I believe that one day, America and the other nations clustered
along the shores of the Pacific will be neighbors along a lake,
a closely interwoven community sharing common interests and common
goals.
Mike Mansfield
March 27, 1980




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A man of few words and great modesty, Mike Mansfield often said
he did not want to be remembered. Yet, his fascinating life story
and enormous contributions are an inspiration for all who follow.
Rocky Childhood
Mike Mansfield was born in New York City on March 16, 1903. Following
his mothers death when Mike was 7, his father sent him and
his two sisters to Great Falls, Montana, to be raised by an aunt
and uncle there. At 14, he lied about his age in order to enlist
in the U.S. Navy for the duration of World War I. Later, he served
in the Army and the Marines, which sent him to the Philippines and
China, awakening a lifelong interest in Asia.
From Mucker to Teacher
Honorably discharged from the Marines in 1922, Mike Mansfield returned
to Montana. Lacking a high school education, he worked as a mucker
in the copper mines of Butte, shoveling rock and ore half a mile
underground, and attended the Montana School of Mines. While in
Butte he met Maureen Hayes, a young school teacher who encouraged
Mike to further his education. With her financial and moral support,
Mansfield enrolled at Montana State University (now The University
of Montana) where as a special student he took high
school and college courses simultaneously. He and Maureen Hayes
were married in 1932, and thus began a lifelong partnership of extraordinary
devotion, commitment and respect that lasted until her death in
September 2000.
Mansfield received his high school equivalency and bachelors
degree in 1933 and went on to receive a masters degree in
1934. He then taught Latin American and East Asian history at The
University of Montana until 1942.
Bipartisan Leadership
Mike Mansfields political career was launched in 1942 when
he was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. He served five
terms from Montanas 1st District. In 1952, he was elected
to the U.S. Senate and re-elected in 1958, 1964 and 1970. His selection
as Democratic Assistant Majority Leader in 1957 was followed by
election in 1961 as Senate Majority Leader. He served in that capacity
until his retirement from the Senate in 1977, longer than any other
Majority Leader in history.
It has been said that Mike Mansfield shaped the character of the
modern Senate more than any other leader in its history by allowing
a Senate of equals to emerge and giving voice and a role to younger
Senators. Respected by Senators on both sides of the aisle, he led
the Senate during a period of great achievement as the Great
Society legislation of the 1960s was passed. Yet, he found
time to personally read and sign all letters to his constituents
in Montana and was remarkable in his memory of the names of folks
back home and in Washington, D.C. Each year his Montana constituents
looked forward to receiving Christmas cards
that he and Maureen designed.
Respected Envoy
During Mike Mansfields years in Congress, Presidents Truman
and Eisenhower appointed him delegate to the United Nations in 1951
and 1958 respectively. Considered an authority on U.S.-Asia relations,
he also undertook foreign policy assignments for Presidents Roosevelt,
Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon and Ford, and his private discussions with
President Nixon paved the way for Nixons visit to China in
1972. Mike Mansfield did not hesitate to speak out in opposition
to the war in Vietnam and he privately counseled a succession of
presidents against U.S. involvement.
In 1977, President Carter appointed Mike Mansfield Ambassador to
Japan. He was reappointed by President Reagan and served until January
1989, longer than any other U.S. Ambassador to Japan. Mansfield
brought his experience in Asian affairs to the embassy in Tokyo,
where he tackled thorny bilateral trade and defense issues and was
trusted and esteemed for his wisdom and sensitivity.
Following his retirement in 1989 until his death on October 5,
2001, Mike Mansfield served as senior advisor to the international
financial firm of Goldman, Sachs & Co. in Washington, D.C.
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