May 1, 1945
Dear Fred:
As V-E Day approaches, many of our wartime agencies will face a most critical
personnel problem. Under the impact of war, these agencies have recruited many splendid
executives from private life. In every grade and rank today the government is served by splendid
personnel. These men and women have rendered faithful, patriotic and effective service for the
country in meeting the critical problems of war on the home front.
These agencies cannot afford to relax their efforts or to disband their trained staffs after V-E
Day. We still have a tremendous job ahead in bringing the entire war to a victorious conclusion.
Beyond that, we must reconvert our domestic economy to the production of peacetime goods
and services. The tasks which lie ahead are no less important, no less urgent, no less vital to the
future stability of our free institutions than the tasks which are behind us.
In the months ahead, our government simply cannot afford to lose the services of its key
personnel. Through you, I am calling upon these men and women to stick to their posts until the
battle is won and the ship of state is safe in the harbor again. I want you to write to the head of
each one of our important home front agencies and ask him to canvass his key personnel,
informing him of my request that these key workers stay on the job. I want the head of each
agency, insofar as possible, to secure a pledge from these essential employees that they will not
go home on V-E Day, but will stay and help to finish the task. When the heads of the agencies
have done this, I should like for them to report to you as to their success.
These patriotic citizens who have devoted themselves unstintingly to the nation's welfare in time
of war have earned the lasting gratitude of the American people. They have helped to pay that
debt which every citizen in the Democracy owes to his country and its institutions. But that debt
is unpaid at least until we have finished the war and solved those urgent problems which war
leaves in its aftermath. I reiterate with all the emphasis at my command that the nation cannot yet
allow any man to leave his post of duty.
Sincerely yours,
HARRY S. TRUMAN
[The Honorable Fred M. Vinson, Director, Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion]
Dear Fred:
As V-E Day approaches, many of our wartime agencies will face a most critical
personnel problem. Under the impact of war, these agencies have recruited many splendid
executives from private life. In every grade and rank today the government is served by splendid
personnel. These men and women have rendered faithful, patriotic and effective service for the
country in meeting the critical problems of war on the home front.
These agencies cannot afford to relax their efforts or to disband their trained staffs after V-E
Day. We still have a tremendous job ahead in bringing the entire war to a victorious conclusion.
Beyond that, we must reconvert our domestic economy to the production of peacetime goods
and services. The tasks which lie ahead are no less important, no less urgent, no less vital to the
future stability of our free institutions than the tasks which are behind us.
In the months ahead, our government simply cannot afford to lose the services of its key
personnel. Through you, I am calling upon these men and women to stick to their posts until the
battle is won and the ship of state is safe in the harbor again. I want you to write to the head of
each one of our important home front agencies and ask him to canvass his key personnel,
informing him of my request that these key workers stay on the job. I want the head of each
agency, insofar as possible, to secure a pledge from these essential employees that they will not
go home on V-E Day, but will stay and help to finish the task. When the heads of the agencies
have done this, I should like for them to report to you as to their success.
These patriotic citizens who have devoted themselves unstintingly to the nation's welfare in time
of war have earned the lasting gratitude of the American people. They have helped to pay that
debt which every citizen in the Democracy owes to his country and its institutions. But that debt
is unpaid at least until we have finished the war and solved those urgent problems which war
leaves in its aftermath. I reiterate with all the emphasis at my command that the nation cannot yet
allow any man to leave his post of duty.
Sincerely yours,
HARRY S. TRUMAN
[The Honorable Fred M. Vinson, Director, Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion]