Part 1: The End of an Era
He had led the FBI for nearly a half
century and worked for eight different presidents, becoming practically an
institution in his own right.
So
when J. Edgar Hoover’s body was found by his housekeeper on the morning of May
2, 1972—40 years ago this week—the reaction was swift and far-reaching.
Congress responded quickly as well,
ordering Hoover’s body to lie in state in the U.S. Capitol—an honor afforded to
no other civil servant before or since. The next day, as rain fell on
Washington, thousands processed by his casket in the rotunda to pay their
respects, and Supreme Court Justice Warren Burger eulogized the departed
Director. Allies and admirers took to the floor of Congress to offer often
effusive praise, and a new FBI building on Pennsylvania Avenue, halfway between
the Capitol and the White House, was soon named in his honor.
At
the same time, as the inevitable obituaries were written and TV specials aired,
there was an undercurrent of reservation and some outright criticism.
Hoover’s historic 48-year tenure in such a position of profound influence—and
during a stretch of time when America was undergoing great social change—was
bound to be marked by some mistakes and controversy. Fairly or unfairly, Hoover
was criticized for his aggressive use of surveillance, his perceived reluctance
to tackle civil rights crimes, his reputation for collecting and using
information about U.S. leaders, and his seeming obsession with the threat of
communism.
The country’s honeymoon with Hoover
would ultimately come to end, to some degree in the years before his passing
and even more so after his death in the wake of greater scrutiny of the FBI and
the growing distrust of government leaders that followed Watergate. Over the
next several months, FBI.gov will explore various aspects of the directorship
of J. Edgar Hoover through a series of stories and other materials, with the
goal of shedding light on less well known or even caricatured areas of his
actions and broadening the discussion on his complex and enduring legacy.
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