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C. Douglas Dillon, Financier Who Served in Kennedy Cabinet, Dies at 93

January 12, 2003
By ERIC PACE






C. Douglas Dillon, a versatile Wall Street financier who
was named secretary of the Treasury by President Kennedy
and ambassador to France under President Eisenhower, and
was a longtime executive of the Metropolitan Museum of Art,
died Friday at New York Presbyterian Hospital in Manhattan.
Mr. Dillon, who lived with his wife on Jupiter Island in
Hobe Sound, Fla., was 93.

Mr. Dillon was born to wealth and influence as the son of
the founder of Dillon, Read & Company, an international
banking house. Mr. Dillon was widely respected for his
attention to detail - he had a reputation for ferreting out
inconspicuous errors in reports - and his intellect, which
his parents began shaping at an early age by enrolling Mr.
Dillon in elite private schools.

Mr. Dillon is said to have been able to read quickly and to
fully comprehend what he read by the time he was 4 years
old. At the Pine Lodge School in Lakehurst, N.J., Mr.
Dillon's schoolmates included Nelson, Laurance and John
Rockefeller III. Mr. Dillon later graduated magna cum laude
from Harvard and sharpened his analytical powers on Wall
Street.

Strapping and strong-jawed, Mr. Dillon sometimes seemed
self-effacing or even shy in public, despite his long
prominence in public affairs and in business. He served
over the years as chairman of the Rockefeller Foundation,
president of Harvard University's board of overseers,
chairman of the Brookings Institution, vice chairman of the
Council on Foreign Relations, and, after his time in Paris,
in high posts at the State Department.

In the business world, he rose to be chairman of Dillon,
Read and of the United States and Foreign Securities
Corporation, an investment company founded by his father,
Clarence Dillon.

Despite his patrician roots, Douglas Dillon was only twice
removed from more meager means in Poland, where his
paternal grandfather was born. Mr. Dillon's grandfather,
Samuel Lapowski, a Jewish immigrant from Poland, moved his
family to Texas after the Civil War and began building
several businesses and propelling his children to higher
social strata through education. Mr. Dillon's father
studied at Harvard and, at some point, changed his surname
from Lapowski to Dillon, which was his mother's maiden
name.

In private life, Douglas Dillon and his first wife, the
former Phyllis Chess Ellsworth, amassed collections of
Impressionist paintings and other works of art. His
interest in art led him to be selected as a trustee of the
Metropolitan Museum two decades before he became its
president. He served from 1970 to 1977, when he became
chairman.

In March 1983, Mr. Dillon said he planned to step down as
chairman in the fall, explaining, "My feeling is that this
is quite long enough for one person to hold these offices."


Mr. Dillon's first wife died in 1982. He is survived by two
daughters from that marriage, Phyllis Dillon Collins and
Joan, the Duchesse de Mouchy. Mr. Dillon is also survived
by Susan Dillon, whom he married in 1983, and three
grandchildren.

Mr. Dillon was a lifelong Republican who had long been
active in party affairs when he was picked for the Treasury
post by President Kennedy in an attempt to give an incoming
administration a bipartisan cast. Kept on by President
Johnson, Mr. Dillon served as secretary of the Treasury
from 1961 to 1965, and his fiscal policies won wide
support.

"I am a moderate Republican," he said as he left the
cabinet, adding, "I do not believe that there are great
differences between that kind of Republicanism and the
objectives" of the Kennedy and Johnson administrations.

In his years as the secretary of Treasury, Mr. Dillon
played a key part in drawing up the Trade Expansion Act of
1962, which empowered Mr. Kennedy to cut tariffs by half in
the course of reciprocal negotiations. As secretary, Mr.
Dillon was also instrumental in framing the Revenue Act of
1962, which mandated a 7 percent investment credit that was
meant to spur industrial plant and equipment investment. He
oversaw the revising and liberalizing of principles for the
companies' handling of depreciation charges.

However, Mr. Dillon's influence and the weight of the
Treasury dwindled near the end of his tenure when it became
known that he was going to resign; he had wanted to leave
government for some time. And wide notice was taken, even
by his admirers, of his inability to bring about an end to
the deficit in the United States' balance of payments.

After leaving his cabinet post, Mr. Dillon returned to the
world of finance, where the Dillon name was a byword long
before World War II, thanks to his father, who amassed a
fortune at the head of Dillon, Read. The company was one of
the prominent Wall Street houses that underwrote hundreds
of millions of dollars worth of bonds that were floated in
the United States by numerous European cities and countries
after World War I.

The elder Mr. Dillon and his wife, Anne Douglass Dillon,
were spending a year abroad when Clarence Douglass Dillon
was born Aug. 21, 1909, in Geneva, Switzerland. The
terminal "S" was later dropped from his middle name.

The son was brought up in New York and New Jersey. He
graduated in 1927 from the Groton School and in 1931 from
Harvard, where he was considered too wiry to be a member of
the football team. Instead, he became its manager.

Once he graduated, he had time to acquire a seat on the New
York Stock Exchange, using $185,000 that his father had
staked to him for the purpose.

In 1937, after working on the stock exchange and as an
investment banker, Mr. Dillon became president and a
director of the United States and Foreign Securities
Corporation. The next year he also became a director at
Dillon, Read.

In World War II, Mr. Dillon interrupted his Wall Street
career to serve in the Navy, seeing action in the Pacific.
He earned the Legion of Merit and the Air Medal and rose to
the rank of lieutenant commander.

In 1946, he became chairman of Dillon, Read, but he left
that post, and also left the securities corporation in
1953, the year President Eisenhower chose him to be
ambassador to France. The appointment was largely seen as a
political spoil because Mr. Dillon, who at that time also
served as a Republican state committeeman, had helped to
lock in votes from New Jersey's Republican delegation for
Mr. Eisenhower's bid for president. Mr. Dillon also made
financial contributions to Mr. Eisenhower's campaign.

To some, Mr. Dillon was a logical choice for the Paris post
since he was familiar with France, partly a result of the
fact that for 20 years his family had owned the Château
Haut-Brion vineyards, which produced Bordeaux wine.
Initially, though, Mr. Dillon was criticized because of his
crude command of French, his youth and his inexperience as
a diplomat. But he quickly gained respect after he
diligently studied French with a tutor and performed ably
during several incidents in which the United States
disagreed with the French government's policies.

In the State Department, as ambassador until 1957 and then
as under secretary of State for economic affairs and as
under secretary of State, Mr. Dillon was noted for
analyzing problems in detached Wall Street style and then
acting firmly and logically.

After leaving government, he again returned to Wall Street.
But after he was elected president of the Metropolitan
Museum, the museum work came to fascinate him so much that
he spent most of his time at it. An avid collector of 18th-
and 19th-century French paintings, Mr. Dillon also gave the
museum much of the artwork that he acquired over the years
and he is credited with nearly single-handedly building the
museum's Chinese painting collection.

"It was his passion, which he developed out of an
institutional need because it was a weakness at the Met,"
said Philippe de Montebello, the director of the
Metropolitan Museum. "He wanted the Met to be strong in all
fields, so he literally adopted Chinese arts."

The galleries were set up with money from the Dillon Fund,
a small family foundation set up in 1922; and Mr. Dillon
made personal contributions as well.

While he led the museum, Mr. Dillon oversaw the completion
of a campaign to raise funds for new construction. It
brought in $118 million. He also directed the beginning of
another fund-raising campaign, intended mainly to enlarge
the museum's endowment. By late 1982, the campaign was more
than halfway to its goal of $150 million.

After retiring from the Met, Mr. Dillon continued to serve
the museum, most recently on the acquisitions committee,
which he was said to love so deeply that, during a recent
illness, he read acquisitions papers from his hospital bed.

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/01/12/obituaries/12DILL.html?ex=1043453574&ei=1&en=78db30c0b6bb16ec



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