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Caffery, Jefferson (1886-1974). Papers, 1902-1974

 Collection
Identifier: UAAMC-COLL-0045

Scope and Contents

The collection includes news clippings, correspondence, invitations, appointment books, photographs, artifacts, and souvenirs acquired during his tenure at various cities and countries throughout the world where he served.

Dates

  • 1902 - 1974

Creator

Biographical / Historical

Jefferson Caffery (1886-1974) was born in Lafayette, LA, the son of Charles Duval Caffery and Mary Catherine Parkerson. He married Gertrude McCarthy (1895-1973) in 1937. There were no children.

Caffery was a member of the first class enrolled in Southwestern Industrial Institute (now the University of Louisiana at Lafayette) in 1902 and graduated from Tulane University in 1906. He read law with his father for three years and was admitted to the bar but chose to pursue a career as a diplomat instead.

Caffery’s first posting, in 1911, was as secretary of the American Legation at Caracas, Venezuela. Subsequent assignments sent him to Sweden, Persia and France. Between 1920 and 1925 he served as second in command or acting chief of mission in Spain, Greece, and Japan. His assignment to Japan coincided with the great earthquake of 1923 and he oversaw the distribution of American aid to its victims, an example of his style of diplomacy he defined as “getting things done”.

Caffery was promoted to minister to El Salvador in 1926, and served as chief of mission, often to various trouble spots, for 29 years, a record in the history of the U.S. diplomatic corps. He went on to serve in Colombia and Cuba before being sent to Brazil in 1937. There he worked on President Getulio Vargas to keep the country neutral during World War II and to allow U.S. planes to use the air corridor along Brazil’s coast to fly supplies to British forces in North Africa. In 1944 Caffery was appointed ambassador to France, where government was being reestablished after the Nazi occupation. His task was to promote economic recovery and to prevent the Communist Party from gaining power. His language skills (he grew up speaking French and learned Spanish and Portuguese during his Latin American assignments) and his pragmatic and aggressive diplomatic style worked well for him. At the end of his assignment in 1949, the French government awarded him the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor.

Caffery’s final assignment was to Egypt, where the government and Great Britain were negotiating the terms of the British withdrawal from the Suez Canal zone. Remaining neutral, Caffery helped shape compromises that both sides could accept. In the midst of these negotiations, Col. Gamal Abdel Nasser seized power in Egypt, replacing King Farouk. Caffery’s principled actions during the transition impressed Nasser, but the U.S.’s refusal to supply arms to a country at war with Israel later soured relations between the two countries.

After his retirement in 1955, the Cafferys lived in Rome, making frequent visits to Lafayette where Caffery’s relatives lived. The couple moved to Lafayette in 1973, shortly before Mrs. Caffery’s death. The Ambassador died the following year.

For further information see Dictionary of American Biography; Dictionary of Louisiana Biography; Philip F. Dur, Jefferson Caffery of Louisiana: Ambassador of Revolutions (Lafayette: USL Libraries, 1982); obituary in New York Times, 15 April 1974.

Extent

26.5 Linear Feet

Language of Materials

English

Arrangement

SERIES: A. Newspaper Clippings 1. Brazil, 1937-44 Boxes 1-12 2. France, 1944-48 Boxes 12-14 3. Egypt, 1948-53 Boxes 14-27 B. Correspondence, Invitations, Appointment Books, etc. 1. Early years, First assignments Box 28 2. Foreign Countries Box 29-51 3. Retirement Box 51-57 C. Miscellaneous Box 58-66 D. Oversize Map Case 34-01

Title
Jeffery Caffery Papers, 1902-1975
Status
In Progress
Author
Scott Jordan
Date
2024-09-30
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the University Archives and Acadiana Manuscripts Collection Repository

Contact:
Edith Garland Dupré Library
University of Louisiana at Lafayette
400 East St. Mary Blvd.
Lafayette LA 70503 United States
337-482-6031