Michael
J. Mansfield, veteran of 34 influential years
in the United States Congress, and who served
as Ambassador to Japan from 1977 to 1988,
died October 5, 2001 at the age of 98. Mansfield
was born in New York City on March 16, 1903,
and his family moved to Montana in 1907 where
your Michael attended grammar school. He left
home in 1917 before completing the 8th grade
and joined the United States Navy at 14 years
of age on February 23, 1918. During the First
World War, ten of Mansfields nineteen
months of service were spent overseas. He
subsequently served a one-year hitch in the
Army.
On 10 November 1920, Mike Mansfield enlisted
in the Marine Corps at San Francisco, California.
Serving in the Western Recruiting Division
at San Francisco until January 1921, he was
transferred to the Marine Barracks at Puget
Sound, Washington, were he remained until
February. At that time he was detached to
the Guard Company, Marine Barracks, Navy Yard,
Mare Island, California. In April of 1921,
Mansfield boarded the USAT Sherman for the
Philippines. After a brief stopover at the
Marine Barracks at Cavite, he arrived at his
duty station on 5 May 1921, the Marine Barracks,
Naval Station, Olongapo, Philippine Islands.
After nearly twelve months of duty at Olongapo,
Mansfield was assigned to Company A, Marine
Battery, Asiatic Fleet. His month long tour
of duty with the Asiatic Fleet took him up
and down the coast of China before he returned
to Olongapo in late May, 1922.
In August 1922, Mansfield returned to Cavite
in preparation for his return to the United
States and eventual discharge from the Marine
Corps. On November 9, 1922, Private Michael
J. Mansfield was discharged upon expiration
of his enlistment. Awarded the Good Conduct
Medal, Mansfields character was described
as excellent during his two years
of service.
Mansfield returned to Montana after his discharge
where he worked in the Butte mines as a miner
and mining engineer until 1930. Having never
attended high school, Mansfield had to read
and study to take the entrance examinations
to become eligible to enter college. He attended
the Montana School of Mines from 1927 to 1928
and Montana State University from 1930 to
1934. At the University he was awarded the
B.A. and M.A. degrees and went on to teach
there for ten years. Before being elected
to his first term in Congress in 1942, he
was the Professor of Latin American and Far
Eastern History at the Montana State University.
Congressman Mansfield served five terms in
the House of Representatives before being
elected to the Senate in 1952. While in the
House of Representatives, he undertook a number
of missions to other nations, particularly
in the Far East, as part of his duties on
the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Representative
Mansfield returned to China and the Philippines
in 1946 on an investigation of Naval bases
that included the areas where Mansfield had
served twenty-five years earlier as a Marine.
It was during Representative Mansfields
last term in the House of Representatives
that he introduced legislation to insure the
survival of the Marine Corps. The political
battle over the status of the Corps had been
raging in Congress ever since the closing
days of World War II. In January 1951, with
the future of the Marine Corps in apparent
jeopardy, Senator Paul H. Douglas of Illinois
and Congressman Mansfield introduced the Douglas-Mansfield
Bill. This bill would have made it a matter
of law that there would be four Marine divisions
and four Marine air wings in the active structure
of the Marine Corps.
The Senate and House hearings on the Douglas-Mansfield
Bill, held in April and May 1951, focused
on the status of the Marine Corps as a separate
service as well as on the roles and missions
of the Corps. Representative Mansfield was
one of the most outspoken defenders of the
Marine Corps as he emphasized that the Corps
was a separate service which has been
established in law and in precedents.
He further argued for the representation of
the Commandant of the Marine Corps on the
Joint Chiefs of Staff pointing out that as
the head of the Marine Corps, one of the four
services, (the Commandant) should have equal
status with the chiefs of the other three
services.
Due to the support provided by Congressmen
like Mike Mansfield, a modified version of
the Douglas-Mansfield Bill was overwhelmingly
passed by both houses of Congress. Signed
by President Truman on June 28, 1952, Public
Law 416, 82d Congress provided for three standing
Marine divisions and air wings, and coequal
status for the Commandant with the Joint Chiefs
of Staff when matters of direct concern to
the Marine Corps were under consideration.
Later that year, in November 1952, Mansfield
was elected to his first term in the Senate.
He soon gained the respect and admiration
of that body as he had in the House and by
1957 had been chosen Assistant Democratic
Leader. Senator Mansfields reputation
for fairness, straight talk, and candor also
was evident in the wide margins of victory
he enjoyed over his opponents on election
day in Montana.
Senator Mansfield continued his avid interest
in foreign affairs on the Senate Committee
on Foreign Relations making visits around
the world including visits to Southeast Asia
and to China on the invitation of Premier
Chou-En-lai in 1972. After serving in the
Senate for 24 years, 15 of which were the
capacity of Senate Majority Leader, Senator
Michael Mansfield retired from the Congress
in 1977. He was sworn in an U.S. Ambassador
to Japan in May 1977, and served in that position
until he resigned in 1988 at the age of 85.