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The Jesuits and Joe McCarthy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Extract
The Jesuits frequently attract public attention, and one such occasion for notoriety occurred in the days of the Communist hunt commonly associated with the name of the junior Senator from Wisconsin, Joseph Raymond McCarthy (1908–1957). During the years from 1950 to 1957 there were repeated attempts to link McCarthy with the Jesuits, (or, paradoxically, to link him with the Senator's opponents). The national Jesuit weekly America became embroiled in one of the most bitter arguments which broke out in the controversy. The events illustrate not only the intensely divisive nature of the dispute over McCarthy, but the peculiar position of the order both in the Church and in the intellectual life of the nation as well.
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- Copyright © American Society of Church History 1977
References
1. Interviews with Rev. James Orford, S.J., November 15, 1971; Rev. Robert Sampon, November 17, 1971; Rev. Raphael Hamilton, S.J., November 16, 1971; Rev. Perry Roetz, S.J., November 13, 1971.
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27. Brooklyn Tablet, May 21, 1954.
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34. Interview with Thurston N. Davis, February 21, 1972.
35. Hartnett wrote that the magazine had received 70 letters for McCarthy and about six for America. See Hartnett to Parsons, May 21, 1954, Parsons Papers, GU.
36. Davis interview.
37. John McMahon, William E. Fitzgerald, and William F. Maloney to Hartnett, May 29, 1954, “McCarthy Editorial” folder, JAFU. In a covering letter, McMahon wrote Hartnett, “We do not wish you to interpret this Directive as a vote of no confidence. It is not that. You still have our support. But in the present heated state of public opinion, particularly among Catholics, we think silence for two months will be golden.… P.S. If some extraordinary and crucial situation should develop which you and the Staff think should warrant an editorial or comment, you may represent this to me and I shall take it up with the Committee.” McMahon to Hartnett, May 29, 1954, Ibid.
38. Hartnett to Vincent McCormick, May 31, 1954, “America” box, JAFU; Hartnett to McMahon, June 2, 1954, Ibid.
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40. Hartnett to McMahon, June 4, 1954, Ibid.
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46. On Hartnett's personal reasons for leaving: author's interview with Hartnett, Septemebr 9, 1971. For documentary evidence, See“America” boxes, JAFU.
47. Crosby, “The Angry Catholics.”
48. New York Times, December 23, 1952.