Background
Macy, John Williams was born on April 6, 1917 in Chicago, Illinois, United States. Son of John Williams and Juliette (Shaw) Macy.
assistant government administrator civil servant
Macy, John Williams was born on April 6, 1917 in Chicago, Illinois, United States. Son of John Williams and Juliette (Shaw) Macy.
Bachelor of Arts, Wesleyan University, 1938; Doctor of Laws, Cornell College, Mount Vernon, Iowa, 1963; Doctor of Laws, Colgate University, 1965; Doctor of Laws, Allegheny College, 1965; Doctor of Laws, Eastern Kentucky College, 1966; Doctor of Laws, Dartmouth College, 1966; Doctor of Laws, Wesleyan University, 1967; Doctor of Laws, University Delaware, 1967; Doctor of Laws, Indiana State University, 1968; Doctor of Laws, Ithaca College, 1969; Doctor of Laws, St. John's U., 1969; Doctor of Laws, Austin College, 1972.
Born in Chicago, he received a Bachelor of Arts from Wesleyan University in 1938. In 1938 Macy moved to Washington, District of Columbia He worked as an intern at the National Institute of Public Affairs from 1938–1939 and later became an administrative aide of the Social Security Board (1939–1940). From 1940 to 1942, he was a personnel specialist for the War Department in Washington and Chicago.
From 1942 to 1943 he became the assistant director of civilian personnel.
After the war, he returned to the War Department as director of civilian personnel. From 1947 to 1951, Macy was the organization and personnel director for the United States. Atomic Energy Commission in Los Alamos, New Mexico.
From 1951 to 1953, Macy was the special assistant to the Under Secretary of the Army. He held this post until 1958.
He left government service in 1958 to act as the executive vice-president of his alma mater, Wesleyan University.
President John F. Kennedy asked Macy to return to the Civil Service Commission in 1961, and Macy chaired the commission through Kennedy and Johnson Administrations. He called for federal salaries to be put on par with private industry salaries. lieutenant was during this period that Macy spoke out against sexual and racial discrimination in the federal government.
Macy was an adamant supporter of the ban on homosexual employment by the federal government.
He wrote The Mattachine Society of Washington, District of Columbia ( 2/25/66): "Pertinent considerations here are the revulsion of other (federal) employees by homosexual conduct and the consequent disruption of service efficiency, the apprehension caused other employees of homosexual advances, solicitations or assaults, the unavoidable subjection of the sexual deviate to erotic stimulation (on-the-job)". As head of the Civil Service Commission, he was also a named defendant in an early gay-rights case, Norton v.
Macy. During the Johnson Administration, Macy also directed the White House Personnel Appointment Office.
Macy left the Civil Service Commission in 1969 and served as president for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (1969–1972). His work landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents.
Later, he ran the Council of Better Business Bureaus (1972–1979). In 1979, President Jimmy Carter nominated Macy to became the first Senate-confirmed director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
He served in that position until 1981.
Macy also authored several books, including Public Service: Human Side of Government (1971) and To Irrigate a Wasteland (1974). A civil servant with a career spanning six different decades, John Macy died in McLean, Virginia. In 1988, the United States. Army established the John West. Macy, Junior., Award that recognizes demonstrated excellence in the leadership of civilians by an Army military or civilian supervisor.
The first awardee was John T. Lovo, Director of Engineering and Housing for the United States Army in Munich, Germany.
Board of directors Institute Court Management, 1969-1979. Trustee Bennett College, 1970-1973, Potomac School, Virginia, 1967-1973, Experiment in International Living, 1966-1969, 82-86;trustee American Film Institute, 1971-1975, treasurer, 1974-1975. Board visitors George Mason U., 1973-1979.
Board of Governors American Stock Exchange, 1972-1977, American Red Cross, 1979-1981. Board directors Cultural Resources, 1978-1979, WETA, 1981-1986. Board certification United States Circuit Court Appeals Court Executive, 1982-1986.
Served as captain United States Army Air Force, 1943-1946. Member National Planning Association (trustee 1978-1979, 81-86), National Academy Public Administration, American Society Public Administration (national president 1958-1959), Institute Public Administration (trustee 1982-1986), Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Nu Theta.
Married Joyce Hagen, February 12, 1944. Children: Thomas L., Mary Macy Civitarese, Susan Macy Jarvinen, Richard H.