Memories of Ludwig von Mises
by
Hans F. Sennholz
by Hans F. Sennholz
DIGG THIS
This paper was prepared for the Grove City College
conference on The
Legacy of Ludwig von Mises, February 2324, 2007.
It
is quite a task to talk about teachers who played important roles
in our lives. Professor Ludwig von Mises played a decisive role
in my life. I met him in 1950 when he was 70 years old, teaching
at New York University, and I was 28, seeking a new beginning in
the United States. I was aware of the Professor, of the important
role he was playing in the fields of economic and social thought.
Two years earlier, when I was a student of economics and law at
the University of Marburg in Germany, his name had come up again
and again among a few interested students. German professors did
not mention him, but students readily did; they were keenly aware
of the evils of the old socialist order and the importance of a
new beginning in individual freedom and a free market order. The
University library had one copy of Mises book The
Theory of Money and Credit. There was a waiting list of
several weeks before a student could borrow the copy for a few days.
I patiently waited before I had the opportunity to read and enjoy
the book.
Having come
to the United States in December 1949, I was living with relatives,
and soon decided to add an American Ph.D. to my German degrees in
order to open American employment doors. Many were closed to my
Marburg and Cologne degrees. As a poor immigrant, I had my eyes
on Wall Street, which caused me to search for the university that
offered the best financial and monetary courses. In January and
February 1950, I visited several New York universities, requesting
catalogues and application forms. I visited Columbia University,
Fordham University, New York University, and several other institutions
of learning. To my complete surprise, I found Professor Mises
name listed in the NYU Graduate School of Business Administration
catalogue. I had now found the institution where I would earn my
American degree.
Professor
Mises had arrived in New York from Switzerland, Spain, and Portugal
on August 2, 1940. He immediately resumed his educational efforts
by writing two relevant books which Yale University Press readily
published. Omnipotent
Government appeared in May 1944, a second printing in February
1945 and a third in May 1945. Bureaucracy
was first published in September 1944, a second printing in October
1944, and the third in January 1946. Generous grants by the Rockefeller
Foundation and the National Bureau of Economic Research supported
him in his study and writing.
American universities
had no regular academic position for this foremost Austrian scholar.
But, in 1945, the Graduate School of Business Administration of
New York University accepted him as Visiting Professor
as long as the Volker Fund in Burlingame, California, and other
foundations and funds provided his support. But even when university
administrators became conversant with his thought during the 1950s
and 1960s, they were not prepared to employ a great mind like Mises.
In seventeen years of effective teaching at the University of Vienna,
the authorities did not let him go any further in his academic career
than to an unsalaried Visiting Professor. In twenty-four years of
teaching in the United States (19451969) he was never promoted.
Among the many institutions of higher learning in Europe and America,
both the University of Vienna and New York University distinguished
themselves in that they tolerated his teaching, provided it did
not cost them a penny.
Professor
von Mises main teaching effort in Vienna focused on his non-accredited
private seminar in which as many as forty to fifty young
people gathered around him for informal discussions of important
economic and philosophical issues. From this small Mises circle
in Vienna emerged some of the most eminent scholars of our day
e.g., Friedrich A. von Hayek, Gottfried von Haberler, Fritz Machlup,
Oskar Morgenstern, Erich Voegelin, and others. There was greatness
in this unassuming exchange of ideas, Mises later recalled,
and in it we all found happiness and satisfaction.
At New York
University, Professor von Mises conducted a formal seminar for students
interested in writing masters reports and doctoral dissertations.
The weekly meeting attracted not only a few serious degree candidates
but also several nonregistered students from the New York City area.
The circle was joined by some of Mises eminent friends, such
as Henry Hazlitt and Lawrence Fertig, and other scholars who happened
to be in town.
In the fall
of 1950, working in a television factory to earn my living expenses
and school tuition, I registered and enrolled in Professor Mises
basic course on Political Economy. I was impressed by the large
size of his class, some 100 to 120 students who listened attentively
to his lectures. But talking to a few of his students, I soon found
that they were aware of his Austrian accent and background but utterly
unaware of an Austrian school of thought and the eminent role Professor
Mises played in the history of economic thought. They merely were
meeting easy class and credit requirements but were not studying
Misesian thought.
I soon introduced
myself to the professor and petitioned him to become my tutor and
sponsor for a Doctor of Philosophy degree. But I was surprised and
actually hurt that he rejected me without hesitation. His reply:
The School has strenuous requirements which most students
cannot meet. Surely, I was aware that the School conferred
many Masters Degrees but only a handful of Ph.D.s every year
and that, since his appointment as visiting professor,
Professor Mises only had one degree candidate Louis Spadaro,
associate professor of economics at Fordham University. Professor
Mises blunt rejection of me undoubtedly made sense in the
light of the schools stringent policy and tradition; but this
student could not be discouraged so easily. When, six weeks later,
I petitioned him again, always communicating in German, he surprised
me by readily accepting me in a friendly manner, waxing eloquently
about his past experience. I never learned whether he treated and
tested all his applicants in such a manner or whether he had seen
my school application revealing my Cologne University doctorate.
I was to become his first Ph.D. at New York University, one of four
who passed his and the schools rigorous requirements. Thereafter,
our relationship was always cordial and like colleagues until he
passed away in 1973.
I dont
know whether Professor Mises lectures and seminar discourses
would have made me an Austrian scholar. At that time my eyes were
on Wall Street and the fortune I intended to earn there. I was confident
that, in the long run, thorough knowledge of money and credit, of
the trade cycle, and the effects of government intervention would
yield fame and fortune. Toward that end, knowledge of Austrian and
especially Misesian theory would be useful and profitable. But I
never intended to make such knowledge and teaching my lifes
work. Two distinct causes pointed and guided me in this new direction.
Professor
von Mises himself provided the first and strongest impetus. Soon
after I appeared in his classes and he had accepted me as a candidate,
he introduced me to a friend and admirer, an eminent industrialist
and the founder of Libertarian Press, Frederick Nymeyer, who was
eager to publish great Austrian books not yet available in English.
Professor Mises had pointed him toward the scholarly writings of
his own great teacher Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk (18571914), whose
three-volume magnum opus, Capital
and Interest, was accessible only to German readers, and recommended
the name Libertarian Press for the new publishing venture.
It needed a translator and publisher who would introduce it to the
wide English-speaking world. Frederick Nymeyer was the eager publisher
and I was elected to be the translator. As I had never been a translator,
I had serious doubts about my linguistic ability to translate some
1200 pages of scholarly text from my mother tongue into a foreign
language. Surely, I had had three years of English in high school
and had learned more since then, but I surely was no translator
of scholarly sentences, half a page long, written by a former Secretary
of Finance of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy. But Professor Mises
persisted in his advice, which I began to understand only several
years later. I conquered the tome, translating two pages a day,
earning a $10 fee per page. It made me a lucid English writer and,
above all, an Austrian economist which may have been Professor
Mises intent all along.
It is noteworthy
that, in 1984, the Nymeyer estate sold not only the inventory of
Böhm-Bawerk books to our son Robert and daughter-in-law Lyn but
also Libertarian Press itself. Its inventory of Austrian titles
now is located in a warehouse in Grove City.
Mrs. Mises
induced me to translate the Professors memoirs many years
later, in 1977. He had penned his Notes
and Recollections soon after his arrival in the U.S., in
August 1940. They read like the last testimony of a resistance fighter
who is looking back because there may be no tomorrow. It is a statement
of defiance, proud of his efforts, and exalted in his integrity
to the end. (Libertarian Press, 1978).
The other
force that changed my direction from Wall Street to the world of
academe was my wife. Her older sister being happily married to a
professor at Penn State University had introduced her to the free
and serene lifestyle of a college professor. When she met me in
the Mises seminar, she soon saw in me a potential professor and
encouraged me to move in that direction. I have never regretted
our joint path.
As the promoter
of translations of great Austrian books, Professor Mises undoubtedly
kept an eye on this translator. The special family relationship
that developed probably rested on the words and deeds of Mrs. Margit
von Mises. At a social seminar meeting at the Mises residence in
Manhattan, she had introduced me to another seminarian who was to
become my life partner, Mary Elizabeth Homan. As our matchmaker,
she later insisted upon becoming our sons godmother. She carried
him during his baptism in front of our Lutheran congregation in
Dobbs Ferry while the Professor watched the proceedings sitting
in the last pew. He declined an invitation to a congregational reception
afterwards, which made us return for lunch to our third floor apartment
at 14 South Broadway in Irvington. Throughout her long life (Mrs.
Mises followed him in death, eight days before her 103rd birthday)
she faithfully observed her godsons birthdays and holidays
with cards, letters, gifts and phone calls.
Another personal
bond that allowed us to befriend both the professor and his wife
was our 1956 publication of the Mises Festschrift. A few ardent
students were keenly aware that the professors 50th anniversary
of his Dr.jur. degree from the University of Vienna was approaching
and that none of his old colleagues and friends was making preparations
for a volume of learned articles as a tribute to the 75-year old
scholar. Therefore, my wife invited the most famous Mises friends
and colleagues to contribute to a volume in his honor. Nineteen
responded promptly. There was C. Antoni in Italy, Faustino Ballvé
in Mexico, Louis Baudin, Bertrand de Jouvenel, and Jacque Rueff
in France, W. H. Hutt and L.M. Lachmann in South Africa, William
E. Rappard and Wilhelm Röpke in Switzerland, and Percy L. Greaves,
Jr., F. A. Harper, F. A. Hayek, Henry Hazlitt, Fritz Machlup, William
H. Peterson, Leonard E. Read, Murray N. Rothbard, Louis M. Spadaro,
and this writer in the United States. In March 1956, my wife presented
the Festschrift to the professor at a banquet, arranged by Leonard
Read, the founder and president of the Foundation for Economic Education.
It was a grand evening at the University Club in New York City,
with excellent speeches by F. A. Hayek, Leonard Read, Fritz Machlup,
and Henry Hazlitt. When, thirty-six years later, I headed the Foundation
for Economic Education it re-published a large paper-covered edition
in 1994. At that time, most of the authors who in 1955 had collaborated
in the preparation of the Festschrift had departed this life.
In 1956 this
writer joined the Grove City College faculty. The Chairman of the
Board, J. Howard Pew, may have been my sponsor as we had met several
times and he had heard me lecture at The Foundation for Economic
Education, of which he also had been Chairman. In a conversation
with the new College president, J. Stanley Harker, I had mentioned
the opportunity to confer an honorary degree on Professor Mises;
it would give Grove City College the distinction of being the first
to confer such an honor on a great scholar, now 75 years old, author
of numerous books and countless articles, and foremost champion
and guardian of the free society. President Harker and the Board
of Trustees apparently agreed and granted him an honorary Doctor
of Laws degree (L.L.D.) at its seventy-seventh commencement on June
8, 1957. As the College was not accustomed nor prepared to give
a special reception after the graduation exercise, Mary and I invited
the trustees and faculty members to meet the honoree at our house
at 200 East Pine Street. Most trustees and faculty members were
eager to meet the famous professor and joined us in our living room.
J. Howard Pew and his wife led the way.
A few months
earlier, the University of Vienna, which had conferred the doctorate
on him in 1906, had renewed his title. It was, according to the
deans correspondence, a special honor granted only to the
most meritorious recipients. Despite the University of Viennas
and Grove City Colleges recognition and honors, the professors
influence continued to be rather negligible in the mainstream of
economic thought. Yet he continued to meet his classes at New York
University until the spring of 1969 at the age of 87, regularly
lectured at the Foundation for Economic Education in Irvington until
1972, at the age of ninety, and went on numerous lecture tours.
In 1962 the President of Austria honored him, conferring the Austrian
Medal of Honor for Science and Art, which is the highest decoration
the Austrian government can bestow on one of her sons;
the Austrian ambassador bestowed it at a luncheon in Washington
with many friends and former students in attendance. A year later,
New York University managed to confer on him the honorary degree
of Doctor of Laws for his exposition of the philosophy of
the free market and his advocacy of a free society. And in
1964, the University of Freiburg in Germany, where F. A. Hayek occupied
an influential position, granted him the honorary degree of Doctor
Rerum Politicarum. On his 90th birthday on September 29, 1971, his
old friend, Larry Fertig, at a small party at the New York University
Club, presented to him a two-volume Festschrift of seventy-one essays
by scholars in eighteen countries, former students and ardent admirers
from all over the world.
Throughout
the 1960s we remained in close touch with Professor and Mrs. von
Mises. Whenever we went to New York we would be invited for tea
in their apartment at 777 West End Avenue. I would have to report
about my academic activity and especially about my current research
and writing. Mrs. Mises always wanted to know about the growth of
her godson. In November 1970, when he was 89 years old, they returned
to Grove City College. I had invited the Professor upon the urging
of my students who were most eager to see the famous author. Unfortunately,
the octogenarian failed to impress and persuade many twenty-year
olds. He had been more vigorous and persuasive on a few earlier
speaking tours on which I was fortunate to accompany him. When,
in 1964, no other young economist could be found to travel with
the master and his spouse, I, together with my spouse, was chosen
to join them and add my lectures. The Miseses and Sennholzes toured
Costa Rica and Guatemala together, giving lectures and seminars
at several universities. I always knew my place and deportment in
the presence of the teacher and his spouse.
The Mises
spent their last summer (1973) at a health resort near Lucerne,
Switzerland, enjoying the view of beautiful lakes and snow-covered
mountains. Our son Robert, at the young age of seventeen, attending
summer school in Germany, did not miss the opportunity to visit
the Mises. With a bouquet of flowers in hand, he greeted his godmother
and her husband. He spent the day with them, returning to his school
the following morning. It is not difficult to imagine the communication
between a boy of seventeen and his hosts in their eighties and nineties.
The Mises returned to New York in August. The professor promptly
entered the hospital, which he never left.
Although a
great man may die, his thought and deeds may survive and leave an
indelible stamp on his fellow men. Ludwig von Mises left the stage
of life but lives on in many books and hundreds of articles he published
and in thousands of publications about his ideas. He wrote originally
in German but continued in English soon after his arrival in the
United States; some of his books were translated into more than
a dozen foreign languages. His influence is felt as an effective
intellectual force of economic, social, and political reform all
over the world.
This writer
has observed three generations of Mises colleagues and students
who were inspired and guided by the master. The first undoubtedly
consisted of some of his contemporaries in Austria, Germany, France,
Italy, England, and the United States. In 1947 some forty of them,
economists, historians, philosophers, and journalists, led by F.
A. Hayek, Ludwig von Mises, and Wilhelm Röpke, organized the
Mont Pelerin Society. Members met every year in a different country,
discussing pertinent issues of the time. There were Jacques Rueff,
Louis Baudin, and Bertrand de Jouvenel of France, William E. Rappard
of Switzerland, Carlo Antoni and Bruno Leoni of Italy, Faustino
Ballvé of Mexico, and Henry Hazlitt, F. A. Harper, Fritz
Machlup, and Leonard E. Read of the United States. All of them were
aware of the force and intransigence of Professor Mises position,
which encouraged them to reconstruct the market order wherever it
had been crushed. He greatly influenced Wilhelm Röpke who gave
guidance and support to the recovery of West Germany from the ashes
of totalitarian socialism. In France, Jacques Rueff urged General
De Gaulle to stabilize the currency and return to the gold standard.
In Italy, President Luigi Einaudi, a life-long friend and colleague
of Professor Mises, managed to stem the tide of inflationism and
socialism. In many other countries, in Japan and Guatemala, Argentina
and Spain, Mises admirers labored to restore the market order.
Some members
of the second generation of Mises admirers and disciples actually
had the opportunity to sit in his classes or listen to his lectures
on his many tours. Countless members undoubtedly acquired economic
knowledge by studying his books and articles. Some even pleased
the professor by passing his tests and examinations. At New York
University, a few managed to earn their doctors degrees and then
share their newly acquired knowledge with their students. There
were Louis Spadaro of Fordham University, Israel Kirzner of New
York University, George Reisman at St. Johns University in
Brooklyn, N.Y. and later Pepperdine University in Los Angeles, California.
This writer graduated in 1955 and then taught at Grove City College
in Grove City, Pa. for thirty-six years.
At New York
University, thousands of students had the opportunity to attend
the professors classes and hundreds to come to his weekly
seminar. Some became well-known as writers and teachers in their
professions and occupations. An illustrious Mises student who reached
out to millions of readers was Murray N. Rothbard who taught for
many years at the Polytechnic Institute in Brooklyn, New York, and
at the University of Nevada in Las Vegas. Although he earned his
B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees at Columbia University, he also studied
with Professor Mises at New York University. He became the author
of many important works in Austrian economics and, until his death
in 1995, was editor of the Mises Institutes scholarly Journal
of Austrian Economics.
Two other
eminent economists who faithfully attended the Mises seminar and
became good friends of the professor were Percy L. Greaves, Jr.
and his wife, Bettina Bien Greaves. Greaves reached many readers
as economic adviser to the Christian Freedom Foundation and columnist
for its publication, Christian Economics. He later served as Professor
of Economics at the University of Plano, Texas. His wife was a senior
member of the staff of Leonard Reads Foundation for Economic
Education in Irvington, New York. She often served as Professor
Mises assistant and secretary and created his bibliography,
a definitive listing of his work and articles about him.
Teachers and
writers undoubtedly affect the thoughts and actions of their students
and readers. They may reach out to hundreds or even thousands of
individuals who are interested in their thoughts and policies. But
in order to reach millions of readers and affect public opinion,
the teachers and writers may depend on entrepreneurs who know how
to promote and spread the ideas. They may place their trust in the
founders and managers of schools, foundations, publications, and
other media of communication.
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell is such an entrepreneur. He is the founder and president
of the Ludwig von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, which is the
educational center of the Austrian School of Economics. Ever since
1982, it has been reaching out with a large array of publications,
programs, and fellowships that seek to move the educational climate
toward individual freedom and the market order. This writer is a
proud member of the faculty of 250 who undoubtedly reach millions
of readers on all levels of understanding.
The Foundation
for Economic Education (FEE) created by Leonard E. Read in 1946
is the oldest educational organization dedicated to the preservation
of individual freedom and the private property order. Given direction
by its advisor, Professor von Mises, it publishes The Freeman,
an award-winning monthly journal which reaches many thousands of
readers. It conducts a wide variety of seminars at the FEE site
in Irvington, New York as well as all over the country. This writer
headed FEE from 1992 to 1997 and continues to serve as President
Emeritus of the institution.
A
few other foundations took a great interest in Professor Mises
ideas and writings. There was the Volker Fund of California which
was managed by H. W. Luhnow. It provided the funds for the Mises
seminar at New York University along with others in California,
at Wabash College in Indiana and at Chapel Hill in North Carolina.
There was Antony Fisher of England who founded economic institutes
in London, Vancouver, Los Angeles, Amsterdam, and New York. His
Atlas Foundation, now capably managed by Alejandro Chafuen, reaches
out to all corners of the world. There were Pierre Hamilius in Luxembourg,
Ludwig M. Lachmann in South Africa, Toshio Murata in Japan, Alberto
Benegas-Lynch in Argentina, Manuel Ayau in Guatemala, and several
others who founded Austrian schools and institutions. Their dedication
and loyalty to Misesian ideals made them an ideological force that
was felt throughout the free world.
The
third generation of Mises followers and admirers never met the master
but was introduced to his thought and deeds by some of his students.
Llewellyn Rockwells Mises Institute, for instance, is reaching
millions of students at all levels, assisting thousands of students
at hundreds of colleges, and conducting summer schools all over
the world. This writer, in thirty-seven years of teaching, reached
some ten thousand college students and, in a dozen books and nearly
one thousand essays and articles published in opinion journals and
on the internet, probably touched many more readers. The same may
be true with many other Mises disciples and followers, such as Walter
Block and Thomas DiLorenzo of Loyola University in New Orleans,
Peter Klein of the University of Missouri, Joseph Salerno of Pace
University, Guido Hülsmann of the University of Angers, Jeffrey
Herbener of Grove City College, and, last but not least, Thomas
Woods, Mark Thornton, and David Gordon of the Mises Institute. They
all are contributing in their ways to spreading the words and teachings
of Ludwig von Mises.
February
28, 2007
Dr.
Hans F. Sennholz [send him mail]
was professor and chairman of the department of economics at Grove
City College. See his website.
Copyright
2007 Hans F. Sennholz
Hans
F. Sennholz Archives
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