Fort Towson

William Patrick Clark Jr. (October 23, 1931 – August 10, 2013) was an American rancher, judge, and public servant who served under President Ronald Reagan as the Deputy Secretary of State from 1981 to 1982, United States National Security Advisor from 1982 to 1983, and the Secretary of the Interior from 1983 to 1985.

Early life and education

Clark was born in Oxnard, California on October 23, 1931, the son of William Petit and Bernice Gregory Clark.

Clark attended Villanova Preparatory School in Ojai. After completing high school, Clark went on to Stanford University and Loyola Law School while managing his ranch.[1] Not being able to dedicate sufficient time and resources towards completing his undergraduate and postgraduate degrees, Clark never graduated from Stanford or Loyola. Nevertheless, he scored well enough on entrance exams to gain admittance to law school, and he passed the California state bar exam without a law school degree, after failing his first attempt at the California state bar exam.[2] He also served in the U.S. Army Counter Intelligence Corps.

Legal and government career

California

In the 1960s and 1970s, Clark held a series of public posts in state government. In September 1967, Clark became the Executive Secretary to Governor Ronald Reagan.[3][4] Clark was a judge of the Superior Court of California from 1969 to 1971, in Paso Robles, San Luis Obispo County.[5] On July 30, 1971, Governor Reagan elevated Clark to Associate Justice of the California Court of Appeal, Second District, Division One.[6] In January 1973, Governor Reagan appointed Clark as an associate justice of the California State Supreme Court, where he served from March 23, 1973, until February 25, 1981.[7][8][9]

Washington, D.C.

In 1980, Ronald Reagan won the election as President of the United States. Clark reached the apex of his power when Reagan appointed Clark as National Security Advisor, and he temporarily became preeminent among presidential aides. A longtime rancher friend of Reagan, according to Edmund Morris's Dutch, Clark would walk into Reagan's office unannounced, an unheard-of practice for even the most senior officials. Clark even suggested to the president in light of foreign policy troubles bedeviling the United States in the mid-1980s that Reagan consider not running for reelection in 1984. By that time, however, George Shultz had surpassed Clark in influence, and Reagan apparently gave Clark's suggestion no thought.

Clark's biographers credit him with convincing Reagan that the Soviet Union could be pushed to the edge of collapse. The strategy was opposed by Secretary of State George Shultz, among others, leading to rancor in the White House.[10]

Morris writes in his admitted semi-fictionalized narrative biography that Clark resigned in late 1983 when he tired of the "unceasing hostility of [Michael] Deaver, George Shultz, and Nancy Reagan." Morris described Clark as "the only man who ever got within a furlong of intimacy" with the notoriously distant Reagan, and his ability to relate to Reagan inspired jealousy, at the same time that Clark's taciturn nature made him unlikely to build allies.

A differing PBS account[11] quotes Mike Deaver via his book "Nancy", pg. 48: "Staff might have resented my closeness with Nancy, but to my knowledge, it was never a problem. Bill Clark and Ed Meese, then the legal-affairs counsel, were happy to have me working closely with Nancy because that freed them up to concentrate on policy and appointments. Often, too they would use me as back door to the first lady, to get her input ..." The PBS "Role of a Lifetime" url also lists some support of a conflict with George Shultz: "I knew that I would have to insist on dealing directly with the president. I could not let the White House staff interpret me to him. That was especially true when it came to Clark, because his views and instincts were different from mine ..." Noted authority Lou Cannon concluded that "[Mrs. Reagan] was very much opposed to Bill Clark. She wanted him out of (the NSA position) because she felt that it was interfering with (President) Reagan's efforts to open up better relations with the Soviet Union." Fellow Reagan family biographer James Benze furthers in the commentary, "Nancy Reagan (then) enlists other moderates in the administration to make William Clark's life miserable as National Security Advisor."

On September 21, 1983, Secretary of the Interior James G. Watt embarrassed the administration by making bigoted remarks to the media, causing him to resign on November 8, and Clark requested and received an appointment to replace Watt.[12][13]

Return to California

Clark with Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld in 2001

Clark returned to California after his stint serving the administration and pursued a variety of law firm and other business interests.[14]

After the Iran-Contra hearings in Congress, Clark wrote privately to Reagan urging him to pardon his three aides who were threatened with indictments in the conspiracy: Oliver North, John Poindexter, and Robert McFarlane.[15] Under President George H. W. Bush, Clark also orchestrated the lobbying campaign to obtain a pardon for his friend Caspar Weinberger.[16]

In July 2011, Clark became a member of the United States Energy Security Council,[17] which seeks to diminish oil's monopoly over the United States transportation sector and is sponsored by the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security.[18]

Observations on national and international relations

As National Security Advisor for Ronald Reagan, Clark frequently consulted with and visited with the three living former presidents, Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter, and Gerald Ford, leaving a briefing book with them on subjects important to them. For Nixon, it was on East-West Relations including the Soviet Union; for Carter, the Middle East, and for Ford, domestic matters. Consulting with predecessors, in the White House and in the Cabinets of either party, was important to Clark's and therefore, Reagan's success. "While I did not always agree with (former National Security Adviser and Secretary of State) Henry Kissinger's views on national security, I had a close relationship with him and would take his call any time of the day or night," Clark said. "Recognizing that the Reagan administration was serving at the height of the Cold War, I would get his opinions as well as other predecessors in national security–at the Pentagon, State Department and, of course, the White House."

Clark was dismayed at the tones of early 21st-century politics in the United States. "There was a lack of contentiousness between the two political parties that I'm afraid does not exist today," Clark said. "That's one of my worries about making government work — there seems to be far less camaraderie now than we've known in the past."[19]

Retirement

Clark retired to his ranch near the rural community of Shandon, California, where he built a small chapel in the hills of his ranch. On August 10, 2013, Clark died of complications from Parkinson's disease at his home in Shandon, at age 81.[20][21] He is interred at the Shandon Cemetery in Shandon, California.

Philanthropy

In 1988, Clark was severely injured when he crashed his airplane on his ranch in Shandon, San Luis Obispo County, California. He was pulled from the wreck by Jesus Muñoz, his long-time ranch manager. In part due to his gratitude to God for his recovery, he and his family created a chapel on their ranch, and donated the Spanish ceiling of another to the Thomas Aquinas College library in Santa Paula, Ventura County. Each contains ceilings and other features from European buildings, purchased by Clark from the Hearst Corporation, via his close friend George Randolph Hearst Jr. The chapel in Shandon, known locally as Chapel Hill, is open to the public.[10]

The auditorium at Villanova Preparatory School in Ojai, California, was named in honor of Judge Clark, as a distinguished alumnus and in recognition of his gifts to the school.

Personal life

On May 5, 1955, Clark married the former Johanna M. "Joan" Brauner in Bern, Switzerland; they had five children. Joan Clark died in April 2009.

References

  1. ^ "Memorial Services Planned for Justice William P. Clark, Jr".
  2. ^ Dolan, Maura. "A High Bar for Lawyers". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  3. ^ "Short Memo System Works For Governor". Madera Tribune. No. 92. California Digital Newspaper Collection. UPI. 22 September 1967. p. 6. Retrieved September 18, 2017. Clark, a 35-year-old attor-ney-rancher who became the governor's chief aide two weeks ago
  4. ^ "Firing Heralds Changes". Palos Verdes Peninsula News. California Digital Newspaper Collection. CNS. 27 September 1967. p. 28. Retrieved September 18, 2017.
  5. ^ "Overhaul Needed". Corsair. Vol. 42, no. 11. California Digital Newspaper Collection. 9 December 1970. p. 2. Retrieved September 18, 2017. Honorable William P. Clark, Jr. (judge of the superior court, San Luis Obispo County)
  6. ^ "Commission To Meet On Clark". Desert Sun. California Digital Newspaper Collection. 1 March 1973. p. A2. Retrieved September 18, 2017. William P. Clark Jr., presently associate justice of the Court of Appeal in Los Angeles
  7. ^ Hanna, Phil (12 January 1973). "What will Senate Do With Reagan Choice?". Desert Sun. California Digital Newspaper Collection. Capitol News Service. p. A3. Retrieved September 18, 2017.
  8. ^ "Ration Plans Blasted Idea Called Impractical By Reagan". Desert Sun. California Digital Newspaper Collection. 17 January 1973. p. A1. Retrieved September 18, 2017. Reagan also defended his appointment of William P. Clark Jr., his former top assistant, to the state Supreme Court
  9. ^ "Clark Seating OKd". Desert Sun. California Digital Newspaper Collection. UPI. 5 March 1973. p. A2. Retrieved September 18, 2017. Clark, 41, formerly of the superior court in San Luis Obispo and currently on the appeals court in Los Angeles
  10. ^ a b Kenger, Paul (2007). The Judge: William P. Clark, Ronald Reagan's Top Hand. San Francisco: Ignatius Press. p. 378. ISBN 978-1-58617-183-4.
  11. ^ Nancy Reagan, PBS Newshour.
  12. ^ Barton, John F. (November 16, 1983). "William Clark's nomination as interior secretary is snarled". UPI. Retrieved September 18, 2017.
  13. ^ Freudenburg, William R.; Gramling, Robert (2011). Blowout in the Gulf: The BP Oil Spill Disaster and the Future of Energy in America. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. p. 139. ISBN 978-0262015837. Retrieved September 18, 2017. william p. clark, jr. department of the interior.
  14. ^ Reynolds, Christopher (May 24, 1990). "Displeasure Island: Useful Friends : Former Interior Secretary William P. Clark Jr. says he's not representing Francis Gherini in his friend's legal row". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved September 18, 2017.
  15. ^ Berke, Richard L. (November 18, 1987). "Reagan Confidant Urged Pardons in Iran Case". The New York Times. Retrieved August 10, 2013.
  16. ^ "Anatomy Of A Pardon: Why Weinberger Walked". Newsweek. January 10, 1993. Retrieved 20 August 2017.
  17. ^ United States Energy Security Council
  18. ^ Institute for the Analysis of Global Security.
  19. ^ Middlecamp, David. "Reporter". San Luis Obispo, California Telegram-Tribune. Retrieved January 25, 2009.
  20. ^ Hallow, Ralph Z. (August 10, 2013). "William Clark, former Reagan security adviser, dead at 81". The Washington Times. Retrieved September 18, 2017.
  21. ^ "In Memory of Judge William P. Clark, Jr., 1931-2013". Young American's Foundation. Retrieved September 18, 2017.

Sources

Videos

External links

See also

Legal offices
Preceded by Associate Justice of the California Supreme Court
1973–1981
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by United States Deputy Secretary of State
1981–1982
Succeeded by
Preceded by National Security Advisor
1982–1983
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Secretary of the Interior
1983–1985
Succeeded by