Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Review – Arthur Vandenberg: The Man in the Middle of the American Century
Review – Arthur Vandenberg: The Man in the Middle of the American Century
May 23, 2026 5:41 PM

^This is a guest post for the Acton PowerBlog.

By Gleaves Whitney

Some years ago, the bestselling biographer David McCullough outlined the “missing history” of our nation’s capital – the histories that had yet to be written. Among the people he believed merited more in-depth study was Michigan Sen. Arthur Vandenberg. In Hendrik Meijer’s latest biography, Arthur Vandenberg: The Man in the Middle of the American Century, McCullough’s es true – and then some. No less mentator than Cokie Roberts, lamenting the brokenness of American politics, counsels that “Every member of Congress should read [Meijer’s] book for a lesson in leadership.”

Published by the University of Chicago Press, Arthur Vandenberg is a significant achievement in American letters. First is its successful resurrection of a subject little-known outside of West Michigan. The Grand Rapidian’s career as a newspaper editor and biographer of Alexander Hamilton set the stage for “Van” to go to Washington in 1928 as a senator. In a career that spanned more than two decades, the politician grew into a statesman at a time when the Western world was desperate for bold leadership. Our civilization was in a fight for its life, first against a host of internal divisions that festered in the Great Depression, and then against an axis of dictators who attacked the heart of the civilization in a two-front world war. The age that gave us such outsized personalities as Churchill and Roosevelt and Patton also gave us the outsized Vandenberg.

Second is the book’s literary mastery. Even though the biography follows the genre’s conventional rhetorical strategy of unveiling its subject chronologically, Meijer makes a taut drama of Vandenberg’s personal struggles at home, his political battles in Washington, and his nation’s civilizational conflicts on the world stage. The author deftly avoids the extremes of hagiography and cynicism. There are things not to like about Vandenberg – his prickly, pompous personality, above all – and Meijer does not shrink from exposing the man, “warts and all,” including his adulterous attachment to the probable British agent and “luscious peach,” Mitzi Sims. Meijer sets up the possibility in an intriguing way: “While it is clear what attracted Vandenberg to Mitzi, one might wonder why the object of the senator’s passion responded as she did. Part of the answer may have been spy craft.” The narrative that follows (Chapter 11) reveals Meijer’s talent bining the skills of a journalist with the sensibilities of a novelist – just bination needed to pull off a first-rate biography. Arthur H. Vandenberg

Third is the work’s lapidary wisdom for us today. There is no doubt that the Republican senator stood on principle. After all, he wrote multiple books about his hero, Alexander Hamilton, nearly a century before the Broadway musical swept Americans off their feet. Principles notwithstanding, Vandenberg again and again demonstrated practical wisdom. He understood that politics is the art of the possible; that half a loaf is better than no loaf at all; that principles must necessarily be in tension with expedience. Above all, he never forgot that the founders challenged every generation of Americans “to form a more perfect Union.” Thus, the senator showed the capacity to work with political opponents on both sides of the aisle. He could change his mind when the evidence warranted. He could bring isolationist Republicans around to his internationalist point of view when dissent was no longer a luxury the nation could afford (after Pearl Harbor). He could work with Democrats for mon good when the survival not just of the country but of the West was at stake (after the U.S.S.R. developed atomic weapons). His skill at crafting bipartisan legislation should be closely studied by students of statecraft. As Meijer observes, “Not to note his relevance today almost feels irresponsible.”

Americans today hunger for statesmanship. The justification for regarding Vandenberg as a statesman is that he did more than anticipate the next election cycle; he helped define U.S. foreign policy for decades e. Meijer details how Vandenberg’s statesmanship was shaped – by his identification with Alexander Hamilton, his Midwestern roots, his newspaper work, his hard-charging personality that did not shrink from action. And while Vandenberg’s statesmanship may not have earned him the marble statues that Washington, Jefferson, and Lincoln enjoy, he is rightly celebrated for his marquee role in establishing many of the institutions that have given shape to our world – the FDIC, United Nations, NATO, and Marshall Plan, among them. It is also significant that, as a Republican, he steered the party’s foreign policy in a bipartisan direction that would help sustain American leadership through the Cold War and beyond. Vandenberg’s achievements are a monument to bipartisanship; not the “oh-well” of go-along-get-along squishes, but the determined cooperation of principled leaders who work tirelessly for lasting legislation that advances mon good.

When reading a biography critically, one looks at how an author approaches his subject, how he positions his text in context. What substantive contributions does the biography make? What evidence does the researcher find and use and interpret? Does the author treat the evidence honestly rather than ideologically? How about the rhetorical strategy he pursues to make his case? Is the resulting work a pleasure to read? Finally, is there an X-factor that surprises us, that reveals something significant we did not previously know?

By all of these criteria, Meijer’s book is a model of the genre, and the author can be counted among the finest biographers of our time. Few could be more devoted to the craft. Over the better part of a quarter century, Meijer undertook more exhaustive research about Vandenberg than any other human being ever has – by a long shot. He canvassed every relevant archive in the U.S., interviewed every source who knew Vandenberg personally, and collected a fascinating array of objects associated with the U.S. senator, enough to fill an estimable museum exhibit. He field-tested his ideas in a number of public presentations. It is no stretch to say that Meijer lived with Vandenberg in his imagination all those years: no one is in a better position to narrate and explicate the statesman’s words, actions, and beliefs.

Apropos of which, friends of the Acton Institute are no doubt curious to learn more of Vandenberg’s spiritual apprehensions in general and his mitments in particular. If there is one criticism that attaches to Meijer’s book, it is that the biography is thin on Vandenberg’s inner life as it pertains to religion. But in fairness to Meijer, the available evidence on the topic is thin. It is unfortunate that Vandenberg did not write the memoir he had long planned, so biographers will be forever denied such insights. We should be grateful to Meijer for doing such an admirable job given the paucity of source material on the topic. Although formally a mainline Calvinist, Vandenberg was spiritually an exceedingly private man. He attended Park Congregational Church in Grand Rapids and New York Avenue Presbyterian Church in Washington, whose dynamic young minister, Peter Marshall, would also serve as chaplain of the U.S. Senate after World War II. Vandenberg met with Marshall frequently as the latter prepared daily invocations for the Senate. It is easy to imagine Vandenberg exploring the life of St. Paul with Marshall. “The Life of St. Paul” was the biography Vandenberg wanted to write but never got around to.

During many decades of immersion in the rough and tumble of politics, Vandenberg was too busy to devote much time to spiritual contemplation. Yet what spiritual questions he pursued were deepened as he lay dying of cancer in his Grand Rapids home. One of his daughters who attended him fretted over whether her father was spiritually at peace. To the Catholic convert Clare Booth Luce, he wrote, on his deathbed, “I have a little ‘prayer meeting’ all by myself each night.” From such moments Vandenberg learned that, as the end approaches, “every cloud has a silver lining, and the spiritual values in e surging to the fore. They are so much more important than anything else.”

Gleaves Whitney is director of Grand Valley State University’s Hauenstein Center for Presidential Studies.

Photo: Michigan Senator Arthur Vandenberg es new Congressman Gerald R. Ford Jr., to Washington DC. 1949. Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Michael Miller: Let’s Rethink Foreign Aid
Michael Matheson Miller Acton’s Michael Miller, director of the documentary Poverty.Inc, spoke with Bill Frezza at RealClearPolitics. Miller asks listeners to rethink the foreign aid model, which has not been successful in alleviating poverty in the developing world. Rather, Miller makes the case for supporting entrepreneurship and supporting the social and political framework that enable people to lift themselves out of poverty. Listen to the interview here. ...
Preventing Human Trafficking
Human trafficking can be prevented. It takes tenacity, hard work, and knowledge of the needs of the people in a particular area of the world. One of the greatest “push” factors (those factors that drive people into human trafficking) is poverty. Poverty creates desperation, and desperation drives trafficking. Parents cannot afford to feed children, and will sell them off. Sometimes people are tricked, thinking that their child will be given a job or education. Women will sell their bodies because...
Why Not Just Hand Over the Sermons?
After hearing the news that the city of Houston had ordered several pastors to submit their sermons for legal review, many people had the same reaction as Brian Lee: “My response? So what? Sermons are public proclamation, aren’t they?” Sermons are indeed proclamations intended for the public, and most pastors would be eager for anyone — including public officials — to hear them. So what is the reason for the current objection? Mollie Hemingway explains that the true “governing authorities”...
The Welfare State and Intergenerational Injustice
Contrary to current policy, this is not reality. Last Saturday The Imaginative Conservative published my essay, “Let’s Get Back to Robbing Peter: The Welfare State and Demographic Decline.” To add to what I say there, it should be a far more pressing concern to conscientious citizens that the US national debt has risen from $13 trillion in 2010 to nearly $18 trillion today. That is an increase of $5 trillion in just four years, or a nearly 40 percent increase....
Socialists Love Everything About $20 Minimum Wages (Except Paying Such Wages Themselves)
There’s something almost charming about people in American who champion socialism. Yes, their economic views are naive and destructive. And yes most people (though especially the poor) would be much worse off if their vision for “progress” was actually implemented. But it’s hard to be too concerned when they are, at heart, really just capitalists who like to play political dress up. Consider one of their favorite causes, a $20 minimum wage. In their most recent party platform, the Freedom...
Freedom, Security, and the iPhone
Writing on September 22 in the Wall Street Journal, Devlin Barret and Danny Yadron reported, Last week, Apple announced that its new operating system for phones would prevent law enforcement from retrieving data stored on a locked phone, such as photos, videos and contacts. A day later, Google reiterated that the next version of its Android mobile-operating system this fall would make it similarly difficult for police or Google to extract such data from suspects’ phones. It’s not just a...
Rev. Sirico on the Vatican Synod
In today’s Wall Street Journal, Rev. Robert A. Sirico clears away the media hype surrounding the Vatican Synod on the Family and offers an analysis of its early work. He observes that nothing about the synod “challenges the dogma of the church related to the indissolubility of sacramental marriage, the use of artificial contraception, cohabitation and homosexual acts. What it did was soften the tone of these teachings.” But things got interesting. An early report led critics to say that...
Why American slavery wasn’t capitalist
In his new book, The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism, Edward E. Baptist “offers a radical new interpretation of American history,” through which slavery laid the foundation for and “drove the evolution and modernization of the United States.” In a review of the book for the Wall Street Journal, Fergus M. Bordewich concurs with this central point, noting that “Mississippi…does not have to look like Manchester, England, or Lowell, Mass., to make it...
Acton On WOOD Radio With Mako Fujimura
Acton broadcast consultant, Paul Edwards, will guest host West Michigan Live on Tuesday, October 21 at 9:00 am EST on WOOD Radio in Grand Rapids. His guest at 9:30 a.m. is artist Makoto Fujimura, whose 2014 ArtPrize entry, Walking on Water, was exhibited at the Acton Building. At his blog, Mako has written an engaging and thoughtful piece about his experience at ArtPrize which will be the focus of Paul’s conversation with him. In West Michigan, you can listen live...
Reflections on the Passing of Leonard P. Liggio
LiggioAlmost 20 years ago I was invited to speak at the celebratory banquet for the Atlas Economic Research Foundation (now Atlas Network) and the Institute for Humane Studies, then celebrating their 15th and 35th anniversaries respectively. I was an alumnus of both and six years into the launch of the Acton Institute (founded in 1990). Both organizations considered me “successful enough” to reflect at the banquet on how each had influenced my life. It was an undeserved honor, of course,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved