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William Christian Bullitt was born in 1891 to an aristocratic family in Philadelphia. His ancestors were French Huguenots on the paternal side and Prussian Jews on the maternal; both sides could trace their roots to some of the first settlers on the East Coast. His French ancestor, Joseph Boulet, came to Maryland in 1685; there he changed his name to Bullitt. Several generations later, one of his descendants, Bill’s grandfather, wrote the first city charter of Philadelphia. On his mother’s side, Jonathan Horwitz arrived in America around 1710. Baptized in the Episcopal Church, he graduated from the University of Pennsylvania and became a doctor.
Bill’s father, William Christian Bullitt Sr., ran in Philadelphia’s most elite circles: he managed the supply of coal from Pennsylvania mines to the US Navy and transatlantic steamship companies. His wife and Bill’s mother, Louisa Gross Horwitz, spoke French with her two sons, giving Bill a faculty with languages that benefited him tremendously over the course of his career. During the summer, the family sailed to Europe; young Bullitt learned on these journeys, he would write much later, to appreciate people from all over the world—their various looks, sounds, and even smells. He liked them all but considered the European states to be somehow inferior to the United States. The more he traveled abroad, the more patriotic he became. At home, he enjoyed decidedly American pastimes, including duck hunting with his father. Later, he took an interest in other aristocratic arts such as boxing and riding. There were good horses on his family’s estate, and Bill loved horses.
His father died young, but Bill maintained a strong relationship with his mother for decades. When he was in America, she often stayed with him for weeks. She did not want to be anything other than a good wife and mother, he wrote, always subscribing to the era’s traditional gender roles. In his old age Bullitt wrote that he could not imagine having had better parents or a happier childhood. The family was religious and he shared their faith; he also shared his family’s patriotism, which was characteristic of an aristocracy that had good reasons to be grateful to their country. In his unfinished memoirs, Bullitt wrote that, while walking in Philadelphia, his father used to take off his hat in front of the Liberty Bell. His father made him feel that “my country is my country in the same sense as my hand is my hand. I was a part of it, and it was a part of me. I was responsible for its safety and for what it did. The United States owned me and I owned the United States.” Forty years later Bullitt said something to this effect to Roosevelt. The president replied: “But this country is mine too,” and the two men shared a hearty laugh.1
A student at Yale, Bullitt was mostly interested in European languages; he spent the summer of 1909 in Munich studying German. Bullitt did not become a member of the famous “Skull and Bones” secret society but was the president of the Yale Dramatic Association. On June 4, 1910, the New York Times reported that the Yale Dramatic Association performed in the ballroom of the Waldorf-Astoria in New York; Bullitt, who played a female role, was seen as having been a particular success. In his memoirs Bullitt mentioned a pioneering sociology course taught at Yale by Albert G. Keller and a psychology course taught by Roswell Angier. From the latter, Bullitt first learned about psychoanalysis, which became one of his main intellectual influences; these classes had such an effect on him that for a time Bullitt considered a career in psychology. Charles Seymour taught European history to Bullitt; later the two would participate in the Paris Peace Conference together.
After graduating from Yale in 1913, Bill went to Harvard Law School, where he studied for a year but did not graduate. He considered the atmosphere there “cynical”: when students brought up justice, they were advised to go next door to the School of Theology. Like his hero in those years, Woodrow Wilson, a professor of history who became the president of Princeton and later of the United States, Bullitt did not trust lawyers. During his student years, Bullitt fell ill and was wrongly diagnosed with appendicitis. The surgery to remove his appendix caused adhesions, which had to be removed later. Because of these adhesions, he escaped conscription into the military.
Bill’s father died in March 1914. To cope with her grief, his mother went on a tour of Europe. The doctor had advised to go to places that she had not visited with her husband, and she traveled with Bill to Russia. They were in Moscow on July 28, 1914, when Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia and the First World War began. Staying at the “National” hotel in the center of the city, they heard a crowd chanting on Tverskaya Street: “Down with Austria! Hurrah for Serbia!” They decided to go home, catching the last train to Berlin.2
Following their father’s death, William and Orville inherited modest funds that supported them to the tune of six thousand dollars per year. This was not a large sum, but it was considerable compared with the starting salary of a journalist in Philadelphia, for example, which was one hundred dollars per month. “Father’s conviction that it was bad for American boys to have much money was absolute. . . . He brought us up—as he, his father, and his grandfather had been brought up—to understand that, while he would give us any education we might want, we would have to earn our livelihood from the days our studies were completed.”3 Still, Bill loved to spend money. Orville sometimes tried to restrain him, but he was rarely successful. Spending money lavishly, Bill threw parties, flaunted his wealth, and ignored warnings from his friends about his fiduciary recklessness. Bill’s friends never understood where he got his money and frequently discussed his financial situation behind his back. In reality, Bill depended on wages earned from his job as a journalist and diplomat, and his purported wealth was largely fictional.
Bullitt’s first job was at a well-respected Philadelphia newspaper, the Public Ledger. After only one year on the job, he became the paper’s deputy editor. Later, Bullitt satirically depicted these years in his novel, It’s Not Done: the rich owner of a newspaper arranges a job for a young journalist—a relative—but dismisses him years later when the relative, now the editor, stops listening to his benefactor. As a journalist, Bullitt developed a fluent and powerful style of writing, using rich details about the past and sharp judgments about the present, which he combined with his unusual interest in the future.
As a reporter for the Public Ledger, Bullitt took part in Henry Ford’s famous voyage to Europe in December 1915. An eccentric millionaire with ambition to change the world, Ford chartered an ocean liner, filled it with intellectuals and activists, and sailed this “Peace Ship” to Europe with the intention of mediating talks between the warring countries. From the ship, Ford sent a telegram to soldiers on both sides of the conflict, calling them to join a general strike on Christmas Day, 1915.4 Almost daily, Bullitt cabled satirical reports from the ocean about his journey and the war, which top American newspapers published, often on the front page. He reported that, before leaving New Jersey, Ford had offered one million dollars to Thomas Edison to take part in the mission; Edison refused. Aboard the Peace Ship, Bullitt met Inez Milholland, a famous beauty who later became a feminist activist; Bullitt courted her then, and he remembered her many decades later. Bullitt wrote chidingly that Ford hoped that the sobs and kisses of the “pilgrims” from his ship would convince the Germans to leave Belgium. Arriving in Oslo, the Peace Ship, also known in the press as the “Ship of Fools,” ended its mission. Bullitt returned to the United States to marry.
His bride was Ernesta Drinker, who, like Bullitt, came from an old and wealthy Philadelphia family: her ancestors, Quakers, were among the first families in William Penn’s colony. The daughter of the president of Lehigh University, Ernesta was beautiful and well educated. She studied sociology and economics at the Sorbonne and then at Radcliffe, though she did not graduate from either. Before accepting Bullitt’s marriage offer, she had turned down fifty other proposals.5
For their honeymoon, the newlyweds chose to sail back to Europe. They brought their recently acquired passports and eighty-nine letters of introduction to European celebrities. In May 1916 they arrived in Berlin, where Bullitt interviewed diplomats and military leaders; from there they went to occupied Belgium and then to Austria-Hungary. Officials in Berlin willingly granted interviews to Bullitt. The United States was still neutral, but an American correspondent in Germany was something of a rarity at the time.
Despite traveling frequently, Bullitt did not keep a diary, but both his wives did. Ernesta Drinker wrote a lively book about her adventures with Bill in wartime Central Europe. Keeping a diary was something of a family tradition for Ernesta: her great-grandmother kept one during the American Revolution, and the whole family loved to read and re-read her notes. Ernesta chose to publish her diary “for our own great-granddaughters”; she was mostly interested in women’s issues and wrote for a female audience. Her book documented the increasingly difficult situations in Germany and Austro-Hungary in the lead-up to their military defeat.
During the war female employment in Germany, as elsewhere, grew rapidly. Women worked in factories and mines, places from which they had been excluded before the war. Interviewing the leaders of the women’s movement in Berlin, Ernesta tried to figure out how employment changed their position in the family. Doing the same work, women earned less than men, she noted; however, most of the female workers were new to their jobs, so this was probably fair, she suggested. Germany had recently introduced maternity leave, but women still did not have voting rights. The schools were separated by gender as in America, but during the war the German women were given the right to teach in the male gymnasiums.
The German government subsidized hospitals, nurseries, and canteens for the poor. To Americans, these forms of welfare were unprecedented; they represented the kind of modernity that Ernesta and Bill were seeking in Europe. Socially progressive but culturally conservative, they were pleased to see that the German Empire offered welfare without revolution, and the Prussian aristocracy was able to maintain its manners and privileges. Later, Bullitt compared his German experience to the devastation he saw in France and revolutionary Russia. These comparisons were indeed important for the future enthusiast of the New Deal.
In 1916 and 1917, the Philadelphia Ledger regularly published Bullitt’s extended dispatches from Germany, but not before they had passed through German censorship; there were visible markings on the text where the censor had crossed out words or entire passages. The essays addressed the atmosphere in Berlin; attitudes toward America; Holland’s role in the war, the state of its army, and the possibility of using its canals and dykes for defense; the Kaiser’s intention to sail to America for a peace conference in December 1917; and the German economy, banks, food stamps, and social support. In September 1916, Bullitt traveled to the Eastern Front to see the war from the German side. In the ruins of Jewish settlements, he walked the trenches that had been locked in stalemate for months; it was Bill’s first military experience. He interviewed the German officers, heard shells explode, saw a parade of Prussian hussars, and flew over the Russian trenches with a German plane. Russian machine gunners shot at their plane, and Bill had “a great time,” according to Ernesta’s diary.
In Berlin Bullitt spent long hours with Walter Rathenau, a German-Jewish industrialist who would later become the minister of foreign affairs. He was murdered by right-wing fanatics in 1922. In their conversations, Rathenau correctly predicted that the war would be over by 1918, but he did not foresee a revolution in Russia. He did not expect that Germany would take control of new lands in Europe, but he wished to gain some African colonies. In the wartime government, Rathenau was responsible for procuring natural resources—mainly coal, ore, and oil, as the British naval blockade had cut Germany off from its suppliers. Bullitt asked him whether Germany was ready to give Constantinople to Russia in exchange for a separate peace.
“We might,” Rathenau replied.
“Would it not be rather hard to throw over the Turks?” Bullitt asked reasonably.
“No,” said Rathenau. “We would only have to publish full accounts of the Armenian massacres, and German public opinion would become so incensed against the Turks that we could drop them as allies.”
Despite certain hardships, Ernesta concluded that her life with Bill in wartime Germany was not altogether bad: “War corresponding to-day must be a pleasant life. You go de luxe as the guests of the government; you are dined and wined by Generals. . . . Dress parades and cavalry maneuvers are given for your benefit, and you have automobiles and wagons at your disposal. The only drawback is that, if you happen to say anything either uncommon or interesting in your story to the newspapers, it is cut out by the censor.” Ernesta proudly called her book The Uncensored Diary. As the title suggests, it contained some rather unflattering passages about Germany: “Billy says the Germans are the most moral people in the world when it comes to dealing with Germans, and the most immoral in their dealings with the rest of the world.”6
The manners of European aristocracy excited the young Americans as much as their wealth thrilled the Europeans; both sides were fascinated by each other. Their trip to wartime Germany and Austria-Hungary gave Bullitt a three-dimensional vision of Europe, which surprised his friends and readers who were dependent on their British and French contacts for news from the Old World. There, in the capitals of belligerent and potentially hostile empires, Bullitt first felt like a member of the European elite—not just an outsider but a welcome adviser, a mediator between its conflicting parts, a prophet of its misfortunes.
Indeed, there was much for Bullitt to digest in Berlin. The First World War was not a war of ideologies; rather, it was a fight for natural resources, the most important being coal, iron ore, grain, and rubber. Desperate for commodities, European powers sought colonies from the Congo to Ukraine. However, two key allies—Russia and America—already had an abundance of most of these natural resources, and their aims were different. Fighting for access to the Mediterranean, Russia wanted Constantinople; America insisted on its right to control the Western Hemisphere.
In America the liberals in power detested European-style imperialism: keenly aware of their country’s own experience as a European colony, they believed that colonialism could only bring war and destruction. For the first time since the American Civil War, southerners came to power in the United States: Woodrow Wilson and his closest adviser, Edward House, were both from the South. They saw the Civil War as having been caused by the imperialist ambitions of the North, which needed the South for its resources, and they viewed the European conflict in similar terms. They did not blame Germany for the war; it was no guiltier of unleashing an imperialist war than Britain was. Exporting the American Revolution to the European continent, this circle of liberal, post-imperial politicians conceived the idea of “self-determination of nations” as the solution to European problems. The United States would oversee the collapse of the antiquated empires and the emancipation of oppressed minorities—at least, in Europe. With this in mind, America entered the war after Germany sank American ships and in February 1917 openly refused to stop such attacks. In addition, Germany tried to engage Mexico in the war, which the American leadership saw as an attempt to spread European imperialism in the New World.
The United States’ entry into the First World War in April 1917 came shortly after the February revolution in Russia. The American public came to understand the war as a decisive battle between modern democracies and obsolete monarchies. The awkward alliance between Western European powers and tsarist Russia undermined this reading of the war. Written in 1926, Bullitt’s novel It’s Not Done describes the 1916 American debates on war in Europe. The protagonist becomes embroiled in an argument with his sister:
“Wilson’s written another note. . . . It starts this way: ‘Words. Words, words! We have had enough of this!”
“Why do you add any more? But you don’t really mean it, do you? You don’t really want us go to war.”
“I certainly do. . . . If we don’t the Allies will be licked! Then it will be our turn. . . . They are fighting our fight and they are fighting for our kind of a civilization.”
“Including that ardent republican, the Czar.”7