H. Stuart Hughes - Early Career

Early Career

Hughes then attended graduate school at Harvard University, where he wrote his thesis on "The Crisis of the Imperial French Economy, 1810-1812." He was in Paris working on this thesis when World War II started on September 1, 1939. Hughes soon returned to Cambridge.

With his new Ph.D., Hughes was appointed a junior faculty member at Brown University. He remained there only briefly before enlisting in the United States Army as a private. The Army soon recognized that a historian who was fluent in French and German would better serve by being in military intelligence than in the field artillery. Hughes was soon after Pearl Harbor commissioned as an officer (initially, a second lieutenant) in what was soon to become the Office of Strategic Services. During the war, he served as an intelligence analyst whose work was generally well received, despite his association with political views that were, especially in the context of the United States military establishment of the time, decidedly left-wing.

Hughes, by then a lieutenant colonel, was honorably discharged from active duty in 1946 and was soon reassigned as a civilian intelligence analyst, returning to Europe. In this role, he was to befriend pioneering black State Department official Ralph Bunche. In the State Department, Hughes bemoaned the rise of the Cold War mentality. In late 1947, he left to return to Harvard as an instructor and as the associate director of its new Russian Research Center. However, Hughes felt that he unwittingly sabotaged his career there by his early support for former Vice President Henry Wallace for President in 1948. In 1950, Hughes married his first wife, Suzanne, a member of a wealthy and influential French Protestant family. Failing to be published as a historian at a level sufficient to allow him to be promoted in the atmosphere of the Harvard of that time, and somewhat ostracized for his activism, Hughes left Harvard for Stanford University in 1952 at the height of the McCarthy era.

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