In June 1939, Edward J. Noble was appointed the first Under Secretary of Commerce[1] a role created especially for him by President Franklin D. Roosevelt that had a salary of $10,000 per year.
[2] He was succeeded by Wayne Chatfield-Taylor, the former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury who later served as president of the Export-Import Bank.
[3] The role was later held by various prominent people, including Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney (under President Truman),[4] and Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. (under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson), when the job had a salary of $21,000 per year.
[5][6] On December 13, 1979, President Jimmy Carter replaced the role of Under Secretary, which was then held by Luther H. Hodges Jr., with United States Deputy Secretary of Commerce, and Hodges became the first holder.
[8] Truman had created Civil Aeronautics Administration and transferred the Bureau of Public Roads within the department the previous year.