Robert McNutt McElroy

Robert McNutt McElroy (December 28, 1872 in Perryville, Kentucky - January 15, 1959 in Līhu'e, Hawaii)[1] was a professor of history at Princeton University. He became a jingoistic advocate of a strong national defense during World War I,[2] working with the Republican Party and the National Security League (NSL).[3][4] A popular historian in his day, he published biographies of Grover Cleveland and Jefferson Davis, and respected histories of the states of Kentucky and Texas and the conquest of the American West, none of which are much cited today.[5]

Biography

McElroy was born in Kentucky to William Thomas Eliza Casseday McElroy. He studied at the University of Leipzig, University of Berlin, Oxford University, and St. John's University, Shanghai, China. He married Louise Robinson Booker McElroy (1874-1942) on May 21, 1900; they had two daughters, Katharine Louise McElroy Kent (1902-1986), and Elizabeth Hunt McElroy (1901 - 1965).[6]

In 1898-1916 McElroy was a professor of history at Princeton University.[7][3] An adamant opponent of "provincial thinking", he was well regarded by historians in the United States and Great Britain, and in 1912 he succeeded Woodrow Wilson as the chair of the Princeton department of history and politics.[8] In 1916-1917 he became the first American professor to teach in China on an official exchange program.[9][10]

In April 1918 McElroy accused practically every citizen in the state of Wisconsin of treason.[3][11] McElroy was addressing some University of Wisconsin Army junior cadets on behalf of the NSL in the rain on the college's campus. The acoustics made it difficult to hear him, and the wet cadets fidgeted throughout his speech. McElroy grew increasingly angry as he spoke, convinced the cadets were ignoring him. Finally McElroy—whether in exasperation or because he truly believed it—accused the students and the university's faculty of treason. But since no one could hear him, there was no response to his statement. McElroy then broadened his accusation to include the chief justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court (who was also in attendance) and the entire population of the state of disloyalty as well. To make matters worse, McElroy published these accusations in a number of newspaper articles. When McElroy's statements became widely known, the public and press turned on the NSL and accused it of xenophobia and fanaticism. Many mainstream supporters of the League, unaware of the jingoistic tendencies of some of the more senior members of the organization's inner circle, quit in protest.[12]

During the 1920s and 1930s he taught at Oxford University,[13] Cambridge University and other institutions of higher education in the United Kingdom.[9] In 1925-1939 he succeeded Samuel Eliot Morison as the second Harold Vyvyan Harmsworth Professor of American History at Oxford University.

He died in Līhu'e, Hawaii and was buried in Princeton Cemetery in Princeton, New Jersey.[3][14]

Works

References

  1. archives.nypl.org
  2. "Schools to Take Up Patriotic Campaign," New York Times, March 1, 1918.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Robert McElroy, Educator, Dead," New York Times, January 17, 1959.
  4. "Educators Discuss War," New York Times, July 27, 1917.
  5. archives.nypl.org
  6. "Historians at Princeton," New York Times, May 3, 1914.
  7. archives.nypl.org
  8. 1 2 "Dr. R. McN. McElroy Back," New York Times, December 1, 1933.
  9. "McElroy Going to China," New York Times, April 23, 1916; Rood, "The Young China and the Old," New York Times, May 20, 1923.
  10. "Sharply Rebukes McElroy," Associated Press, March 1, 1919.
  11. Wisconsin at the time had a large German-American population, which lent credence to the conclusion that McElroy truly believed the state's citizens to be traitors. Shulman, "The Progressive Era Origins of the National Security Act," Dickinson Law Review, Winter 2000; Edwards, Patriots In Pinstripe, 1982.
  12. "Oxford Seeks American," New York Times, June 5, 1925.
  13. "Princeton Rites for McElroy," Associated Press, January 24, 1959.
  14. www.presidentprofiles.com

Further reading

External links

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