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Cordell Hull was a prominent American statesman, diplomat, and politician who served as the 47th Secretary of State under Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and briefly Harry S. Truman from 1933 to 1944. Born in Overton County, Tennessee, in 1871, Hull represented Tennessee in both the House of Representatives and the Senate during a lengthy political career spanning several decades. He is widely regarded as one of the most influential secretaries of state in American history, playing a crucial role in shaping United States foreign policy during the Great Depression and World War II. Hull's legacy in Nashville extends beyond his diplomatic achievements; he maintained deep connections to his home state throughout his life and is commemorated through various landmarks and institutions in the city. His commitment to free trade, international cooperation, and democratic principles earned him the Nobel Peace Prize in 1945, making him one of only a handful of American diplomats to receive this prestigious honor.
```mediawiki
Cordell Hull was an American statesman, diplomat, and politician who served as the 47th Secretary of State under President Franklin D. Roosevelt from 1933 to 1944, making him the longest-serving person to hold that office in American history. Born in Overton County, Tennessee, on October 5, 1871, Hull represented Tennessee in both the U.S. House of Representatives and the Senate before his appointment to the cabinet. He is widely regarded as one of the most consequential secretaries of state the country has produced, shaping American foreign policy through the Great Depression, the approach of World War II, and the Allied effort to build a postwar international order. His role in laying the groundwork for the United Nations led the Nobel Committee to award him the Nobel Peace Prize in 1945—an honor he received too ill to collect in person. President Roosevelt called him "the Father of the United Nations."<ref>[https://history.state.gov/departmenthistory/people/hull-cordell "Cordell Hull (1933–1944)"], ''U.S. Department of State Office of the Historian''.</ref>


== History ==
== Early Life and Education ==


Cordell Hull's early life in rural Tennessee profoundly influenced his political philosophy and career trajectory. Born on October 5, 1871, in Overton County, Hull grew up in a family with strong Democratic Party ties and developed a keen interest in law and public service from an early age. He attended Cumberland University in Lebanon, Tennessee, where he studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1891. Hull's legal practice in Carthage, Tennessee, provided him with a solid foundation in business and constitutional law, which would serve him well in his subsequent political endeavors. After establishing himself as a respected lawyer and community leader, he entered Tennessee politics by serving in the state legislature, where he gained recognition for his advocacy of progressive reforms and support for the gold standard in monetary policy.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cordell Hull: Early Life and Political Emergence |url=https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/history/2024/01/15/cordell-hull-tennessee-statesman/67890123/ |work=The Tennessean |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
Hull's early years in rural Overton County shaped much of his thinking about economic fairness and the role of government. His father, William Hull, was a farmer and local businessman, and the family had strong ties to the Democratic Party. The region's economy was rooted in subsistence agriculture and small trade, conditions that gave Hull a lifelong hostility toward tariffs and trade barriers he believed punished working people.


Hull's national political career began in earnest when he was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1906, representing Tennessee's Fourth Congressional District. He served in the House for twenty-two years, from 1907 to 1931, establishing himself as a staunch advocate for tariff reduction and free trade policies. During this period, he became deeply involved in crafting trade legislation and served on the House Ways and Means Committee, where he championed the reciprocal trade agreement program that would later become central to his diplomatic agenda. His expertise in international commerce and unwavering commitment to reducing trade barriers caught the attention of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who appointed him Secretary of State in 1933. This appointment marked the beginning of Hull's most influential period, during which he would serve for an unprecedented eleven years, making him the longest-serving Secretary of State at that time. His tenure encompassed some of the most turbulent years in modern history, including the rise of fascism, the economic crises of the Great Depression, and the entire scope of American involvement in World War II.
He attended local schools before enrolling at Montvale College in Celina, Tennessee, and later at National Normal University in Lebanon, Ohio. He then studied law at Cumberland University School of Law in Lebanon, Tennessee, and was admitted to the Tennessee bar in 1891.<ref>[https://millercenter.org/president/fdroosevelt/essays/hull-1933-secretary-of-state "Cordell Hull"], ''Miller Center, University of Virginia''.</ref> Hull opened a law practice in Celina, Tennesse, not Carthage as sometimes stated, and quickly established a reputation as a capable courtroom advocate. His legal work gave him direct experience with the economic struggles of rural Tennesseans, experience he carried into every legislative fight over taxation and trade that followed.


== Notable People ==
At just 21, Hull was elected to the Tennessee state legislature, serving from 1893 to 1897. He took a break from law and politics to serve as a captain in the 4th Tennessee Infantry Regiment during the Spanish-American War in 1898, seeing service in Cuba. That experience reinforced his belief in American engagement with the wider world rather than retreat from it.


Cordell Hull's prominence in Nashville and Tennessee society made him a significant figure in the state's political and cultural landscape. Throughout his career, he maintained numerous relationships with other influential Tennessee politicians and business leaders who shaped the state's development during the twentieth century. His network extended to prominent Nashville figures in government, law, finance, and education, many of whom sought his counsel on matters of state and national importance. Hull's role as Secretary of State brought considerable prestige to Tennessee and Nashville specifically, as the state's most prominent representative in the Roosevelt administration. His relationships with other cabinet members and with President Roosevelt himself were marked by mutual respect, though they occasionally disagreed on specific policy matters, particularly regarding military preparedness in the years preceding American entry into World War II. Hull was also known for his mentorship of younger politicians and diplomats from Tennessee, helping to shape the next generation of state leaders who would continue his legacy of public service.<ref>{{cite web |title=Secretary Hull's Influence on Tennessee Politics |url=https://wpln.org/story/2023/11/08/cordell-hull-legacy-tennessee-government/ |work=WPLN News |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
== Congressional Career ==


Hull's personal life in Nashville was characterized by his dedication to his family and his involvement in various civic and charitable organizations. He married Rosa Whitney in 1911, and their marriage lasted until his death in 1955. The couple maintained a residence in Nashville and participated actively in the city's social and philanthropic circles. Hull was known for his accessibility to constituents and his willingness to engage with citizens from all walks of life who sought his counsel or assistance. His reputation for integrity and principled decision-making earned him considerable respect among his peers and the public. Despite his long absences from Nashville during his years of service in Washington, D.C., Hull maintained strong ties to Tennessee and regularly returned to visit family and conduct civic business. He was active in various professional organizations, including bar associations and civic clubs, and served on boards and committees focused on education, economic development, and cultural advancement.
Hull was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1906, representing Tennessee's Fourth Congressional District, and began his first term in 1907. His House career was not entirely continuous: he lost his seat in the 1920 Republican wave election but returned to Congress in 1923 and served until 1931.<ref>[https://bioguide.congress.gov/search/bio/H000940 "Hull, Cordell"], ''Biographical Directory of the United States Congress''.</ref> Across those years, he became the leading Democratic voice for tariff reduction and reciprocal trade agreements, arguing consistently that high protective tariffs depressed American exports, harmed farmers, and invited retaliation from trading partners.


== Attractions ==
His most lasting legislative contribution from this period came through his authorship of the federal income tax legislation passed under the Sixteenth Amendment in 1913, work he carried out as a member of the House Ways and Means Committee. He also drafted the original federal and estate tax laws. These were not peripheral achievements. They established the basic architecture of federal revenue collection that persists today.


Nashville commemorates Cordell Hull's significant contributions to American diplomacy and Tennessee history through several landmarks and institutions. The Cordell Hull Birthplace and Museum, located in Pickett County near his native Overton County, preserves the memory of his early years and documents his rise to prominence. This historic site attracts visitors interested in Tennessee history and the development of American foreign policy during the twentieth century. Within Nashville proper, various plaques and monuments throughout the city acknowledge Hull's legacy and his role in shaping American international relations. The Tennessee State Capitol building in Nashville contains historical references to Hull and other prominent Tennessee statesmen, providing visitors with information about his contributions to the state and nation.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cordell Hull Birthplace Museum Preserves Tennessee Diplomat's Memory |url=https://www.tnhistory.org/exhibit/cordell-hull-birthplace/ |work=Tennessee Historical Society |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
In 1931, Hull moved to the Senate, winning election to represent Tennessee. He served only two years in the upper chamber before President-elect Roosevelt selected him to lead the State Department, but his Senate tenure helped cement his national profile as a serious legislator with deep expertise in trade and fiscal policy.


Educational institutions throughout Nashville and Tennessee also recognize Hull's importance to the state's history. Several schools and universities maintain collections of his papers, speeches, and correspondence, making these materials available to scholars and students. The Vanderbilt University Library in Nashville holds significant archival materials related to Hull's diplomatic work and his relationship with the Roosevelt administration. These collections provide valuable resources for historical research and understanding the development of American foreign policy during a critical period in the nation's history. Professional organizations focused on diplomacy, international relations, and law frequently reference Hull's work and career as exemplary of dedicated public service and principled governance.
== Secretary of State ==
 
Roosevelt appointed Hull Secretary of State in March 1933. The eleven years that followed were among the most consequential in the history of American foreign policy.
 
Hull's first major legislative victory came in 1934 with the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act, which gave the executive branch authority to negotiate bilateral tariff reductions without requiring Senate ratification of each individual agreement. Hull viewed high tariffs not merely as bad economics but as a cause of international tension—nations shut out of each other's markets, he argued, were more likely to turn aggressive. The RTAA became the foundation for decades of American trade policy and eventually fed into the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) after the war.<ref>[https://millercenter.org/president/fdroosevelt/essays/hull-1933-secretary-of-state "Cordell Hull"], ''Miller Center, University of Virginia''.</ref>
 
Hull championed Roosevelt's Good Neighbor Policy toward Latin America, working to dismantle earlier U.S. interventionist postures and build cooperative relationships across the hemisphere. He attended numerous inter-American conferences throughout the 1930s and pushed for multilateral declarations of solidarity that later proved important when the war came.
 
=== The Hull Note and Pearl Harbor ===
 
Hull's role in the final months before the United States entered World War II remains among the most scrutinized episodes of his tenure. Through the summer and fall of 1941, he conducted lengthy negotiations with Japanese Ambassador Kichisaburo Nomura and special envoy Saburo Kurusu, trying to find terms that might forestall war in the Pacific. On November 26, 1941, Hull delivered to the Japanese diplomats what became known as the Hull Note—a comprehensive proposal demanding Japan withdraw its forces from China and Indochina and effectively abandon its alliance with Germany and Italy in exchange for normalized trade relations with the United States.<ref>[https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1931-41v02/d573 "Proposal by the Secretary of State, November 26, 1941"], ''Foreign Relations of the United States, 1931–1941'', U.S. Department of State Office of the Historian.</ref> Japan's military leadership treated the note as an ultimatum and proceeded with the attack on Pearl Harbor ten days later. Hull learned of the attack while meeting with Nomura and Kurusu on December 7 and dismissed them with language described by those present as unusually sharp for a man known for careful formality.
 
=== The MS St. Louis ===
 
Hull's record includes decisions that history has judged harshly. In May 1939, the German ocean liner MS St. Louis arrived in Cuban waters carrying 937 Jewish refugees fleeing Nazi persecution. Cuba refused entry to most passengers. The ship's captain sought permission to land passengers in the United States. Hull, along with other administration officials, declined to permit entry on the grounds that the passengers would have to wait their turn under existing immigration quotas. The ship returned to Europe. Of the 937 passengers, historians have documented that 254 subsequently died in the Holocaust.<ref>[https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/the-ms-st-louis "The MS St. Louis"], ''United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia''.</ref> The episode has become a standard reference point in discussions of American refugee policy during the Nazi era.
 
=== Founding the United Nations ===
 
Hull spent the later years of his tenure building the institutional framework for postwar international cooperation. He was the primary American architect of the proposal that became the United Nations, overseeing the preliminary planning conferences and working to secure bipartisan congressional support—a lesson learned from Woodrow Wilson's failure to bring the Senate along on the League of Nations after World War I. Hull had watched that failure from Congress and was determined not to repeat it. He cultivated Republican senators directly, ensuring that the UN framework had cross-party backing before the war ended.<ref>[https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/peace/1945/hull/facts/ "Cordell Hull – Facts"], ''Nobel Prize Outreach''.</ref>
 
The Nobel Committee awarded Hull the 1945 Nobel Peace Prize in recognition of this work, citing his efforts on behalf of the United Nations as the central basis for the prize. Ill with tuberculosis that had dogged him for years, Hull was unable to travel to Oslo to accept the award in person.
 
=== Resignation and Final Years ===
 
Hull resigned as Secretary of State in November 1944, before Roosevelt's death in April 1945 and Harry Truman's accession to the presidency. He did not serve under Truman, though his institutional legacy shaped the State Department that Truman inherited. Hull spent his final years in Washington, D.C., largely confined by poor health. He died on July 23, 1955, at the Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland.<ref>[https://history.state.gov/departmenthistory/people/hull-cordell "Cordell Hull (1933–1944)"], ''U.S. Department of State Office of the Historian''.</ref>
 
His wife was Rose Frances Witz, whom he married in 1917. She survived him.
 
== Legacy and Namesakes ==
 
Hull's name appears across Tennessee in ways that reflect his standing as the state's most prominent twentieth-century statesman.
 
The Cordell Hull Birthplace State Park and Museum stands in Pickett County, near the site of his original log cabin home, and documents his life from childhood through his years as Secretary of State. The museum draws visitors interested in Tennessee history and American diplomatic history, and the state maintains it as part of the Tennessee State Parks system.<ref>[https://tnstateparks.com/parks/cordell-hull-birthplace "Cordell Hull Birthplace State Park"], ''Tennessee State Parks''.</ref>
 
In Nashville, the Cordell Hull Building on Charlotte Avenue serves as a major state office building housing multiple Tennessee government agencies. The building's name reflects Hull's status as a defining figure in the state's political history.
 
The Cordell Hull Dam on the Cumberland River in Jackson County, Tennessee, was built by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and impounds Cordell Hull Lake. The dam and reservoir provide flood control, hydroelectric power, and recreational access for the Upper Cumberland region. In January 2026, the Army Corps of Engineers' Nashville District closed the dam's tailwater area to begin a bluff stabilization project, with construction work expected to affect public access to the tailwater fishing area for an extended period.<ref>[https://www.lrd.usace.army.mil/News/News-Releases/Display/Article/4373832/cordell-hull-dam-tailwater-area-closes-for-bluff-stabilization-project/ "Cordell Hull Dam Tailwater Area Closes for Bluff Stabilization Project"], ''U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Great Lakes and Ohio River Division'', January 2026.</ref>
 
The Cordell Hull Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based policy organization focused on international trade, takes its name from Hull's work on reciprocal trade agreements and multilateral economic cooperation.
 
Scholarly recognition of Hull's career has grown steadily. Julius W. Pratt's two-volume biography, ''Cordell Hull, 1933–44'' (1964), remains the standard scholarly account of his State Department years. The Miller Center at the University of Virginia and the State Department's own Office of the Historian maintain detailed records of his tenure. His papers are held at the Library of Congress.<ref>[https://www.loc.gov/collections/cordell-hull-papers/ "Cordell Hull Papers"], ''Library of Congress''.</ref>
 
== Tennessee Political Connections ==
 
Hull's decades in Congress and at the State Department made him the central node of Tennessee's Democratic political network through the middle of the twentieth century. He mentored younger Tennessee politicians and maintained close ties to the state's business and legal communities even during his years in Washington. His success in the Roosevelt cabinet elevated Tennessee's profile within the national Democratic Party and helped the state secure federal attention and investment during the New Deal years.
 
His relationship with Roosevelt was characterized by genuine mutual respect, though the two sometimes disagreed on methods. Hull preferred patient multilateral negotiation; Roosevelt was more comfortable with direct personal diplomacy and occasionally bypassed the State Department through his own channels. Their differences over military preparedness before Pearl Harbor were real but never broke the working relationship.
 
Hull returned to Tennessee regularly throughout his career, maintaining connections to Carthage, Nashville, and his native Overton and Pickett County region. His standing in the state was such that his resignation from the State Department in 1944 was treated as a major event in the Tennessee press, and tributes came from across the political spectrum.


== Education ==
== Education ==


Cordell Hull's influence on education extended throughout Tennessee and Nashville, reflecting his belief in the importance of learning and intellectual development. His support for educational institutions and scholarship programs helped advance higher education in the state during a period of significant growth and expansion. Hull maintained connections with Cumberland University and other Tennessee educational institutions, frequently returning to address students and faculty on matters of international relations and diplomacy. His speeches and writings on educational topics emphasized the importance of preparing young people to engage with complex international issues and to understand America's role in global affairs. Many of Hull's contemporaries in the educational field recognized him as an important resource and advocate for strengthening the intellectual infrastructure of Tennessee institutions.
Hull believed strongly in education as the foundation of effective citizenship and international engagement. He maintained ties to Cumberland University and spoke frequently at Tennessee colleges and universities about international relations, trade policy, and the responsibilities of public service. His view that Americans needed to understand global affairs—not retreat from them—informed his support for expanding educational programs in international studies.


The legacy of Hull's educational philosophy continues to influence Tennessee schools and universities in the twenty-first century. Graduate programs in international relations, diplomacy, and public policy frequently examine Hull's career and accomplishments as case studies in effective governance and diplomatic practice. Scholars studying American foreign policy regularly reference his writings and the extensive documentation of his tenure as Secretary of State. Educational institutions in Nashville regularly incorporate Hull's life and work into their curricula, ensuring that future generations of Tennesseans understand the significant contributions their state made to American history and international relations. His example continues to inspire students of government, law, and diplomacy to pursue careers in public service and to approach such work with the same dedication and principle that characterized Hull's own distinguished career.
Graduate programs in international relations, public policy, and diplomatic history have long used Hull's career as a case study in the relationship between domestic political constraints and foreign policy ambition. His success in building bipartisan congressional support for the United Nations framework is regularly cited in political science literature as a model of how executive-legislative coordination on foreign policy can succeed where Wilson's approach failed. Scholars also examine his record on refugee policy and Japan negotiations as illustrations of the ethical limits and bureaucratic pressures that shape even experienced diplomats' decisions.


{{#seo: |title=Cordell Hull | Nashville.Wiki |description=Cordell Hull was the 47th U.S. Secretary of State (1933–1944) and a Tennessee statesman who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1945. |type=Article }}
{{#seo: |title=Cordell Hull | Nashville.Wiki |description=Cordell Hull was the 47th U.S. Secretary of State (1933–1944), a Tennessee statesman, Nobel Peace Prize laureate, and primary American architect of the United Nations framework. |type=Article }}
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[[Category:Nashville landmarks]]
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Latest revision as of 02:53, 12 April 2026

```mediawiki Cordell Hull was an American statesman, diplomat, and politician who served as the 47th Secretary of State under President Franklin D. Roosevelt from 1933 to 1944, making him the longest-serving person to hold that office in American history. Born in Overton County, Tennessee, on October 5, 1871, Hull represented Tennessee in both the U.S. House of Representatives and the Senate before his appointment to the cabinet. He is widely regarded as one of the most consequential secretaries of state the country has produced, shaping American foreign policy through the Great Depression, the approach of World War II, and the Allied effort to build a postwar international order. His role in laying the groundwork for the United Nations led the Nobel Committee to award him the Nobel Peace Prize in 1945—an honor he received too ill to collect in person. President Roosevelt called him "the Father of the United Nations."[1]

Early Life and Education

Hull's early years in rural Overton County shaped much of his thinking about economic fairness and the role of government. His father, William Hull, was a farmer and local businessman, and the family had strong ties to the Democratic Party. The region's economy was rooted in subsistence agriculture and small trade, conditions that gave Hull a lifelong hostility toward tariffs and trade barriers he believed punished working people.

He attended local schools before enrolling at Montvale College in Celina, Tennessee, and later at National Normal University in Lebanon, Ohio. He then studied law at Cumberland University School of Law in Lebanon, Tennessee, and was admitted to the Tennessee bar in 1891.[2] Hull opened a law practice in Celina, Tennesse, not Carthage as sometimes stated, and quickly established a reputation as a capable courtroom advocate. His legal work gave him direct experience with the economic struggles of rural Tennesseans, experience he carried into every legislative fight over taxation and trade that followed.

At just 21, Hull was elected to the Tennessee state legislature, serving from 1893 to 1897. He took a break from law and politics to serve as a captain in the 4th Tennessee Infantry Regiment during the Spanish-American War in 1898, seeing service in Cuba. That experience reinforced his belief in American engagement with the wider world rather than retreat from it.

Congressional Career

Hull was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1906, representing Tennessee's Fourth Congressional District, and began his first term in 1907. His House career was not entirely continuous: he lost his seat in the 1920 Republican wave election but returned to Congress in 1923 and served until 1931.[3] Across those years, he became the leading Democratic voice for tariff reduction and reciprocal trade agreements, arguing consistently that high protective tariffs depressed American exports, harmed farmers, and invited retaliation from trading partners.

His most lasting legislative contribution from this period came through his authorship of the federal income tax legislation passed under the Sixteenth Amendment in 1913, work he carried out as a member of the House Ways and Means Committee. He also drafted the original federal and estate tax laws. These were not peripheral achievements. They established the basic architecture of federal revenue collection that persists today.

In 1931, Hull moved to the Senate, winning election to represent Tennessee. He served only two years in the upper chamber before President-elect Roosevelt selected him to lead the State Department, but his Senate tenure helped cement his national profile as a serious legislator with deep expertise in trade and fiscal policy.

Secretary of State

Roosevelt appointed Hull Secretary of State in March 1933. The eleven years that followed were among the most consequential in the history of American foreign policy.

Hull's first major legislative victory came in 1934 with the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act, which gave the executive branch authority to negotiate bilateral tariff reductions without requiring Senate ratification of each individual agreement. Hull viewed high tariffs not merely as bad economics but as a cause of international tension—nations shut out of each other's markets, he argued, were more likely to turn aggressive. The RTAA became the foundation for decades of American trade policy and eventually fed into the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) after the war.[4]

Hull championed Roosevelt's Good Neighbor Policy toward Latin America, working to dismantle earlier U.S. interventionist postures and build cooperative relationships across the hemisphere. He attended numerous inter-American conferences throughout the 1930s and pushed for multilateral declarations of solidarity that later proved important when the war came.

The Hull Note and Pearl Harbor

Hull's role in the final months before the United States entered World War II remains among the most scrutinized episodes of his tenure. Through the summer and fall of 1941, he conducted lengthy negotiations with Japanese Ambassador Kichisaburo Nomura and special envoy Saburo Kurusu, trying to find terms that might forestall war in the Pacific. On November 26, 1941, Hull delivered to the Japanese diplomats what became known as the Hull Note—a comprehensive proposal demanding Japan withdraw its forces from China and Indochina and effectively abandon its alliance with Germany and Italy in exchange for normalized trade relations with the United States.[5] Japan's military leadership treated the note as an ultimatum and proceeded with the attack on Pearl Harbor ten days later. Hull learned of the attack while meeting with Nomura and Kurusu on December 7 and dismissed them with language described by those present as unusually sharp for a man known for careful formality.

The MS St. Louis

Hull's record includes decisions that history has judged harshly. In May 1939, the German ocean liner MS St. Louis arrived in Cuban waters carrying 937 Jewish refugees fleeing Nazi persecution. Cuba refused entry to most passengers. The ship's captain sought permission to land passengers in the United States. Hull, along with other administration officials, declined to permit entry on the grounds that the passengers would have to wait their turn under existing immigration quotas. The ship returned to Europe. Of the 937 passengers, historians have documented that 254 subsequently died in the Holocaust.[6] The episode has become a standard reference point in discussions of American refugee policy during the Nazi era.

Founding the United Nations

Hull spent the later years of his tenure building the institutional framework for postwar international cooperation. He was the primary American architect of the proposal that became the United Nations, overseeing the preliminary planning conferences and working to secure bipartisan congressional support—a lesson learned from Woodrow Wilson's failure to bring the Senate along on the League of Nations after World War I. Hull had watched that failure from Congress and was determined not to repeat it. He cultivated Republican senators directly, ensuring that the UN framework had cross-party backing before the war ended.[7]

The Nobel Committee awarded Hull the 1945 Nobel Peace Prize in recognition of this work, citing his efforts on behalf of the United Nations as the central basis for the prize. Ill with tuberculosis that had dogged him for years, Hull was unable to travel to Oslo to accept the award in person.

Resignation and Final Years

Hull resigned as Secretary of State in November 1944, before Roosevelt's death in April 1945 and Harry Truman's accession to the presidency. He did not serve under Truman, though his institutional legacy shaped the State Department that Truman inherited. Hull spent his final years in Washington, D.C., largely confined by poor health. He died on July 23, 1955, at the Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland.[8]

His wife was Rose Frances Witz, whom he married in 1917. She survived him.

Legacy and Namesakes

Hull's name appears across Tennessee in ways that reflect his standing as the state's most prominent twentieth-century statesman.

The Cordell Hull Birthplace State Park and Museum stands in Pickett County, near the site of his original log cabin home, and documents his life from childhood through his years as Secretary of State. The museum draws visitors interested in Tennessee history and American diplomatic history, and the state maintains it as part of the Tennessee State Parks system.[9]

In Nashville, the Cordell Hull Building on Charlotte Avenue serves as a major state office building housing multiple Tennessee government agencies. The building's name reflects Hull's status as a defining figure in the state's political history.

The Cordell Hull Dam on the Cumberland River in Jackson County, Tennessee, was built by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and impounds Cordell Hull Lake. The dam and reservoir provide flood control, hydroelectric power, and recreational access for the Upper Cumberland region. In January 2026, the Army Corps of Engineers' Nashville District closed the dam's tailwater area to begin a bluff stabilization project, with construction work expected to affect public access to the tailwater fishing area for an extended period.[10]

The Cordell Hull Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based policy organization focused on international trade, takes its name from Hull's work on reciprocal trade agreements and multilateral economic cooperation.

Scholarly recognition of Hull's career has grown steadily. Julius W. Pratt's two-volume biography, Cordell Hull, 1933–44 (1964), remains the standard scholarly account of his State Department years. The Miller Center at the University of Virginia and the State Department's own Office of the Historian maintain detailed records of his tenure. His papers are held at the Library of Congress.[11]

Tennessee Political Connections

Hull's decades in Congress and at the State Department made him the central node of Tennessee's Democratic political network through the middle of the twentieth century. He mentored younger Tennessee politicians and maintained close ties to the state's business and legal communities even during his years in Washington. His success in the Roosevelt cabinet elevated Tennessee's profile within the national Democratic Party and helped the state secure federal attention and investment during the New Deal years.

His relationship with Roosevelt was characterized by genuine mutual respect, though the two sometimes disagreed on methods. Hull preferred patient multilateral negotiation; Roosevelt was more comfortable with direct personal diplomacy and occasionally bypassed the State Department through his own channels. Their differences over military preparedness before Pearl Harbor were real but never broke the working relationship.

Hull returned to Tennessee regularly throughout his career, maintaining connections to Carthage, Nashville, and his native Overton and Pickett County region. His standing in the state was such that his resignation from the State Department in 1944 was treated as a major event in the Tennessee press, and tributes came from across the political spectrum.

Education

Hull believed strongly in education as the foundation of effective citizenship and international engagement. He maintained ties to Cumberland University and spoke frequently at Tennessee colleges and universities about international relations, trade policy, and the responsibilities of public service. His view that Americans needed to understand global affairs—not retreat from them—informed his support for expanding educational programs in international studies.

Graduate programs in international relations, public policy, and diplomatic history have long used Hull's career as a case study in the relationship between domestic political constraints and foreign policy ambition. His success in building bipartisan congressional support for the United Nations framework is regularly cited in political science literature as a model of how executive-legislative coordination on foreign policy can succeed where Wilson's approach failed. Scholars also examine his record on refugee policy and Japan negotiations as illustrations of the ethical limits and bureaucratic pressures that shape even experienced diplomats' decisions. ```

  1. "Cordell Hull (1933–1944)", U.S. Department of State Office of the Historian.
  2. "Cordell Hull", Miller Center, University of Virginia.
  3. "Hull, Cordell", Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
  4. "Cordell Hull", Miller Center, University of Virginia.
  5. "Proposal by the Secretary of State, November 26, 1941", Foreign Relations of the United States, 1931–1941, U.S. Department of State Office of the Historian.
  6. "The MS St. Louis", United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia.
  7. "Cordell Hull – Facts", Nobel Prize Outreach.
  8. "Cordell Hull (1933–1944)", U.S. Department of State Office of the Historian.
  9. "Cordell Hull Birthplace State Park", Tennessee State Parks.
  10. "Cordell Hull Dam Tailwater Area Closes for Bluff Stabilization Project", U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Great Lakes and Ohio River Division, January 2026.
  11. "Cordell Hull Papers", Library of Congress.