
Earnest endeavors
By Marc Eric McClure
Subjects: Political Reformer, Biography, United states, biography, Jewish refugees, Political consultants, Intergovernmental Committee on Refugees, United States. Federal Trade Commission, Lobbyists, United States, Migrations, United states, federal trade commission, History, Jews, Jewish Refugees, Economic policy
Description: George Rublee (1868-1957) was a public-spirited lawyer who involved himself with domestic political reform during the Progressive Era (1910-1918) and international affairs from 1917 to 1945. After serving as assistant to Wall Street corporation lawyer Victor Morawetz in the 1890s and early 1900s, Rublee entered public life when he became political adviser to Governor Robert Bass to establish Lafollette-inspired reforms in New Hampshire (1910-12). Rublee then served as adviser to Theodore Roosevelt on political-economic matters in the 1912 presidential campaign and as adviser to President Woodrow Wilson on anti-trust reform beginning in 1914. Rublee was the primary force behind the establishment of the Federal Trade Commission, upon which he served by recess appointment from 1915 to 1917. Rublee pivoted to international affairs when he was appointed as U.S. representative to the London-based Allied Maritime Transport Council (AMTC) in 1917, where Rublee became an ardent internationalist while serving with Jean Monnet and James Arthur Salter on the AMTC. Rublee became a founding partner in Covington and Burling Law firm Washington, D.C., in 1920 but returned to international affairs in 1927 when he became adviser to Ambassador Dwight Morrow in his mission to Mexico. Rublee served on the U.S. delegation to the London Naval Conference in 1930, where he worked to promote U.S. cooperation with the Versailles Treaty system, and he was involved in several Latin American diplomatic missions during the 1930s. His public work climaxed in 1938 when Franklin Roosevelt requested Rublee become director of the London-based Intergovernmental Committee on Political Refugees Coming from Germany, which attempted to arrange for the resettlement of German and Austrian Jews prior to the outbreak of World War II. Rublee divided his time between residences in Washington, New York City, and Cornish, New Hampshire, an artist and intellectual community. A genuine humanist and progressive thinker, Rublee sought to help find and implement solutions to pressing problems of his day.
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