The Personal and Family Records series includes materials about Labouisse's personal life and education, as well as materials from his father and extended family. Please see the subseries descriptions in the contents list for additional information about individual subseries.
Divided into four subseries: Correspondence; Genealogy; Papers of Father, Labouisse Sr.; and Princeton University.
Alphabetical, 1945-1987
Alsop, Joseph W, 1956-1963
Anschuets, Norbert L, 1964-1984
Bennett, W. Tapley, 1962-1984
Benton, William, 1952-1968
Burgess, Eugene W, 1959-1972
Calligas, Stephen and Son, 1964-1985
Camps, Miriam, 1977-1978
Clark, William C, 1958-1986
Cooley, James, 1951-1986
Culp neé Levtz, Susan, 1977-1986
Davis, John H, 1959-1975
Dent, John, 1978-1983
Diamanti, Mary, 1972-1984
Dillon, C. Douglas, 1957-1976
Feis, Herbert, 1947-1972
Fistere, John, 1956-1982
Fitzgerald, Dennis A, 1974-1977
Fulbright, J. William, 1960-1976
Fuller, C.P.G., 1946-1964
Harriman, W. Averell, 1953-1976
Hicks, Paul De Forest, 1945-1980
Hodges, Luther H, 1962-1963
Humphrey, Hubert, 1957-1978
Jackson, Wayne, 1948-1977
Javits, Jacob K, 1961-1964
Jasperson, Mary, 1956-1987
Johnson, Joseph A, 1961-1962
Joyce, Robert and Jane, 1961-1980
Lalive d'Epinay, Jean, 1958-1984
Lippmann, Walter, 1959-1974
MacChesney, Brunson, 1945-1981
Marjolin, Robert, 1946-1985
Marris, A.D., 1963-1982
Merchant, Livingston T, 1945-1978
Moe, Henry Allen, 1962-1975
Moore, Ben T, 1950-1955
Muelberger, Arthur T, 1950-1983
Nakouz, Alexandre, 1974-1977
Norstad, Lavris, 1961-1962
Palmieri, Edmund L, 1947-1976
Peale neé Sorlin, Joan, 1963-1984
Riddleberger, James W, 1953-1969
Ringer, Walter M, 1958-1962
Rockefeller, David, 1957-1981
Rockefeller, John D., III, 1959-1978
Russell, Theodore B., Dr, 1947-1972
Sheffield, Frederick, 1951-1971
Stearns, Monteagle, 1964-1985
Stevenson, Adlai E., II, 1948-1965
Talbot, Phillips, 1962-1979
Terrence, August, Dr, 1948-1986
Timmons, Benson E.L., III, 1957-1982
Treadwell, John W.F., 1946-1968
Villere, Ernest C, 1961-1986
Watts, Edward E, 1946-1980
Wyndham White, Eric, 1974-1980
Chronological, 1945-1987
1945, 1945
1946, 1946
1947, 1947
1948, 1948
1949, 1949
1950, 1950
1951, 1951
1952, 1952
1953, 1953
1954, 1954
1955-1957, 1955-1957
1958-1959, 1958-1959
1960, 1960
1961-1962, 1961-1962
1965, 1965
1966, 1966
1967, 1967
1968, 1968
1969, 1969
1970, 1970
1971-1972, 1971-1972
1973, 1973
1974, 1974
1975, 1975
1976, 1976
1977, 1977
1978, 1978
1979, 1979
1980, 1980
1981, 1981
1982, 1982
1983, 1983
1984, 1984
1985, 1985
1986-1987, 1986-1987
In America, 1785-2004
Father, 1805-2004
Labouisse, 1805-2004
Priestley, 1928-2004
Richardson, 1979-2004
Smith, 1834-2004
Mother, 1785-2004
Hooker, 2004
Huger, 1785-2004
Middleton, 1872-1959
Notes and Copies, 1872, 1959
Polk, 1872-2004
In France, 1904-2004
Appraiser's Notes, 2004
1904, 1904
1905, 1905
1906-1907, 1906-1907
1908, 1908
1909-1910, 1909-1910
1911-1915, 1911-1915
1916-1918, 1916-1918
1919-1922, 1919-1922
1925-1928, 1925-1928
Written History, 1904
Appraiser's Notes, 2004
New Orleans, 1864-1909
Stock Certificates, 1912-1913
Correspondence, 1886-2004
Alphabetical, 1886-2004
Labouisse, Fanny, 1895-2004
Appraiser's Notes, 2004
1895-1897, 1895-1897
1898, 1898
1899, 1899
1900, 1900
1901, 1901
1902, 1902
1903, 1903
1904, 1904
1905, 1905
1906, 1906
1907-1915, 1907-1915
1916-1917, 1916-1917
1918-1926, 1918-1926
Schools, 1916-2004
Chronological, 1909-1926
1909, 1909
1915-1917, 1915-1917
1918-1919, 1918-1919
1921-1926, 1921-1926
Public Statements, 1900-1927
As Student, 1922-1926
As Alumnus, 1945-1988
Awards, 1959-1978
Classmates, 1945-1987
1945-1969, 1945-1969
1970-1980, 1970-1980
1981-1987, 1981-1987
Edwards, W.P.N., 1950-1987
Gilbert, Roger, 1946-1979
Hallock, Gerard, 1948-1986
Leslie, John, 1961-1972
McKeever, H. Van Brunt, 1947-1986
Schmidt, Adolph W, 1965-1981
University, 1955-1987
Donations, 1971-1987
Artwork Loan, 1971-1981
Labouisse Fellowship, 1983-1986
Labouisse Fellowship, 1986
Life Income Fund, 1985-1987
Reunions, 1971-1986
Series 2: United Nations, 1917-2004
The United Nations series documents Labouisse's work with United Nations relief organizations. Please see the subseries descriptions in the contents list for additional information about individual subseries.
Divided into three subseries: United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), Crisis in the Congo, and United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF).
Appointment, 1954-1955
Correspondence, 1950-1965
Alphabetical, 1950-1965
Carver, Leslie, 1954-1959
Courvoisiez, Raymond M, 1955-1959
Davis, John H, 1959
Diffelen, R.W. Van, 1957-1960
Flynn, Molly, 1954-1961
Hammarskjöld, Dag, 1950-1964
Lalive, Jean, 1955-1958
Moe, Sherwood G, 1954-1965
Chronological, 1954-1958
Press Clippings, 1954-1958
Publications, 1917-1956
Publications, 1957-1980
Resignation, 1956-2004
Announcements, 1958
Farewells, 1958
Letters, 1958
Press Clippings, 1958
Speeches, 1954-1959
Staff, 1954-1958
9th Session, 1954
10th Session, 1955
11th Session, 1956
12th Session, 1957
13th Session, 1958
Resolutions, 1948-1957
Status Reports, 1954-1958
Travel, 1954-1960
Gaza, 1954-1960
Iraq, 1956
Jordan, 1954-1958
Lebanon, 1955-1958
Syria, 1955-1957
Appointments, 1964-1978
Correspondence, 1951-1987
Alphabetical, 1951-1987
Bacic, Sasha, 1970-1986
Beer, Henrik, 1973-1979
Campbell-Beaven, Jane, 1960-1979
Charnow, Jack, 1972-1986
Christensen, Knud, 1976-1984
Conzett, Hans, 1975-1984
Debré, Robert, 1970-1980
Egger, Charles, 1976-1986
Gendrou, Louis, 1969-1986
Grant, James P, 1973-1985
Heyward, E.J.R., 1965-1986
Jones, Vicky, 1976-1977
Jackson, Robert, Sir, 1951-1986
Kaye, Danny, 1968-1987
Larsen, Paul F, 1974-1986
Lim, Estefania A, 1977-1986
Lutz, Gertrude, 1973-1985
McDougall, James, 1976-1982
Mahler, Halfdan, 1976-1980
Morse, Bradford, 1977-1986
Mostefaoui, Ahmed, 1976-1977
Ogata, Sadako, 1977-1980
Ordóñez-Plaja, Antonio, 1976-1979
Pantaleoni, Helenka, 1972-1987
Pate, Martha, 1965-1966
Reyes, Narciso G, 1974-1978
Sandberg, Martin B, 1972-1984
Sasakawa, Ryoichi, 1974-1980
Stein, Herman, 1974-1986
Thant, U, 1964-1972
Thedin, Nils, 1972-1979
Turrettini, Bernard, 1976-1984
Waldheim, Kurt, 1972-1979
Chronological, 1966-1986
1966-1972, 1966-1972
1973, 1973
1974, 1974
1975, 1975
1976, 1976
1977, 1977
1978, 1978
1979, 1979
1980-1982, 1980-1982
1983-1986, 1983-1986
Gift of Song, 1978-1981
Correspondence, 1978-1979
Financial Results, 1981
Photographs, 1979
Press Clippings, 1978-1979
Production Manual, 1978
Harlem Schools Visit, 1977
Brochures and Pamphlets, 1979
Commemorative Stamps, 1979
Correspondence, 1975-1980
Rights of a Child Concert, 1976
St. James Church Speech, 1967-1968
UNICEF Gala Benefit, 1968
Infrastructure, 1965-1979
Administrative, 1975-1979
Annual Reports, 1972-1979
Consultant Reports, 1973-1978
Executive Board Meetings, 1965-1979
Funding, 1975-1978
Funding, United States, 1969-1979
Cambodia, 1974-1980
1979, 1979
1979, 1979
1979-1980, 1979-1980
Expulsion of UNICEF, 1974-1975
Maps of Region, undated
Meetings, 1979
Pledging Conference, 1979
Press Clippings, 1979
United Nations Assembly, 1979
Israel, 1969-1984
Nigeria, 1964-1970
1968-1970, 1968-1970
Maps, 1964
Press Clippings, 1968
UNICEF News, 1968-1969
Vietnam, 1970-1979
Nobel Prize, 1965-1966
Announcements, 1965
Ceremonies, 1965
Congratulations, 1965-1966
Itinerary, 1965
Press Clippings, 1965
UN Reception, 1965
Retirement, 1974-1980
Farewell Messages, 1979
Farewell Receptions, 1979
Final Work, 1978-1979
Press Clippings, 1979-1980
Search for Successor, 1974-1979
Telegrams, 1979-1980
Tribute Scrapbook, 1979
Speeches, 1965-1987
1965-1966, 1965-1966
1967, 1967
1968, 1968
1969-1970, 1969-1970
1971-1972, 1971-1972
1973-1974, 1973-1974
1975-1976, 1975-1976
1977, 1977
1978, 1978
1979, 1979
1980-1987, 1980-1987
Staff, 1965-1981
Correspondence, 1975-1981
Directories, 1979
Hiring, 1975-1978
Parties, 1966-1979
Policies, 1975-1979
Reviews, 1979
Season's Greetings, 1965-1979
Travel, 1965-1979
Chile, 1965
Norway, 1965
Switzerland, 1966
India, 1966
Bangkok, South Vietnam, 1966
East and West Pakistan, Beirut, 1966
Press Clippings, 1966
Greece, 1967
USSR and Poland, 1967
Belgium, 1967
Nigeria, 1968
Toronto, 1968
Program of Entire Trip, 1968
Columbia Documents, 1968
Columbia Press, 1968
Peru, 1968
Brazil Documents, 1968
Brazil Press, 1968
London, 1969
Chile, 1969
Istanbul, 1969
Ottawa, 1969
Japan, Paris, Geneva, 1970
Nigeria, 1970
Geneva and Italy, 1971
Tokyo, 1971
Singapore and Indonesia, 1971
India, Bangladesh, 1971
India and Bangladesh Bound Map, 1971
Copenhagen, 1971
London, 1972
Program, 1972
Lebanon, 1972
Iran, 1972
Qatar and United Arab Emirates, 1972
Egypt, 1972
Germany, 1974
Geneva, 1974
Rome, 1974
Program, 1975
Hawaii, Bangkok, 1975
Bangladesh, 1975
New Delhi, 1975
Calcutta, Assam, 1975
Assam Bound Map, 1975
Ottawa, 1975
Tokyo and China, 1976
Stockholm, 1976
Program, 1977
Niger, 1977
Upper-Volta, 1977
Ivory Coast, 1977
Press Clippings, 1977
Geneva and Paris, 1977
Los Angeles, 1977
Venezuela, 1977
Jamaica, 1978
London, 1978
Brazil, 1978
Program, 1978
Moscow and Alma Ata, 1978
Jordan, 1978
Lebanon, Beirut, 1978
Bonn and Paris, 1979
Mexico City, 1979
Japan, 1979
Geneva, 1979
Program, 1979
Cambodia, 1979
Hanoi, 1979
Thailand, 1979
Tokyo, 1979
UN Archives Finding Aid, 1948-1980
The United States Government series documents Labouisse's service to the United States government throughout his career on matters of international economic policy and development, and as ambassador to Greece. Please see the subseries descriptions in the contents list for additional information about individual subseries.
Divided into three subseries: State Department, International Cooperation Administration (ICA), and Ambassador to Greece.
Appointment, 1943
Appointment, 1944
Appointment, 1945-1946
Marshall Plan, 1947-1957
Appointment, 1948
Promotions, Raises, 1948-1952
Correspondence, 1948-1957
Developments, 1947-1950
Resignation Correspondence, 1953-1954
Speeches, 1948-1952
Speeches, 1953-1955
Appointment, 1958-1961
Congratulations, 1961
Daily Appointments, 1961
Public Information, 1961
Speeches, 1961
Speeches, 1961
Appointment, 1961-1965
Appointment, 1961-1964
Congratulations, 1961-1962
Press Clippings, 1961-1962
Correspondence, 1961-1965
Embassy Paintings, 1962-1965
Thank You Letters, 1962-1965
1961-1962, 1961-1962
1962-1965, 1962-1965
Embassy Events, 1962-1965
Press Clippings, 1962-1965
Resignation, 1964-1985
Farewell Parties, 1965
Gifts Received, 1965
Press Clippings, 1965
Staff References, 1965
Royal Family, 1962-1971
Correspondence, 1963-1971
Events, 1963-1965
Athens Meeting, 1964
Embassy, 1963-1965
King Constantine Wedding, 1964
King Paul Funeral, 1964
Palace Officials, 1962-1965
Photographs, 1965
Schedules, 1962-1965
Speeches, 1962-1965
Staff, 1961-1965
Christmas Messages, 1962-1964
Diplomatic Lists, 1962-1963
Greek Governments, 1962-1965
Staffing Patterns, 1961
Staffing Patterns, 1962-1965
Travel, 1962-1965
Washington, 1962-1987
Air Force Base Visit, 1962
Events in Greece, 1962-1964
Farewell Reception, 1965
White House, 1962-1987
John Kennedy, 1962-1965
Correspondence, 1963-1987
The Other Organizations series documents Labouisse's wide range of involvement in civil service organizations, serving on the board or in a committee, as a member, or which he helped financially. There is a small amount of material for each organization, including correspondence, meeting minutes, brochures, press clippings, newsletters, briefings, and itineraries. The two most thoroughly documented organizations are the American Farm School (in Greece) and the World Bank.
Arranged alphabetically by organization.
Appointment, 1965-1981
Correspondence, 1962-1987
Landslide, 1962-1987
Trimis, Toni, 1974-1985
Trustees, 1963-1987
1962-1982, 1962-1982
1983-1987, 1983-1987
History, 1911-1985
Newsletter, 1962-1988
Visits of Labouisse to Campus, 1962-1986
Youth Center, 1983-1987
The Atlantic Council, 1962-1966
Ralph Bunche Memorial, 1972-1986
The Century Association, 1946-1986
Channel 13, 1975-1986
Clark Foundation, 1963-1986
Greer School, 1946-1981
Holy Trinity Church, 1957-1987
Mark Twain Society, 1969-1976
Treadwell Memorial Fund, 1973-1985
Woodberry Forrest School, 1947-1985
World Bank, 1959-1961
Appointment, 1959-1961
Briefings, 1959-1960
Correspondence, 1959-1961
Mission Statement, 1959
Press Clippings, 1959
Report, 1961
Speech, 1959
Travel, 1959
Series 5: Awards, 1946-1984
The Awards series contains awards certificates, honorary degree diplomas, and medals, as well as correspondence, invitations, and programs regarding the awards that Labouisse received during his career. In some cases, the material related to an award is located in the Awards series, while the award itself is located in the Oversized Materials series.
Arranged alphabetically by document type. Awards and Decorations, and Honorary Degrees are arranged chronologically.
Citation, Hellenic Red Cross, 1965
Associate Commander, Associate Knight, Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem, 1966-1984
Great Cross, Order of Boyaca, 1968
Order of the Big Heart, 1974
Decoration, Order of the Smile, 1979
Medals, 1954-1983
The Oversized Materials series includes awards, honorary degrees, plaques, and a sash, as well as Labouisse's certificate of appointment as United States Ambassador to Greece, and a map detailing the movement of Lyndon Johnson during a visit to the embassy.
Arranged by document type and then by size.
Plaques, 1970-1981
Plaque, undated
Sash, 1952
Awards, 1952-1982
Honorary Degrees, 1965-1983
Ambassador to Greece, 1961
- Scope and Contents
Labouisse's papers document his career with the United Nations and with the State Department and include correspondence, speeches and publications, as well as biographical and genealogical material. The United Nations materials document his term as director of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) from 1954 to 1958 and as Executive Director of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) from 1965 to 1979. The State Department papers consist of materials regarding his work with international economic aid, especially the formation and implementation of the Marshall Plan and his service as director of the International Cooperation Administration (ICA), and his service as United States Ambassador to Greece in the 1960s.
Please see the series descriptions in the contents list for additional information about individual series.
- Arrangement
The Papers have been arranged in six series:
- Collection Creator Biography:
Henry R. Labouisse (1904-1987) was a distinguished American diplomat and international public servant. He served as director of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) from 1954 to 1958 and as executive director of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) from 1965 to 1979. He also served as a United States government official working on the formation and implementation of foreign economic policies during World War II and the 1960s.
Henry Richardson Labouisse was born in New Orleans, Louisiana on February 11, 1904. He was one of two sons of Henry Richardson Labouisse and Frances Devereaux (Huger) Labouisse. He married Elizabeth Scriven Clark on June 29, 1935 and they had one daughter, Anne (Farnsworth). Elizabeth Labouisse died in 1945. Labouisse remarried on November 19, 1954, to Eve Curie, daughter of the scientists Pierre and Marie Curie. Curie was a renowned author and journalist. They met in 1951, while he was on the Economic Cooperation Administration (ECA) staff and she was a secretary with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).
Labouisse earned his B.A. from Princeton University in 1926 and graduated from Harvard University Law School in 1929. He was admitted into the New York State bar the following year. Labouisse was an associate and member of the New York City law firm Taylor, Blanc, Capron and Marsh, and its successor firm Mitchell, Taylor, Capron & Marsh, from 1929 to 1941.
When the United States entered the Second World War, Labouisse chose to serve his country by accepting a position in the State Department. He began there in 1941 and rose through a variety of positions over the next several years, most concerned with forming and implementing foreign economic policy. His first position was as assistant chief of the Division of Defense Materials in December 1941. He was promoted to chief of the division in February 1943. Later in 1943, he was made deputy director of the Office of Foreign Economic Coordination, and in January 1944 he was appointed chief of the Eastern Hemisphere Division. In March 1944, he was transferred to the Office of European Affairs, where he was special assistant to the director.
Labouisse was appointed chief of the Foreign Economic Administration mission to France in November 1944 and served concurrently as minister for economic affairs at the American Embassy. He became special assistant to Under Secretary of State, William L. Clayton, in November 1945. Through his work with the undersecretary, and his previous work coordinating aid to various European reconstruction points, Labouisse played an important role in the aid efforts that culminated in the Marshall Plan. In July 1946, he returned to his role as special assistant to the director of the Office of European Affairs.
Labouisse then served as the principal State Department officer working with the Economic Cooperation Administration (ECA) during the initial implementation of the Marshall Plan. He traveled to Paris in March 1948 as head of the mission to establish the ECA as the agency to administer United States economic aid to Europe. He returned to Europe in May 1948 as the head of the United States delegation to the Geneva meeting of the Economic Commission for Europe. Labouisse then served as coordinator of foreign aid and assistance in the State Department from June 1948 until October 1949, when he became director of British Commonwealth and Northern European Affairs. He held this post until September 1951. He began arguing for a tougher stance on aid in 1949, one that would force European economies to adjust to market forces. In September 1951, Labouisse was named head of the ECA's mission to France, journeying to Paris as head of the Marshall Plan mission. When the ECA was replaced by the Mutual Security Administration and the Foreign Operations Administration, Labouisse headed the Paris missions of both agencies from 1951 to June 1954.
Labouisse left United States government service in 1954 to work for the United Nations. He was appointed director of the United Nations Relief and Work Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) in June 1954 at the request of United Nations Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld. The UNRWA was established in December 1949 to carry out relief and works projects in cooperation with local governments. When Labouisse assumed his directorship, the UNRWA was responsible for the care of 887,000 Arab refugees who had fled Palestine in 1948. Labouisse oversaw the improvement of the standard of living in the refugee camps, raised the standards of health, education, and vocational training, and established a grant program that allowed refugees to make a down payment on a farm or shop. He left the UNRWA in 1958.
Labouisse was appointed as a consultant to the International Bank of Reconstruction and Development in May 1959. He headed a survey mission to Venezuela in September 1959 to assist in the formulation of a program of economic development. He was recalled from that mission by Hammarskjöld to serve as special advisor to the secretary-general during the Congo crisis in 1960. In December 1960, Labouisse was appointed as the International Bank's special representative for Africa and also headed a mission to Uganda to study economic problems.
He returned to United States government service in January 1961, when he was appointed Director of the International Cooperation Administration (ICA) by President John F. Kennedy, which was created to coordinate nonmilitary foreign aid programs. Labouisse had been considered for the post by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in February 1959, but his appointment was rejected by Republican national chairman Meade Alcorn on the grounds that Labouisse had registered as a Democrat several years earlier. In May 1961, President Kennedy began to work with Congress to reorganize the foreign aid programs into a single agency. The ICA was eliminated during the reorganization, and Labouisse was named United States Ambassador to Greece. He held that post from 1962 to 1965.
Labouisse was appointed the second Executive Director of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) in June 1965, following the death of the first director, Maurice Pate. During his directorship, Labouisse oversaw the emergency relief efforts for several major conflicts and naturals disasters, and fought to alleviate poor conditions in developing countries. UNICEF provided relief to both sides in the Nigerian civil war in 1968 and to Cambodia in 1979, after the country was invaded by Vietnam.
Labouisse retired from his position with UNICEF in December 1979, although he continued to work as a consultant on the Cambodia and Thailand operations for most of 1980. After his retirement, Labouisse continued to be active in various organizations, including serving as Chairman of the Board of the American Farm School in Thessaloniki Greece from 1980 to 1985 and as trustee of the school from 1965 to 1985. Labouisse died on March 25, 1987.
Labouisse
Henry R. Labouisse (1904-1987) was a distinguished American diplomat and international public servant. He served as director of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) from 1954 to 1958 and as executive director of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) from 1965 to 1979. He also served as a United States government official working on the formation and implementation of foreign economic policies during World War II and the 1960s. Henry Richardson Labouisse was born in New Orleans, Louisiana on February 11, 1904. He was one of two sons of Henry Richardson Labouisse and Frances Devereaux (Huger) Labouisse. He married Elizabeth Scriven Clark on June 29, 1935 and they had one daughter, Anne (Farnsworth). Elizabeth Labouisse died in 1945. Labouisse remarried on November 19, 1954, to Eve Curie, daughter of the scientists Pierre and Marie Curie. Curie was a renowned author and journalist. They met in 1951, while he was on the Economic Cooperation Administration (ECA) staff and she was a secretary with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Labouisse earned his B.A. from Princeton University in 1926 and graduated from Harvard University Law School in 1929. He was admitted into the New York State bar the following year. Labouisse was an associate and member of the New York City law firm Taylor, Blanc, Capron and Marsh, and its successor firm Mitchell, Taylor, Capron & Marsh, from 1929 to 1941. When the United States entered the Second World War, Labouisse chose to serve his country by accepting a position in the State Department. He began there in 1941 and rose through a variety of positions over the next several years, most concerned with forming and implementing foreign economic policy. His first position was as assistant chief of the Division of Defense Materials in December 1941. He was promoted to chief of the division in February 1943. Later in 1943, he was made deputy director of the Office of Foreign Economic Coordination, and in January 1944 he was appointed chief of the Eastern Hemisphere Division. In March 1944, he was transferred to the Office of European Affairs, where he was special assistant to the director. Labouisse was appointed chief of the Foreign Economic Administration mission to France in November 1944 and served concurrently as minister for economic affairs at the American Embassy. He became special assistant to Under Secretary of State, William L. Clayton, in November 1945. Through his work with the undersecretary, and his previous work coordinating aid to various European reconstruction points, Labouisse played an important role in the aid efforts that culminated in the Marshall Plan. In July 1946, he returned to his role as special assistant to the director of the Office of European Affairs. Labouisse then served as the principal State Department officer working with the Economic Cooperation Administration (ECA) during the initial implementation of the Marshall Plan. He traveled to Paris in March 1948 as head of the mission to establish the ECA as the agency to administer United States economic aid to Europe. He returned to Europe in May 1948 as the head of the United States delegation to the Geneva meeting of the Economic Commission for Europe. Labouisse then served as coordinator of foreign aid and assistance in the State Department from June 1948 until October 1949, when he became director of British Commonwealth and Northern European Affairs. He held this post until September 1951. He began arguing for a tougher stance on aid in 1949, one that would force European economies to adjust to market forces. In September 1951, Labouisse was named head of the ECA's mission to France, journeying to Paris as head of the Marshall Plan mission. When the ECA was replaced by the Mutual Security Administration and the Foreign Operations Administration, Labouisse headed the Paris missions of both agencies from 1951 to June 1954. Labouisse left United States government service in 1954 to work for the United Nations. He was appointed director of the United Nations Relief and Work Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) in June 1954 at the request of United Nations Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld. The UNRWA was established in December 1949 to carry out relief and works projects in cooperation with local governments. When Labouisse assumed his directorship, the UNRWA was responsible for the care of 887,000 Arab refugees who had fled Palestine in 1948. Labouisse oversaw the improvement of the standard of living in the refugee camps, raised the standards of health, education, and vocational training, and established a grant program that allowed refugees to make a down payment on a farm or shop. He left the UNRWA in 1958. Labouisse was appointed as a consultant to the International Bank of Reconstruction and Development in May 1959. He headed a survey mission to Venezuela in September 1959 to assist in the formulation of a program of economic development. He was recalled from that mission by Hammarskjöld to serve as special advisor to the secretary-general during the Congo crisis in 1960. In December 1960, Labouisse was appointed as the International Bank's special representative for Africa and also headed a mission to Uganda to study economic problems. He returned to United States government service in January 1961, when he was appointed Director of the International Cooperation Administration (ICA) by President John F. Kennedy, which was created to coordinate nonmilitary foreign aid programs. Labouisse had been considered for the post by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in February 1959, but his appointment was rejected by Republican national chairman Meade Alcorn on the grounds that Labouisse had registered as a Democrat several years earlier. In May 1961, President Kennedy began to work with Congress to reorganize the foreign aid programs into a single agency. The ICA was eliminated during the reorganization, and Labouisse was named United States Ambassador to Greece. He held that post from 1962 to 1965. Labouisse was appointed the second Executive Director of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) in June 1965, following the death of the first director, Maurice Pate. During his directorship, Labouisse oversaw the emergency relief efforts for several major conflicts and naturals disasters, and fought to alleviate poor conditions in developing countries. UNICEF provided relief to both sides in the Nigerian civil war in 1968 and to Cambodia in 1979, after the country was invaded by Vietnam. Labouisse retired from his position with UNICEF in December 1979, although he continued to work as a consultant on the Cambodia and Thailand operations for most of 1980. After his retirement, Labouisse continued to be active in various organizations, including serving as Chairman of the Board of the American Farm School in Thessaloniki Greece from 1980 to 1985 and as trustee of the school from 1965 to 1985. Labouisse died on March 25, 1987.
Labouisse
Henry R. Labouisse (1904-1987) was a distinguished American diplomat and international public servant. He served as director of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) from 1954 to 1958 and as executive director of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) from 1965 to 1979. He also served as a United States government official working on the formation and implementation of foreign economic policies during World War II and the 1960s. Henry Richardson Labouisse was born in New Orleans, Louisiana on February 11, 1904. He was one of two sons of Henry Richardson Labouisse and Frances Devereaux (Huger) Labouisse. He married Elizabeth Scriven Clark on June 29, 1935 and they had one daughter, Anne (Farnsworth). Elizabeth Labouisse died in 1945. Labouisse remarried on November 19, 1954, to Eve Curie, daughter of the scientists Pierre and Marie Curie. Curie was a renowned author and journalist. They met in 1951, while he was on the Economic Cooperation Administration (ECA) staff and she was a secretary with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Labouisse earned his B.A. from Princeton University in 1926 and graduated from Harvard University Law School in 1929. He was admitted into the New York State bar the following year. Labouisse was an associate and member of the New York City law firm Taylor, Blanc, Capron and Marsh, and its successor firm Mitchell, Taylor, Capron & Marsh, from 1929 to 1941. When the United States entered the Second World War, Labouisse chose to serve his country by accepting a position in the State Department. He began there in 1941 and rose through a variety of positions over the next several years, most concerned with forming and implementing foreign economic policy. His first position was as assistant chief of the Division of Defense Materials in December 1941. He was promoted to chief of the division in February 1943. Later in 1943, he was made deputy director of the Office of Foreign Economic Coordination, and in January 1944 he was appointed chief of the Eastern Hemisphere Division. In March 1944, he was transferred to the Office of European Affairs, where he was special assistant to the director. Labouisse was appointed chief of the Foreign Economic Administration mission to France in November 1944 and served concurrently as minister for economic affairs at the American Embassy. He became special assistant to Under Secretary of State, William L. Clayton, in November 1945. Through his work with the undersecretary, and his previous work coordinating aid to various European reconstruction points, Labouisse played an important role in the aid efforts that culminated in the Marshall Plan. In July 1946, he returned to his role as special assistant to the director of the Office of European Affairs. Labouisse then served as the principal State Department officer working with the Economic Cooperation Administration (ECA) during the initial implementation of the Marshall Plan. He traveled to Paris in March 1948 as head of the mission to establish the ECA as the agency to administer United States economic aid to Europe. He returned to Europe in May 1948 as the head of the United States delegation to the Geneva meeting of the Economic Commission for Europe. Labouisse then served as coordinator of foreign aid and assistance in the State Department from June 1948 until October 1949, when he became director of British Commonwealth and Northern European Affairs. He held this post until September 1951. He began arguing for a tougher stance on aid in 1949, one that would force European economies to adjust to market forces. In September 1951, Labouisse was named head of the ECA's mission to France, journeying to Paris as head of the Marshall Plan mission. When the ECA was replaced by the Mutual Security Administration and the Foreign Operations Administration, Labouisse headed the Paris missions of both agencies from 1951 to June 1954. Labouisse left United States government service in 1954 to work for the United Nations. He was appointed director of the United Nations Relief and Work Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) in June 1954 at the request of United Nations Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld. The UNRWA was established in December 1949 to carry out relief and works projects in cooperation with local governments. When Labouisse assumed his directorship, the UNRWA was responsible for the care of 887,000 Arab refugees who had fled Palestine in 1948. Labouisse oversaw the improvement of the standard of living in the refugee camps, raised the standards of health, education, and vocational training, and established a grant program that allowed refugees to make a down payment on a farm or shop. He left the UNRWA in 1958. Labouisse was appointed as a consultant to the International Bank of Reconstruction and Development in May 1959. He headed a survey mission to Venezuela in September 1959 to assist in the formulation of a program of economic development. He was recalled from that mission by Hammarskjöld to serve as special advisor to the secretary-general during the Congo crisis in 1960. In December 1960, Labouisse was appointed as the International Bank's special representative for Africa and also headed a mission to Uganda to study economic problems. He returned to United States government service in January 1961, when he was appointed Director of the International Cooperation Administration (ICA) by President John F. Kennedy, which was created to coordinate nonmilitary foreign aid programs. Labouisse had been considered for the post by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in February 1959, but his appointment was rejected by Republican national chairman Meade Alcorn on the grounds that Labouisse had registered as a Democrat several years earlier. In May 1961, President Kennedy began to work with Congress to reorganize the foreign aid programs into a single agency. The ICA was eliminated during the reorganization, and Labouisse was named United States Ambassador to Greece. He held that post from 1962 to 1965. Labouisse was appointed the second Executive Director of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) in June 1965, following the death of the first director, Maurice Pate. During his directorship, Labouisse oversaw the emergency relief efforts for several major conflicts and naturals disasters, and fought to alleviate poor conditions in developing countries. UNICEF provided relief to both sides in the Nigerian civil war in 1968 and to Cambodia in 1979, after the country was invaded by Vietnam. Labouisse retired from his position with UNICEF in December 1979, although he continued to work as a consultant on the Cambodia and Thailand operations for most of 1980. After his retirement, Labouisse continued to be active in various organizations, including serving as Chairman of the Board of the American Farm School in Thessaloniki Greece from 1980 to 1985 and as trustee of the school from 1965 to 1985. Labouisse died on March 25, 1987.
- Acquisition:
This collection was donated by Anne L. Peretz, the daughter of Henry R. Labouisse, in January 2003 .
- Appraisal
No material was separated from this collection during processing in 2006.
- Sponsorship:
These papers were processed with the generous support of the National Historical Publications and Records Commission and the John Foster and Janet Avery Dulles Fund.
- Processing Information
This collection was processed by Adriane Hanson, Christopher Shannon, and Karen Okigbo in 2006. Finding aid written by Adriane Hanson in March 2006.
- Conditions Governing Access
The collection is open for research use.
- Conditions Governing Use
Single copies may be made for research purposes. To cite or publish quotations that fall within Fair Use, as defined under U. S. Copyright Law, no permission is required. For instances beyond Fair Use, any copyright vested in the donor has passed to The Trustees of Princeton University and researchers do not need to obtain permission, complete any forms, or receive a letter to move forward with use of donor-created materials within the collection. For materials in the collection not created by the donor, or where the material is not an original, the copyright is likely not held by the University. In these instances, it is the responsibility of the researcher to determine whether any permissions related to copyright, privacy, publicity, or any other rights are necessary for their intended use of the Library's materials, and to obtain all required permissions from any existing rights holders, if they have not already done so. Princeton University Library's Special Collections does not charge any permission or use fees for the publication of images of materials from our collections. The department does request that its collections be properly cited and images credited. More detailed information can be found on the Copyright, Credit and Citations Guidelines page on our website. If you have a question about who owns the copyright for an item, you may request clarification by contacting us through the Ask Us! form.
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- Credit this material:
Henry R. Labouisse Papers; Public Policy Papers, Department of Special Collections, Princeton University Library
- Permanent URL:
- http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/zc77sq10r
- Location:
-
Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library65 Olden StreetPrinceton, NJ 08540, USA
- Storage Note:
- Mudd Manuscript Library (scamudd): Box 1-52
- Bibliography
The following resources were consulted during preparation of the biographical note: "About UNICEF: Who we are," on the UNICEF website. http://www.unicef.org/about/who/index_introduction.html Accessed March 16, 2006. "Henry R. Labouisse Dies; Former Chief of Unicef," by Eric Pace. The New York Times, March 27, 1987. "Labouisse, Henry R." in Current Biography, The H. W. Wilson Company, 1961. Materials from the Henry R. Labouisse Papers; Public Policy Papers, Special Collections, Princeton University Library.
- Subject Terms:
- Awards.
Child welfare -- International cooperation.
Diplomatic and consular service, American -- Greece.
Economic assistance, American.
Economics. -- 20th century
Humanitarian assistance, American.
International relief -- Middle East.
Refugees, Palestinian Arab. - Genre Terms:
- Clippings.
Correspondence
Genealogies.
Pamphlets.
Speeches.
Writings. - Names:
- American Farm School (Greece)
World Bank.
UNICEF.
United Nations. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East
United States. Department of State
United States. International Cooperation Administration
Marshall Plan - Places:
- United States -- Foreign relations -- Europe.
United States -- Foreign economic relations.