Windsor Star

DENT A DEFENDER OF FREE TRADE AND BOSS, RICHARD NIXON.

Commerce secretary under Nixon

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Frederick Baily Dent, a softspoken South Carolina textile manufactur­er who in the mid-1970s was commerce secretary to President Richard Nixon and trade representa­tive for President Gerald Ford, died Dec. 10 in Spartanbur­g, S.C. He was 97.

In April 1973, two months after being sworn in as commerce secretary, Dent learned that his assistant secretary, Jeb Stuart Magruder, a former White House and Nixon campaign official, had resigned abruptly, accusing Attorney General John Mitchell and John Dean, the White House counsel, of approving the break-in and bugging of phones at the Democratic National Committee headquarte­rs at the Watergate apartment complex in Washington in 1972.

As the crisis deepened, Dent emerged as a vociferous defender of the president.

The scion of a family that prospered in textiles, Dent grew up with advantages: a prep school and Yale education, collegiate football and yachting, a Navy commission in the Second World War, an assured future behind his father as president of a South Carolina textile mill, and Republican connection­s that included Sen. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina.

Seen as a business visionary, he was elected president of the American Textile Manufactur­ers Institute.

In 1969, he was appointed to a Nixon administra­tion commission that concluded the national interest would not be adversely affected by ending the military draft and replacing it with all-volunteer armed forces. As the war in Vietnam wound down, conscripti­on was officially ended in 1973.

As commerce secretary, he proved a spirited advocate of free trade, while accepting the need to protect sensitive sectors. Dent’s tenure coincided with an Arab oil embargo and rising inflation, and he responded to oil shortages and spiking gas prices by establishi­ng a National Industrial Energy Conservati­on Council.

Frederick Baily Dent was born in Cape May, N.J. on Aug. 17, 1922, to Magruder and Edith Baily Dent (there is no relation to Jeb Magruder).

In 1944, he married Mildred Harrison. He is survived by two sons, two daughters, 14 grandchild­ren and 13 great-grandchild­ren. His wife died in 1997.

 ??  ?? Frederick B. Dent
Frederick B. Dent

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