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Fed Officials' Trips through 20th Century History
January 08, 2020
By Heather Hennerich
Whether by plane, train or boat, Fed officials and future Fed officials have traveled to history’s stage—from World
War I, to India’s Green Revolution, to the USSR’s glasnost.
You can take historical trips with them via the collections in the St. Louis Fed’s digital library FRASER and read
the very human stories of some of the people who lived through momentous times.

Traveling amid the Great War in Europe
1916: The United States’ central banking system was founded in 1913 after President
Woodrow Wilson signed the Federal Reserve Act into law.
A few years later, Benjamin Strong Jr., who was the first president (then called governor) of
the New York Fed, set sail for Europe to make plans for the banking arrangements of the
Federal Reserve System in London, Paris and Holland.
At the time, World War I was raging.
Strong conceded in a 1916 letter to a Paris contact that it would be difficult to determine
“just how far we can go or would be willing to go [with the arrangements] prior to the
conclusion of the war,” but the fact that he would be traveling in countries at war did not
deter him.

Benjamin Strong
Jr., circa 1915.
Included in his papers in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York archives are photographs of Image from papers
held at the New
war scenes taken before Strong’s 1916 trip by an unknown photographer.
York Fed; digitized
The 104 pages of photos and their labeled backs include a 1914 photo of “Paris motor-buses
for FRASER.
carrying the 20th Army Corps driving the race to the sea,” among others.
Before, after and during his trip, Strong helped family and friends
volunteer in the war effort. Along with Americans including Ernest
Hemingway, Strong’s son, Ben, and “one or two” of Ben’s friends
sought to help near the front.
Henry Herman Harjes, Strong’s Paris contact, had organized an
ambulance service for the American Red Cross, and Strong in his 1916
letter asked him for advice on the young men “either driving an
ambulance or in some form of the service” in France.
Strong’s extensive international travels continued throughout the 1920s
as he promoted more effective cooperation among the world’s central

Included in Benjamin Strong Jr.'s papers
in the New York Fed archives are

banks, according to a biography on the Federal Reserve History website.

photographs of World War I scenes.

Funding Mining and Metal in Brazil
1946: William McChesney Martin Jr. was Fed chairman from 1951 to 1970. Before that, and after serving in the
U.S. Army during World War II, the St. Louis native was chairman of the Export-Import Bank of the United States.
Martin and three other Export-Import Bank officials visited Brazil in October 1946 for the
dedication of a steel mill the bank had helped fund, and to find out about the general
economic situation and projects the bank was interested in.
Those included an iron ore project in the southeast of the country, which Martin spoke about
to then-Brazilian President Eurico Gaspar Dutra. The conversations on a train en route to the
steel mill dedication had to be conducted through one of Dutra’s cabinet officers because of
a language barrier.
“Mr. Martin expressed the great interest of the Export-Import Bank in completion of
development of the Vale do Rio Doce,” according to a report by bank Secretary Sidney
William
Sherwood. “Each time Mr. Martin expressed this, the President smiled, nodded and indicated McChesney Martin
that he understood.”
Jr., circa 1943.
Image from papers
During another part of the trip, a car ride on winding roads outside Rio de Janeiro gave the
held at the
bank officials jitters, and a misunderstanding about road speeds made matters worse.
“Our nerves had reached the breaking point when we saw the needle on the speedometer
touch 95 and were only slightly relieved when our engineer companion explained it
indicated kilometers equivalent to about 65 miles per hour,” Sherwood wrote.

Missouri History
Museum; .

Seeing the Aftermath of World War II
1947: As Export-Import Bank chairman, Martin also traveled through Europe after the war’s end. His wife, fellow
St. Louis native Cynthia Davis Martin, traveled with him and took careful notes on its effects on everything from
food supplies to morale.
Cities’ conditions varied wildly, according to her accounts circa 1947.
London still was “gaping full of wounds” from bombing. In otherwise seemingly untouched blocks, single houses
had suffered direct hits, she wrote.
On the inside walls of those houses, “one could still see the paint, the panels of the livingroom (sic), the papered
walls of the diningroom (sic) and upstairs the pinks and blues for the bedrooms,” Cynthia Martin wrote.
But in Holland, “the countryside is greatly restored, some entire villages rebuilt entirely in bricks. …”

The Green Revolution in India
1965: Then-Minneapolis Fed President Hugh G. Galusha traveled to India in the midst of the Green Revolution to
speak with central and commercial bankers and others.
While there, he talked with Dave Hopper, then an agricultural economist for the Rockefeller Foundation.

Farmers in India had been growing a type of wheat that spent most of its energies on
growing high and bushy to protect itself from the sun and neighboring competitors, Galusha
said in his account of his conversation with Hopper.
Then experimenting started in Mexico with short wheat that would respond to fertilizer and
produce heavy heads and a stiff straw. According to Hopper, no one really knew the
implications of this discovery in Mexico for tropical agriculture, Galusha said in his notes.
“It was almost on impulse that an experimental plot was tried in India and it proved
enormously successful,” he said.
The farmers “accepted the new wheat with great enthusiasm and a lively black market
developed in the seed. Acreage expanded geometrically, and today Hopper figures that there
is roughly a 10-year lead on the population growth,” Galusha said.
But Hopper also said there were concerns that small landowners couldn’t afford the higher
yielding varieties and the fertilizers to go with them.
Galusha spoke about those concerns in visits with other officials. He discussed them with
Herbert Spivack, political and economic officer in the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi, and two
top officials in the India Ministry of Finance’s Department of Economic Affairs: I.G. Patel,
special secretary, and V.K. Ramaswami, chief economic advisor.

Hugh D. Galusha
Jr., president of the
Minneapolis Fed
from 1965-71.
Image from
Federal Reserve
History.

The officials suggested that the problem wouldn’t emerge for a while, according to Galusha. “They believed that
the problem, if there is one, can be handled for some years to come by better distribution of credit and agricultural
inputs to equalize the disproportion between the larger land units and the smallest ones,” Galusha said.

The “Enormous” Challenges of Soviet Changes
October 1989: Then-Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan traveled to Moscow when the Soviet Union was in the midst
of reforms that included moving toward glasnost, or openness; loosening centralized control of economic systems;
and restructuring political systems.
In a speech at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow, Greenspan outlined principles of commercial and central banking,
saying that changes in financial structure were essential for successful economic restructuring.
“Dynamic economies are always in a state of evolution, but I would guess that there are few examples in history to
rival the scope of the restructuring now being undertaken in the Soviet economy,” Greenspan said, according to the
transcript of the speech in FRASER.
“The challenges are enormous, but so are the potential rewards.”

In this April 1991 photo, taken a couple of years after Alan Greenspan’s 1989 visit to Moscow, Greenspan (left
front) is shown during a visit to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Others pictured are St. Louis Fed board
members Robert H. Quenon (back left), H. Edwin Trusheim (back right) and then-St. Louis Fed President Thomas
C. Melzer.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Heather Hennerich
Heather Hennerich is a senior editor with the St. Louis Fed’s communications team.