demanding
that Peress be court-martialed. On that same day, Peress asked for
his pending discharge from the Army to be effected immediately, and
the next day
Brigadier
General Ralph W.
Zwicker, his commanding officer at Camp Kilmer in New Jersey
, gave him an honorable separation from the
Army. At McCarthy's encouragement, "Who promoted Peress?"
became a rallying cry among many anti-communists and McCarthy
supporters. In fact, and as McCarthy knew, Peress had been promoted
automatically through the provisions of the Doctor Draft Law, for
which McCarthy had voted.
McCarthy summoned General Zwicker to his subcommittee on February
18. Zwicker, on advice from Army counsel, refused to answer some of
McCarthy's questions and reportedly changed his story three times
when asked if he had known at the time he signed the discharge that
Peress had refused to answer questions before the McCarthy
subcommittee. McCarthy compared Zwicker's intelligence to that of a
"five-year-old child," and said he was "not fit to wear that
uniform."
This abuse of Zwicker, a battlefield hero of World War II, caused
considerable outrage among the military, newspapers, civilian
veterans, senators of both parties and, probably most dangerously
for McCarthy, President Eisenhower himself.Army Secretary Stevens
ordered Zwicker not to return to McCarthy's hearing for further
questioning. Hoping to mend the increasingly hostile relations
between McCarthy and the Army, a group of Republicans, including
McCarthy, met with Secretary Stevens over a luncheon that included
fried chicken and convinced him to sign a "memorandum of
understanding" in which he capitulated to most of McCarthy's
demands. After "The Chicken Luncheon," as it came to be called,
McCarthy later told a reporter that Stevens "could not have given
in more abjectly if he had got down on his knees."Reaction to this
agreement was widely negative. Secretary Stevens was ridiculed by
Pentagon officers,and
The Times
of London wrote: "Senator McCarthy achieved today what
General Burgoyne and
General
Cornwallis never achieved—the surrender of the American
Army."
A few months later, the Army, with advice and support from the
Eisenhower Administration, would launch a counterattack against
McCarthy. It would do this not by directly challenging and
criticizing McCarthy's behavior toward Army personnel, but by
bringing charges against him on an unrelated issue.
The Army-McCarthy hearings
Early in 1954, the U.S. Army accused McCarthy and his chief
counsel,
Roy Cohn, of improperly pressuring
the Army to give favorable treatment to
G. David
Schine, a former aide to McCarthy and a friend of Cohn's, who
was then serving in the Army as a private. McCarthy claimed that
the accusation was made in bad faith, in retaliation for his
questioning of Zwicker the previous year. The Senate Permanent
Subcommittee on Investigations, usually chaired by McCarthy
himself, was given the task of adjudicating these conflicting
charges. Republican Senator
Karl
Mundt was appointed to chair the committee, and the
Army–McCarthy hearings
convened on April 22, 1954.
The hearings lasted for 36 days and were broadcast on live
television, with an estimated 20 million viewers. After hearing 32
witnesses and two million words of testimony, the committee
concluded that McCarthy himself had not exercised any improper
influence on Schine's behalf, but that Cohn had engaged in "unduly
persistent or aggressive efforts." The committee also concluded
that Army Secretary Robert Stevens and Army Counsel John Adams
"made efforts to terminate or influence the investigation and
hearings at Fort Monmouth," and that Adams "made vigorous and
diligent efforts" to block subpoenas for members of the Army
Loyalty and Screening Board "by means of personal appeal to certain
members of the [McCarthy] committee."
Of far greater importance to McCarthy than the committee's
inconclusive final report was the negative effect that the
extensive exposure had on his popularity. Many in the audience saw
him as bullying, reckless, and dishonest, and the daily newspaper
summaries of the hearings were also frequently unfavorable.Late in
the hearings, Senator
Stuart
Symington made an angry and prophetic remark to McCarthy: "The
American people have had a look at you for six weeks," he said.
"You are not fooling anyone."In
Gallup polls
of January 1954, 50% of those polled had a positive opinion of
McCarthy. In June, that number had fallen to 34%. In the same
polls, those with a negative opinion of McCarthy increased from 29%
to 45%.
An increasing number of Republicans and conservatives were coming
to see McCarthy as a liability to the party and to anti-communism.
Congressman
George H. Bender noted, "There is a growing
impatience with the Republican Party. McCarthyism has become a
synonym for witch-hunting,
Star Chamber
methods, and the denial of...civil liberties." Frederick Woltman, a
reporter with a long-standing reputation as a staunch
anti-communist, wrote a five-part series of articles criticizing
McCarthy in the
New York
World-Telegram. He stated that McCarthy "has become a
major liability to the cause of anti-communism," and accused him of
"wild twisting of facts and near facts [that] repels authorities in
the field."
The most famous incident in the hearings was an exchange between
McCarthy and the army's chief legal representative,
Joseph Nye Welch. On June 9, the 30th day of
the hearings, Welch challenged Roy Cohn to provide
U.S. Attorney General Herbert Brownell, Jr. with McCarthy's
list of 130 Communists or subversives in defense plants "before the
sun goes down."
McCarthy stepped in and said that if Welch
was so concerned about persons aiding the Communist Party, he
should check on a man in his Boston
law office
named Fred Fisher, who had once
belonged to the National Lawyers
Guild, which Brownell had called "the legal mouthpiece of the
Communist Party."In an impassioned defense of Fisher that
some have suggested he had prepared in advance and had hoped not to
have to make,Welch responded, "Until this moment, Senator, I think
I never gauged your cruelty or your recklessness[...]" When
McCarthy resumed his attack, Welch interrupted him: "Let us not
assassinate this lad further, Senator. You've done enough. Have you
no sense of decency, sir, at long last? Have you left no sense of
decency?" When McCarthy once again persisted, Welch cut him off and
demanded the chairman "call the next witness." At that point, the
gallery erupted in applause and a recess was called.
Edward R. Murrow, See It Now
One of the most prominent attacks on McCarthy's methods was an
episode of the television documentary series
See It Now, hosted by journalist
Edward R. Murrow, which was broadcast on March 9,
1954. Titled "A Report on Senator Joseph R. McCarthy", the episode
consisted largely of clips of McCarthy speaking. In these clips,
McCarthy accuses the Democratic party of "twenty years of treason,"
describes the
American
Civil Liberties Union as "listed as 'a front for, and doing the
work of,' the Communist Party," and berates and harangues various
witnesses, including General Zwicker.
In his conclusion, Murrow said of McCarthy:
The following week
See It Now ran another episode critical
of McCarthy, this one focusing on the case of
Annie Lee Moss, an African American army
clerk who was the target of one of McCarthy's investigations. The
Murrow shows, together with the televised Army-McCarthy hearings of
the same year, were the major causes of a nationwide popular
opinion backlash against McCarthy, in part because for the first
time his statements were being publicly challenged by noteworthy
figures. To counter the negative publicity, McCarthy appeared on
See It Now on April 6, 1954, and made a number of charges
against the popular Murrow, including the accusation that he
colluded with the "Russian espionage and propaganda organization"
VOKS. This response did not go over well with
viewers, and the result was a further decline in McCarthy's
popularity.
Public opinion
McCarthy's Support in Gallup Polls
| Date |
Favorable |
No Opinion |
Unfavorable |
Net Favorable |
| 1951 August |
15 |
63 |
22 |
−7 |
| 1953 April |
19 |
59 |
22 |
−3 |
| 1953 June |
35 |
35 |
30 |
+5 |
| 1953 August |
34 |
24 |
42 |
−8 |
| 1954 January |
50 |
21 |
29 |
+21 |
| 1954 March |
46 |
18 |
36 |
+10 |
| 1954 April |
38 |
16 |
46 |
−8 |
| 1954 May |
35 |
16 |
49 |
−14 |
| 1954 June |
34 |
21 |
45 |
−11 |
| 1954 August |
36 |
13 |
51 |
−15 |
| 1954 November |
35 |
19 |
46 |
−11 |
Censure and the Watkins Committee
Several members of the U.S. Senate had opposed McCarthy well before
1953.
Senator Margaret Chase Smith, a Maine
Republican,
delivered her "Declaration of
Conscience" on June 1, 1950, calling for an end to the use of
smear tactics without mentioning McCarthy or anyone else by
name. Six other Republican Senators —
Wayne Morse,
Irving
Ives,
Charles W. Tobey,
Edward
John Thye,
George Aiken, and
Robert C. Hendrickson — joined her in condemning
McCarthy's tactics. McCarthy referred to Smith and her fellow
Senators as "Snow White and the six dwarfs."
On March
9, 1954, Vermont
Republican Senator Ralph E. Flanders gave a
humor-laced speech on the Senate floor, questioning McCarthy's
tactics in fighting communism, likening McCarthyism to
"housecleaning" with "much clatter and hullabaloo." He recommended
that McCarthy turn his attention to the worldwide encroachment of
Communism outside North America.In a June 1 speech, Flanders
compared McCarthy to
Adolf Hitler,
accusing him of spreading "division and confusion" and saying,
"Were the Junior Senator from Wisconsin in the pay of the
Communists he could not have done a better job for them."On June
11, Flanders introduced a resolution to have McCarthy removed as
chair of his committees. Although there were many in the Senate who
believed that some sort of disciplinary action against McCarthy was
warranted, there was no clear majority supporting this resolution.
Some of the resistance was due to concern about usurping the
Senate's rules regarding committee chairs and seniority. Flanders
next introduced a resolution to
censure
McCarthy. The resolution was initially written without any
reference to particular actions or misdeeds on McCarthy's part. As
Flanders put it, "It was not his breaches of etiquette, or of rules
or sometimes even of laws which is so disturbing," but rather his
overall pattern of behavior. Ultimately a "bill of particulars"
listing 46 charges was added to the censure resolution. A special
committee, chaired by Senator
Arthur Vivian Watkins, was appointed
to study and evaluate the resolution. This committee opened
hearings on August 31.

Senator Arthur V.
After two months of hearings and deliberations, the Watkins
Committee recommended that McCarthy be censured on two of the 46
counts: his contempt of the Subcommittee on Rules and
Administration, which had called him to testify in 1951 and 1952,
and his abuse of General Zwicker in 1954. The Zwicker count was
dropped by the full Senate on the grounds that McCarthy's conduct
was arguably "induced" by Zwicker's own behavior. In place of this
count, a new one was drafted regarding McCarthy's statements about
the Watkins Committee itself.
The two counts on which the Senate ultimately voted were:
- That McCarthy had "failed to cooperate with the Subcommittee on
Rules and Administration," and "repeatedly abused the members who
were trying to carry out assigned duties..."
- That McCarthy had charged "three members of the [Watkins]
Select Committee with 'deliberate deception' and 'fraud'...that the
special Senate session...was a 'lynch party,'" and had
characterized the committee "as the 'unwitting handmaiden,'
'involuntary agent' and 'attorneys in fact' of the Communist
Party," and had "acted contrary to senatorial ethics and tended to
bring the Senate into dishonor and disrepute, to obstruct the
constitutional processes of the Senate, and to impair its
dignity."
On December 2, 1954, the Senate voted to "condemn" McCarthy on both
counts by a vote of 67 to 22. The Democrats present unanimously
favored condemnation and the Republicans were split evenly. The
only senator not on record was
John F.
Kennedy, who was hospitalized for back surgery; Kennedy never
indicated how he would have voted. Immediately after the vote,
Senator
H. Styles Bridges, a McCarthy supporter, argued
that the resolution was "not a censure resolution" because the word
"condemn" rather than "censure" was used in the final draft. The
word "censure" was then removed from the title of the resolution,
though it is generally regarded and referred to as a censure of
McCarthy, both by historiansand in Senate documents. McCarthy
himself said, "I wouldn't exactly call it a vote of confidence." He
added, "I don't feel I've been lynched."
Final years
After his censure, McCarthy continued senatorial duties for another
two and a half years, but his career as a major public figure had
been unmistakably ruined. His colleagues in the Senate avoided him;
his speeches on the Senate floor were delivered to a near-empty
chamber or were received with conspicuous displays of
inattention.The press that had once recorded his every public
statement now ignored him, and outside speaking engagements
dwindled almost to nothing. President Eisenhower, free of
McCarthy's political intimidation, quipped to his Cabinet that
McCarthyism was now "McCarthywasm."
Still, McCarthy continued to rail against Communism. He warned
against attendance at summit conferences with "the Reds," saying
that "you cannot offer friendship to tyrants and
murderers...without advancing the cause of tyranny and murder."He
declared that "coexistence with Communists is neither possible nor
honorable nor desirable. Our long-term objective must be the
eradication of Communism from the face of the earth."
McCarthy's biographers agree that he was a changed man after the
censure; declining both physically and emotionally, he became a
"pale ghost of his former self" in the words of Fred J. Cook.It was
reported that McCarthy suffered from
cirrhosis
of the liver and was frequently hospitalized for
alcoholism.Numerous eyewitnesses, including Senate aide
George Reedy and journalist
Tom Wicker, have reported finding him alarmingly
drunk in the Senate.Journalist
Richard
Rovere (1959) wrote:
He had always been a heavy drinker, and there were
times in those seasons of discontent when he drank more than
ever.
But he was not always drunk.
He went on the wagon (for him this meant beer instead
of whiskey) for days and weeks at a time.
The difficulty toward the end was that he couldn't hold
the stuff.
He went to pieces on his second or third
drink.
And he did not snap back quickly.
McCarthy
died in Bethesda Naval Hospital
on May 2, 1957, at the age of 48. The
official cause of his death was listed as acute
hepatitis: an inflammation of the liver. It was
hinted in the press that he died of alcoholism, an estimation that
is accepted by contemporary biographers. He was given a state
funeral attended by 70 senators, and
St. Matthew's Cathedral performed a
Solemn Pontifical
Requiem before more than
100 priests and 2,000 others. Thousands of people viewed the body
in Washington.
He was buried in St. Mary's Parish
Cemetery, Appleton,
Wisconsin
, where more than 30,000 filed through St. Mary's
Church to pay their last respects. Three senators—
George W. Malone,
William E. Jenner, and
Herman Welker—had flown from Washington to
Appleton on the plane carrying McCarthy's casket.
Robert F. Kennedy quietly attended the funeral in
Wisconsin. McCarthy was survived by his wife, Jean, and their
adopted daughter, Tierney.
In the summer of 1957, a special election was held to fill
McCarthy's seat. In the
primaries,
voters in both parties turned away from McCarthy's legacy. The
Republican primary was won by
Walter J. Kohler, Jr., who called for a clean
break from McCarthy's approach; he defeated former Congressman
Glenn Robert Davis, who charged
that Eisenhower was soft on Communism. The Democratic winner was
William Proxmire, who called
McCarthy "a disgrace to Wisconsin, to the Senate and to America."
On August 27, Proxmire won the election.
Ongoing debate
In the view of a few modern conservative authors, McCarthy's place
in history should be reevaluated.
Ann
Coulter's book
Treason: Liberal Treachery from the Cold War to the War on
Terrorism is a notable example of this. Coulter, a
controversial
right-wing author,
devotes a chapter to her defense of McCarthy, and much of the book
to a defense of McCarthyism. She states, for example, "Everything
you think you know about McCarthy is a hegemonic lie. Liberals
denounced McCarthy because they were afraid of getting caught, so
they fought back like animals to hide their own collaboration with
a regime as evil as the Nazis."Other authors who have voiced
similar opinions include
William
Norman Grigg, formerly of the
John Birch Society,and
Medford Stanton Evans.
; also:
These authors frequently cite new evidence, in the form of
Venona decrypted Soviet messages, Soviet
espionage data now opened to the West, and newly released
transcripts of closed hearings before McCarthy's subcommittee,
asserting that these have vindicated McCarthy, showing that many of
his identifications of Communists were correct. These and other
authors have said that Venona and the Soviet archives have revealed
that the scale of Soviet espionage activity in the United States
during the 1940s and 1950s was larger than many scholars
suspected,and that this too is a vindication of McCarthy.
These viewpoints are considered
revisionist by most
credentialed scholars. Challenging such efforts aimed at the
"rehabilitation" of McCarthy, historian
John Earl Haynes argues that McCarthy's
attempts to "make anti-communism a partisan weapon" actually
"threatened [the post-War] anti-Communist consensus," thereby
ultimately harming anti-Communist efforts more than helping.With
regard to Coulter's views in particular, the response among
scholars has been all but universally negative, even among authors
generally regarded as conservative or
right-wing.See, for example:
,
There are scarcely any cases where Venona or other recent data has
increased the weight of evidence against a person named by
McCarthy.
HUAC
McCarthy is often incorrectly described as part of the
House Committee on
Un-American Activities (technically HCUA, but generally known
as HUAC). HUAC is best known for the investigation of
Alger Hiss and for its investigation of the
Hollywood film industry,
which led to the
blacklisting of
hundreds of actors, writers, and directors. HUAC was a House
committee, and as such had no formal connection with McCarthy, who
served in the Senate.
McCarthy in popular culture
From the start of his notoriety, McCarthy was a favorite subject
for political cartoonists. In 1953, the popular daily comic strip
Pogo introduced the character
Simple J. Malarkey, a pugnacious and
conniving
wildcat with an unmistakable
physical resemblance to McCarthy.
Later in life, McCarthy increasingly became the target of ridicule
and parody. He was impersonated by nightclub and radio
impressionists and was
satirized in
Mad magazine,
on
The Red Skelton
Show, and elsewhere. Several comedy songs lampooning the
senator were released in 1954, including "Point of Order" by
Stan Freberg and
Daws Butler, "Senator McCarthy Blues" by
Hal Block, and unionist folk singer
Joe Glazer's "Joe McCarthy's Band", sung
to the tune of "
McNamara's Band."
Also in 1954, the radio comedy team
Bob and
Ray parodied McCarthy with the character "Commissioner
Carstairs" in their soap opera spoof "Mary Backstayge, Noble Wife".
That same year, the
Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation radio network broadcast a satire,
The Investigator, whose title
character was a clear imitation of McCarthy. A recording of the
show became popular in the United States, and was reportedly played
by President Eisenhower at cabinet meetings.
A more serious fictional portrayal of McCarthy played a central
role in the 1959 novel
The
Manchurian Candidate by
Richard
Condon. The character of Senator John Iselin, a
demagogic anti-communist, is closely modeled on
McCarthy, even to the varying numbers of Communists he asserts are
employed by the federal government. In the
1962 film version, the
characterization remains; in this version, a
Heinz ketchup bottle inspires Iselin and
his wife to settle on "57" as the number of subversives he claims
are on the federal payroll.
McCarthy was portrayed by
Peter Boyle in
the 1977 Emmy-winning television movie
Tail Gunner Joe, a dramatization of
McCarthy's life.
Tony Curtis played
McCarthy as an unnamed "Senator" in
Nicholas Roeg's 1985 film
Insignificance, which details a
chance meeting between McCarthy,
Albert
Einstein,
Marilyn Monroe, and
Joe DiMaggio. Archival footage of
McCarthy himself was used in the 2005 movie
Good Night, and Good Luck.
about
Edward R. Murrow and the
See It Now episode that
challenged McCarthy. The song
Exhuming McCarthy by the band
R.E.M. is also about McCarthy and his
trials.
See also
Notes
- The
American Heritage Dictionary (2000) defines "McCarthyism"
as "the practice of publicizing accusations of political disloyalty
or subversion with insufficient regard to evidence" and "the use of
unfair investigatory or accusatory methods in order to suppress
opposition." Webster's Third New International
Dictionary, Unabridged defines it as "characterized
chiefly by opposition to elements held to be subversive and by the
use of tactics involving personal attacks on individuals by means
of widely publicized indiscriminate allegations especially on the
basis of unsubstantiated charges."
- McCarthy as Student
- In A Conspiracy So Immense, Oshinsky states that
McCarthy chose Marquette University rather than the University of
Wisconsin–Madison partially because Marquette was under
Catholic control and partially because he enrolled during the Great
Depression, when few working-class or farm-bred students had the
money to go out of state for college.
- Judge on Trial, McCarthy - A Documented Record, The
Progressive, April 1954
- Oshinsky explains this (p. 17) as resulting partially from the
financial pressures of the Great Depression. He also notes (p. 28)
that even during his judgeship, McCarthy was known to have gambled
heavily after hours.
- Oshinsky describes the nickname "Tail-Gunner Joe" as the result
of McCarthy's wish to break the record for most live ammunition
discharged in a single mission.
- Also reported as up to 8 hours in length.
- {{cite book
- The allegation is specifically rejected in
- The Kennedys. American
Experience. Boston, Massachusetts: WGBH. 2009.
- All quotes in this paragraph:
- See "Transcripts, Executive Sessions..." under Primary sources,
below.
- Often misidentified as "Reds In Our Churches;" see
this versus this.
- Oshinsky [1983] (2005), pp. 33, 490; Michael O'Brien, John
F. Kennedy: A Biography (2005), pp. 250-54, 274-79, 396-400;
Reeves (1982), pp. 442-43; Thomas Maier, The Kennedys:
America's Emerald Kings (2003), pp. 270-80; Crosby, God,
Church, and Flag, 138-60.
- Joseph McCarthy Photographs: The Funeral
- See, for example,
References and further reading
Secondary sources
- Crosby, Donald F. "The Jesuits and Joe McCarthy." Church
History 1977 46(3): 374-388. Issn: 0009-6407 Fulltext: in
Jstor
- Gauger, Michael. "Flickering Images: Live Television Coverage
and Viewership of the Army-McCarthy Hearings." Historian
2005 67(4): 678-693. Issn: 0018-2370 Fulltext: in Swetswise,
Ingenta and Ebsco. Audience ratings show that few people watched
the hearings.
- Murphy, Brenda. Congressional Theatre: Dramatizing
McCarthyism on Stage, Film, and Television. Cambridge U.
Press, 1999.
Primary sources
External links
- A lengthy review of Arthur Herman's Joseph
McCarthy
- BBC coverage
- Spartacus Biography
- The History Net page on McCarthy
- The McCarthy-Welch exchange
- Joseph McCarthy Papers, Marquette University
Library
- Senator Joe McCarthy: Audio Excerpts, 1950-1954
- FBI Memo Referencing 206
Communists in Government
- Infoage Information on McCarthy's investigations of
the Signal Corps, including transcripts of the hearings and more
recent interviews.
- Transcript: "A Report on Senator Joseph R.
McCarthy" - Edward R. Murrow, See It Now, CBS Television, March 9, 1954 via
UC Berkeley library
- Transcript: "Joseph R. McCarthy: Rebuttal to Edward R. Murrow", See It Now, CBS Television, April 6, 1954 via
UC Berkeley library
- Documents on McCarthyism at the Dwight D.
Eisenhower Presidential Library
Defenses of McCarthy:
Criticism of McCarthy: