International affairs In July 1938 he represented the U.S. at the
Évian Conference in
Évian-les-Bains,
France, which convened at the initiative of
U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt to discuss the issue of increasing numbers of
Jewish refugees fleeing
Nazi persecution leading up to the onset of World War II. Before
German Nazi leader
Adolf Hitler turned to
mass extermination of Jews by way of
The Holocaust, the possibility of having
refugees sent to willing countries was posed.
Sumner Welles, the
U.S. Under Secretary of State had proposed an international conference to address immigration issues. Going into the conference Roosevelt gave Taylor the instruction: "All you need to do is get these people together." Taylor was appointed chairman, and while he was not able to get concessions on immigration, a proposal to create the Intergovernmental Committee on Refugees was approved.
Personal envoy to Pope Pius XII On December 22, 1939, Roosevelt asked Taylor "to take on a special mission for me" to be Roosevelt's "personal envoy" to
Pope Pius XII. Taylor's appointment was announced on December 23, 1939, and confirmed in
Rome,
Italy, on February 28, 1940. Taylor served from 1940 throughout the rest of Roosevelt's presidency (his death in 1945) and continued as President
Harry S. Truman's "personal envoy" until 1950. Although appointed as a "Peace Ambassador" and "personal envoy", Taylor was extended
ambassador status by the
Holy See on February 13, 1940. His appointment to that diplomatic position was officially protested by many American
Protestant Christian denominations, including
Methodists,
Presbyterians,
Lutherans,
Baptists and
Seventh-day Adventists, who opposed the United States maintaining diplomatic relations with the
Vatican. Taylor left Rome on September 22, 1941, flying to
Lisbon and
London on the way back to the U.S. Initially he was ordered to work to prevent Italy from joining the war with Germany. Later he would be influential in urging limited
bombing of Rome in 1943–1944 by the
Allies of World War II, and then only of specific military targets, in order to preserve the cultural resources of the ancient city.
Harold H. Tittmann Jr. remained as ''
chargé d'affaires'' after Taylor's departure. Given the rising tensions, he was required to move into
Vatican City on December 13, 1941, after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor and the US entered World War II against the Axis Powers. Taylor returned to Rome in September 1942, but went back to the US in October of that year. Later, he was able to lobby for an Allied
military airbase in neutral Portugal that was ultimately granted. As the war approached its end and afterwards, Taylor recognized the Italian people were in dire need of necessities. He established American Relief for Italy, an organization that became the primary means to provide food, clothing and medicine to millions of suffering Italians. In a short time approximately $6 million in public funds were raised and over $37 million in relief supplies were distributed. Taylor intended to step down after the war ended. Following Roosevelt's death, he agreed to stay on and to help President
Harry S. Truman, who succeeded to office. Truman charged Taylor to work "not only with the Pope but with other leaders in the spiritual world and in the world of politics and secular affairs as he travels through
Europe in the fulfillment of his mission." Taylor resigned in January 1950. Truman recalled Taylor's assistant, Franklin C. Gowan, prompting speculation that the U.S. would reduce its relations with the Vatican and its officials. Protestant leaders continued to oppose US relations with the Vatican. ==Awards==