Altmeyer at his desk on his last day on the job as Commissioner, April 10, 1953. SSA History Archives
Arthur Altmeyer, who was
a member of the first Unitarian Society of Madison, Wisconsin,
is known as the person who did more than anyone else to
shape the institution that administered the Social Security
Program of the United States. He worked closely with fellow
Unitarian, U.S. Representative Thomas Eliot of Massachusetts,
to draft the enabling legislation.
Altmeyer was born in DePere, Wisconsin. He obtained a B.A. from the University of Wisconsin in 1914 and subsequently taught high school and was a high school principal. He then became a statistician, advancing to chief statistician and later executive secretary of the Wisconsin Industrial Commission. After being awarded his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin in 1931 and writing two books, he was summoned to Washington in 1933 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt where he became chairman of the Social Security Board in 1937. His retirement from government service in 1953 ended an era of shaping the nation's social insurance program. He remained active in social welfare policy, however—he served as an advisor to foreign governments and in 1954 was elected president of the National Conference on Social Work..
"Arthur Altmeyerwas part of the President's Committee on Economic
Security that drafted the original legislative proposal
in 1934. He was a member of the three-person Social
Security Board created to run the new program, and he
was either Chairman of the Board or Commissioner for
Social Security from 1937-1953. Although he believed
that public administration was a vitally important activity,
he was also one of the principal conceptual and philosophical
spokesmen for social insurance in America, and much
of the policymaking during Social Security's founding
decades was formulated by Altmeyer. Along with a mere
handful of others, Arthur J. Altmeyer is responsible
for the Social Security program as it exists in America
today."
A young Ethel Thomas. SSA History Archives
A LEGACY OF DEDICATION
Altmeyer was a modest, serious, and dedicated career public servant. In 1916, he married Ethel Thomas, his former high school history teacher who was four years his senior. They remained married for 56 years, until Altmeyer's death in 1972. Yet although they had no offspring, the Altmeyers' concern for the welfare of children, the elderly, the disabled, and all members of society was evidenced in their chosen professions striving for the public good.
When Franklin D. Roosevelt ascended to the office of President of the United States of America in 1933, he inherited a country shattered by the economic devastation of the Great Depression of the early 1930s. Before that catastrophe, "there was no precedent for a social insurance system in United States law," thus no established guidelines for how to assist both the self-sufficient and the needy in maintaining acceptable living standards even in times of duress, ill health, and/or old age. Faced with continuous partisan antagonism by Republican opponents and widespread, misleading propaganda generated by fearful naysayers, President Roosevelt vowed to give the American people once again a sense of security and, therein, hope for a better future.
Arthur Altmeyer, Robert Ball (taller man in back), and Wilbur Cohen on the porch of the White House, May 5, 1965, at a ceremony where President Johnson honored the 20,000,000th Social Security beneficiary.SSA History Archives
Altmeyer, during his nearly 20 years of leading the charge for the Social Security program during the Roosevelt and Truman presidencies, was instrumental in ensuring that this new social welfare policy would be designed, administrated, and legislated as comprehensively and efficiently as possible. Originally conceived as a means to help provide financial stability for the elderly in retirement, Altmeyer's advocacy and devotion eventually lead to the expansion of Social Security's coverage to orphans, widows, unskilled laborers, and the self-employed. Despite the fact that his desire to also have Social Security supply health insurance coverage and disability benefits was never fully realized during his tenure in federal government, Altmeyer persevered in championing the ideal of a broad, fair social insurance program that provides protection to society's most vulnerable members when they need it most.
Former HEW Secretary Wilbur Cohen, Social Security Commissioner Robert Ball, outgoing Under Secretary John Veneman, and others on hand for the rededication of the Social Security Administration headquarters in honor of Altmeyer view the inscription on the building's marble walls. OASIS
On January 19, 1973, three months after his death, the Social Security Administration headquarters in Baltimore, Maryland were renamed in honor of Altmeyer. Then Social Security Commissioner and former colleague, Robert Ball, noted:
"It has always seemed to me that the contribution Arthur Altmeyer made to the development of the social security program was very specific and personal. He did more, much more, than oversee the building up of an efficient organization. He imprinted on the evolving program and on the administration and in the people who were with it a set of values that are still operative and that have been largely responsible for the success and widespread acceptance and support that the social security system enjoys. . ."
Thus, "Mr. Social Security," as Altmeyer came to be known, helped to forge one of the world's most enviable government programs and leaves behind an incomparable legacy of dedication.
Altmeyer was honored by the National Council of Churches of Christ in America in 1955 although the organization did not admit Unitarians.
THE
FIRST DECADE IN SOCIAL SECURITY
Following is an excerpt from Arthur Altmeyer's August 1945 report as Chairman of the Social Security Board:
On August
14, 1935 the Social Security Act became law. Workmen's compensation
was the only form of social insurance in which the United
States had comprehensive experience before 1935. Even now,
after more than half a century, not much more than half
the workers of this country are protected, and one State
still has no law to compensate workers injured on the job.
Probably never before in
a corresponding period of time has legislation done as
much to establish a ground work of economic security for
families in the United States as in the years following
President Roosevelt's message of June 8, 1934, in which
he said to Congress: "Among our objectives I place the
security of men, women, and children of the Nation first."
The
first meeting of the Social Security Board, August
23, 1935. Left to right: Arthur Altmeyer, John Winant,
and Vincent Miles.
Today some 40 million people
are insured. Even so, social insurance is new in the United
States and incomplete in coverage and scope. As coverage
is extended, it will go far toward cutting down poverty
and insecurity. But however comprehensive the insurance
provisions, we shall always need a complementary program
to the needs of people who are not eligible for insurance
benefits or their need is greater than the system is designed
to insure.
Recall some of the remarks
made about social security in 1935 and 1936. It was unconstitutional.
Unworkable. A first step toward communism. It would destroy
individual enterprise and initiative. Actual experience
quickly belied all such charges.
The program has worked --
better in some respects than its sponsors dared hope.
Disbursements under the program have been less than was
estimated in advance. The less tangible fears could have
been discounted in advance. The United States was far
stronger, freer, and richer than it could have been if
the alarmists who opposed such legislation had had their
way. Freedom to be sick or hungry is not a freedom to
be prized.
Altmeyer as Chairman of the Social Security Board in 1939 with Board members George Bigge (left) and Ellen Woodward (right). SSA History Archives
Social
security does not endanger the moral fiber of the Nation.
The program has been replacing part of the wage loss of
workers who find themselves unable to earn and helping
people who lack the means of subsistence in even a period
like the present. The operations show that Americans continue
to prize their capacity for self-support and family support
and will and do work when they can.
The advance fears came from
distrust of anything different, anything new. Social security
is not an effort to inject something new, its purpose
is to conserve what men and women have long cherished
in the face of changes they themselves cannot control.
President Roosevelt in June 1934 said, "Security was
attained in the earlier days through the interdependence
of members of families upon each other and of the families
within a small community upon each other. The complexities
of great communities and of organized industry make less
real these simple means of security. Therefore, we are
compelled to employ the active interest of the Nation
as a whole through government in order to encourage a
greater security for each individual who composes it.
. . .This seeking for a greater measure of welfare and
happiness does not indicate a change in values. It is
rather a return to values lost in the course of our economic
development and expansion."
That idea has permeated
much of our thinking. We see it in letters from old people
telling of their joy in receiving the small benefits which,
with their other savings, will enable them to live out
their lives in independence and modest comfort. Widows
write that the benefits on the dead father's earnings
will enable them to give their children a fair start in
life. We see it also in appeals from those who write to
ask why the program is not extended to their kind of work
so they, too, can earn this assurance for themselves and
their families.
When it comes to proposals
for improving the program, we hear the same objections
that were made 10 years ago. I believe, as in the past,
they will prove groundless.
Altmeyer in front of the SSA headquarters in Baltimore--May 1963. Less than 10 years after this picture was taken the building was renamed in his honor.
Assistance
will seem a stigma to most people. But as communities
recognize the right to assistance for a minimum level
of decent human existence, they will help to wipe out
the conditions that make for hopelessness and perpetuate
dependency. The Social Security Act is built on the assumption
that it is hope that leads people to exercise initiative
and assume responsibilities of citizens.
Now we are beginning to
think in terms of risks to economic security that strike
nearly all families at some time. Our program is still
far from complete. Workers and their families still lack
any comprehensive insurance provision against two prime
causes of poverty and dependency-- wage loss in sickness
and disability and costs of medical care.
Enlightened self-interest,
as well as common humanity, requires that we set a floor
beneath which human beings in our civilization shall not
sink. Only in that way can an industrialized society preserve
political democracy and a competitive economy in accordance
with our traditions. By such a minimum, we help to ensure
an effective labor force and the steady stream of widely
diffused purchasing power needed to keep workers steadily
and fully employed. Our success in achieving "domestic
tranquillity" and lasting peace will depend in no small
measure on the ability of this and other countries to
achieve greater security for their peoples. In these first
10 years we have laid the foundation for that effort.
A FAREWELL
Altmeyer was directly involved in the development of Social Security from before the Social Security Act became law under President Roosevelt on August 14, 1935, throughout the next two decades. He persisted during two subsequent amendments to the law—the 1939 amendments, which established earlier benefit start dates, larger payments, survivors' benefits for orphans and widows, and an appeals process, and the 1950 amendments, which increased benefits further and extended coverage to agricultural laborers and most self-employed workers—neither of which fully enacted the more extensive agenda Altmeyer favored. When the White House changed hands to Republican Dwight Eisenhower in 1952, however, Altmeyer found himself amidst a presidential administration that was not as amicable as the previous two he'd served under. Although he had already announced that he would retire from government service at the minimum retirement age on May 8, 1953, an executive reorganization plan eliminated both the agency Altmeyer reported to and his formal job title before he could depart graciously.
A 1953 editorial cartoon expressed what many felt was the unfair treatment suffered by Altmeyer in his abrupt dismissal after the Eisenhower Administration took office.
Being forced out of a long, illustrious federal career did not embitter Altmeyer, and, with public sympathy behind him, he continued to contribute to the progress of social welfare insurance policy in the United States and abroad until his final days.
FEDERAL
SECURITY AGENCY
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
WASHINGTON, D.C.
OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER
A FAREWELL MESSAGE
April
10, 1953
To My Friends and Fellow
Workers:
It is hard to say good-bye
to the work of a life-time; but it is even harder
to say good-bye to all of you who have made a living
reality of these great social measures entrusted to
us for administration. However, my sadness at leaving
is tempered by my realization that these programs
are now firmly established as a part of the American
way of life and that you who remain will carry on
as you have in the past, serving the people of this
country loyally and efficiently. Words cannot express
my gratitude to all of you. Good-bye and God bless
you.
Arthur J. Altmeyer
Recommended
Reading
The Formative
Years of Social Security by Arthur Altmeyer (Madison:
University of Wisconsin Press, 1966).
The
Reminiscences of Arthur Altmeyer are available on three
microfiches (New York: Columbia University Oral History
Collection, 1979).