Robert T. Stevens

American businessman (1899–1983)


title: "Robert T. Stevens" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1899-births", "1983-deaths", "people-from-fanwood,-new-jersey", "phillips-academy-alumni", "united-states-army-personnel-of-world-war-i", "military-personnel-from-middlesex-county,-new-jersey", "military-personnel-from-union-county,-new-jersey", "yale-college-alumni", "american-business-executives", "united-states-army-command-and-general-staff-college-alumni", "united-states-army-personnel-of-world-war-ii", "united-states-army-colonels", "eisenhower-administration-personnel", "united-states-secretaries-of-the-army", "mccarthyism", "people-from-edison,-new-jersey", "burials-at-west-point-cemetery"] description: "American businessman (1899–1983)" topic_path: "history" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_T._Stevens" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary American businessman (1899–1983) ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox officeholder"]

FieldValue
imageRobert Ten Broeck Stevens.jpg
captionOfficial portrait, 1955
office4th United States Secretary of the Army
presidentDwight D. Eisenhower
term_startFebruary 4, 1953
term_endJuly 21, 1955
predecessorFrank Pace
successorWilber M. Brucker
birth_date
birth_placeFanwood, New Jersey, U.S.
death_date
death_placeEdison, New Jersey, U.S.
relativesJohn Peters Stevens (father)
educationYale University (BA)
allegianceUnited States
branchUnited States Army
serviceyears1917–1918, 1942–1945
rankColonel
battlesWorld War I
World War II
::

|image = Robert Ten Broeck Stevens.jpg |caption = Official portrait, 1955 |office = 4th United States Secretary of the Army |president = Dwight D. Eisenhower |term_start = February 4, 1953 |term_end = July 21, 1955 |predecessor = Frank Pace |successor = Wilber M. Brucker |birth_date = |birth_place = Fanwood, New Jersey, U.S. |death_date = |death_place = Edison, New Jersey, U.S. |relatives = John Peters Stevens (father) |education = Yale University (BA) |allegiance = United States |branch = United States Army |serviceyears = 1917–1918, 1942–1945 |rank = Colonel |commands = |battles = World War I World War II |mawards = Robert Ten Broeck Stevens (July 31, 1899January 31, 1983) was an American businessman and former chairman of J. P. Stevens and Company, which was one of the most established textile manufacturing plants in the US.

Biography

Stevens was born on July 31, 1899, in Fanwood, New Jersey to John Peters Stevens and Edna Ten Broeck. He attended Phillips Academy and graduated in 1917. After serving as a second lieutenant in the field artillery in World War I he attended and graduated from Yale University. He became president of J.P. Stevens and Company in 1929. It is now part of a conglomerate—WestPoint Home.

In 1941, Stevens attended a civilian course at the Army Command and General Staff School. In 1942, he was recalled to active duty in the Quartermaster Corps as a lieutenant colonel. Promoted to colonel, he served in the United States during most of World War II except for a temporary assignment in Europe, returning to civilian life in 1945.

He served as chairman of The Business Council, then known as the Business Advisory Council for the United States Department of Commerce in 1951 and 1952.

On January 29, 1953, Stevens was nominated to be Secretary of the Army by President Dwight Eisenhower and appeared for a hearing before the Senate Committee on Armed Services that same day. After confirmation, he came into conflict with Senator Joseph McCarthy over a series of issues that ultimately led to the Army-McCarthy hearings of 1954. In the fall of 1953, McCarthy began an investigation into the United States Army Signal Corps laboratory at Fort Monmouth. McCarthy's aggressive questioning of army personnel was damaging to morale, but failed to reveal any sign of the "dangerous spies" that McCarthy alleged to exist. Next McCarthy investigated the case of Irving Peress, an Army dentist who had refused to answer questions in a loyalty-review questionnaire.

As various officers, scientists and other army staff were subjected to McCarthy's often abusive questioning, Stevens was criticized for capitulating to many of McCarthy's demands and not supporting his men.

Concurrent with these events, McCarthy's chief counsel, Roy Cohn, had been pressuring the army, including Stevens, to give preferential treatment to his friend G. David Schine, who had recently been drafted. The Army-McCarthy hearings were held to investigate the Army's charge that McCarthy and Cohn were making improper demands on behalf of Schine, and McCarthy's counter charge that the Army was holding Schine "hostage" in an attempt to halt McCarthy's investigations into the Army. During the hearings, McCarthy questioned Stevens for several days. Although Stevens is generally considered to have handled the hearings poorly, it was McCarthy who fared worst in the month-long investigation. The exposure before a television audience of McCarthy's methods and manners during the hearings are credited with playing a major role in his ultimate downfall. Stevens wanted to resign after the incident but Vice-President Richard Nixon convinced him not to.

J. P. Stevens & Company

Robert T. Stevens had a fifty-year career with J. P. Stevens & Company—named after New York-based John Peter Stevens who made his fortune by selling the products of his grandfather's Massachusetts-based family business which dated back to the War of 1812. Under John Peter Stevens it became one of the largest textile companies in the United States with mills in the North and South. By the age of thirty Robert T. Stevens was president of the company. During his tenure it was "one of the world's largest, most diversified textile organizations." He left Stevens for two-years to serve as Secretary of the Army and by July 1955 he returned to Stevens where he remained until his retirement. He became director emeritus in 1974.

Like many other companies in post-World War II United States, Stevens moved the company south specifically because he "wanted to pay lower wages and avoid unions."

By 1963 Stevens was the second-largest company in the United States with 36,000 employees—mainly in the Southern states. For that reason it was selected by the union as the target of a major organizing campaign. Stevens's employees earned "wages that were well below the manufacturing average, and they had few benefits." Stevens resented his company being singled out by the union, and made an aggressive stand. From 1963 to 1980 the company and the union entered into a bitter struggle that became known as the J. P. Stevens campaign or controversy.

Personal life

His children include Bob Stevens from Helena, Montana, J. Whitney Stevens from New York, and Tom Stevens from Florida. The family still owns an est. 45000 acre cattle ranch called the American Fork in Two Dot, Montana.

Stevens died on January 30, 1983, in Edison, New Jersey. He was buried at the West Point Cemetery on February 3, 1983.

References

before=Frank Pace| title=United States Secretary of the Army| after=Wilber M. Brucker| years=February 1953 – July 1955

References

  1. Bell, William Gardner. (1992). "Secretaries of War and Secretaries of the Army: Portraits and Biographical Sketches". [[United States Army Center of Military History]].
  2. Bell, William Gardner. (1981). "Secretaries of War and Secretaries of the Army: Portraits & Biographical Sketches". Center of Military History, U.S. Army.
  3. [http://www.thebusinesscouncil.org/about/background.aspx The Business Council, Official website, Background] {{webarchive. link. (2016-03-03)
  4. (1953). "Nominations: Hearings before the Committee on Armed Services, United States Senate, Eighty-Third Congress, First Session". U.S. Government Printing Office.
  5. Stone, Geoffrey R.. (2004). "Perilous Times: Free Speech in Wartime from the Sedition Act of 1798 to the War on Terrorism". W. W. Norton & Company.
  6. Klingaman, William K.. (1996). "Encyclopedia of the McCarthy Era". Facts on File.
  7. Fried, Richard M.. (1990). "Nightmare in Red: The McCarthy Era in Perspective". Oxford University Press.
  8. Adams, John G.. (1983). "Without Precedent: The Story of the Death of McCarthyism". W. W. Norton & Company.
  9. Minchin, Timothy. (November 16, 2006). "J. P. Stevens Campaign (1963-1980)". Routledge.
  10. Salmans, Sandra. (October 18, 1981). "J. P. Stevens: One year after the truce". The New York Times.
  11. (July 15, 2014). "In Good Faith: Working-Class Women, Feminism, and Religious Support in the Struggle to Organize J. P. Stevens Textile Workers in the Southern Piedmont, 1974–1980". Southern Spaces.
  12. Patton, Randall L.. (1999). "Carpet capital: the rise of a new south industry". University of Georgia Press.
  13. Hodges, James A.. "J.P.Stevens and the Union: Struggle for the South". University of Alabama Press.
  14. Conway, Mimi. (1979). "Rise Gonna Rise: a Portrait of Southern Textile Workers". Anchor Press/Doubleday.
  15. Daniel, Clete. (2001). "Culture of Misfortune: an Interpretive History of Textile Unionism in the United States". ILR.
  16. Guzzardi, Walter Jr.. (June 19, 1978). "How the Union got the upper hand on J. P. Stevens". Fortune.
  17. Hodges, James A.. (1997). "The Real Norma Rae". The University of Tennessee Press.
  18. Kovler, Peter. (Spring 1979). "The South: Last Bastion of the Open Shop". Politics Today.
  19. Minchin, Timothy. (2005). "Don't Sleep with Stevens!: The J.P. Stevens Campaign and the Struggle to Organize the South, 1963-1980". University of Florida Press.
  20. Toplin, Robert Brent. (Spring 1995). "Norma Rae: Unionism in an Age of Feminism". Labor History.
  21. Truchil, Barry E.. (1988). "Capital Labor Relations in the U.S. Textile Industry". Praeger Press.
  22. Robert D. McFadden. (February 1, 1983). "Robert T. Stevens, Former Army Secretary, Dies At 83". [[New York Times]].
  23. "Stevens, Robert TenBroeck". U.S. Army.

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1899-births1983-deathspeople-from-fanwood,-new-jerseyphillips-academy-alumniunited-states-army-personnel-of-world-war-imilitary-personnel-from-middlesex-county,-new-jerseymilitary-personnel-from-union-county,-new-jerseyyale-college-alumniamerican-business-executivesunited-states-army-command-and-general-staff-college-alumniunited-states-army-personnel-of-world-war-iiunited-states-army-colonelseisenhower-administration-personnelunited-states-secretaries-of-the-armymccarthyismpeople-from-edison,-new-jerseyburials-at-west-point-cemetery