W. Averell Harriman (born November 15, 1891, New York City, New York, U.S.—died July 26, 1986, Yorktown Heights) was a statesman who was a leading U.S. diplomat in relations with the Soviet Union during World War II and the subsequent Cold War. He also served as the governor of New York (1954–58).
The son of the railroad magnate Edward Henry Harriman, he began his employment with the Union Pacific Railroad Company in 1915; he served as chairman of the board in 1932–46. During this period he was affiliated with the investment bank Brown Brothers Harriman and helped establish the Union Banking Corporation (UBC), both of which were enmeshed with the financial interests of German industrialist Fritz Thyssen, who helped fund the rise of the Nazi Party. Despite the release of documents in the early 21st century that confirmed that UBC’s holdings were vested by the U.S. government in 1942, the nature of Harriman’s involvement with prewar and early wartime German business enterprises remained the subject of conjecture.
During the administration of U.S. Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harriman was an officer of the National Recovery Administration and during 1940–41 served with the National Defense Advisory Commission and its successor agency, the Office of Production Management. In 1941 Roosevelt sent him to Britain and the Soviet Union to expedite U.S. lend-lease aid. He then served as U.S. ambassador to the Soviet Union (1943–46), ambassador to Great Britain (April to October 1946), and secretary of commerce (1947–48).
From 1948 to 1950 he was special U.S. representative in Europe to supervise administration of the European Recovery Program (Marshall Plan); in 1950 he was named special assistant to the president and in 1951 director of the Mutual Security Agency. He was twice unsuccessful in his attempt to win the Democratic nomination for the presidency (1952 and 1956). Governor of New York from 1954 to 1958, Harriman lost the position to Nelson A. Rockefeller. He served as U.S. Pres. John F. Kennedy’s assistant secretary of state for Far Eastern affairs from 1961 to 1963. During that period he advocated U.S. support of a neutral government in Laos and helped to negotiate the Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty. Under Pres. Lyndon B. Johnson Harriman served as ambassador-at-large and headed the U.S. delegation to the Paris peace talks between the United States and North Vietnam (1968–69). He retired in 1969 (though he remained active in foreign affairs in an unofficial capacity) and was replaced by Henry Cabot Lodge.
Harriman’s reflections on his relations with the Soviet Union, America and Russia in a Changing World, appeared in 1971 and his Special Envoy to Churchill and Stalin, 1941–1946 (with Elie Abel) in 1975.