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Carleton Beals

Carleton Beals (November 13, 1893 – April 4, 1979) was an American journalist, writer, historian, and political activist with a special interest in Latin America.[1] A major journalistic coup for him was his interview with the Nicaraguan rebel Augusto Sandino in February 1928.[2] In the 1920s he was part of the cosmopolitan group of intellectuals, artists, and journalists in Mexico City. He remained an active, prolific, and politically engaged leftist journalist and is the subject of a scholarly biography.[3]

Carleton Beals
BornNovember 13, 1893
DiedApril 4, 1979
EducationUniversity of California, Berkeley;
Columbia University
Occupation(s)Journalist, book author, historian, political activist
Notable creditThe only foreign journalist who interviewed General Augusto Sandino during Nicaragua's 1927–33 war against US military occupation
SpouseLilian Beals
RelativesCarrie Nation, grandmother

Early years edit

Beals was born in Medicine Lodge, Kansas. His father, Leon Eli Beals, lawyer and journalist, was the stepson[4] of Carrie Nation,[5] the temperance movement advocate.[5] His mother was Elvina Sybilla Blickensderfer.[6] His brother, Ralph Leon Beals, was the first anthropologist at University of California, Los Angeles.[7]

The family moved from Kansas when Beals was age three, and he attended school in Pasadena, California. After graduating from high school in 1911, he worked a variety of jobs while attending the University of California, Berkeley where he studied engineering and mining. He won the Bonnheim Essay Prize and the Bryce History Essay Prize.[8] After graduating in 1916,[9] cum laude,[8] he attended Columbia University on a graduate scholarship, earning a master's degree in 1917.[5]

Career edit

[Beals] is now the best informed and the most awkward living writer on Latin America. (Time, April 25, 1938)

[10]

Unable to find work as a writer, Beals took a job with Standard Oil Company, but it did not suit him. In 1918, he spent a brief period of time in jail as a World War I draft evader. Upon release, he decided to go see the world, and with what little money he had, Beals and his wife Lillian drove to Mexico.[11] There, he founded the English Preparatory Institute in 1919, taught at the American High School during 1919 to 1920, and was on the personal staff of President Carranza (1920).[9] They left Mexico in 1921 for Europe where Beals studied at the University of Madrid, and then the University of Rome. Back in Mexico, he became a correspondent for The Nation, separated from his wife, and became romantically involved with photographer Tina Modotti's sister, Mercedes.[11]

In February 1928, Oswald Garrison Villard, editor of The Nation, sent Beals to Nicaragua[12] to write a series of articles. He became notable as the only foreign journalist who interviewed General Augusto Sandino during Nicaragua's 1927–33 war against US military occupation.[13]

In all, Beals wrote over 200 magazine articles[14] for publications such as the New Republic[5] and Harper's Magazine.[15] Beals also wrote more than 45 books, including on history, geography, and travel. Some of his books are written for a juvenile audience.[16] His autobiography, Glass Houses, was published by J.B. Lippincott Company in 1938.[10] In 1931, Beals was awarded the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship for biographies.[17] His biography subjects included Porfirio Díaz, Huey P. Long, Roberto de la Selva, Stephen F. Austin, John Eliot, Carrie Nation, and Leon Trotsky.

During his career, Beals witnessed Mexican revolutions, lectured on Shakespeare, and was held incommunicado by a Mexican general.[10] His travels took him to French Morocco[broken anchor], Tunisia, Algiers, Greece, Turkey, the Soviet Union, Germany, and the Caribbean. He was a Ford Hall Forum speaker in 1936, and a member of the American Committee for the Defense of Leon Trotsky in 1937. The following year, Time magazine called Beals, "the best informed and the most awkward living writer on Latin America."[14]

Later years edit

During the 1960s, he supported the Fair Play for Cuba Committee. Beals was a hero to the young people of Cuba.[18]

Partial bibliography edit

I have done most of my writing in Spain, Italy, Mexico and Peru, and in this country, chiefly in New York, later in Guilford, Connecticut, since 1957 in Killingworth. (C. Beals)

[18]

  • 1921, The Mexican As He is
  • 1922, Magdalene of Michoacan
  • 1923, Rome Or Death; the Story of Fascism
  • 1923, Mexico; an Interpretation (Agrarian land reform in Mexico)
  • 1925, Tasks Awaiting President Calles of Mexico
  • 1926, The Church Problem in Mexico
  • 1927, Brimstone and Chili: A Book of Personal Experiences in the Southwest and in Mexico
  • 1929, Mexico's New Leader
  • 1929, Destroying Victor
  • 1930, The Coming Struggle for Latin America
  • 1931, Mexican Maze, with illustrations by Diego Rivera[19]
  • 1932, Porfirio Díaz. Dictator of Mexico
  • 1932, Banana Gold
  • 1933, The Crime of Cuba, with photographs by Walker Evans
  • 1934, Fire on the Andes
  • 1934, Black River
  • 1935, Rifle Rule in Cuba
  • 1935, The Story of Huey P. Long
  • 1936, The Stones Awake: A Novel of Mexico
  • 1936, Prologue to Cuban Freedom
  • 1937, America South
  • 1937, The New Genre of Roberto de la Selva
  • 1937, The Drug Eaters of the High Andes
  • 1938, Glass Houses, Ten Years of Free-Lancing
  • 1939, American Earth; the Biography of a Nation
  • 1939, The Coming Struggle for Latin America
  • 1940, Pan America
  • 1943, Dawn over the Amazon
  • 1948, Lands of the Dawning Morrow: The Awakening from Rio Grande to Cape Horn
  • 1949, The Long Land: Chile
  • 1953, First Men of America
  • 1953, Stephen F. Austin, Father of Texas
  • 1955, Our Yankee Heritage: New England's Contribution to American Civilazation
  • 1956, Adventure of the Western Sea, illustrated by Jacob Landau
  • 1956, Taste of Glory; a Novel
  • 1957, John Eliot, the Man Who Loved the Indians (July 31, 1604 – May 20, 1690)
  • 1958, House in Mexico
  • 1960, Cuba's Revolution: The First Year
  • 1960, Brass-Knuckle Crusade; the Great Know-Nothing Conspiracy, 1820–1860
  • 1961, Nomads and Empire Builders; Native Peoples and Cultures of South America
  • 1962, Cyclone Carry, the Story of Carry Nation
  • 1963, Latin America: World in Revolution
  • 1963, Eagles of the Andes: South American Struggles for Independence
  • 1965, War Within a War; the Confederacy Against Itself
  • 1967, Land of the Mayas; Yesterday and Today
  • 1968, The Great Revolt and Its Leaders: The History of Popular American Uprisings in the 1890s
  • 1969, The Case of Leon Trotsky [Lev Davydovič Trockij]: Report of Hearings On the Charges Made Against Him in the Moscow Trails
  • 1970, Stories Told by the Aztecs Before the Spaniards Came
  • 1970, The Nature of Revolution
  • 1970, Great Guerrilla Warriors
  • 1970, Colonial Rhode Island
  • 1973, The Incredible Incas: Yesterday and Today

References edit

  1. ^ Hilton, Ronald (March 23, 2002). "Carleton Beals". stanford.edu. Retrieved 2009-02-02.
  2. ^ John A. Britton, "Carleton Beals" in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture vol. 1, p. 315. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1996.
  3. ^ John A. Britton. Carleton Beals: A Radical Journalist in Latin America. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 1987
  4. ^ Edwards, Janice R. "Tales from River's End – Passport to Adventure Carry A. Nation, The Facts, Brazoria County and the San Bernard River". sanbernardriver.com. Archived from the original on 2007-08-03. Retrieved 2009-02-02.
  5. ^ a b c d Applegate, Edd (September 1996). Literary Journalism: A Biographical Dictionary of Writers and Editors. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 20–22. ISBN 0-313-29949-8. carleton beals kansas.
  6. ^ "NameCarleton Beals". corax.org. July 25, 2005. Retrieved 2009-02-02.
  7. ^ Hendrickson, Katie. . EMuseum. Minnesota State University, Mankato. Archived from the original on 2010-05-28. Retrieved 2009-08-10.
  8. ^ a b . lib.ks.us. Archived from the original on October 16, 2008. Retrieved 2009-02-02.
  9. ^ a b "Beals, Carleton," in Historians of Latin America in the United States, 1965: Biobibliographies of 680 Specialists. Ed. Howard F. Cline. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1966, 8.
  10. ^ a b c . time.com. April 25, 1938. Archived from the original on August 26, 2010. Retrieved 2009-02-02.
  11. ^ a b Hooks, Margaret (2000-09-20). Tina Modotti: Radical Photographer. Da Capo Press. pp. 115–116. ISBN 0-306-80981-8.
  12. ^ Black, George (December 1987). "Carleton Beals: a radical journalist in Latin America. (book reviews)". The Nation. findarticles.com. Retrieved 2009-02-02. [dead link]
  13. ^ "Our Century: The Twenties". The Nation. December 23, 1999. Archived from the original on March 11, 2007.
  14. ^ a b Gosse, Van (1993). Where the Boys are: Cuba, Cold War America and the Making of a New Left. Verso. p. 18. ISBN 0-86091-690-1.
  15. ^ "Beals, Carleton (1893–1979)". Vol. July 1935, July 1938, August 1943, and August 1944. harpers.org. Retrieved 2009-02-02. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  16. ^ Applegate, p. 22.
  17. ^ . gf.org. Archived from the original on 2011-06-03. Retrieved 2009-02-02.
  18. ^ a b Applegate, p. 22
  19. ^ Callcott, Wilfrid Hardy (February 1932). "Review: Mexican Maze, with Illustrations by Diego Rivera by Carleton Beals". The Hispanic American Historical Review. 12 (1): 73–75. doi:10.2307/2506438. JSTOR 2506438.

External links edit

  • Beals' articles:
    • "The Scottsboro Puppet Show", The Nation, 1936
    • "The Black Shirt Revolution, The Nation, 1922
  • Beals' testimony, Fair Play for Cuba Committee, 1960
  • "The Fewer Outsiders the Better," article by Beals critical of the American Committee for the Defense of Leon Trotsky

carleton, beals, november, 1893, april, 1979, american, journalist, writer, historian, political, activist, with, special, interest, latin, america, major, journalistic, coup, interview, with, nicaraguan, rebel, augusto, sandino, february, 1928, 1920s, part, c. Carleton Beals November 13 1893 April 4 1979 was an American journalist writer historian and political activist with a special interest in Latin America 1 A major journalistic coup for him was his interview with the Nicaraguan rebel Augusto Sandino in February 1928 2 In the 1920s he was part of the cosmopolitan group of intellectuals artists and journalists in Mexico City He remained an active prolific and politically engaged leftist journalist and is the subject of a scholarly biography 3 Carleton BealsBornNovember 13 1893Medicine Lodge Kansas USDiedApril 4 1979Hartford County Connecticut USEducationUniversity of California Berkeley Columbia UniversityOccupation s Journalist book author historian political activistNotable creditThe only foreign journalist who interviewed General Augusto Sandino during Nicaragua s 1927 33 war against US military occupationSpouseLilian BealsRelativesCarrie Nation grandmother Contents 1 Early years 2 Career 3 Later years 4 Partial bibliography 5 References 6 External linksEarly years editBeals was born in Medicine Lodge Kansas His father Leon Eli Beals lawyer and journalist was the stepson 4 of Carrie Nation 5 the temperance movement advocate 5 His mother was Elvina Sybilla Blickensderfer 6 His brother Ralph Leon Beals was the first anthropologist at University of California Los Angeles 7 The family moved from Kansas when Beals was age three and he attended school in Pasadena California After graduating from high school in 1911 he worked a variety of jobs while attending the University of California Berkeley where he studied engineering and mining He won the Bonnheim Essay Prize and the Bryce History Essay Prize 8 After graduating in 1916 9 cum laude 8 he attended Columbia University on a graduate scholarship earning a master s degree in 1917 5 Career edit Beals is now the best informed and the most awkward living writer on Latin America Time April 25 1938 10 Unable to find work as a writer Beals took a job with Standard Oil Company but it did not suit him In 1918 he spent a brief period of time in jail as a World War I draft evader Upon release he decided to go see the world and with what little money he had Beals and his wife Lillian drove to Mexico 11 There he founded the English Preparatory Institute in 1919 taught at the American High School during 1919 to 1920 and was on the personal staff of President Carranza 1920 9 They left Mexico in 1921 for Europe where Beals studied at the University of Madrid and then the University of Rome Back in Mexico he became a correspondent for The Nation separated from his wife and became romantically involved with photographer Tina Modotti s sister Mercedes 11 In February 1928 Oswald Garrison Villard editor of The Nation sent Beals to Nicaragua 12 to write a series of articles He became notable as the only foreign journalist who interviewed General Augusto Sandino during Nicaragua s 1927 33 war against US military occupation 13 In all Beals wrote over 200 magazine articles 14 for publications such as the New Republic 5 and Harper s Magazine 15 Beals also wrote more than 45 books including on history geography and travel Some of his books are written for a juvenile audience 16 His autobiography Glass Houses was published by J B Lippincott Company in 1938 10 In 1931 Beals was awarded the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship for biographies 17 His biography subjects included Porfirio Diaz Huey P Long Roberto de la Selva Stephen F Austin John Eliot Carrie Nation and Leon Trotsky During his career Beals witnessed Mexican revolutions lectured on Shakespeare and was held incommunicado by a Mexican general 10 His travels took him to French Morocco broken anchor Tunisia Algiers Greece Turkey the Soviet Union Germany and the Caribbean He was a Ford Hall Forum speaker in 1936 and a member of the American Committee for the Defense of Leon Trotsky in 1937 The following year Time magazine called Beals the best informed and the most awkward living writer on Latin America 14 Later years editDuring the 1960s he supported the Fair Play for Cuba Committee Beals was a hero to the young people of Cuba 18 Partial bibliography editI have done most of my writing in Spain Italy Mexico and Peru and in this country chiefly in New York later in Guilford Connecticut since 1957 in Killingworth C Beals 18 1921 The Mexican As He is 1922 Magdalene of Michoacan 1923 Rome Or Death the Story of Fascism 1923 Mexico an Interpretation Agrarian land reform in Mexico 1925 Tasks Awaiting President Calles of Mexico 1926 The Church Problem in Mexico 1927 Brimstone and Chili A Book of Personal Experiences in the Southwest and in Mexico 1929 Mexico s New Leader 1929 Destroying Victor 1930 The Coming Struggle for Latin America 1931 Mexican Maze with illustrations by Diego Rivera 19 1932 Porfirio Diaz Dictator of Mexico 1932 Banana Gold 1933 The Crime of Cuba with photographs by Walker Evans 1934 Fire on the Andes 1934 Black River 1935 Rifle Rule in Cuba 1935 The Story of Huey P Long 1936 The Stones Awake A Novel of Mexico 1936 Prologue to Cuban Freedom 1937 America South 1937 The New Genre of Roberto de la Selva 1937 The Drug Eaters of the High Andes 1938 Glass Houses Ten Years of Free Lancing 1939 American Earth the Biography of a Nation 1939 The Coming Struggle for Latin America 1940 Pan America 1943 Dawn over the Amazon 1948 Lands of the Dawning Morrow The Awakening from Rio Grande to Cape Horn 1949 The Long Land Chile 1953 First Men of America 1953 Stephen F Austin Father of Texas 1955 Our Yankee Heritage New England s Contribution to American Civilazation 1956 Adventure of the Western Sea illustrated by Jacob Landau 1956 Taste of Glory a Novel 1957 John Eliot the Man Who Loved the Indians July 31 1604 May 20 1690 1958 House in Mexico 1960 Cuba s Revolution The First Year 1960 Brass Knuckle Crusade the Great Know Nothing Conspiracy 1820 1860 1961 Nomads and Empire Builders Native Peoples and Cultures of South America 1962 Cyclone Carry the Story of Carry Nation 1963 Latin America World in Revolution 1963 Eagles of the Andes South American Struggles for Independence 1965 War Within a War the Confederacy Against Itself 1967 Land of the Mayas Yesterday and Today 1968 The Great Revolt and Its Leaders The History of Popular American Uprisings in the 1890s 1969 The Case of Leon Trotsky Lev Davydovic Trockij Report of Hearings On the Charges Made Against Him in the Moscow Trails 1970 Stories Told by the Aztecs Before the Spaniards Came 1970 The Nature of Revolution 1970 Great Guerrilla Warriors 1970 Colonial Rhode Island 1973 The Incredible Incas Yesterday and TodayReferences edit Hilton Ronald March 23 2002 Carleton Beals stanford edu Retrieved 2009 02 02 John A Britton Carleton Beals in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture vol 1 p 315 New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1996 John A Britton Carleton Beals A Radical Journalist in Latin America Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 1987 Edwards Janice R Tales from River s End Passport to Adventure Carry A Nation The Facts Brazoria County and the San Bernard River sanbernardriver com Archived from the original on 2007 08 03 Retrieved 2009 02 02 a b c d Applegate Edd September 1996 Literary Journalism A Biographical Dictionary of Writers and Editors Greenwood Publishing Group pp 20 22 ISBN 0 313 29949 8 carleton beals kansas NameCarleton Beals corax org July 25 2005 Retrieved 2009 02 02 Hendrickson Katie Ralph Beals EMuseum Minnesota State University Mankato Archived from the original on 2010 05 28 Retrieved 2009 08 10 a b Kansas Center for the Book lib ks us Archived from the original on October 16 2008 Retrieved 2009 02 02 a b Beals Carleton in Historians of Latin America in the United States 1965 Biobibliographies of 680 Specialists Ed Howard F Cline Durham NC Duke University Press 1966 8 a b c Stone Thrower time com April 25 1938 Archived from the original on August 26 2010 Retrieved 2009 02 02 a b Hooks Margaret 2000 09 20 Tina Modotti Radical Photographer Da Capo Press pp 115 116 ISBN 0 306 80981 8 Black George December 1987 Carleton Beals a radical journalist in Latin America book reviews The Nation findarticles com Retrieved 2009 02 02 dead link Our Century The Twenties The Nation December 23 1999 Archived from the original on March 11 2007 a b Gosse Van 1993 Where the Boys are Cuba Cold War America and the Making of a New Left Verso p 18 ISBN 0 86091 690 1 Beals Carleton 1893 1979 Vol July 1935 July 1938 August 1943 and August 1944 harpers org Retrieved 2009 02 02 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help Applegate p 22 All Fellows gf org Archived from the original on 2011 06 03 Retrieved 2009 02 02 a b Applegate p 22 Callcott Wilfrid Hardy February 1932 Review Mexican Maze with Illustrations by Diego Rivera by Carleton Beals The Hispanic American Historical Review 12 1 73 75 doi 10 2307 2506438 JSTOR 2506438 External links editBeals portrait Beals articles The Scottsboro Puppet Show The Nation 1936 The Black Shirt Revolution The Nation 1922 Beals testimony Fair Play for Cuba Committee 1960 The Fewer Outsiders the Better article by Beals critical of the American Committee for the Defense of Leon Trotsky Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carleton Beals amp oldid 1215706684, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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