THE GENERAL ELLIOTT
THORPE COLLECTION
MSG# 154
BIOGRAPHICAL AND SCOPE AND CONTENT
NOTE
A native of Westerly, Rhode Island, General
Elliott R. Thorpe's (1897-1989) military career encompassed two world wars, the
reconstruction of Japan, and a tour of duty in post-war Thailand. He stood guard in
the Hall of Mirrors in Versailles when the World War I treaty was signed on June 28, 1919.
In 1945 he was on the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay when the Japanese surrendered to
General Douglas MacArthur. He may have been one of the last living survivors of both
ceremonies. While these were momentous and singular events, General Thorpe's
unheeded warning about the Pearl Harbor attack of December 7, 1941 was arguably his
most memorable moment. Serving as a military attaché in Dutch-controlled Java
(Netherlands Indies) in 1941 when the Dutch broke a Japanese diplomatic code, Thorpe was
informed that intercepted messages referred to planned Japanese attacks on Hawaii, the
Philippines and Thailand. He immediately cabled the information to Washington, but this
warning was ignored. A week later the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor.
In 1943 then-Col. Thorpe was knighted in the
Order of Orange-Nassau by Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands for his work as American
Liaison in the Netherlands Indies. In 1945, Thorpe was promoted to Brigadier General.
Gen. Thorpe was honored in 1949 with the title of Knight Commander in the Most
Noble Order of the Crown of Thailand for his work as military attaché of the American
Embassy in Bankok. Brigadier General Thorpe retired in 1949 after serving 32 years in the
US Army.
Elliott Thorpe attended Rhode Island State
College for one year as a mechanical engineering student before entering the
U.S. Army in
1916. Even though he did not graduate from the College, he always considered himself
an alumnus and was very supportive of efforts to build an adequate campus student activity
center. The post-war campus burgeoned and extra space for the students was added for
the campus by using numerous Quonset huts. One of these huts also served as the
student activity center. He supported a fundraising effort for the construction of a
War Memorial Student Union by donating his veteran's bonus check. He also served as
guest speaker at a benefit dinner held on October 27, 1950 at the
Sheraton-Biltmore Hotel
in Providence. The War Memorial Student Union was built in 1950 largely through fund
raising efforts spearheaded by Gen. Thorpe and other alumni.
In 1946, the General presented the College
with a Japanese temple gong which was meant to be displayed in the Union. The gong
disappeared shortly after its receipt. While efforts were made to recover the gong,
it was never found. Photographs and typescript translations of the gong's
inscriptions are all that remain. (see Carl Woodward Papers, MSG# 1). Thorpe also
donated a ceremonial sword surrendered to him by Maj. Gen. Yoshio Nasu of the Imperial
Japanese Army on the occasion of the Japanese surrender aboard the USS Missouri. In
1969, Gen. Thorpe presented an autographed copy of his memoir East Wind Rain to
the University. Both the sword and the book are presently kept in the Special Collections
Reading Room.
On June 11, 1951, General Elliott Thorpe
received an honorary degree of Doctor of Humane Letters during the institution's first
commencement as the University of Rhode Island. In 1952, Gen. Thorpe was the
endorsed Republican candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives. He abruptly
withdrew because of an investigation by the U.S. Army's Counter Intelligence Corps
questioning his loyalty. He indignantly felt that the investigation had been
politically motivated. The investigation had been a misunderstanding resulting from a 1951
speech addressing the Rhode Island Turkey Growers and Poultry Growers Association in which
he criticized the shortage of food growing areas in Japan and the corruption in the
nationalistic Chinese regime of Chiang Kai-shek. He also called for "a greater
respect for freedom of speech in America as long as it is not subversive." (Westerly
Sun, August 21, 1952). After a public outcry, the Army quickly cleared
the General and apologized for the unwarranted investigation.
He and then-President Carl Woodward
(1941-1951) were close friends (see Carl Woodward Papers, MSG# 1). They
continued to maintain a close correspondence when Thorpe retired to Sarasota, Florida, in
1960. During his retirement, he served as commissioner with the Whitfield Volunteer
Fire Department. Gen. Thorpe continued to be in demand as a speaker and was sought
for interviews by historians and journalists for his first hand account of post war Japan.
Shortly before his death, Thorpe was interviewed for the 1989 BBC production of Sacrifice
at Pearl Harbour. Most recently, Gen. Thorpe was quoted in John W. Dower's
1999 Pulitzer Prize winning book Embracing Defeat: Japan in the Wake of World War II.
He died in 1989 and was buried in Arlington
National Cemetery in Washington D.C.
This collection is arranged in one
series, a Subject File. It contains materials drawn
from items given to or collected by Dr. Richard Vangermeersch, Professor of Accounting,
University of Rhode Island in his research conducted over the summer of 2001 on
General Thorpe's career. Dr. Vangermeerch contacted the General's relatives and was able
to obtain a copy of a video tape of a 1989 BBC production of Sacrifice at Pearl
Harbour in which Thorpe is interviewed and a book entitled Netherlands
Seen by the Tourist presented to Gen. Thorpe (ca. 1947) when he served as
military attaché in the Netherlands. In addition, William Thorpe, General
Thorpe's grandson, provided Special Collections with facsimiles of photographs featuring
his late father with General MacAuthur. An exhibit presented in September 2001 by Special
Collections at the University of Rhode Island Library on General Thorpe resulted from the
materials gathered for this collection.
In 2005 materials initially donated
in the 1980s by
Thorpe to the American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming were transferred
by the Center to the University of Rhode Island and added to the
Thorpe Collection.