Charles W. Thayer

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Charles Wheeler Thayer

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Villanova, Delaware County, Pennsylvania, United States
Death: August 27, 1969 (59)
Salzburg, Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria (during a heart operation)
Place of Burial: Bryn Mawr, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of George Chapman Thayer and Gertrude May Thayer
Husband of Cynthia Louisa Thayer
Father of Private
Brother of Avis Howard Bohlen

Occupation: diplomat, Voice of America
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Charles W. Thayer

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_W._Thayer

Charles W. Thayer (1910– August 27, 1969) was an American diplomat and author. He was an expert on Soviet-American relations and headed the Voice of America.

Early years

Charles Wheeler Thayer was born in Villanova, Pennsylvania, the son of George Chapman Thayer, a shipbuilding engineer, and Gertrude May Wheeler Thayer. He attended St. Paul's School and the U.S. Military Academy, where he played polo, and graduated in 1933. He served for a few months as a cavalry lieutenant.

Foreign Service career

Thayer went to the Soviet Union to study Russian and then won a position at the newly opened American embassy in Moscow, first as personal secretary to Ambassador William Bullitt, a friend of Thayer's father,and then as Embassy Secretary. He taught a group of Russian cavalrymen to play polo so the Americans and Soviets could play "a hard-fought, clean, friendly match." Another embassy official recalled his "youthful exuberance" and "ready wit."

His sister Avis Howard Thayer visited him during his Moscow posting and met Charles E. Bohlen, with whom Thayer was sharing an apartment. She later married Bohlen, who served as American Ambassador to the Soviet Union from 1953 to 1957.

Thayer became a Foreign Service office in 1937 after passing his exams.

Thayer was appointed chargé d'affaires in Kabul, Afghanistan in 1942. He was assigned for a time to the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), forerunner of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), in Belgrade.

He served in London on the European Advisors Committee that drafted the German terms of surrender at the end of World War II.

Thayer attended the Naval War College for a year at the end of the war.

Following the war, he headed the OSS in Austria. He also served in 1946 on the Joint United States-Soviet Commission on Korea. Thayer played a key role in developing the secret Office of Policy Coordination, later merged the CIA, to counter and destabilize the Soviets, including its clandestine recruitment of former Nazis and collaborators for paramilitary operations.

Returning to the State Department, he served briefly as consul general in Munich before returning to the United States to direct the Department's International Broadcasting Division, later known as the Voice of America, in 1948-49. He developed an antagonistic relationship with FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover when he complained publicly that the FBI's slow processing of security clearances was hampering the Division's staffing. Hoover's investigation of Thayer's secretary revealed that she had borne his child. The FBI pursued an investigation of Thayer, though he did not require a security clearance from the FBI, and found he was had "communist sympathy" and was "undoubtedly a homosexual." Hoover failed in two attempts in 1949 and 1950 to persuade other government agencies that Thayer posed a security risk

Thayer married Cynthia Dunn Cochrane, a divorcée and the daughter of James Clement Dunn, U.S. Ambassador to Italy, on March 28, 1950.

Thayer became fluent in Russian, French, German, Spanish, Serbian, Italian, Bulgarian, Slovene, and Persian.

Resignation

Thayer held consular positions in Germany from 1949 to 1953. Beginning in 1950, when Thayer was serving as political liaison officer in the Bonn embassy, several anonymous letters denounced him to Senator Joseph McCarthy and his Senate allies as a Communist sympathizer with a history of financial profiteering and sexual immorality both homosexual and heterosexual. He was being protected, according to one of the anonymous sources, by allies in the State Department, especially his brother-in-law Charles Bohlen. Senate investigators used these letters and other documents obtained from a variety of government security investigations to target a series of government officials, starting with the forced resignation of Carmel Offie from the CIA in May 1950.

The evidence against Thayer collected by Senate investigators was based on "hostile gossip and speculation by Thayer's enemies, and premised on guilt by association." They learned, for example, that during his OSS service "Thayer was waited on regularly by a native Yugoslav waiter. named Marko, who was a known homosexual." Thayer's marriage to Maria Petrucci, the daughter of an Italian diplomat, lasted less than two years, which one informant attributed to homosexuality, though she later denied this. Thayer was a friend of Alexander Kirk, a Foreign Service officer with a homosexual reputation who had retired in 1945, and others. Much of the impulse behind the investigations of political and sexual irregularities reflected resentment of the foreign policy establishment, their elite backgrounds, cosmopolitanism, and association with bohemians and the politically unorthodox.

Senate pressure forced the State Department to review Thayer's status. He returned from Germany to testify that "he had never performed a homosexual act." Though cleared, he remained under surveillance by the State Department's security division. When Thayer was moved to a new post in Munich and Senator Pat McCarran demanded a full report on his "experience, qualifications, moral character, and loyalty," the State Department waited a month to respond with a glowing report that included no qualifications. McCarthy renewed and expanded his attacks following Republican gains in the 1952 elections when the new Secretary of State John Foster Dulles decided to cooperate with Senate investigators.

Finally, at the end of March 1953, after much bureaucratic infighting, Thayer was forced to resign in order to win Senate confirmation of his brother-in-law Charles Bohlen as Ambassador to Russia. The Suddeutsche Zeitung regretted his departure and expressed concern that the effect on government operations of a "wave of McCarthyism...must be devastating."

Later years

Thayer moved to Majorca to live inexpensively beyond the reach of Senate subpoenas. He found some employment opportunities blocked and blamed State Department security officials, though the FBI was responsible. He joked in his diary that "under Stalin you went to Siberia, under Hitler to Dachau or Buchenwald but under McCarthy to Majorca, which counts as progress." He tried without success to have his State Department file amended to make it clear that he resigned because he had a heterosexual affair while married. To support Thayer, his father-in-law, James Dunn, refused an appointment as Ambassador to Brazil. Thayer wrote but did not publish an autobiographical novel based on his experiences as a victim of McCarthyism and the purge of homosexuals from government service.

In 1959, he accompanied W. Averell Harriman, who was reporting for a newspaper syndicate, on a 6-week tour of the Soviet Union,

Thayer wrote several works reflecting his experiences in government service:

Bears in the Caviar (1951)

Hands Across the Caviar (1953)

Unquiet Germans (1957)

Diplomat (1959)

Moscow Interlude (1962)

Guerilla (1963)

Checkpoint (1964)

He also wrote a book about his mother, Muzzy (1966).

Thayer and his wife Cynthia had a son James.

In retirement Thayer and his wife lived half the year in Villanova and half the year outside of Munich. He later divided his time between homes in Philadelphia and Salzburg, Austria.

Thayer died during a heart operation in Salzburg, Austria, on August 27, 1969.


biography

at : https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/17843130/charles-wheeler-thayer &
at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_W._Thayer

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Charles W. Thayer's Timeline

1910
February 9, 1910
Villanova, Delaware County, Pennsylvania, United States
1969
August 27, 1969
Age 59
Salzburg, Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria
????
Church of the Redeemer Cemetery, Bryn Mawr, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, United States