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Ferdinand Eberstadt Papers
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Held at: Princeton University Library: Public Policy Papers [Contact Us]
This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the Princeton University Library: Public Policy Papers. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.
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Ferdinand Eberstadt (1890-1969) was a prominent Wall Street investment banker who also served in several government posts throughout his career. During World War II, he organized the production and distribution of supplies to the United States military through his work with the Army-Navy Munitions Board and the War Production Board, and he was subsequently involved in plans for the reorganization of the armed services and in the development of post-war economic policies. He was also involved with the Reparations Conference in Paris in 1929, the United Nations Atomic Energy Commission, the National Security Resources Board, and the Hoover Commission on Government Reorganization.
Eberstadt was born in New York City on June 19, 1890 to Edward F. and Elenita Eberstadt. He earned his A.B. degree from Princeton University in 1913 and then studied political economy in Berlin, Munich, and Paris for a year. Eberstadt returned to the United States in 1914, enrolling in Columbia University Law School. He interrupted his studies to serve in the armed forces, first on the Mexican border and once the United States entered World War I, serving in France as a lieutenant. He was later promoted to the rank of captain. After the end of his military service, Eberstadt returned to Columbia University, where he received his LL.B. in 1917. Eberstadt married Mary Van Arsdale Tongue of New York City in 1919 and they had four children: Frances (Unnerstall), Mary (Harper), Ann (Cannell), and Frederick.
Eberstadt was admitted to the New York State Bar in 1919 and began his career at Wall Street that same year with the law firm McAdoo, Cotton & Franklin. He was made a partner when Williams Gibbs McAdoo left and the firm was re-organized as Cotton & Franklin. While at Cotton & Franklin, he was assigned to advise the investment banking firm of Dillon, Read & Company. His advice proved so valuable to the company that they hired him, as a partner, in 1925. While there, he was instrumental in facilitating the 1928 merger of Dodge and Chrysler, and worked successfully with big foreign loans. He sold his partnership in the company in 1928.
Eberstadt entered public service for the first time in 1929, when he was appointed to serve as assistant to Owen D. Young at the Paris Reparations Conference because of his knowledge of German finance. Upon returning to the United States, he was a partner in the investment banking firm of Otis & Company of Cleveland and New York for a brief time before founding his own brokerage firm, F. Eberstadt & Company, in 1931. He achieved success dDuring the dDepression he by specializeding in small stock and bond issues, and h. His company became well respected , known for underwriting the public offerings of carefully selected new companies and for arranging mergers. Eberstadt was also a pioneer in the field of mutual funds, founding the successful Chemical Fund in 1938 and serving as chairman of the board until his death in 1969. Throughout his career on Wall Street, Eberstadt became was highly regarded as both an innovator and a critic, especially of Wall Street's insularity, as well as the practices of its member firms.
During the 1940s, Eberstadt served several key roles in the nation's defense. In 1941, he was asked by James V. Forrestal, who had also been a partner at Dillion, Read & Company, to conduct a study of the machine tool industry and determine how it might be prepared for war. This led to a study of the entire production front, and Eberstadt's subsequent appointment in 1942 as Chairman of the Army and Navy Munitions Board, the agency in charge of the procurement and distribution of supplies to the armed services. In four months, he increased machine tool production, a major bottleneck, by thirty percent. When the Board was merged with the War Production Board later that year, Eberstadt was appointed Vice-Chairman of the War Production Board, in which capacity he had charge of procuring and allocating raw materials to war factories. He resigned in 1943, after five months in the position, when it was determined that the Board would operate more efficiently with one chairman.
In 1945, Eberstadt was asked again by James V. Forrestal to prepare a report, this time on the unification of the armed services. The "Eberstadt Plan" became the basis for the Armed Forces Unification Act, under which Forrestal was appointed Secretary of Defense. Eberstadt also wrote the foundation for the National Security Act of 1947. In 1946, Eberstadt was appointed by Bernard Baruch, the United States Representative on the United Nations Atomic Energy Commission, to serve as one of his four assistants. In this capacity, Eberstadt wrote much of the Baruch Plan for the control of atomic energy production. In 1948, he returned once again to Washington to work with the National Security Resources Board to develop a general mobilization plan. He served as an advisor to Arthur M. Hill, chairman of the board, to prepare an organization plan to insure the maximum utilization of the nation's industrial and civilian resources in the event of war and to draft legislation to put it into effect. Eberstadt also served as a member of the Hoover Commission on the Organization of the Executive Branch of the Government, becoming Chairman of the Commission's Committee on the National Security Organization in 1949.
For the remainder of his career, Eberstadt was primarily focused on his investment firm, but he often returned to Washington to serve as a consultant on economic and defense matters to various government agencies. Eberstadt died on November 11, 1969 at the age of 79.
1929 Assistant to Owen D. Young, Reparations Conference, Paris 1942 Chairman, Army and Navy Munitions Board 1942 Program Vice Chairman, War Productions Board 1945 Prepared the "Eberstadt Report" for the Secretary of the Navy, James V. Forrestal 1946 Assistant to Bernard M. Baruch, United Nations Atomic Energy Commission 1948 Prepared a Report on Operations of the National Security Resources Board 1949 Chairman, Commission on National Security Organization of the Herbert Hoover Commission 1958 Consultant, Department of Defense Reorganization
The Eberstadt papers primarily document his extensive career in public service to the United States related to defense and the economy, as well as his career as an investment banker and his personal life, and include correspondence, reports, his writings, and his personal papers. The papers especially document his work during World War II with the production and distribution of supplies to the military, and his subsequent work on the reorganization of the military. The papers include files concerned with his work with the Reparations Conference in Paris, the Army-Navy Munitions Board, the War Production Board, the United Nations Atomic Energy Commission, the National Security Resources Board, and the Hoover Commission on Government Reorganization.
The Papers have been arranged in fifteen series:
The following sources were consulted during the preparation of the biographical note: "Eberstadt, Ferdinand," Current Biography, H.W. Wilson Company, 1942. Eberstadt, Ferdinand 1913 File; Undergraduate Alumni Records, Box 397, Folder 3; University Archives, Special Collections, Princeton University Library. "Ferdinand Eberstadt, Investment Banker Active in Government Service, Dies." The New York Times, November 13, 1969.
This collection was donated by Mary V. T. Eberstadt, wife of Ferdinand Eberstadt, in September 1970, with additions from Frederick Eberstadt, son of Ferdinand Eberstadt, in July 1980 and October 1980, from Dr. Calvin L. Christman in February 1977, and from Professor Jeffrey Dorwart in December 1987.
A record of a luncheon in honor of Howard S. Cullman is located in Series 10: Memorabilia, Box 194, and three audio cassette tapes of an interview of Eberstadt are located in Series 15: Additional Papers, Box 277. Access to these materials follows Mudd Manuscript Library policy for preservation and access to audio-visual materials.
This collection was processed in 1984.
Finding aid written by Adriane Hanson in November 2007.
No appraisal information is available.
People
- Baruch, Bernard M. (Bernard Mannes), 1870-1965.
- Forrestal, James, 1892-1949
- Hoover, Herbert, 1874-1964
Organization
- United Nations. Atomic Energy Commission
- United States. Commission on Organization of the Executive Branch of the Government (1947-1949)
- United States. Joint Army and Navy Munitions Board
- United States. National Security Resources Board
- United States. War Production Board
Subject
- Investment banking -- United States
- Legislators -- United States -- Correspondence
- Mutual funds
- Nuclear nonproliferation
- World War, 1914-1918 -- Reparations
- World War, 1939-1945 -- Economic aspects
- World war, 1939-1945 -- Equipment and supplies
- World War, 1939-1945 -- Reparations
Place
- Publisher
- Public Policy Papers
- Finding Aid Author
- Adriane Hanson
- Finding Aid Date
- 1998
- Sponsor
- These papers were processed with the generous support of the Ferdinand Eberstadt Foundation and the John Foster and Janet Avery Dulles Fund.
- Access Restrictions
-
The collection is open for research use.
- Use Restrictions
-
Single photocopies may be made for research purposes. For quotations that are fair use as defined under U. S. Copyright Law, no permission to cite or publish is required. For those few instances beyond fair use, researchers are responsible for determining who may hold the copyright and obtaining approval from them. Researchers do not need anything further from the Mudd Library to move forward with their use.
Collection Inventory
The Selected Correspondence and Related Materials series contains Eberstadt's professional correspondence with government officials, politicians, and academics, as well as businessmen and investment bankers, policy organizations, social clubs, and charity groups. The series also includes correspondence that Eberstadt was copied on, and related government reports, records of Congressional hearings, meeting minutes, memoranda, academic papers, pamphlets, newspaper clippings, and photographs. The majority of the correspondence is related to Eberstadt's service to the United States government on defense and economic issues, especially during the 1940s and 1950s, including with the Reparations Conference in Paris in 1929, the Army-Navy Munitions Board, the War Production Board, with armed services unification and Defense Department reorganization, the Atomic Energy Commission, and the Hoover Commission on Government Reorganization. Significant correspondents include Bernard M. Baruch, James V. Forrestal, and Herbert Hoover. The correspondence documents Eberstadt's service to these organizations and their work with World War II policies, especially the production and distribution of supplies, post-war economic policies, and national security. The series also includes Eberstadt's correspondence with politicians, academics, and concerned citizens discussing these issues, as well as correspondence with his colleagues in the investment field regarding his business and investing, and correspondence with policy, social, and charity organizations regarding his membership and their meetings and causes.
Eberstadt's personal correspondence with his family is located in Series 14: Personal and Family Records.
Arranged alphabetically by correspondent.
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(Includes comments regarding resignation on December 30, 1916.)
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(Includes correspondence, article and statement.)
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(Includes Ferdinand Eberstadt statement before the committee on May 31, 1945.)
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(Includes Message to the Congress Regarding Defense Reorganization, April 3, 1958; Letter to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives Transmitting a Draft Bill ... on Defense Reorganization, April 16, 1958; and Statement on the Defense Reorganization Bill, May 28, 1958.)
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(Ferdinand Eberstadt did not undertake a job in UNRRA offered by President Harry S. Truman.)
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(Includes dinner in honor of John Foster Dulles, University Club, New York, New York, September 27, 1951.)
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(Includes remarks of Ferdinand Eberstadt before the Senate War Investigating Committee, October 22, 1947.)
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(Includes "Lodge Act" for the establishment of the Commission on Organization of the Executive Branch of the U.S. Government, July 7, 1947.)
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(Includes comments on the report.)
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(Includes speech to Congress regarding strengthening the Defense Department, March 5, 1919.)
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(Includes summary analysis of comments.)
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(Popularly known as "The Young Plan.")
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(Includes Ferdinand Eberstadt's "Proposals for Amendment of the Securities Act of 1933," June 20, 1945.)
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(Includes Ferdinand Eberstadt's statement before the Committee, November 28, 1938.)
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The Diaries series contains typed pages indicating who Eberstadt was meeting with each day, in both scheduled meetings and unplanned conversations, with brief notes on the subjects of the meetings. The diaries document Eberstadt's research on European business for Dillon, Read and Company, and his involvement with the Reparations Conference in 1929, the Army-Navy Munitions Board, the War Production Board, the Atomic Energy Commission, and the National Security Resources Board.
Arranged chronologically.
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The Articles by Ferdinand Eberstadt series is composed of copies of published articles, as well as a few drafts, written by Eberstadt. The majority of the articles are concerned with logistical issues related to World War II, such as the planning, production, and distribution of materials, facilities, and personnel for the support of the armed forces, as well as reflections on the war after its end. Many of the articles are published in the journal of the Army Ordnance Association, Logistics. The papers also include a few papers written while he was a student at Princeton University and a few papers on financial issues associated with businesses.
Arranged chronologically.
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(Also published in Advanced Management, 1951 January.)
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The Speeches and Statements by Ferdinand Eberstadt series is composed of the text for speeches given by Eberstadt before a variety of civic and business organizations, at universities, and over the radio, and testimony given before several committees of the United States Congress. The papers include typed copies of the speech texts, published copies of the speeches in journals and newspapers, and a small amount of correspondence. In the speeches, Eberstadt discussed issues related to World War II and to the field of finance, including the unification of the armed service, world peace, national security, investing, and financing a business.
Arranged chronologically.
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The publications about Ferdinand Eberstadt series contains magazines with articles about Eberstadt's career and a small amount of related correspondence. About half of the articles are concerned with his career as an investment banker. The remaining articles focus predominantly on his service to the United States government on defense issues.
Arranged chronologically.
Physical Description1 box
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The Address Books, Cards, and Appointment Books series includes materials on Eberstadt's contacts and schedules. The address books and cards list the names and addresses of his contacts. The appointment books span almost the entirety of his career and provide lists of who he was meeting with and talking to on each day, sometimes with a brief note on the subject of the meetings.
Divided into two sections, Address Books and Cards, and Appointment Books. Appointments Books is arranged chronologically.
Physical Description6 boxes
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The Documents: Awards, Citations, etc. series includes certificates, identification and membership cards, and legal papers that document Eberstadt's personal and professional life. The series includes papers related to his membership on boards, organizations, and in clubs, his army service, awards he received, and his finances.
Arranged chronologically, with oversized at the end.
Physical Description2 boxes
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Includes Annual Award of Distinction, Alumni Association of the Graduate School of Business Administration, New York University, June 2, 1949.
Physical Description1 box
The Medals series contains medals, ribbons, and pins. The majority of the medals are for Eberstadt's participation and victories in university running and swimming competitions, and also include medals awarded to Eberstadt for his military service.
Series is not arranged according to any organizational scheme.
Physical Description1 box
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Series is not arranged according to any organizational scheme.
The Photographs series includes portraits of United States government officials, many of them with signed inscriptions to Eberstadt, and photographs of meetings and committees. Also included are portraits and political cartoons of Eberstadt.
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( Includes political cartoons of Ferdinand Eberstadt, a portrait of James V. Forrestal, and a group photograph of the attendees at the New York University School of Commerce, Accounts and Finance Golden Anniversary Ceremonial Dinner.)
Physical Description1 box
The Memorabilia series includes prints of political cartoons about World War II, especially the issue of Army and Navy Unification, invitations Eberstadt received, Princeton University reunion booklets, a copy of the poem "Casey Jones," and a floorplan for the Hotel du Palais a Biarritz. Also included are a recording of a luncheon in honor of Howard S. Cullman, a painted tile, a swan drawn onto a piece of wood, and a wasp's nest.
Arranged chronologically, with oversized at the end.
Physical Description2 boxes
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The Scrapbooks series is composed of volumes of clippings, as well as a small amount of correspondence, photographs, booklets, and certificates, which document Eberstadt's career as an investment banker and his service to the United States government on defense issues. The series includes volumes on his career, and volumes on the Eberstadt Unification Report, the War Production Board, and a proposed nuclear power plant at Lloyd Neck, Long Island.
Series is not arranged according to any organizational scheme.
Physical Description2 boxes
(Regarding Eberstadt's service on United States defense issues and his opinions on United States foreign policy.)
Physical Description1 box
(Regarding Eberstadt's career as an investment banker.)
Physical Description1 box
(Regarding Eberstadt's career as an investment banker.)
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(Regarding the Eberstadt Unification Report.)
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(Regarding Eberstadt's career as an investment banker.)
Physical Description1 box
(Regarding a proposed nuclear power plant by LILCO, the Long Island Lighting Company, at Lloyd Neck.)
Physical Description1 box
(Regarding the War Production Board.)
Physical Description1 box
The Printed Matter and Reference Files series includes copies of Congressional hearings and government reports, court documents, reports and pamphlets of a variety of organizations, and copies of articles collected by Eberstadt. The main topics addressed by these materials varies over time. Materials from the 1920s are largely concerned with a case against Goodyear Tire Corporation, and from the 1930s with New York City planning. The materials from the 1940s and early 1950s are predominantly regarding World War II war industry production, the United States economy, and the atomic bomb program, as well as the emerging strain in United States-Soviet Union foreign relations. Materials from the mid-1950s are concerned with the stock market and with the peaceful use of atomic energy, and materials from the late 1950s document a case against RCA (Radio Corporation of America). The materials from the 1960s include information on New York, the United States budget for defense, and the United States submarine program.
Arranged chronologically.
Physical Description10 boxes
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The Books by Others Inscribed to Ferdinand Eberstadt series is composed of books with brief inscriptions to Eberstadt from the authors. The majority of the books are analyses of World War II or biographies of political figures. Also included are a few books on history, business, poetry, and a few yearbooks.
Series is not arranged according to any organizational scheme.
Physical Description2 boxes
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The Personal and Family Records series documents the personal life of Eberstadt and his immediate family. Much of the series is composed of Family Files, which predominantly contains papers related to Eberstadt's children and grandchildren, as well as his extended family. The papers include correspondence regarding family news and arranging for activities, as well as greeting cards, children's drawings and school grade reports, and a few photographs. The series also includes papers regarding Eberstadt's membership in a variety of social and business clubs; correspondence and itineraries for family vacations to Mexico, the Caribbean, and Europe; personal and business financial papers such as tax records and stock holdings; and financial and maintenance papers related to Eberstadt's ownership of property, notably his "Target Rock Farm" estate, and financial and travel records pertaining to his boats, notably the yacht "Target."
Please note that in many cases the contents list for this series only provides the date range for the box. However, there are labeled folders within each of these boxes which provide an additional aid for navigating the collection.
Divided into five sections: Clubs, Trips, Financial Records, Personal Property Files, and Family Files. Clubs is arranged alphabetically by organization and Trips is arranged chronologically. Financial Records and Personal Property Files are not arranged according to any organizational scheme. Family Files is arranged alphabetically by family name, then alphabetically by individual, and then chronologically. There is a section of additional correspondence at the end of the Family Files which was formerly restricted.
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