Robert E. Stripling


Robert E. Stripling was a 20th-century civil servant, best known as chief investigator of the House Dies Committee and its successor the House Un-American Activities Committee, particularly for collaboration with junior congressman Richard Nixon and for testimony gleaned from witness Elizabeth Bentley and Whittaker Chambers, the latter of whose allegations led indirectly to indictment and conviction of State Department official Alger Hiss in January 1950.

Background

Robert E. Stripling Jr., was born around 1910 in San Augustine, Texas. He attended the University of Texas.

Career

In 1932, before Stripling had finished college, U.S. Representative Martin Dies Jr., a Democrat from the Texas's 2nd congressional district, brought him to Washington, DC. Stripling had received what he himself called a "patronage job" in the "folding room" of the Old House Office Building at $120 per month while he attended night school.
When the Dies Committee ran out of funding, Stripling helped persuade Dies to continue by offering to serve as secretary without wages. For the next decade, the committee recovered and grew to a staff of 75 and more than one million names, records, and data related to subversion, among which Stripling named the Pumpkin Papers of Whittaker Chambers.
The cover of the original print run of Stripling's memoir The Red Plot Against America cites his title as "Chief Investigator, House Un-American Activities Committee, 1938–1948." However, some sources call him "permanent counsel" and "chief of staff."
Famous HUAC investigations in which Stripling participated include: testimony of Soviet spy Gerhart Eisler, the Hollywood Trials, testimony by writer Ring Lardner Jr., testimony by Elizabeth Bentley, and testimony by Whittaker Chambers and members of his Ware Group – Alger Hiss, Donald Hiss, Harry Dexter White, Lee Pressman, John Abt, Nathan Witt, Charles Kramer and others.
On December 7, 1948, Stripling testified before HUAC in the Hiss Case.

Personal and death

In 1971, Stripling married Louisa Fowler Shankland.
Stripling died in 1991.

Legacy

Stripling's collaboration with first-term U.S. Representative Nixon and their success in 1948 that lead to the Hiss Case proved the stepping stone to Nixon's rise to U.S. Senator, U.S. Vice President, and later U.S. President.
Stripling appears in film in at least two documentaries regarding HUAC investigations.

Works

One of the few mentions of Stripling's book lumps it with several others about the House Un-American Activities Committee and states "They weren’t good books."