The Many Contradictions of Longtime FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover
Description
J. Edgar Hoover was a man of contradictions. As the Director of the FBI from 1924 to 1972, he spearheaded homophobic, racist, and anti-communist policies – which arguably shaped half a century of the United States. But he also had an intimate personal relationship with a man and he believed in the role of government to support social conservatism.
Beverly Gage is the author of “G-Man: J. Edgar Hoover and the Making of the American Century”, which won a Pulitzer Prize in Biography. She is a 20th-century American historian at Yale. She also wrote “The Day Wall Street Exploded” which examined the history of terrorism in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
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Show notes:
(0:00 ) - Who is J. Edgar Hoover?
(1:54 ) - Intimate Relationship with Clyde Tolson
(3:17 ) - The Lavender Scare and Government
(6:16 ) - Early Years and Racist Fraternity
(8:04 ) - FBI surveilling Civil Rights Movement Leaders
(10:58 ) - Impact of Anti Communism and McCarthyism
(14:30 ) - Social Conservatism and Big Government
(16:50 ) - Process of Writing Biography
(20:39 ) - An “Incredibly Honest” Paper Trail
(22:31 ) - Legacy and Impact
(23:55 ) - Reflection