David K. E. Bruce
David Kirkpatrick Este Bruce was an American diplomat, intelligence officer and politician. During World War II, he was considered one of the three most strategically important intelligence officers at the Office of Strategic Services, with tens of thousands of personnel under his command, and the lives of secretly-deployed spies and special operators operating behind enemy lines under his direct supervision. After the war, he served as ambassador to France, the Federal Republic of Germany, and the United Kingdom and later was the first U.S. emissary to the People's Republic of China.
Early life
Bruce was born in Baltimore, Maryland, to William Cabell Bruce and Louise Este Bruce. His grandfather Charles Bruce was a prominent lawyer and planter in Southside Virginia who fought for the Confederate States of America and lost heavily in the American Civil War, and afterward rejected pleas that he run for political office, although in addition to this man's father who eventually became a U.S. Senator from Maryland, another son Charles Morrelle Bruce became acting governor of the Arizona territory and two other sons became noted academics. One of his three brothers was James Cabell Bruce. David Bruce initially studied at the Gilman County School for Boys in Baltimore. He then traveled to New Jersey and studied for a year and a half at Princeton University.Military service
Bruce dropped out to serve in the United States Army during World War I. An artillery sergeant, he arrived in Europe but saw no action before the armistice. After being commissioned as a second lieutenant, he served in the army courier service after the conflict. At parental insistence, he did not return to Princeton, but attended the University of Virginia School of Law and the University of Maryland School of Law Although not taking a degree from either school, Bruce passed the Maryland bar examination at the top of his class, and was admitted to the Maryland bar in November 1921.Career
State service
Baltimore voters elected Bruce to represent them in the Maryland House of Delegates. Much later he defeated a prominent critic of his friend Harry Flood Byrd in the 1939 Democratic primary. He represented Charlotte County in the Virginia House of Delegates for two terms, as well as renovated the now-historic home his grandfather built, as discussed below.Interwar philanthropist and author
Although Bruce's first diplomatic post, as vice-consul in Rome, was cut short in 1927 due to his wife's ill health, upon returning to the United States, Bruce lived in Washington and New York, where he dabbled on Wall Street and sat on various corporate boards. He also helped his father-in-law create the National Gallery of Art, of which he would serve as president from 1939-1945. Bruce also published Seven Pillars of the Republic in 1936, a book of biographical essays on American Presidents from George Washington to Andrew Jackson. He would expand it twice. In 1939 he expanded it to cover all presidents through Abraham Lincoln, under the revised title Revolution to Reconstruction, and in 1962 revised them as Sixteen American Presidents.Federal service
Bruce volunteed for an American Red Cross mission in London in 1940, and experinced the Battle of Britain and the Blitz firsthand, which with his pro-British sentiments, caused him to oppose American isolationism.Before the United States entered World War II, Bruce had already been working for the Military Intelligence Division, and had been recruited by William Donovan into the Office of the Coordinator of Information. He held the rank of major, and later lieutenant colonel in the Army Air Corps.
Bruce was appointed Chief of a unit at COI called Special Activities/Bruce, which would later become the Secret Intelligence Branch of the Office of Strategic Services, a precursor to the Central Intelligence Agency. Another unit of the COI called Special Activities/Goodfellow was managed by Millard Preston Goodfellow, which became the Special Operations Branch.
File:Bruce_and_Hemmingway.jpg|left|thumb|David Bruce, the Commander of OSS/London and OSS/Europe, and the author Ernest Hemingway, at Rambouillet with members of the French Resistance the day of the Liberation of Paris. Hemingway and his son were both involved in the OSS, and under Bruce's command.
During World War II, Bruce headed OSS/London, the largest overseas field headquarters of the OSS. He trained more than 3,000 people to assist French partisans and coordinated espionage and intelligence activities behind enemy lines for the United States Armed Forces branches. Other OSS functions included the use of propaganda, subversion, and post-war planning. He observed the invasion of Normandy landing there the day after the initial invasion.
After leaving the OSS at the end of World War II, and before entering the diplomatic field, in 1948-1949 David Bruce served as assistant secretary of commerce and oversaw American aid to France with the Economic Cooperation Administration which administered the Marshall Plan. During this time that David Bruce and his new 2nd wife became an early member of the informal Georgetown Set within D.C.
Bruce, as a member of the new President's Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, wrote a secret report on the CIA's covert operations for President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1956 that was highly critical of its operation under Allen Dulles's leadership.
Diplomatic service
Bruce served as the United States Ambassador to France from 1949 to 1952, then briefly as undersecretary of state during the Truman administration, but came to dislike the Washington bureaucracy. In 1953, President Eisenhower appointed Bruce as envoy to the European Coal and Steel Community and European Defense Community. He served until 1955, hoping to rearm Germany so that it could assist western defenses against the Soviet Union. However, despite his efforts and those of his friend Jean Monnet, France refused to accept the European Defense Community, and Bruce returned to the United States for two inactive years.In 1957, President Eisenhower appointed Bruce United States Ambassador to West Germany, and he served for two years but found the Bonn post less congenial than Paris. Although mentioned as a possible Secretary of State in the incoming Kennedy administration, Bruce instead became United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom from 1961 to 1969. Some considered him the most effective 20th century American ambassador to the United Kingdom, as well as the longest-serving, since he continued into the Johnson administration, although Johnson ignored many of his recommendations.
With regard to Vietnam, Bruce privately questioned U.S. involvement and constantly urged the Johnson administration to allow Britain more of a role in bringing the conflict to an end. During the Nixon administration, Bruce was an American envoy at the Paris peace talks between the United States and North Vietnam in 1970 and 1971. Bruce also served as the first United States emissary to the People's Republic of China from 1973 to 1974. He was the ambassador to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization from late 1974 to 1976.
Bruce served as the Honorary Chair on the Board of Trustees of the American School in London during his diplomatic career in the United Kingdom.
Personal life and death
Bruce was an Episcopalian. On May 29, 1926, Bruce married Ailsa Mellon, the daughter of the banker and diplomat Andrew W. Mellon. They had one daughter, but Ailsa developed a debilitating but undiagnosable illness during David's first diplomatic posting, and they eventually divorced on April 20, 1945. Their only daughter, Audrey, and her husband, Stephen Currier, were presumed dead when a plane in which they were flying in the Caribbean disappeared on January 17, 1967, after requesting permission to fly over Culebra, a U. S. Navy installation. No trace of the plane, pilot, or passengers was ever found. Audrey and Stephen Currier left three children: Andrea, Lavinia, and Michael.He married Evangeline Bell on April 23, 1945, three days after his divorce. They had met in wartime London. She was a granddaughter of Sir Herbert Conyers Surtees, a niece of Sir Patrick Ramsay, a stepdaughter of Ambassador Sir James Leishman Dodds, and the elder sister of Virginia Surtees. They had two sons and one daughter, Alexandra. Alexandra died under mysterious circumstances in 1975 at age 29 at the Bruce family home in Virginia.
Bruce purchased and restored Staunton Hill, his grandfather's former estate in Charlotte County, Virginia, which he represented in the Virginia House of Delegates during World War II, as described above, and made it his rural retreat between diplomatic postings and his Georgetown residence. He also donated funds to eleven nearby counties anonymously to build public facilities, among which was a regional public library somewhat to the east, serving Brunswick and Greensville Counties, which opened in October 25, 1940 and continues as the Brunswick Historical Society headquarters as newer buildings now serve both counties.