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John Reed

 
Biography: John Silas Reed
 

John Silas Reed (1887-1920), American revolutionist, poet, and journalist, became a symbol in many American minds of the Communist revolution in Russia.

John Reed was born in the mansion of his maternal grandparents outside Portland, Ore., on Oct. 22, 1887. His father sold agricultural implements and insurance. Reed was a frail youngster and suffered with a kidney ailment. He attended Portland public schools and graduated from Harvard in 1910. Although he felt like an outsider, Reed had been active at the university.

Reed went to work for American Magazine, of muckraking fame, and The Masses, a radical publication. Journalists Ida Tarbell and Lincoln Steffens awakened his liberal feelings, but he soon bypassed them as a radical. In 1914 Metropolitan Magazine sent Reed to Mexico, where he boldly walked within the lines of Pancho Villa's army. Villa reportedly made Reed a staff officer and called the journalist "brigadier general." Reed next gave sympathetic coverage to striking coal miners in Colorado. He went to Europe for Metropolitan Magazine when World War I broke out in 1914. He covered the battle fronts in Germany, Russia, Serbia, Romania, and Bulgaria.

Reed and his wife, Louise Bryant, were in Russia during the October Revolution. In reporting the Bolshevik effort to gain control, Reed won V. I. Lenin's friendship. Here Reed gathered materials for his most noted work, Ten Days That Shook the World (1919). It is generally recognized that the book lacks factual accuracy, but Bertram Wolfe (1960) contends that "as literature Reed's book is the finest piece of eyewitness reporting the revolution produced."

In 1918 Reed was named Russian consul general at New York, a status never recognized by the United States. In 1919, after he had been expelled from the National Socialist Convention, he formed the Communist Labor party in the United States. He was arrested several times for incendiary speeches and finally, after printing articles in the Voice of Labor, was indicted for sedition. He fled to the Soviet Union on a forged passport. The thing usually unreported about Reed among the Muscovites was his unrelenting contention that decisions should be made democratically and his opposition to a monolithic society under dictatorial control. Twice he tried to return to the United States but was unsuccessful. Stricken by typhus, he died on Oct. 19, 1920, in Moscow. He was given a state funeral and buried in the Kremlin.

Further Reading

Bertram D. Wolfe's brilliant introduction to the 1960 Modern Library edition of Ten Days That Shook the World takes note of Reed's inconsistencies in the epic, which is more literary than historical. The best work on Reed is Granville Hicks, John Reed: The Making of a Revolutionary (1936). A portrait of Reed is in the anecdotal-historical collection of essays of Bertram D. Wolfe, Strange Communists I Have Known (1965).

Additional Sources

Baskin, Alex, John Reed: the early years in Greenwich Village, New York: Archives of Social History, 1990.

Duke, David C., John Reed, Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1987.

Homberger, Eric, John Reed, Manchester; New York: Manchester University Press; New York: Distributed exclusively in the USA and Canada by St. Martin's Press, 1990.

Rosenstone, Robert A., Romantic revolutionary: a biography of John Reed, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1990, 1975.

Tuck, Jim, Pancho Villa and John Reed: two faces of romantic revolution, Tucson, Ariz.: University of Arizona Press, 1984.

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(born Oct. 22, 1887, Portland, Ore., U.S. — died Oct. 19, 1920, Moscow, Russia) U.S. journalist. He attended Harvard University and began writing for the radical socialist journal The Masses in 1913. He covered the revolutionary fighting in Mexico (1914) and was frequently arrested for leading labour strikes. A war correspondent during World War I, he became a close friend of Vladimir Lenin and witnessed the Russian Revolution of 1917, described in his book Ten Days That Shook the World (1919). He became head of the U.S. Communist Labor Party; indicted for sedition, he escaped to the Soviet Union, where he died of typhus and was buried beside the Kremlin wall.

For more information on John Reed, visit Britannica.com.

 
US History Companion: Reed, John
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(1887-1920), journalist and political radical. Reed's life was filled with excitement, courage, and contradictions. Born into a middle-class family in Portland, Oregon, he attended private schools and graduated from Harvard University in 1910, determined to make a name for himself as a poet. He settled in Greenwich Village where he found a job with a magazine. By 1912 he became associated with the radical periodical, the Masses. A year later he published a witty verse portrait of Village life, The Day in Bohemia, or Life among the Artists.

While observing striking silk workers in Paterson, New Jersey, Reed was arrested, and his subsequent article for the Masses, "War in Paterson," not only suggested an awakened social conscience and made him an immediate Village celebrity; it also changed his life. The article was the first example of the participatory journalism that remained his trademark.

Radicalized by the Paterson experience, he directed the Paterson Pageant at Madison Square Garden on June 7, 1913, to raise money for the strikers. Using striking workers, short dramatic scenes, and audience participation, Reed anticipated several innovative techniques employed by pageantry and radical theater in the 1920s and 1930s.

In late 1913, Reed was sent by Metropolitan magazine to report on the Mexican Revolution. His fame grew as he rode with revolutionaries, interviewed their celebrated leader, Pancho Villa, and merged personal experiences with dramatic events in an impressionistic analysis, Insurgent Mexico (1914). Reed wrote best about events to which he was personally committed. Unlike his Mexican reporting, his articles on World War I were less than brilliant because he opposed the war. His journalistic career seemed to be unraveling when he was barred from the western front because of a foolish prank. Yet the most important part of his life was just beginning when he and his wife, Louise Bryant, a fellow writer, went to Russia after the czar's overthrow.

Reed discovered in revolutionary Russia a working class determined to control its own destiny. In Petrograd when the Bolsheviks seized power, he sympathetically described the events in Ten Days That Shook the World (1919). Reed subordinated his persona to the book's central character, the Russian working class. He anticipated the new journalism of the 1960s by actively participating in the events he was describing and by exploring the meaning of the revolution by trying to capture the emotions of its participants.

In Russia, as in Paterson and Mexico, Reed was committed to the events he reported. This commitment went further in the case of Russia than ever before, however; he tried to help the revolution succeed by working for the Bureau of International Revolutionary Propaganda in Moscow and later by helping found an American communist party. Neither doctrinaire nor systematic in his thinking, he tried to ensure that this party would conform to unique American needs. He was instrumental in helping found the Communist Labor party, a body distinct from the Communist party of the foreign-language federations, which he believed did not understand the psychology of the American working class. At the Second Congress of the Communist International in Moscow, he also unsuccessfully campaigned for the creation of an industrial union in the United States along the lines of the iww rather than following party doctrine of trying to control from within the more conservative unions like the afl.

After his death of typhus in 1920, he was buried within the Kremlin walls. At the time of his death he was still deeply committed to the revolution but willing to question the application of its ideals to the United States.

Bibliography:

Granville Hicks, John Reed: The Making of a Revolutionary (1937); Robert A. Rosenstone, Romantic Revolutionary: A Biography of John Reed (1975).

Author:

David C. Duke

See also Communist Party; Expatriates and Exiles; Paterson Silk Strike; Radicalism.


 
Columbia Encyclopedia: John Reed
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Reed, John, 1887–1920, American journalist and radical leader, b. Portland, Oreg. After graduating from Harvard in 1910, he wrote articles for various publications and from 1913 was attached to the radical magazine The Masses. His coverage of the Paterson, N.J., silk workers strike of 1913 profoundly affected him, and thereafter he became a proponent of revolutionary politics. The articles that he wrote from Mexico about Pancho Villa established his reputation as a journalist and a radical. He served as a reporter in Europe in World War I and was in Petrograd (now St. Petersburg) when the Bolsheviks seized power in 1917; his book, Ten Days That Shook the World (1919), is considered the best eyewitness account of the revolution. Expelled from the U.S. Socialist convention in 1919, he helped to organize the Communist Labor party, a left-wing splinter group of the Socialist party. He was indicted for sedition in New York City in 1918 and in Philadelphia in 1919, but both cases were dropped. Reed returned to the USSR, worked in the Soviet bureau of propaganda, and was appointed Soviet consul to New York. Upon protest from the U.S. government, Reed was withdrawn from the consulship. He died in Moscow of typhus and was buried at the Kremlin. A selection of his writings was edited by John Stuart (1955).

Bibliography

See biographies by G. Hicks (1936), R. O'Connor and D. L. Walker (1967), and B. Gelb (1973).

 
Works: Works by John Reed
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(1887-1920)

1914Insurgent Mexico. The radical journalist's first book is a collection of his dispatches covering the Mexican revolt of Pancho Villa.
1916The War in Eastern Europe. Reed had produced these articles based on his experiences as a war correspondent for the Metropolitan, the Masses, and the Seven Arts. He saw relatively little of the fighting in World War I but a great deal of the social conditions of the Russian people, which he describes convincingly.
1919Ten Days That Shook the World. Reed's most important work is this firsthand, sympathetic account of the Russian Revolution, which he describes as "a slice of intensified history." Officially approved by the Soviet government, it would feature an introduction by Vladimir Lenin in subsequent editions.

 
Quotes By: John Reed
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Quotes:

"In the relations of a weak Government and a rebellious people there comes a time when every act of the authorities exasperates the masses, and every refusal to act excites their contempt."

 
Wikipedia: John Reed (journalist)
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John Reed

John Reed, American journalist
Born October 22, 1887(1887-10-22)
Portland, Oregon, U.S.
Died October 17, 1920 (aged 32)
Moscow, Russia
Occupation Journalist
Spouse(s) Louise Bryant
Signature

John "Jack" Silas Reed (22 October 1887 – 17 October 1920) was an American journalist, poet, and communist activist, remembered for his first-hand account of the Bolshevik Revolution, Ten Days that Shook the World. He was the husband of the writer and feminist Louise Bryant.

Contents

Early life and education

Reed was born in Portland, Oregon, the son of Charles Jerome and Margaret (Green) Reed[1]. His mother was the daughter of a leading Portland citizen who had made a fortune in pig iron manufacturing[2]. His father, who had recently come from the East when they married in 1886, represented an agricultural machinery manufacturer and with his ready wit quickly won acceptance in Portland’s business community.[3]

The young John, universally called Jack, was born in his mother's mansion and baptized in the fashionable Trinity Episcopal Church (later abandoning religion).[4] He grew up surrounded by nurses and servants, his upper-class playmates carefully selected. He had a brother, Harry, two years his junior.[5] A sickly child, he was sent, at age nine, to the recently-established Portland Academy, a private boarding school, where he was very unhappy.[6] In September 1904, he was sent to Morristown School, New Jersey, to prepare for college (his father had not gone to college and wanted his sons to attend Harvard).[7] There, he made the football team and although he did poorly in most subjects, showed literary promise. Around this time his father's social standing fell because of his muckraking activities in exposing the timber industry's corruption.[8]

Reed entered Harvard College in September 1906 (passing the entrance examination on his second try – something he was allowed to do despite having earned a C in English, a D in history and French, a pass in Chemistry, and failing Latin and geometry).[9] Tall, handsome, and light-hearted, he threw himself into all manner of student activities. He was a member of the cheerleading team, the swimming team and the dramatic club. He served on the editorial boards of the Lampoon and the Harvard Monthly and as president of the Harvard Glee Club. He wrote a play produced by the Hasty Pudding Club, and was made ivy orator and poet. He attended meetings of the Socialist Club, which his friend Walter Lippmann founded in May 1908, but never joined – his social conscience was still dormant and there were too many contradictions involved.[10] Reed failed to make football and crew, but participated in low-prestige sports like swimming and water polo, at which he excelled.[11] He was frustrated by the dismissive attitude the Eastern aristocracy showed the energetic young man, passing him over for membership in the waiting clubs (which one joined in preparation of the final clubs) despite his having broken a friendship with a Jewish classmate for the purpose of social advancement.[12] Still, his mentor, literature professor Charles Copeland, helped develop his talents.[10] Graduating in 1910, he visited England, France, and Spain before moving to New York City in March 1911.

Journalism

He grew to love New York, relentlessly exploring it and writing poems about it. Reed enjoyed the independence he now had from his parents, from Portland (which he hated), and from Harvard snobbery. Although living in Greenwich Village, he kept somewhat apart from its myriad intense, hostile cliques.[13] He joined the staff of the American Magazine in 1911 with the invaluable help of Lincoln Steffens,[14] and in 1912 published “Sangar”, probably his finest poem[15] (Poetry, December 1912; also privately printed), besides producing the first of the Dutch Treat Club shows, Everymagazine. The following year he issued privately The Day in Bohemia.

Reed's central, tortuous relationship in New York was with Mabel Dodge, a married woman eight years his senior. They met in early spring 1913. She dominated and suffocated him, threatening suicide several times when he seemed to neglect her.[16] Visiting Europe later that year, they consummated their relationship in Paris. Problems soon developed. He was very interested in the sights the continent had to offer. She was mainly preoccupied with him.[17] Upon their return she continued to attempt to keep his mind off politics.[18]

His serious interest in social problems was first aroused, at about this time, by Lincoln Steffens and Ida Tarbell, and once aroused it quickly led him to a far more radical position than theirs. In 1913 he joined the staff of The Masses, edited by Max Eastman, contributing more than fifty articles, reviews and shorter pieces. The first of Reed's many arrests came in Paterson, New Jersey, in 1913, for attempting to speak on behalf of the strikers in the silk mills. A short jail term radicalized him. He allied himself with the IWW (though he was still not a socialist).[19] His brilliant account of his experiences appeared in June as "War in Paterson". During the same year, following a suggestion made by Bill Haywood, picked up by Dodge and enthusiastically endorsed by Reed, he put on "The Pageant of the Paterson Strike" in Madison Square Garden for the benefit of the strikers.[19]

In the autumn of 1913 he was sent to Mexico by the Metropolitan Magazine to report the Mexican Revolution. Dodge followed him to El Paso but returned several days later.[20] He participated for four months in the perils of Pancho Villa's army, while his articles brought him national reputation as a war correspondent. They were republished in book form as Insurgent Mexico (1914). He was with Villa's Constitutionalist Army when it defeated Federal forces at Torreón, opening the way for its advance on Mexico City.[21] He adored Villa. Carranza left him cold. Reed deeply sympathized with the plight of the peons and vehemently opposed American intervention, which came shortly after he left. On April 30, he arrived in Colorado, scene of the recent Ludlow massacre. There he spent a little more than a week and investigated the events, spoke on behalf of the miners, wrote an impassioned article on the subject ("The Colorado War", published in July), and came to believe much more deeply in class conflict.[22] That summer he spent in Provincetown, Massachusetts with Dodge and her son, putting together Insurgent Mexico and interviewing President Wilson on the subject. (The resulting report, much watered down at White House insistence, was not a success.)[23]

On August 14, 1914, shortly after Germany declared war on France, he set sail for neutral Italy, having been sent by the Metropolitan. He met Dodge in Naples and they made their way to Paris. They were uneasy with each other and she was depressed, knowing she could never fully possess him. He saw the war as emerging from imperialist commercial rivalries, showing little sympathy for Great Britain. In an anonymous piece ("The Traders’ War", The Masses, September 1914), he famously wrote, "This is not Our War." In France he was frustrated by wartime censorship and the difficulty of accessing the front. Reed and Dodge went to London and Dodge soon left for New York, to the relief of Reed. The rest of 1914 he spent drinking with French prostitutes, and with a German woman.[24] The two went to Berlin in early December but then broke off the affair. While there he interviewed Karl Liebknecht, who was one of the few socialists in Germany to vote against war credits. Reed was deeply disappointed by the general collapse in working-class solidarity promised by the Second International, and by its replacement with militarism and nationalism. On a visit to the German side of the Front south of Ypres on January 12, 1915, he probably fired two shots in the direction of the French, which earned him widespread condemnation.[25]

He returned to New York in the middle of that month where, despite his efforts, he failed to reconcile with Dodge. His time was spent writing about the war, eventually leading to a return to Eastern Europe later that year with Canadian Boardman Robinson. Traveling from Thessaloniki, they met scenes of profound devastation in Serbia (including a bombed-out Belgrade), also going through Bulgaria and Romania. They passed through the Jewish Pale of Settlement in Bessarabia, and in Chełm they were arrested, incarcerated for several weeks and liable to be shot for espionage had not the American ambassador shown some interest. Going to Petrograd, an outraged Reed found the ambassador inclined to believe they were spies, and they were re-arrested when they tried to slip into Romania. It was the British ambassador (Robinson being a British subject) who finally secured permission for them to leave, but not before all their papers were seized in Kiev. It was at this time that his hatred for the Tsarist regime and love for the Russian people began to develop. In Bucharest they spent time piecing together their journey (Reed at one point traveling to Constantinople, hoping to see action at Gallipoli, but being rebuffed), from which Reed’s The War in Eastern Europe (April 1916) would emerge. He sailed for New York in October.

After returning to New York, he paid a visit to his mother in Portland, where he met and fell in love with Louise Bryant, who joined him in the East in January 1916. Bryant was less domineering than Dodge, and, though happy, both had affairs with others rather freely. Early in 1916 Reed met Eugene O'Neill, and beginning that May the three rented a cottage in Provincetown, where Bryant and O'Neill, who fascinated her, began a romance. It was during this time in Provincetown that Mab Dodge showed up looking for Jack. Reed told her firmly that he was not interested in renewing their relationship and that it was over.[26]

Jack Reed opposed the March 1916 intervention of General Pershing into Mexico, seeing it as futile.[27] That summer Reed covered the Presidential nominating conventions, showing pity for the Progressives, whose nomination Theodore Roosevelt, now an inveterate war agitator, declined.[28] Reed himself endorsed Wilson, hoping he would keep America out of the war.[29] He married Bryant in Peekskill in November before heading for an operation at Johns Hopkins Hospital resulting in the removal of one kidney, staying in hospital until mid-December. One of his doctors was Carl Binger, the Jewish friend he had dropped at Harvard, but nothing was said of the matter.[30] The operation rendered him ineligible for conscription and saved him from the fate of a conscientious objector. During 1916 he published privately Tamburlaine and Other Poems.

As the country drifted toward war, Reed was marginalized: his relationship with the Metropolitan was over, he pawned his late father's watch and sold his Cape Cod cottage to Margaret Sanger.[31] When Wilson asked for a declaration of war on April 2, 1917, Reed shouted at a hastily-convened People's Council in Washington: "This is not my war, and I will not support it. This is not my war, and I will have nothing to do with it."[32] In July and August Reed continued to write very strong articles for The Masses, which the Post Office now refused to mail, and for Seven Arts, which as a result of an article by Reed and one earlier in the summer by Randolph Bourne, had its financial backing cut off and ceased publication.[33] Reed was stunned by the nation's pro-war fervor, and his career lay in ruins.[34]

Communism

First trip to Russia

Reed and Bryant traveled via Finland to Russia in August-September 1917; she stayed until January 20, 1918 and he until early February. Upon his arrival he was greatly excited by the fervor of revolution, and the American Ambassador placed him under close surveillance. Reed sensed that power was draining away from the Provisional Government to the Soviets,[35] something which was confirmed by an October 10 visit to the Latvian Front, where he observed the troops' usual deference had been replaced by defiance to their officers.[36] However, unlike Trotsky and other Bolsheviks, who would later claim that their party had planned and guided events leading up to the October Revolution (of which Reed and Bryant were enthusiastic observers), Reed saw a much more chaotic version of events that lacked inevitability.[37] He wrote much of the Bolshevik propaganda dropped over the German lines. He met Trotsky and was introduced to Lenin during a break of the Constituent Assembly on January 18, 1918. By December, his initial $2000 grant (donated by a wealthy American radical[38]) was nearly exhausted and, desperate for cash, he took employment with an American, Raymond Robins of the Red Cross, who wished to set up a newspaper promoting American interests; Reed complied, but in the dummy issue he prepared he included a warning beneath the masthead: "this paper is devoted to promoting the interests of American capital."[39] The dissolution of the Constituent Assembly left Reed unmoved, and two days later, armed with a rifle, he joined a patrol of Red Guards prepared to defend the Foreign Office from counter-revolutionary attack.[40] Reed then attended the opening of the Third Congress of Soviets, where he gave a short speech promising to bring the news of the revolution to America, where he hoped it would "call forth an answer from America's oppressed and exploited masses." American journalist Edgar Sisson told Reed that he was being used by the Bolsheviks for their propaganda, a rebuke he accepted.[40] In January, Trotsky, responding to Reed's concern about the safety of his substantial archive, offered Reed the post of Soviet Consul in New York; as the United States did not recognize the Bolshevik government, his credentials would almost certainly have been rejected and he faced prison (which would have given the Bolsheviks some propaganda material). The appointment was viewed as a massive blunder by most Americans in Petrograd, and the businessman Alex Gumberg directly approached Lenin, showing him a prospectus in which Reed called for massive American capital support for Russia and for the setting up of a newspaper to express the American viewpoint on the negotiations at Brest-Litovsk. Lenin found the proposal unsavory and withdrew the nomination; thereafter, Reed only mentioned Gumberg's name with a string of epithets attached.[41] Ten Days that Shook the World would emerge from these experiences, being published early in 1919 and subsequently translated into numerous languages.

Back in the USA

On his away back to USA Reed travelled from Russia to Finland;he didn't have a visa or passport while crossing to Finland. In Turku harbor when Reed was on boarding a ship on his way to Stockholm Finnish police arrested Reed and took him to Kakola prison in Turku until he was released. From Finland Reed traveled to Kristiania, Norway via Stockholm until April; during this period and after, US government surveillance of his activities and correspondence remained intense. His papers were not returned to him until November. Back in America, he took pains to defend the Bolsheviks and oppose American intervention, but a hyper-patriotic public incensed at Russia's departure from the war gave him a generally cold reception. While he was in Russia, his articles in The Masses and particularly a headline, "Knit a straight-jacket for your soldier boy", had been largely instrumental in bringing an indictment against that magazine for sedition. The first Masses trial ended the day before he arrived in a hung jury; the defendants, including himself, were to be retried, so after returning, he immediately posted $2,000 bail on April 29.[42] The second trial also ended in a hung jury. In Philadelphia, he stood outside a closed hall on May 31, harangued a crowd of 1,000 until police dragged him away, was charged with inciting a riot, and posted $5,000 bail. He was now more aggressively political, intolerant, and self-destructive;[43] his third arrest since his return from Russia came on September 14, when he was charged with violating the Sedition Act and freed on $5,000 bail. This was a day after possibly the largest demonstration for Bolshevik Russia held in the United States (in The Bronx), when Reed passionately defended the revolution, which he seemed to think was coming to America as well.[44] He tried to prevent Allied intervention, arguing that the Russians were contributing to the war effort by checking German ambitions in the Ukraine and Japanese designs on Siberia, but this came to naught.[45] On February 21-22, 1919, Bryant was fiercely grilled before a Senate committee exploring Bolshevik propaganda activities in the US, but emerged resilient; Reed followed on the 22nd, delivering quick, subtle testimony which was, however, savagely distorted by the press.[46] Later that day he went to Philadelphia to stand trial for his May speech; despite a hostile judge, press, and patriotic speech by the prosecutor, Reed's lawyer convinced the jury the case was about free speech, and he was acquitted.[46] Returning to New York, Reed continued speaking widely and participating in the various twists of socialist politics that year.

Affiliated with the Left Wing of the Socialist Party, Reed with the other radicals was expelled from the National Socialist Convention in Chicago on August 30, 1919. The radicals then split into two bitterly hostile groups, forming the Communist Labor Party (Reed's, in the creation of which he had been indispensable) and, the next day, the Communist Party of America. Reed was the international delegate of the former, wrote its manifesto and platform, edited its paper, The Voice of Labor, and was denounced as "Jack the Liar" in the Communist Party organ, The Communist. Reed's writings from 1919 display doubts about Western-style democracy and defend the dictatorship of the proletariat, which he saw as a necessary step that would prefigure the true democracy "based upon equality and the liberty of the individual."[47]

Second trip to Russia

Indicted for sedition and hoping to secure Comintern backing for the CLP, he escaped from America in early October on board a Scandinavian frigate by means of a forged passport, working his way to Bergen as a stoker. Given shore leave, he disappeared to Kristiania, crossed into Sweden on October 22, passed through Finland and made his way to Moscow by train. In the cold winter of 1919-1920, he traveled in the region around Moscow, observing factories, communes, and villages; filling notebooks; and carrying on an affair with a Russian woman.[48] His feelings about the revolution were now ambiguous: on the one hand, he told Emma Goldman, who had recently arrived aboard The Buford and especially complained about the Cheka, that the enemies of the revolution deserved their fate. However, he suggested that she see Angelica Balabanoff, a critic of the current situation, indicating he wanted Goldman to hear the other side.[49]

Reed, although facing the threat of arrest in Illinois, tried to return to home after February 1920. At that time, the Soviets organized a convention to establish a United Communist Party of America.[50] Reed attempted to leave Russia through Latvia that month, but his train never arrived forcing him to hitch a ride in the boxcar of an eastbound military train to Petrograd.[51] In March, he crossed into Helsinki, where he had radical friends, including a future politician and SDKL member of parliament Hella Wuolijoki, and, with their help,was hidden in the hold of a freighter. On the 13th, customs officials finally found him in a coal bunker. He was taken to the police station, where he maintained that he was the seaman "Jim Gormley." Eventually, the jewels, photographs, letters, and fake documents he had in his possession forced him to reveal his true identity. Although beaten several times and threatened with torture, he refused, however, to surrender the names of his local contacts. As a result of his silence, he was not able to be tried for treason, and was instead convicted of smuggling and having jewels in his posession (102 small diamonds worth $14,000 which were confiscated).

The US Secretary of State was satisfied with Reed's arrest and pressured the Finns for his papers. American authorities, however, remained indifferent to Reed's fate.[52] Although Reed paid the fine for smuggling, he was still detained illegally, and his physical condition and state of mind deteriorated rapidly. He suffered from depression and insomnia, wrote alarming letters to Bryant, and threatened a hunger strike on May 18.[53] He was finally released in early June, and sailed for Tallinn on the 5th. Two days later, he traveled to Petrograd, recuperating from malnourishment and scurvy caused by having been fed dried fish almost exclusively, but his spirits were high.[54]

At the end of June, he traveled to Moscow and, after discussing with Bryant the possibility of her joining him, she gained passage on a Swedish tramp steamer and arrived in Gothenburg on August 10.[54] At the same time, Reed attended the second Comintern congress. Although his mood was as jovial and boisterous as ever, his physical appearance had deteriorated; he was quite thin, seemed weak and was sallow and his face lined.[55]

During this congress, he bitterly objected to the deference other revolutionaries showed to the Russians, who assumed the tide of revolutionary fervor was ebbing making it necessary for the communist party to work within the existing institutions – a policy Reed felt would be disastrous.[56] He was contemptuous of the bullying tactics displayed during the congress by Karl Radek and Grigory Zinoviev, who ordered Reed to attend the Congress of the Peoples of the East to be held at Baku on August 15.

It was a long journey, five days by train through countryside devastated by civil war and infected by typhus. Reed was reluctant to go and asked to arrive later, as he had planned to go first to Petrograd, where Bryant was traveling from Murmansk. Zinoviev insisted Reed take the official train: "the Comintern has made a decision. Obey." Reed would normally have rebelled at being spoken to with such contempt, but he needed Soviet good-will at the moment and was not prepared for a final break with the Comintern, so he made the trip with great reluctance.[57]

John Reed's funeral in Moscow 1920

Reed's actions and feelings during this time are a matter of speculation, but years after abandoning Communism, his friend Benjamin Gitlow asserted that the treatment Reed received from Zinoviev filled Reed with bitter disillusionment for the Communist movement.[58]

During his time in Baku, Reed received a telegram announcing Bryant's arrival in Moscow. He followed her there, arriving on September 15, and was able to tell her of the events of the preceding eight months. He appeared older and his clothes were in tatters. While in Moscow, he took her to meet Lenin, Trotsky, Lev Kamenev, and other leading Bolsheviks and also to visit Moscow's ballet and art galleries.

Death

Reed was determined to return home, but fell ill on September 25. At first diagnosed with influenza, he was hospitalized five days later and was found to have spotted typhus. Bryant spent all her time with him, but there were no medicines to be obtained because of the Allied blockade. His mind started to wander, and then he lost the use of the right side of his body and could no longer speak. His wife was holding his hand when he died.[59] After a hero's funeral, his body was buried in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis.

Legacy

Reed, allowed to occupy the roles of "romantic revolutionary" and "playboy" in American culture,[60] was also used as a symbol by the Communist movement to which he belonged. He was the only American buried in the Kremlin, although half of Bill Haywood's ashes are there as well. By the 1930s, John Reed Clubs, affiliated with the Communist Party, existed in his honor in nearly all the large cities of the United States.

Soviet director Sergei Eisenstein's influential 1927 silent film October: Ten Days That Shook the World was based on Reed's book.

The 1981 film Reds, starring Warren Beatty, Diane Keaton, and Jack Nicholson and based on his life, won three Academy Awards, and was nominated for nine more. Other film portrayals of Reed include the 1982 two-part Soviet production Red Bells, starring Franco Nero; and the 1973 film Reed: Mexico Insurgente, based on his accounts of the Mexican Revolution.

A perennial urban legend in Reed's hometown states that Reed College was named for him. Despite the college's reputation for leftist politics, there is no truth to this rumor.[1] [2]

Bibliography

References

  1. ^ Ancestry of John Silas Reed, retrieved December 21, 2008
  2. ^ Portland, Oregon, Its History and Builders, retrieved December 21, 2008
  3. ^ Homberger, pp. 7-8
  4. ^ Homberger, p. 36
  5. ^ Homberger, p. 8
  6. ^ Homberger, p. 9
  7. ^ Munk, Michael. John Reed, marxists.org. Accessed November 4, 2007. "In the fall of 1904, Jack left Portland to attend Morristown School in New Jersey."
  8. ^ Homberger, p. 12
  9. ^ Homberger, p. 15
  10. ^ a b Homberger, p. 21
  11. ^ Homberger, p. 16
  12. ^ Homberger, p. 19
  13. ^ Homberger, p. 33
  14. ^ Homberger, p. 27
  15. ^ DAB, p. 450
  16. ^ Homberger, p. 54
  17. ^ Homberger, p. 52
  18. ^ Homberger, p. 53
  19. ^ a b Homberger, p. 49
  20. ^ Homberger, p. 55
  21. ^ Homberger, p. 69
  22. ^ Homberger, pp. 75-6
  23. ^ Homberger, p. 79
  24. ^ Homberger, p. 87
  25. ^ Homberger, p. 89
  26. ^ Homberger, p. 114
  27. ^ Homberger, p. 109
  28. ^ Homberger, p. 112
  29. ^ Homberger, p. 116
  30. ^ Homberger, p. 118
  31. ^ Homberger, p. 120
  32. ^ Homberger, p. 122
  33. ^ Homberger, pp. 128-9
  34. ^ Homberger, p. 130
  35. ^ Homberger, p. 134
  36. ^ Homberger, p. 138
  37. ^ Homberger, pp. 148-9
  38. ^ Homberger, p. 132
  39. ^ Homberger, pp. 159-60
  40. ^ a b Homberger, p. 161
  41. ^ Homberger, pp. 161-3
  42. ^ Homberger, p. 167
  43. ^ Homberger, p. 172
  44. ^ Homberger, p. 174
  45. ^ Homberger, p. 171
  46. ^ a b Homberger, p. 180
  47. ^ Homberger, pp. 191-3
  48. ^ Homberger, p. 210
  49. ^ Homberger, pp. 202-3
  50. ^ Homberger, pp. 203-4
  51. ^ Homberger, p. 204
  52. ^ Homberger, pp. 205-6
  53. ^ Homberger, p. 206
  54. ^ a b Homberger, p. 207
  55. ^ Homberger, pp. 207-8
  56. ^ Homberger, p. 208
  57. ^ Homberger, pp. 212-3
  58. ^ Homberger, p. 214
  59. ^ Homberger, p. 215
  60. ^ Homberger, p. 191

Further reading

  • Homberger, Eric. John Reed: Manchester University Press, Manchester, 1990.
  • Dictionary of American Biography, vol. 15, pp. 450-51. New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1935.
  • Rosenstone, Robert A. (1990), Romantic Revolutionary: A biography of John Reed, Harvard University Press, ISBN 0-674-77938-X 

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