Rachel Carson and JFK, an Environmental Tag Team

On the 50th anniversary of Silent Spring鈥檚 publication, a best-selling historian shows the extent to which John Kennedy and his administration defended Rachel Carson鈥檚 controversial work against the chemical industry鈥檚 onslaught.
CARSON AND CAMELOT. Illustration: Joe Ciardiello

One of John F. Kennedy鈥檚 favorite books was Henry David Thoreau鈥檚 Cape Cod, published in 1865. When in Washington, D.C., Kennedy, a yachtsman, always craved the Cape Cod winds and turbulent Atlantic waves. He restored his health sailing the Nantucket Sound waters around sandbars and shoals. The elemental forces of the sea helped Kennedy cope with the pain of Addison鈥檚 disease and cleared his mind of the clutter of retail politics. Kennedy understood exactly what Thoreau meant when the naturalist wrote about the Cape that 鈥渁 man can stand there and put all of America behind him.鈥 

On his bookshelf in Hyannis Port, alongside Cape Cod, sat two books by Rachel Carson: The Sea Around Us and The Edge of the Sea. When it came to conservation, only marine-related issues regularly caught Kennedy鈥檚 attention. In awe of the millions of shore, sea, and marsh birds that used the Cape as a stopover during their seasonal migrations, Kennedy, a Massachusetts 爆料公社 Society supporter, wanted to make sure that the shoreline remained unsullied by industrialization. In this spirit, on September 3, 1959, Kennedy, then a member of the U.S. Senate, cosponsored the Cape Cod National Seashore bill with his Republican colleague Leverett Saltonstall. As a longtime resident of Hyannis Port, Kennedy had no detailed knowledge of the lower Cape area, but he routinely flew over it in helicopters as the seashore legislation circulated through Congress.

Running for president in 1960, Kennedy advocated saving seashores as wildlife refuges and recreational areas. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, a New Dealer and close Kennedy family friend, set the tone and tenor of JFK鈥檚 burgeoning environmentalism when he intoned at a Wilderness Conference in San Francisco that the 鈥減reservation of values which technology will destroy . . . is indeed the new frontier.鈥

Biologist Rachel Carson, working feverishly on her eco-manifesto Silent Spring throughout 1960, considered July 15鈥攚hen Kennedy delivered his acceptance speech after winning the Democratic nomination for president and called for a 鈥淣ew Frontier鈥 to reinvigorate the progressive, can-do spirit of America鈥攁 gold-starred day. Most political pundits heard only Kennedy鈥檚 vigorous lines about outfoxing the Soviet Union in the Cold War. But Kennedy鈥攚ho had championed the Wilderness Bill that would eventually be signed into law by Lyndon Johnson, supported expanding bird sanctuaries and advocated the creation of new protected national seashores鈥攐ffered a promise Carson found irresistible. He called for 鈥渕astery of the sky and rain, the oceans and the tides.鈥

Carson knew exactly what Kennedy meant by mastery: empowering biologists to help rescue America from environmental degradation. Certainly since 1945, the White House under Harry Truman and Dwight Eisenhower had been, at the most charitable, uninspiring on the conservation front, causing environmental activists to hope that another Theodore or Franklin D. Roosevelt would appear on the political horizon. Between 1945 and 1960 a string of multi-megaton thermonuclear detonations, all in the name of weapons supremacy vis-脿-vis the Soviet Union, had released massive amounts of radioactive fallout in the atmosphere. During the Eisenhower era, America wasn鈥檛 just the preeminent superpower, it became the world鈥檚 leading hyper-industrial giant. This brought Americans a lot of economic lifestyle benefits. But it came at a high cost. The oceans were dying. Rainwater was unsafe to drink. 鈥淭o dispose first and investigate later is an invitation to disaster,鈥 Carson wrote around the time of Kennedy鈥檚 acceptance speech, 鈥渇or once radioactive elements have been deposited at sea they are irretrievable. The mistakes that are made now are made for all time.鈥

 

Besides sounding the Paul Revere alarm about the pesticide DDT in Silent Spring, Carson also promoted nuclear non-proliferation, even dedicating the book to Albert Schweitzer, who had won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1952 for his efforts to end the atomic arms race. Carson, one of the best marine biologists alive, feared the oceans would be poisoned beyond redemption in the coming decades, and that a point of no return was fast approaching. The thought of Kennedy in the White House鈥攁 new Roosevelt鈥攍ifted her hopes that aboveground nuclear testing would be banned. (Her dream came true in August 1963, when Kennedy signed the Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty with the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union.)

In the spring of 1960 Carson, even while struggling with breast cancer, viral pneumonia, and ulcers, had signed up to be a New Frontier foot soldier in solidarity with the Kennedy family and Justice Douglas. Only her assistant Jeanne Davis understood how debilitating her health problems were. This was Carson鈥檚 big secret. As Linda Lear stressed in Witness to Nature, Carson had to conceal her illness, even wearing a wig when her hair started falling out during chemotherapy, for fear of the chemical companies attacking her Silent Spring research by saying, 鈥淪he鈥檚 dying of cancer and wants to blame the pesticides.鈥

Propped up on pillows at her home in Silver Spring, Maryland, trying to heal, working away on her Silent Spring manuscript, Carson managed to find time to volunteer for Kennedy鈥檚 campaign. In the weeks leading up to Kennedy鈥檚 nomination, Carson served on the Natural Resources Committee of the Democratic Advisory Council. She hoped that in late 1962, when Silent Spring would be published, Kennedy would occupy the White House, leading a mainstream effort to slay the dual dragons of pollution: radioactive and chemical contamination of the environment. The advisory council embraced Carson鈥檚 anti-pollution ideas. Her dear friend Pare Lorentz, a film producer, wrote the council鈥檚 far-reaching report on pollution control, with input from Carson. They recommended that Kennedy, if elected, create a Bureau of Environmental Health within the U.S. Public Health Service. Carson envisioned this prototype for the Environmental Protection Agency wielding regulatory jurisdiction over 鈥渙ur one imperative resource: the environment in which all of us live.鈥 Kennedy received the Lorentz report鈥攖itled 鈥淩esources for the People鈥濃攖hat October.

In the fall of 1960 most outdoors enthusiasts considered themselves conservationists. But Carson, using the advisory council as a bully pulpit, turned the public debate toward a new environmentalism, one properly informed of the perils of mass chemical usage. The monumentalism of Theodore Roosevelt (who protected such American wonders as the Grand Canyon and Crater Lake) and the conservation ethos of FDR (who planted trees and expanded wildlife refuges) were great accomplishments. But Carson wanted to connect the movement to public health. No longer would conservation be a cult of birdwatchers, fair-chase hunters, and outdoor recreationalists. The new ecological awareness would extend to every mom and dad striving to protect their children鈥檚 precious health. Nobody wanted to give their child cow鈥檚 milk containing dangerous levels of strontium-90 or serve fish contaminated with toxic mercury. 鈥淓cology鈥 became the new buzzword.

That October, while Kennedy read the council鈥檚 report, his wife, Jacqueline, invited Carson to join the Women鈥檚 Committee for New Frontiers. Not only did Carson accept, but she also met with the future first lady at the Kennedys鈥 Georgetown home. This wasn鈥檛 a garden club Carson was joining; it was the brain trust of the smartest women in the Democratic Party. Word spread among the liberal Washington doyennes鈥攊ncluding Evangeline Bruce (wife of the famed diplomat David K.E. Bruce), former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, and former Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins鈥攖hat Carson was writing about how the residue of insecticides and pesticides had been discovered in soil and water all over America. Mrs. Kennedy was pregnant with John, her baby due in December, and the mere thought that pesticides might have a genetic effect on her unborn child would have been harrowing to her.

 

On November 4, Kennedy beat Vice President Richard Nixon and was elected the 35th U.S. president. Carson was overjoyed. It heartened her that Kennedy, shortly before winning, issued a statement saying, 鈥淲e must restore our own woodlands as a source of strength for the Nation鈥檚 future. . . . The Nation should set aside shoreline recreational refuges, and ranges must be protected to serve the purposes to which they are dedicated without interference by commercial exploitation.鈥 Perhaps now the federal government would address her crusade against pesticides and nuclear fallout in a more pronounced, regulatory way.

For most of 1961 Carson continued slaving away on Silent Spring. She was ecstatic that Kennedy, the lover of the great Atlantic Ocean, had pushed to create new national seashores at Cape Cod (Massachusetts), Padre Island (Texas), and Point Reyes (California). In June of 1961 Elbert N. Carvel, the Democratic governor of Delaware, tried to hinder the creation of the Prime Hook National Wildlife Refuge鈥攃onsidered one of the preeminent stopover sites for migratory shorebirds in the fall and spring. Kennedy wrote him a threatening letter, demanding that he 鈥渞etract his objections.鈥 In 1963, under the authority of the Migratory Bird Conservation Act, the president established Prime Hook鈥攍ocated on the west shore of Delaware Bay鈥攁s a national wildlife refuge.

After Carson completed Silent Spring in early 1962, she once again hitched her wagon to the star of the New Frontier. With The New Yorker slated to run the first excerpt of Silent Spring in its June 16 issue, Carson went on a pre-publication alliance-building charge. She attended a White House conference on conservation convened at President Kennedy鈥檚 request. Still receiving cancer radiation treatments, Carson asked two key female allies to accompany her to the conference: Ruth Scott (a Pennsylvania conservationist and friend) and Nicki Wilson (an Interior Department publicist). 鈥淭his is not an easy book to tell people about,鈥 Carson鈥檚 editor at Houghton Mifflin had warned. 鈥淲e are going to have to work up something of a crusade鈥攐n a local level鈥攊f we are to reach a really wide audience.鈥

Carson could have brought anybody with her to meet the Kennedys. The fact that she chose a publicist and a tireless Democratic Party networker shows how Carson was gearing up for the inevitable blowback that Silent Spring was bound to receive from the chemical industry, agribusiness behemoths, and other deep-pocketed polluters. Scott made sure that Carson interacted with Secretary of the Interior Stewart Udall and Sierra Club Director David Brower at the White House. Justice Douglas, Kennedy鈥檚 number one unofficial adviser on all things conservation, had read an advance galley of Silent Spring just before the White House conference. Carson was getting her high-powered advocacy ducks in a row. On May 27, shortly before The New Yorker excerpt ran, Paul Knight, a close adviser to Interior Secretary Udall, met with Carson to strategize on how the Kennedy administration and Carson could work in tandem to bring maximum publicity to Silent Spring.

 

The new frontier was now fully behind the Carson environmental zeitgeist. President Kennedy himself鈥攁fter reading The New Yorker excerpt along with the first lady鈥攚anted Carson defended from the onslaught of abuse that Big Chemical would hurl her way. The administration, in fact, was helping to publicize Carson鈥檚 work while simultaneously creating a buffer for the president if her research didn鈥檛 hold up under peer review. Justice Douglas took the New Frontiersman lead, declaring Silent Spring 鈥渢he most revolutionary book since Uncle Tom鈥檚 Cabin.鈥 Since the 1950s Douglas and Robert F. Kennedy, the president鈥檚 brother, had hiked together all over the world, from the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal in Maryland to the outback of Siberia. Justice Douglas was practically an auxiliary member of the Kennedy family. Writing in the Book-of-the-Month Club News about Silent Spring, Douglas threw down a gauntlet impossible to ignore. 鈥淭his book,鈥 he wrote, 鈥渋s the most important chronicle of this century for the human race. This book is a call for immediate action and for effective control of all merchants of poison.鈥

What companies like American Cyanamid, Velsicol, and Monsanto would soon learn was that the Kennedy administration was setting up Big Chemical as the culprit of the planet鈥檚 worse environmental desecrations. The New York Times published its first pro-Silent Spring editorial鈥斺淩achel Carson鈥檚 Warning鈥濃攐n July 2, 1962. A few weeks later the Times ran a supportive story about Carson called 鈥Silent Spring Is Now Noisy Summer: Pesticide Industry Up in Arms Over a New Book.鈥 The die was cast for a king-daddy fight. At a White House news conference, which coincided with Douglas鈥檚 endorsement of Silent Spring in the Book-of-the-Month Club News, President Kennedy offered Carson his imprimatur鈥攖o a degree. While too smart a politician to embrace all of Carson鈥檚 research, Kennedy made clear that his administration took Silent Spring seriously. Because of 鈥淢iss Carson鈥檚 book,鈥 Kennedy said in a televised press conference, the Department of Agriculture and the Public Health Service had launched a full-blown investigation into whether pesticides caused illnesses in humans. What a daring thing for Kennedy to do, the equivalent of Theodore Roosevelt embracing muckraking novelist Upton Sinclair鈥檚 The Jungle (a searing indictment of unsanitary Chicago meatpacking plants that led to the passage of the 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act). Kennedy was using Silent Spring to help push the Democratic Advisory Council鈥檚 1960 agenda to combat pollution by connecting old-style conservation to the new-style environmentalism that called for the protection of earth, air, and water (and all creatures dwelling therein). 

The day after the White House press event, Kennedy announced the establishment of a special panel of the President鈥檚 Science Advisory Committee (PSAC), headed by the highly respected Dr. Jerome B. Wiesner, to study various health and environmental questions about pesticide use. The hullabaloo over Silent Spring allowed Kennedy to go on the offensive against chemical polluters. Most other presidents would have gone into duck-and-cover mode because of Carson. But Silent Spring served Kennedy鈥檚 goal of saving wetland habitats along the Atlantic coast and having the U.S. government regulate the toxic pesticide sprays beloved by huge agricultural concerns. Although Kennedy didn鈥檛 want to be an alarmist, he didn鈥檛 mind a fellow New Frontier intellectual鈥攍ike Carson鈥攍eading the gallant charge. 

When Silent Spring was at last published in book form on September 27, 1962, the chemical industry went ballistic. Kennedy instantly became Public Enemy No. 1 for propping up Silent Spring as worthy of serious attention. The National Agricultural Chemicals Association rushed its propaganda booklet 鈥淔act and Fancy鈥 into print. The nub of the counterattack was that Mr. Fancy (a.k.a. Kennedy) was an East Coast elite who yachted frivolously around Cape Cod, his treasured national seashore, while allowing DDT manufacturers to be unjustly vilified. The association warned that factory shutdowns would mean thousands of lost jobs. When Kennedy awarded Dr. Frances Oldham Kelsey鈥攁 Food and Drug Administration scientist鈥攁 public service gold medal for discovering that thalidomide (a sedative frequently prescribed to pregnant women) caused deformities in babies, the pharmaceutical industry likewise felt blindsided. 鈥淚t is all of a piece,鈥 Carson told The New York Post, 鈥渢halidomide and pesticides鈥攖hey represent our willingness to rush ahead and use something new without knowing what the results are going to be.鈥

In June 1962, 爆料公社 President Carl Buchheister had read a galley of Silent Spring just as The New Yorker installment was running, and decided to back Carson. Lawyers from Velsicol lobbed veiled threats at John Vosburgh (爆料公社鈥檚 editor) and Charles Callison (assistant to the NAS president) over lunch, warning them to beware of associating with Carson. Big Chemical was gearing up to blast her out of the water. Bravely, Vosburgh and Callison ignored the Velsicol bullying, though they were fearful of lawsuits. 爆料公社 published an excerpt of Silent Spring and criticized, in an editorial, Velsicol鈥檚 pesticide programs (though it didn鈥檛 entirely endorse Carson鈥檚 argument).

Furthermore, 爆料公社 Society branches in different cities and states banded together to serve as refuges for Carson throughout the summer and fall of 1962. Fighting a kind of guerrilla war against Big Chemical, Carson spent time at the 爆料公社 Camp in Maine and attended a book signing at the 爆料公社 Society in Washington, D.C. Roland Clement, vice president of 爆料公社 and a staff biologist, publicly embraced Carson鈥檚 Silent Spring research; others at the nonprofit, more timid, expressed varied doubts. In September 1963, 爆料公社 courageously reprinted a Carson lecture about New England wildflowers as 鈥淩achel Carson Answers Her Critics.鈥 But National 爆料公社 never supported a ban on DDT. Instead, the nonprofit simply gave Carson鈥檚 defense real estate in its own organ of reform.

Not that 爆料公社 was taking much of a risk. The Great Debate over Silent Spring ended in Carson鈥檚 favor on May 15, 1963, when President Kennedy鈥檚 46-page President鈥檚 Science Advisory Committee report鈥攖itled 鈥淯se of Pesticides鈥濃攚as made public. (It might as well have been called 鈥淩achel Carson Wins.鈥) Although the report wasn鈥檛 definitive concerning any human health concerns about pesticides, it did contain a bombshell recommendation to increase public education about the biological hazards of pesticides. It was as if WARNING had been stamped on every page. 鈥淯ntil the publication of Silent Spring by Rachel Carson, people were generally unaware of the toxicity of pesticides,鈥 the PSAC report stated. 鈥淭he Government should present this information to the public in a way that will make it aware of the dangers while recognizing the value of pesticides.鈥

 

Carson had three aims in writing Silent Spring: creating an enduring work of literature on par with The Sea Around Us; alerting the public to the health dangers of pesticides; and forcing the U.S. government to regulate the chemical industry more stringently. That May she accomplished all three goals. The wheels of Congress now started turning in her direction. Senator Abraham Ribicoff of Connecticut demanded subcommittee hearings, which started the very day after the PSAC report came out. Secretary Udall heralded Carson as a 鈥渇ar-sighted and alert writer [who] has awakened the Nation.鈥 Having achieved her goals, Carson headed north to rock-ribbed Maine for the summer. With her friend Dorothy Freeman she relaxed, watching the advancing and retreating tides from an oceanfront deck. She enjoyed the diving terns, nesting parula warblers, and scavenging gulls more than ever before, though radiation treatments had ravaged her body and shrunken her frame. When summer ended, Carson headed back to Silver Spring. Awaiting her on her desk was a letter from the 爆料公社, informing Carson that it was awarding her its highest honor for conservation achievement. More than 500 dinner guests attended the award ceremony at the Hotel Roosevelt in New York on December 3, 1963. 鈥淐onservation is a cause that has no end,鈥 she said in her acceptance speech. 鈥淭here is no point at which we will say 鈥榦ur work is finished.鈥 鈥

President Kennedy had been killed in Dallas just 11 days earlier. Carson mourned for months. But as solace, the New Frontier regulatory attitude toward the use of pesticides and other chemicals had taken hold of the national psyche. The Kennedy-Carson vision of an America with 鈥渕astery of the sky and rain, the oceans and the tides鈥 lived on in Lyndon Johnson鈥檚 Great Society, igniting the grassroots modern environmental movement that would bring us such landmark legislation as the Clean Air Act, the National Environmental Policy Act, and the Endangered Species Act鈥攁ll signed into law by President Richard Nixon.

Suffering terribly from myriad illnesses, Carson died on April 14, 1964. In the same way Abraham Lincoln was forever tied by history to Harriet Beecher Stowe and Theodore Roosevelt to Upton Sinclair, so, too, had Carson been linked to Kennedy鈥檚 New Frontier conservation. There is no shortage of conflicting opinions about the controversial DDT analysis in Silent Spring. But no one disputes that by 1964 the environmental revolution was on, and Kennedy and Carson were among its John the Baptist figures. Their shared love of the Atlantic seaboard鈥攑articularly the migratory shorebird areas from Maine to Virginia鈥攆used together an alliance that uplifted outdoors enthusiasts in all 50 states. 鈥淜ennedy loved marine conservation,鈥 Udall recalled. 鈥淎nd Carson was his muse.鈥