Willard Long Thorp (May 24, 1899 – May 10, 1992) was an American economist and academic.
[2] He served three US Presidents, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S. Truman and Dwight D. Eisenhower as an advisor in both domestic and foreign affairs.
He helped draft the Marshall Plan and was also prominent in business and education.
[5][1] He was Assistant Secretary of State under Truman for Economic Affairs 1946–1952;[3][6] a member of the U.S. delegation serving as special adviser on economic matters at the Paris Peace Conference of 1946;[3] special adviser on economic matters at the New York meeting of the Council of Foreign Ministers in 1946;[7] and American representative to the United Nations General Assembly, 1947–48.
[7] He came under great strain during the McCarthy 'witch-hunt' investigations into alleged Communists 1950–1954[7] and eventually resigned, becoming a professor at Amherst College again instead.