Showing posts with label Eugene Debs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eugene Debs. Show all posts

Thursday, March 2, 2023

My Amazon Review of Adam Hochschild's "American Midnight: The Great War..............."

Red Scare 1917-21

I thoroughly enjoyed Adam Hochschild’s book on the Spanish Civil War (See:Shulmaven: My Amazon Review of Adam Hochschild's "Spain in Our Hearts: Americans in the Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939"  ) and was very hopeful that his book on the crushing of civil liberties during and immediately after World War I would be as good. Unfortunately, I was disappointed. To be sure Hochschild does a very good job in covering the era, but I believe he over does it. It is one civil liberties violation after another with the evil Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer and his Bureau of Investigation aide J. Edgar Hoover ferreting out socialists, Wobblies, communists, labor union organizers ad Black Americans coming home from the war. The author leaves no doubt in the reader’s mind that he is man of the Left.

It is too much and ignores the real scare that was facing Americans, the very deadly influenza pandemic. Simply put, his book lacks context and he leave out the fact that part of the fear of Bolshevism was based o the fact that Lenin and Trotsky took Russia out of the war to the very real detriment of the American soldiers arriving in France. Further he doesn’t go into detail about the breakup of socialist party into a socialist and a communist faction.

Nevertheless, I learned much from the book. Hochschild shows the full extent of press censorship accomplish by Postmaster General Albert Burleson. In those days magazines were distributed by mail and the postal authorities had the ability to suspend mailing privileges of any publication it deemed contrary to the Espionage Act.

I also learned of  Leo Wendell an accomplished government spy and provocateur entrenched deep in the labor movement. One of the leading red hunters of the day was the very anti-immigrant Senator Albert Johnson of the state of Washington. In 1924 he would go on to write the Johnson-Reed drastically restricting immigration.

Woodrow Wilson does nothing to stop the attacks on civil liberties and, in fact, he refuses to pardon of commute the sentence of Socialist Party leader Eugene Debs. It would take the election of Republican Warren Harding to commute Debs’ sentence many others. It was Harding who put an end the Red Scare.

One of the heroes in the book is Department of Labor official, Louis Post. He personally stopped a huge number of deportations and embarrassed Palmer before a congressional committee thereby hurting his presidential prospects.

In sum Hochschild has given us a sese of this sordid time in American history. However, it would have helped if spent more time on the lives of every day American were trying to live normal lives.

For the full Amazon URL see: Red Scare 1917-21 (amazon.com)

 

Friday, June 25, 2021

My Amazon Review of David Pietrusza's "1920: The Year of Six Presidents"

 

A Rocky Road to Normalcy

 

1920 was quite a year. The 18th Amendment (prohibition) was enforced, the 19th Amendment was ratified (Women’s Suffrage), the Palmer raids against radicals continued, the Ku Klux Klan was revived, Sacco and Vanzetti were arrested for murder, and the North discovered there was a large African American population living in its major cities as a result of the wartime demand for labor. Into this hothouse comes the 1920 presidential election.

 

Author David Pietrusza highlights the role of six presidents who played key roles in that year’s election. First there is Theodore Roosevelt who in late 1918 after Republican congressional victories became the odds-on favorite for the nomination. Unfortunately, he dies in early 1919 and his chosen successor General Leonard Wood fails to win the Republican nomination. Then there is President Woodrow Wilson who was ready to run for an unprecedented third term but was incapacitated by a stroke that enabled his wife Edith to become the de facto president. We see young and charismatic Franklin Roosevelt advancing to become the Democratic nominee for Vice President. Before that he was talked about running for Vice President under Herbert Hoover on the Democratic ticket.

 

Of course, Hoover would ultimately acknowledge that he was a Republican. Hoover was extraordinarily popular in his role to feed famine struck Europe and even Keynes noted that Hoover was one of the few people who came out of the Versailles Conference with an enhanced reputation.

 

On the Republican side we see the very amiable and very flawed Warren Harding win the nomination under the aegis of his corrupt campaign manager Harry Dougherty. Harding’s affairs and illegitimate children would have made Bill Clinton blush. In a multi-ballot affair, the Republican leadership settles on Harding in the famous Room 404 of the Blackstone Hotel which forever after would be called the smoke-filled room. When a delegate from Oregon nominates Massachusetts governor Calvin Coolidge for Vice President a genuine stampede on the floor of the convention leads to his nomination. Coolidge is known for breaking the Boston police strike in 1919.

 

The Democratic Convention is also a multi-ballot affair that leads to the nomination of Ohio governor James Cox, a favorite of the big city bosses. Unlike the Republican Convention the Democratic bosses left no tracks. Ironically both Harding and Cox are newspaper publishers from the same state. Nevertheless, the decision of the voter in November was clear. Both Harding and the Republicans in congress won a blowout victory. One of Harding’s first acts is to pardon Socialist candidate Eugene Debs who was serving in prison, an act that Wilson refused to do.

 

Where Pietrusza is acute is his character sketches of the book’s major protagonists. Wilson is a stubborn old man, Harding is in way over his head, Hoover, though brilliant is cold and austere and Coolidge, though quiet is a dedicated public servant. This book is a great read for political junkies. I learned that the Republicans put a mild anti-lynching plank written by the NAACP and that the seeds for Roosevelt’s 1932 run were planted in 1920 where he collected the names of leading Democrats throughout the country during his vice-presidential campaign.

For the full Amazon URL see: A Rocky Road to Normalcy (amazon.com)