William Wesley Waymack was a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and liberal internationalist. He devoted much of his career to seeking economic parity for depressed farmers in Iowa and the Midwest, alleviating the conditions of farm tenancy, and advocating a global economy.
Background
William Wesley Waymack was born on October 18, 1888, in Savanna, Illinois, United States; the son of William Edward Waymack and Emma Julia Oberheim. His father's Virginia family, after losing its possessions in the Civil War, had migrated to western Illinois.
Education
Waymack began elementary school at Savanna, but before completing the eighth grade went to Mount Carroll, Illinois, to live with his mother's parents. After graduating from high school he worked as a section hand and did other jobs in the Savanna area. Beginning in 1908, Waymack worked his way through Morningside College in Sioux City, Iowa. During his senior year, he was the college correspondent for the Sioux City Journal. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1911.
Waymack entered the newspaper business as a reporter and editorial writer with the Sioux City Journal, from 1911 to 1918. But his employment by the Des Moines Register and Tribune as a chief editorial writer in 1918 marked the real beginning of an illustrious career. Not by accident, Waymack’s Wilsonian outlook coincided with that of Gardiner Cowles Sr., who purchased the Register and Tribune in 1903 and built it into Iowa’s dominant paper. Waymack was promoted to the post of editor of the editorial section in 1931. He became a company vice-president in 1939, editor in 1943, and, in 1944, a member of the board of Cowles Broadcasting.
In the depression environment of the 1930s, Waymack won recognition for advocating amelioration of the farm problem by securing a better economic balance between the industrialized Northeast and the agrarian Midwest. While a Republican, he accepted the need for the New Deal agricultural programs, despite reservations about their centralizing tendencies. His support for Secretary of State Cordell Hull’s reciprocal trade agreements program stemmed from his conviction that no permanent remedy for depressed farm prices was possible absent reopened international markets. It would not suffice to hate Roosevelt, he argued; the GOP needed a substantive agricultural program. While he pressed Republican candidates for the presidency to adopt alternatives to crop controls, he became disenchanted with the contradictory proposals on agricultural relief in the GOP’s 1936 and 1940 platforms and the campaigns led by Alf Landon and Wendell Willkie.
As William Allen White, an inexhaustible correspondent and organizer in Kansas, Waymack was a man of broad interests and an activist. He founded or served as director of numerous local and national organizations related to agriculture, civil liberties, world peace, and religious tolerance. Fearful of renewed warfare, he promoted educational campaigns at the state and regional levels aimed at countering the isolationist and nationalistic climate of the interwar period. Conscious of internal and external threats to the nation’s constitutional fabric, he deplored both the rise of dictatorships in Europe and the emergence of self-contained decision-making dominated by interest groups in Washington. He acknowledged the need to accommodate the centrifugal tendencies of the 20th century but preferred greater influence on public policy from enlightened liberals.
Engaged in a war of ideas, Waymack joined with other Wilsonian internationalists in forming the Economic Policy Committee to promote open markets as essential to economic recovery from the Great Depression and to the attainment of world peace. With the outbreak of the Second World War, many in the group, Waymack, Will Clayton, and Dean G. Acheson among them advocated support for the Allied and British causes. The same group was instrumental in shaping postwar policy. Waymack served on the board of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and was actively involved in Freedom House, founded to promote civil liberties worldwide.
Waymack entered public service initially through the President’s Committee on Farm Tenancy, from 1936 to 1937, and on Iowa Governor Nelson Kraschel’s Farm Tenancy Committee, subsequently with membership on the Federal Reserve Board of Chicago, from 1941 to 1946, and several wartime agencies, including the War Labor Board, in 1942) and the Midwest Regional Commission of the National Resources Planning Board. When President Harry Truman appointed him to the newly created Atomic Energy Commission, a civilian agency that succeeded in wartime military control, he had to terminate his association with the Des Moines Register and Tribune. Confronted by ill health, Waymack resigned from the AEC in 1948 and returned to his beloved 275-acre farm in Adel, 30 miles west of Des Moines.
Achievements
In 1938 William was given the first-place editorial award of Sigma Delta Chi, a professional journalistic society. While many other editors would have avoided Waymack's course as exceeding a journalist's proper function, Waymack saw it as fulfillment. His own newspaper characterized him as having "one of those rare minds which stir and invigorate and challenge." He contributed "clarity, force, and drive" to a long range of activities "from local welfare to the development of the atom for peaceful purposes."
Waymack believed that a free democracy had an obligation as well as an opportunity to demonstrate its superiority over the postwar dictatorships. He also advocated wage and price controls to combat inflation.
Although Waymack could hold unswervingly to a policy when convinced of its correctness, he was a foe of cant and dogma and sponsored an open exchange of viewpoints on political, economic, social, and religious issues. He avoided easy labels but defined conservatism as "nostalgia for the never-never land that never was. "
Connections
In 1911 William married Elsie Jeannette Lord. They had a son, Edward Randolph, who was born born in 1912.
Father:
William Edward Waymack
William served as a car foreman in Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul Railroad.
Mother:
Emma Julia Oberheim McLaughlin
Spouse:
Elsie Jeanette Lord Waymack
Sister:
Nora Ellen Waymack Airhart
Son:
Edward Randolph Waymack
References
The Biographical Dictionary of Iowa
Iowa has been blessed with citizens of strong character who have made invaluable contributions to the state and to the nation. In the 1930s alone, such towering figures as John L. Lewis, Henry A. Wallace, and Herbert Hoover hugely influenced the nation’s affairs.