'Gordon Dean' (
December 28 1905 -
August 15 1958) was an American lawyer and prosecutor who served as
chairman of the
US Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) from
1950 to
1953.
Dean received his J.D. from the
University of Southern California in 1930 and an LL.M. from
Duke University Law School in 1932. In
1934, Dean joined the U.S. Department of Justice during the
New Deal administration of President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Dean served under Attorneys General
Homer S. Cummings and
Frank Murphy as a Criminal Division attorney and press spokesperson. Dean helped draft expansions of the federal criminal law and defended them in cases argued before the
United States Supreme Court. In 1940, Attorney General
Robert H. Jackson made Dean the press spokesperson for the Department of Justice. After World War II military service, Dean served as press spokesperson for now Supreme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson who was the chief prosecutor in the
Nuremberg Trials. Prior to his work with the AEC, Dean was professor of criminal law at the University of Southern California (
1946-
1949).
He was appointed by President
Harry S. Truman as one of the original Commissioners of the AEC in May 1949 and then as the second Chairman of the AEC beginning in May
1950, following
David Lilienthal. As early as 1950, Dean advocated for the appointment of a Presidential Science Advisor and science advisory task force.
[1] Dean served at the time of the
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory's creation in
1952. During Dean's tenure as Chairman,
McCarthyism reached its peak.
Robert Oppenheimer came under attack by
Lewis Strauss,
Edward Teller and others for his alleged foot-dragging at Los Alamos. Dean defended Oppenheimer. As
Cold War tensions heightened and the
Korean War raged on, Dean led a massive industrialization of the United States nuclear facilities. The hydrogen bomb, a nuclear weapon of massive and unprecedented force, was perfected during his tenure as Chairman with the detonation of the
Ivy Mike hydrogen bomb, based on
Edward Teller's design in October
1952. Dean served for a brief period under
President Eisenhower as well, staying until the completion of his term on June 30, 1953.
Following government service, Dean worked as a private investment banker and as an executive of
General Dynamics. Dean was killed in a commercial aviation accident over
Nantucket Island on August 15, 1958.
External link
★
Annotated bibliography for Gordon Dean from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues