
"Nations, like individuals, differ as to what is right and just, and dashing appeals to reason may in the long run do more to avert a clash of arms than a lot of pious resolutions which conceal honest and serious disagreements." James F. Byrnes
Having
resigned as Director of War Mobilization,
Mr. Byrnes returned home to Spartanburg, SC, in April 1945 to resume
his law practice. Shortly thereafter, President Roosevelt died in Warm
Springs, Georgia, and Byrnes was summoned back to Washington. Several
days later, President Truman asked Mr. Byrnes to be his Secretary of
State. On July 3, 1945, Byrnes was sworn into office in the White House
rose garden.
As Secretary of State, Byrnes was responsible for maintaining good foreign relations and for helping to create and carry out foreign policy. It was an exciting time to have such a job since the huge task of rebuilding a war-torn Europe rested in the hands of the United States, Great Britain and the Soviet Union.
One of Mr. Byrnes' major goals was to assure that the peoples of Germany and her allies be allowed to choose their own forms of government. He was not wholly successful in this matter, however, because the Soviets quickly established puppet governments in many East European countries such as Rumania, Bulgaria and Hungary.
Mr. Byrnes was instrumental in all the postwar peace conferences: the Big Three Meeting at Potsdam, the meetings of the Foreign Ministers Council in London and Moscow, the United Nations General Assembly in London, the Big Four Meetings in Paris and the 21-Nation Peace Conference, also in Paris. He was also committed to establishing the United Nations as an effective international peacekeeping body.
View a map showing Mr. Byrnes' travels.
Big Three Meeting, Yalta; January 22, 1945 to February 12, 1945
Big Three Meeting, Potsdam; July 6, 1945 to August 7, 1945
Foreign Ministers Council, London; September 4, 1945 to October 8, 1945
Big Three Foreign Ministers, Moscow; December 12, 1945 to December 29, 1945
United Nations. General Assembly, London; January 7, 1946 to January 25, 1946
Big Four Foreign Ministers, Paris; April 23, 1946 to May 18, 1946
Big Four Foreign Ministers, Paris; June 13, 1946 to July 14, 1946
Twenty-one Nation Peace Conference, Paris; July 27, 1946 to October 17, 1946
The last conference Byrnes attended as Secretary of State was the Council of Foreign Ministers meeting held in New York in November 1946. It is fitting that his last conference was a Council meeting since the Council had been created in response to Byrnes' proposal. Here, as at other meetings, Mr. Byrnes argued fiercely for a fair and lasting peace, though he was willing to compromise when political and ideological differences virtually crippled efforts to continue negotiations.
After signing the treaties of peace with five nations, Mr. Byrnes resigned as Secretary of State in January 1947, feeling his mission had been completed. Throughout these years of service and in years after, Byrnes maintained, "Even a battle with words is better than a battle with bombs."