Paul G. Hoffman

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Paul G. Hoffman was the President of the Ford Foundation from 1950-1953.[1]

"Henry II and the [Ford] Foundation's trustees hastened their search for a president. By the end of 1949, Henry had settled on Paul G. Hoffman, another automaker. The essence of the Horatio Alger myth, a college dropout, Hoffman rose from car salesman to take over the bankrupt Studebaker Corporation in 1933 and bring it back to solvency. A millionaire at thirty-five, he belonged to all the "right" organizations: the Rotary, Masons, Republican Party, National Council of the Boy Scouts of America, and ten exclusive clubs; by 1950 he had gathered twenty-seven honorary doctorates. he became a public figure when he ran the Marshall Plan that spent over ten billion dollars to reconstruct war-torn Europe. Furthermore, he had impeccable anticommunist credentials, a real asset after the Iron Curtain fell and just before McCarthy began his tirades."[2]

Resources and articles

Related Sourcewatch articles

References

  1. Ford Foundation Presidents, 1936-Present, Ford Foundation, accessed February 2, 2008.
  2. James Arthur Ward , Ferrytale: The Career of W. H. "Ping" Ferry, Stanford University Press, 2002, p. 45
  3. Century Foundation Past Trustees, organizational web page, accessed October 1, 2012.

External Resources

Books about Hoffman

  • Alan R. Raucher, Paul G. Hoffman: Architect of Foreign Aid (Lexington University Press of Kentucky, 1986)