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John Spargo

John Spargo (January 31, 1876 – August 17, 1966) was a British political writer who, later in life, became an expert in the history and crafts of Vermont. At first Spargo was active in the Socialist Party of America. A Methodist preacher he tried to meld the Protestant Social Gospel with Marxist socialism in Marxian Socialism and Religion: A Study of the Relation of the Marxian Theories to the Fundamental Principles of Religion (1915). He also founded a settlement house in Yonkers, N.Y. Spargo moved steadily to the right after 1917 when he supported American intervention in World War I. With AFL leader Samuel Gompers he organized the American Alliance for Labor and Democracy in 1917. Spargo helped draft the Colby Note that formalised the Wilson administration's anti-communist policies. He strongly denounced the Bolshevik Revolution in Bolshevism: The Enemy of Political and Industrial Democracy (1919). He opposed the foreign policy of the New Deal, especially its recognition of the USSR in 1933. He supported the House Un-American Activities Committee in the late 1930s and Senator Joseph McCarthy in the early 1950s. He endorsed Barry Goldwater In the 1964 Elections.[1]

John Spargo, c. 1917

Biography edit

Early years edit

Spargo was born on January 31, 1876, in the small village of Longdowns in the parish of Stithians, Cornwall, England. His parents were Thomas Spargo (1850–1920) and Jane Hocking Spargo (1851–1900), whose maiden name was also Spargo. As a young man, He trained as a stonecutter, and he later became a lay Methodist minister. He was attracted to the socialist doctrines of early English Marxist Henry Hyndman, particularly to his book England for All.[2]

Spargo was a largely self-educated man, but he did in 1894-95 take two courses through the Oxford University Extension Program, including one by economist J. A. Hobson.[3] Spargo went to work in 1895, moving with his alcoholic father to Barry Docks in South Wales, where he was employed as a stonemason.[4] Within a year after his arrival at Barry Dock, Spargo had started the first local of Hyndman's Social Democratic Federation (SDF), was elected president of the Barry Trades and Labour Council, became an editor of the Barry Herald, and was elected a member of the National Executive Committee of the SDF.[5]

As his biographer notes

It was an amazing, meteoric progression for an uneducated stonemason from Western Cornwall that took place in these few years of Spargo's education in Marxism; by the end of his residence in Britain, the 25-year-old was recognized as one of the most promising and energetic Marxist agitators in the country. Through it all, he was guided, inspired, and sustained by the Social Democratic Federation's founder and leader, Henry Meyers Hyndman, the man whose England for All had converted him to Marxism and who for the rest of his life would remain Spargo's model, mentor, and friend.[6]

Spargo's political ideas in this early period were an amalgam of Christian Socialism and Marxism, simultaneously seeking the brotherhood of man by following "the true principles of the man of Galillee," while embracing science and the belief in the rule of the working class as the motive force to create social change.[7]

In January 1900, Spargo married Prudence Edwards, a clerk from Lancashire, England who shared her new husband's socialist politics. The couple had one son, named after Christian Socialist leader George D. Herron.

In 1900, Spargo participated in some of the preliminary meetings which brought together representatives of the SDF, the Independent Labour Party, the Fabian Society, and various trade unions and cooperative societies to form the Labour Parliamentary Representation Committee, a direct forerunner of the British Labour Party.[8] This drive of the SDF to unite with various non-Marxist organizations brought about an immediate reaction from the party's hardline "impossibilist" left wing, who sought revolutionary transformation rather than incremental, piecemeal parliamentary reforms. The rise of the left caused Hyndman to temporarily leave the SDF's executive council and alienated Spargo to some extent from the party. Providentially, Spargo received at this time an invitation from the private lecture bureau to travel to America to spend a couple months traveling the country, speaking about socialism.[9] And so the newlyweds sailed for America and ultimately a new life there.

Coming to America edit

John and Prudence Spargo arrived at the port of New York in February 1901. The promised lecture series proved to be vastly exaggerated and Spargo wound up standing in bread lines to get food and shoveling snow from the sidewalks of the city for $7.50 a week. Eventually a few socialist lectures did come and Spargo made the acquaintance of many leading radicals in the city, including Christian Socialist George D. Herron, Job Harriman, and Algernon Lee.[10] Spargo cast his lot with the dissident (and newly independent wing of the Socialist Labor Party headed by Henry Slobodin and Morris Hillquit), teaching at an SLP education center in Brooklyn, and working as an assistant to the lawyer Hillquit.[10]

Spargo also assumed the role of editor of an illustrated socialist monthly based in New York, The Comrade. The Spargos spent the next eight years living in a small apartment in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, with Spargo spending much of his time traveling the country as a paid lecturer.[11] When the New York SLP dissidents merged with the midwestern Social Democratic Party of America headed by Victor L. Berger and Eugene Debs to establish the Socialist Party of America (SPA), Spargo was a founding member — although he was not in attendance at the Indianapolis Convention which established the organization in the summer of 1901.

 
John Spargo, 1902

With regard to his travels on behalf of the American socialist movement as a lecturer, Spargo's biographer notes

It was well known that on many of his trips Spargo cavorted with a number of attractive ladies, and he quickly built a reputation not just as an effective socialist organizer but as a womanizer of some note... There was nothing unusual in this since the early-20th century intellectuals who crowded New York's socialist circles tended to embrace free love as an indispensable dimension of their newfound aesthetics. In Spargo's case, however, the sexual cavorting led to some tricky situations, and once he had to borrow some 200 dollars from Hillquit to pay off a blackmailer who knew too much of some compromising tryst.[12]

Spargo continued as editor of The Comrade until April 1904. In May of that same year, he traveled to Chicago and attended the second convention of the Socialist Party as a delegate from New York. At the convention, Spargo was elected Chairman of the Resolutions Committee and he reported as such to the conclave. Among other topics, the committee passed resolutions attacking the payment of "exorbitant fees or salaries" of socialist speakers and lecturers and condemning "all propaganda organizations, not connected with the Socialist Party, doing Socialist propaganda" and declaring membership in any such organization to be "sufficient cause for expulsion" from the SPA.[13]

Spargo also took to the floor of the convention in opposition to the establishment of a national party-owned newspaper, a demand put forward by delegates from the left-wing state organizations of the Pacific Coast but regarded as anathema by moderate Easterners who had fairly recently defected from the centralized Socialist Labor Party dominated by party editor Daniel DeLeon. Spargo declared

I am opposed to a national party-owned organ because I am opposed to the heresy hunter all the time. (Applause.) I am opposed to a national party-owned organ because I will not trust the party integrity, I will not trust the party interests, I will not trust the party faith to the judgment of any one man, no matter how great he may be. (Applause.) If Editor Wayland, of the Appeal to Reason, makes a mistake, the Socialist Party stands firm, but if somebody who is declared to be for the time being the infallible literary pope of the movement makes a mistake, that mistake carries with it the Socialist Party. (Applause.)[14]

Spargo's position won the day at the 1904 Socialist Party convention and it was not until 1914 until the organization finally established a party-owned weekly newspaper.

Spargo's first wife, Prudence, died of tuberculosis in March 1904.[15] A year and 10 days later, he married Amelia Rose Bennetts, a British-born New York socialist who had lived in America from early childhood and who had recently been employed as a worker in a carpet mill. The couple set up house in Yonkers, New York, and had two children, a daughter named Mary and a son (who died in childhood) named John Jr.[16]

Spargo was elected to the National Committee of the Socialist Party in 1905 and to the governing National Executive Committee in 1909. As his biographer notes, during this period Spargo began "easing his way toward the reformist right-wing" of the SPA, giving up on the tactic of agitation among striking workers in favor of building middle class socialist educational institutions. Spargo was instrumental in helping establish the Rand School of Social Science, persuading George D. Herron and his wife Carrie Rand Herron to make a large bequest and Mrs. Herron's mother to provide seed money for the new institution.[17] Spargo also was a co-founder of the Intercollegiate Socialist Society (ISS), an organization dedicated to the establishment of non-partisan socialist study groups on college campuses and sponsoring debates and lectures on socialist topics.[18] Spargo would later serve on the ISS executive from 1916 to 1919.

Spargo wrote a series of compassionate, well-researched books, The Bitter Cry of the Children (1905), Underfed School Children (1906), and The Common Sense of the Milk Question (1908). Both concerned child slavery in British and American factories and arguing for the state-funded feeding of underprivileged children on the grounds that it was pointless attempting to teach children distracted by hunger, a concept that very successfully came into fruition in America during World War II.

He felt deeply about the issue, later writing that:

The claim for an equal chance for every child born into the world carries with it that most fundamental of claims, that every child has a right to be well-born into the world. And that ideal can never be realized until every mother-to-be is safeguarded by all the arts and resources of our civilization to the end that she may bring her baby into the world with joy–healthy of body, glad of heart, serene of soul, unafraid of the future, unterrified by want or the fear of it, secure in the consciousness that the child she bears is heir to all the riches and advantages of earth.[19]

In 1908, Spargo authored a lengthy and academically serious biography of Karl Marx, his book being recognized as the best such treatment published in the English language at the time.

The same year, Spargo was elected as a delegate to the 1908 National Convention of the Socialist Party, held again at Chicago. Spargo was returned by the convention to the post he had held at the previous national gathering, Chairman of the Resolutions Committee. Spargo was influential in defeating through parliamentary procedure a resolution moved by a majority of the Resolutions Committee calling for the future exclusion of Asian workers from America. Spargo's opposition to the resolution was based upon the principle of state autonomy of local parties rather than upon internationalism and the social equality of the races:

Comrades, I ask you to vote that we are a party of the working class, that it is the economic interest of the working class which must guide our party, that we leave it to the states themselves to decide if they have an Asiatic problem. They can decide it upon the basis of local state autonomy, and, above all, I ask that you recognize that the immigration problem is a big problem, a complex problem...[20]

Factional politics of the early 'teens edit

 
Cover of Spargo's The Common Sense of Socialism, as published by the Lithuanian Socialist Federation of the SPA in 1916

During the years 1909 to 1914, Spargo continued his reconsideration of socialist theory and practice and emerged as a top leader of the Socialist Party's right wing.[21] He was diagnosed with a heart ailment and suffered from a lung infection which claimed the life of his younger son, so the Spargos moved to a new home in the hamlet of Old Bennington, Vermont, close to the New York border in the southwestern corner of the state. There the ailing Spargo recovered from his illness and was soon back on the road lecturing on socialist themes.

Spargo was one of 24 delegates of the Socialist Party (along with, incidentally, Industrial Workers of the World leader "Big Bill" Haywood) to the 1910 Congress of the International, held in Copenhagen, Denmark, from August 28 to September 4, 1910. The gathering discussed matters relating to international relations between socialist parties, the trade union movement, disarmament, and the progress of labor legislation in the various countries.[22]

Spargo was a bitter opponent of the syndicalism which was sweeping parts of the Socialist Party and staunchly supported the established craft unionism of the American Federation of Labor against the radical industrial unionism of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). A battle royal between the dominant center-right coalition that controlled the Socialist Party and its pro-syndicalist left wing erupted in 1912. As Spargo's biographer notes:

Throughout, the faction fight was about much more than just a struggle for power. To Spargo and his fellow right-wingers, it subsumed under its rubric the larger question of where and how the socialist movement was headed, that is, whether it was to be led by those schooled in theoretical Marxian exegesis and historical study or by those who discarded such exegesis and study and opted instead for direct catastrophic action.[23]

The brewing skirmish erupted into an open fight at the 1912 National Convention of the Socialist Party, to which Spargo was once again a delegate from New York as well as the elected Chairman of the Resolutions Committee. At issue was language to be inserted into the party constitution which called for the expulsion of "any member of the party who opposes political action or advocates crime, sabotage, or other methods of violence as a weapon of the working class to aid in its emancipation."[24] The debate was vitriolic, with Victor L. Berger of Wisconsin stating the matter in its most bellicose form:

Comrades, the trouble with our party is that we have men in our councils who claim to be in favor of political action when they are not. We have a number of men who use our political organization — our Socialist Party — as a cloak for what they call direct action, for IWW-ism, sabotage and syndicalism. It is anarchism by a new name....

Comrades, I have gone through a number of splits in this party. It was not always a fight against anarchism in the past. In the past we often had to fight Utopianism and fanaticism. Now it is anarchism again that is eating away at the vitals of our party.

If there is to be a parting of the ways, if there is to be a split — and it seems that you will have it, and must have it — then, I am ready to split right here. I am ready to go back to Milwaukee and appeal to the Socialists all over the country to cut this cancer out of our organization.[25]

Spargo played a leading role in this purge of the party's left wing with his 1913 book entitled Syndicalism, Industrial Unionism and Socialism, an attack on the syndicalism of the IWW and its supporters. Spargo charged that the IWW's tactic of encouraging sabotage would have the effect of undermining the honor, courage, and self-respect of the working class, causing it to lose sight of the spiritual ideals of socialism. He held that the "IWW form of organization which denies autonomy to local unions and centralizes power in the hands of the executive, really involves the ideal of a bureaucratic government in the future society."[26] For Spargo, the ideal of "one big union" meant in practice "authoritarianism and bureaucracy" and "the creation of a despotic industrial State in place of a political State." He asked his readers, "If all the unions are to be centralized in one big union and its power centralized in the hands of a single authority, can the government of society by that union be other than democratic?"[27]

While many adhering to the syndicalist and revolutionary socialist ideals of the SPA's left wing exited the party following their defeat at the 1912 National Convention and the successful recall of "Big Bill" Haywood from the party's National Executive Committee, there remained a strong radical current in the party, dissatisfied with the temporizing parliamentarism of the party majority. In the summer of 1914 would come an issue which would sweep the syndicalist controversy aside and fundamentally alter political discourse within the international socialist movement and the Socialist Party of America — the crisis of international war in Europe.

The year 1912 also marked Spargo's only foray into American electoral politics, when he ran for the United States Congress in the 1st Congressional District of Vermont as the nominee of the Socialist Party. Spargo received 456 votes, as opposed to the more than 3,000 that the victorious candidate received.[28]

 
John Spargo, 1919

The war and after edit

At the 1917 National Convention of the Socialist Party, Spargo was the author of a minority resolution in the Committee on War and Militarism calling for American support of the Allied war effort as the least onerous alternative facing the socialist movement. This proposal was decisively defeated, garnering the support of only 5 delegates, in favor of the militant St. Louis Resolution, which called for an active struggle against the American war effort. Up until the party voted to ratify the St. Louis Resolution, Spargo clung to the hope that a majority of the rank and file would endorse his own views of the European conflict. When, on the other hand, the party's membership enthusiastically endorsed the party's line established at the 1917 convention, Spargo decided to make a decisive exit from the organization. On May 30, 1917, he resigned his seat on the SP's governing National Executive Committee, followed three days later by his resignation from the party itself.[29]

Spargo wrote to his former comrade Morris Hillquit, co-author of the St. Louis Resolution, that his resignation from the Socialist Party "probably means the end of practically everything. In the absence of any other Socialist organization in which I can function, I shall probably devote myself exclusively to my personal affairs and leave the political struggle alone."[30]

Spargo did not drop out of politics, however, choosing instead to actively endorse and collaborate with the Wilson administration in its war effort. He conceived of the US government-sponsored pro-war labor organization the American Alliance for Labor and Democracy, which together with Samuel Gompers of the AF of L he subsequently helped lead, and for which he occasionally wrote.[29] Spargo also joined the Social Democratic League of America (SDL), a pro-war organization which emerged through the venerable socialist weekly, the Appeal to Reason — now named The New Appeal by its pro-war editors, Louis Kopelin and Emanuel Haldeman-Julius. Spargo was chosen as the first Chairman of the SDL,[31] with Haldeman-Julius apparently handling the day-to-day operations of the organization through the offices of the Appeal in Girard, Kansas.

Spargo conceived of the SDL as a group akin to the Independent Labour Party in England and sought to involve it in a broader pro-war organization analogous to the British Labour Party. Spargo himself conceived of this broader group, the National Party, and sat on the Executive Committee of this new political organization. The National Party dissolved following disappointing returns in the elections of 1918.

By the middle 1920s, Spargo had turned away from leftist politics, developing his own theories of what he called "socialized individualism". He became a member of the Republican Party, supported Calvin Coolidge in the election of 1924, and was regarded as a prospective United States Secretary of Labor during the presidency of Herbert Hoover.[32] His biographer characterized the change as that from a "Marxian socialist who became a Goldwater Republican and was throughout an American anti-communist.[33]

Spargo became the director-curator of the Bennington, Vermont Historical Museum and wrote several books on ceramics.

He researched and wrote a booklet on the history of his family name. Spargo is also the name of the locality around Mabe Church in the parish of Mabe. He postulated that evidence supported the place name and Spargo family name being in existence c. 400AD. This pre-dated the arrival by some 400 years of the Christian Church.

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Richard Seymour, "John Spargo and American Socialism" Historical Materialism (2009) 17#2 pp 272-285.
  2. ^ Markku Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006; pg. 13.
  3. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 14.
  4. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 15.
  5. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pp. 17, 20.
  6. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 17.
  7. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 25.
  8. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 30.
  9. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pp. 31-32.
  10. ^ a b Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 36.
  11. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 37.
  12. ^ John Patrick Diggins, The Rise and Fall of the American Left. New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1992; pp. 93-98. Cited in Ruotsila, pg. 37.
  13. ^ Willam Mailly (ed.), National Convention of the Socialist Party Held at Chicago, Illinois, May 1 to 6, 1904: Stenographic Report. Chicago: National Committee of the Socialist Party, [1904]; pg. 65. Hereafter: 1904 National Convention: Stenographic Report.
  14. ^ 1904 National Convention: Stenographic Report, pp. 92-93.
  15. ^ It seems that Prudence Spargo had been sent to the same sanitarium for tuberculosis patients at Saranac Lake, New York at which Morris Hillquit later spent time. Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 45.
  16. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 45.
  17. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 46.
  18. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 47.
  19. ^ Socialism and Motherhood, by John Spargo, 1914.
  20. ^ John M. Work (ed.), National Convention of the Socialist Party, Held at Chicago, Illinois, May 10 to 17, 1908: Stenographic Report. Chicago: The Socialist Party, [1908]; pg. 122.
  21. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 53.
  22. ^ May Wood-Simons, Report of Socialist Party Delegation and Proceedings of the International Socialist Congress at Copenhagen, 1910. Chicago: [the Socialist Party], [1910]; pg. 4.
  23. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 60.
  24. ^ Amendment to Article 2, Section 6, proposed by William Lincoln Garver of Missouri. John Spargo (ed.), National Convention of the Socialist Party Held at Indianapolis, Ind., May 12 to 18, 1912: Stenographic Report. Chicago: the Socialist Party, [1912]; pg. 122. Hereafter: 1912 National Convention Stenographic Report.
  25. ^ Speech of Victor Berger, 1912 National Convention Stenographic Report, pg. 130.
  26. ^ Quoted in Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 59.
  27. ^ Spargo, Syndicalism, Industrial Unionism and Socialism, New York: B. W. Huebsch, 1913; pp. 39-40.
  28. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 69.
  29. ^ a b Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 78.
  30. ^ Letter from John Spargo to Morris Hillquit, May 23, 1917, John Spargo Papers, box 13, University of Vermont. Quoted in Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 78.
  31. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 79.
  32. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 2.
  33. ^ Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism, pg. 3.

Works edit

The socialist years edit

The social democratic years edit

Post-radical works edit

  • Anthony Haswell: Printer — Patriot — Ballader: A Biographical Study with a Selection of his Ballads and an Annotated Bibliographical List of his Imprints. Rutland, VT: The Tuttle Co., 1925.
  • Ethan Allen at Ticonderoga: An Address Delivered By Spargo At Castleton, Vermont May 9, 1925 At The 150th Anniversary Of The Green Mountain Boys Under Ethan Allen And Their Departure For Ticonderoga. (city, publisher, date?)
  • Early American Pottery and China. Garden City, NY: The Century Co., 1926.
  • Potters And Potteries of Bennington. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company/Antiques Incorporated, 1926.
  • The Stars and Stripes in 1777: An Account of the Birth of the Flag and its First Baptism of Victorious Fire. Bennington, VT: Bennington Battle Monument and Historical Association, 1928.
  • The True Story of Capt. David Mathews and His State Line House: Being the Vindication of the Memory of a Revolutionary Patriot & the Exposure of Fantastic Legends Concerning the House He Built. Bennington, VT: Bennington Historical Museum Publications, 1930.
  • Republicans Must Choose. New York: Review of Reviews, 1936.
  • Iron mining and smelting in Bennington, Vermont 1786 - 1842. Bennington, VT: Bennington Battle Monument and Historical Association, 1938.
  • The A.B.C. of Bennington Pottery Wares, a Manual for Collectors and Dealers. Bennington, VT: Bennington Historical Museum, 1938.
  • The Rise and Progress of Freemasonry in Vermont, the Green Mountain State, 1765-1944. Written for the Sesqui-centennial Anniversary Celebration of the Grand Lodge of Vermont, June 13–15, 1944. Burlington, VT: Grand Lodge of Vermont/Lane Press, 1944.
  • The Return of Russell Colvin. Bennington, VT: Bennington Historical Museum and Art Gallery, 1945.
  • Amabimus, amamus, amabimus. In memory of John Spargo, Jr., December 20, 1919—October 10, 1945. Bennington, VT: John Spargo, 1946.
  • Verses Grave and Gay. Bennington, VT: John Spargo, 1946.
  • An Illustrated Descriptive Sketch of Bennington Battle Monument, With an Account of Bennington Battle, August 16, 1777. Bennington, VT: Bennington Battle Monument and Historical Association, 1947.
  • Two Bennington-Born Explorers and Makers of Modern Canada. Bradford, VT: Green Mountain Press, 1950.
  • Faith and Fun at Sunset. Bennington, VT: John Spargo, 1951.
  • Covered Wooden Bridges of Bennington County - Historical and Descriptive Account. Bennington, VT: Bennington Historical Museum and Art Gallery, 1953.
  • The Old First Church of Bennington. Bennington, VT: Broad Brook Press, n.d. [1950s].
  • The Reminiscences of John Spargo. [microfilm] n.c., n.p., 1957. OCLC 1458902.

Further reading edit

  • Gerald Friedberg, Marxism in the United States: John Spargo and the Socialist Party of America. PhD dissertation, Harvard University, 1964.
  • Kenneth Howard Hilton, A Well Marked Course: The Life and Works of John Spargo. PhD dissertation, Syracuse University, 1991.
  • Ronald Radosh, "John Spargo and Wilson's Russian Policy, 1920," Journal of American History, vol. 52, no. 3 (Dec. 1965), pp. 548–565. JSTOR 1890847.
  • Markku Ruotsila, John Spargo and American Socialism. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006.

External links edit

  • Articles in The Craftsman, 1906–1907.
  • Inventory of the John Spargo Papers, Special Collections, University of Vermont, Library.
  • Works by John Spargo at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about John Spargo at Internet Archive
  • "Spargo, John" . Collier's New Encyclopedia. 1921.

john, spargo, american, water, polo, player, water, polo, american, electrical, engineer, john, warren, spargo, neutrality, this, article, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, remove, this, message, until, conditions, october, 2020, learn. For the American water polo player see John Spargo water polo For the American electrical engineer see John Warren Spargo The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message John Spargo January 31 1876 August 17 1966 was a British political writer who later in life became an expert in the history and crafts of Vermont At first Spargo was active in the Socialist Party of America A Methodist preacher he tried to meld the Protestant Social Gospel with Marxist socialism in Marxian Socialism and Religion A Study of the Relation of the Marxian Theories to the Fundamental Principles of Religion 1915 He also founded a settlement house in Yonkers N Y Spargo moved steadily to the right after 1917 when he supported American intervention in World War I With AFL leader Samuel Gompers he organized the American Alliance for Labor and Democracy in 1917 Spargo helped draft the Colby Note that formalised the Wilson administration s anti communist policies He strongly denounced the Bolshevik Revolution in Bolshevism The Enemy of Political and Industrial Democracy 1919 He opposed the foreign policy of the New Deal especially its recognition of the USSR in 1933 He supported the House Un American Activities Committee in the late 1930s and Senator Joseph McCarthy in the early 1950s He endorsed Barry Goldwater In the 1964 Elections 1 John Spargo c 1917 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Coming to America 1 3 Factional politics of the early teens 1 4 The war and after 2 Footnotes 3 Works 3 1 The socialist years 3 2 The social democratic years 3 3 Post radical works 4 Further reading 5 External linksBiography editEarly years edit Spargo was born on January 31 1876 in the small village of Longdowns in the parish of Stithians Cornwall England His parents were Thomas Spargo 1850 1920 and Jane Hocking Spargo 1851 1900 whose maiden name was also Spargo As a young man He trained as a stonecutter and he later became a lay Methodist minister He was attracted to the socialist doctrines of early English Marxist Henry Hyndman particularly to his book England for All 2 Spargo was a largely self educated man but he did in 1894 95 take two courses through the Oxford University Extension Program including one by economist J A Hobson 3 Spargo went to work in 1895 moving with his alcoholic father to Barry Docks in South Wales where he was employed as a stonemason 4 Within a year after his arrival at Barry Dock Spargo had started the first local of Hyndman s Social Democratic Federation SDF was elected president of the Barry Trades and Labour Council became an editor of the Barry Herald and was elected a member of the National Executive Committee of the SDF 5 As his biographer notes It was an amazing meteoric progression for an uneducated stonemason from Western Cornwall that took place in these few years of Spargo s education in Marxism by the end of his residence in Britain the 25 year old was recognized as one of the most promising and energetic Marxist agitators in the country Through it all he was guided inspired and sustained by the Social Democratic Federation s founder and leader Henry Meyers Hyndman the man whose England for All had converted him to Marxism and who for the rest of his life would remain Spargo s model mentor and friend 6 Spargo s political ideas in this early period were an amalgam of Christian Socialism and Marxism simultaneously seeking the brotherhood of man by following the true principles of the man of Galillee while embracing science and the belief in the rule of the working class as the motive force to create social change 7 In January 1900 Spargo married Prudence Edwards a clerk from Lancashire England who shared her new husband s socialist politics The couple had one son named after Christian Socialist leader George D Herron In 1900 Spargo participated in some of the preliminary meetings which brought together representatives of the SDF the Independent Labour Party the Fabian Society and various trade unions and cooperative societies to form the Labour Parliamentary Representation Committee a direct forerunner of the British Labour Party 8 This drive of the SDF to unite with various non Marxist organizations brought about an immediate reaction from the party s hardline impossibilist left wing who sought revolutionary transformation rather than incremental piecemeal parliamentary reforms The rise of the left caused Hyndman to temporarily leave the SDF s executive council and alienated Spargo to some extent from the party Providentially Spargo received at this time an invitation from the private lecture bureau to travel to America to spend a couple months traveling the country speaking about socialism 9 And so the newlyweds sailed for America and ultimately a new life there Coming to America edit John and Prudence Spargo arrived at the port of New York in February 1901 The promised lecture series proved to be vastly exaggerated and Spargo wound up standing in bread lines to get food and shoveling snow from the sidewalks of the city for 7 50 a week Eventually a few socialist lectures did come and Spargo made the acquaintance of many leading radicals in the city including Christian Socialist George D Herron Job Harriman and Algernon Lee 10 Spargo cast his lot with the dissident and newly independent wing of the Socialist Labor Party headed by Henry Slobodin and Morris Hillquit teaching at an SLP education center in Brooklyn and working as an assistant to the lawyer Hillquit 10 Spargo also assumed the role of editor of an illustrated socialist monthly based in New York The Comrade The Spargos spent the next eight years living in a small apartment in the Lower East Side of Manhattan with Spargo spending much of his time traveling the country as a paid lecturer 11 When the New York SLP dissidents merged with the midwestern Social Democratic Party of America headed by Victor L Berger and Eugene Debs to establish the Socialist Party of America SPA Spargo was a founding member although he was not in attendance at the Indianapolis Convention which established the organization in the summer of 1901 nbsp John Spargo 1902With regard to his travels on behalf of the American socialist movement as a lecturer Spargo s biographer notes It was well known that on many of his trips Spargo cavorted with a number of attractive ladies and he quickly built a reputation not just as an effective socialist organizer but as a womanizer of some note There was nothing unusual in this since the early 20th century intellectuals who crowded New York s socialist circles tended to embrace free love as an indispensable dimension of their newfound aesthetics In Spargo s case however the sexual cavorting led to some tricky situations and once he had to borrow some 200 dollars from Hillquit to pay off a blackmailer who knew too much of some compromising tryst 12 Spargo continued as editor of The Comrade until April 1904 In May of that same year he traveled to Chicago and attended the second convention of the Socialist Party as a delegate from New York At the convention Spargo was elected Chairman of the Resolutions Committee and he reported as such to the conclave Among other topics the committee passed resolutions attacking the payment of exorbitant fees or salaries of socialist speakers and lecturers and condemning all propaganda organizations not connected with the Socialist Party doing Socialist propaganda and declaring membership in any such organization to be sufficient cause for expulsion from the SPA 13 Spargo also took to the floor of the convention in opposition to the establishment of a national party owned newspaper a demand put forward by delegates from the left wing state organizations of the Pacific Coast but regarded as anathema by moderate Easterners who had fairly recently defected from the centralized Socialist Labor Party dominated by party editor Daniel DeLeon Spargo declared I am opposed to a national party owned organ because I am opposed to the heresy hunter all the time Applause I am opposed to a national party owned organ because I will not trust the party integrity I will not trust the party interests I will not trust the party faith to the judgment of any one man no matter how great he may be Applause If Editor Wayland of theAppeal to Reason makes a mistake the Socialist Party stands firm but if somebody who is declared to be for the time being the infallible literary pope of the movement makes a mistake that mistake carries with it the Socialist Party Applause 14 Spargo s position won the day at the 1904 Socialist Party convention and it was not until 1914 until the organization finally established a party owned weekly newspaper Spargo s first wife Prudence died of tuberculosis in March 1904 15 A year and 10 days later he married Amelia Rose Bennetts a British born New York socialist who had lived in America from early childhood and who had recently been employed as a worker in a carpet mill The couple set up house in Yonkers New York and had two children a daughter named Mary and a son who died in childhood named John Jr 16 Spargo was elected to the National Committee of the Socialist Party in 1905 and to the governing National Executive Committee in 1909 As his biographer notes during this period Spargo began easing his way toward the reformist right wing of the SPA giving up on the tactic of agitation among striking workers in favor of building middle class socialist educational institutions Spargo was instrumental in helping establish the Rand School of Social Science persuading George D Herron and his wife Carrie Rand Herron to make a large bequest and Mrs Herron s mother to provide seed money for the new institution 17 Spargo also was a co founder of the Intercollegiate Socialist Society ISS an organization dedicated to the establishment of non partisan socialist study groups on college campuses and sponsoring debates and lectures on socialist topics 18 Spargo would later serve on the ISS executive from 1916 to 1919 Spargo wrote a series of compassionate well researched books The Bitter Cry of the Children 1905 Underfed School Children 1906 and The Common Sense of the Milk Question 1908 Both concerned child slavery in British and American factories and arguing for the state funded feeding of underprivileged children on the grounds that it was pointless attempting to teach children distracted by hunger a concept that very successfully came into fruition in America during World War II He felt deeply about the issue later writing that The claim for an equal chance for every child born into the world carries with it that most fundamental of claims that every child has a right to be well born into the world And that ideal can never be realized until every mother to be is safeguarded by all the arts and resources of our civilization to the end that she may bring her baby into the world with joy healthy of body glad of heart serene of soul unafraid of the future unterrified by want or the fear of it secure in the consciousness that the child she bears is heir to all the riches and advantages of earth 19 In 1908 Spargo authored a lengthy and academically serious biography of Karl Marx his book being recognized as the best such treatment published in the English language at the time The same year Spargo was elected as a delegate to the 1908 National Convention of the Socialist Party held again at Chicago Spargo was returned by the convention to the post he had held at the previous national gathering Chairman of the Resolutions Committee Spargo was influential in defeating through parliamentary procedure a resolution moved by a majority of the Resolutions Committee calling for the future exclusion of Asian workers from America Spargo s opposition to the resolution was based upon the principle of state autonomy of local parties rather than upon internationalism and the social equality of the races Comrades I ask you to vote that we are a party of the working class that it is the economic interest of the working class which must guide our party that we leave it to the states themselves to decide if they have an Asiatic problem They can decide it upon the basis of local state autonomy and above all I ask that you recognize that the immigration problem is a big problem a complex problem 20 Factional politics of the early teens edit nbsp Cover of Spargo s The Common Sense of Socialism as published by the Lithuanian Socialist Federation of the SPA in 1916During the years 1909 to 1914 Spargo continued his reconsideration of socialist theory and practice and emerged as a top leader of the Socialist Party s right wing 21 He was diagnosed with a heart ailment and suffered from a lung infection which claimed the life of his younger son so the Spargos moved to a new home in the hamlet of Old Bennington Vermont close to the New York border in the southwestern corner of the state There the ailing Spargo recovered from his illness and was soon back on the road lecturing on socialist themes Spargo was one of 24 delegates of the Socialist Party along with incidentally Industrial Workers of the World leader Big Bill Haywood to the 1910 Congress of the International held in Copenhagen Denmark from August 28 to September 4 1910 The gathering discussed matters relating to international relations between socialist parties the trade union movement disarmament and the progress of labor legislation in the various countries 22 Spargo was a bitter opponent of the syndicalism which was sweeping parts of the Socialist Party and staunchly supported the established craft unionism of the American Federation of Labor against the radical industrial unionism of the Industrial Workers of the World IWW A battle royal between the dominant center right coalition that controlled the Socialist Party and its pro syndicalist left wing erupted in 1912 As Spargo s biographer notes Throughout the faction fight was about much more than just a struggle for power To Spargo and his fellow right wingers it subsumed under its rubric the larger question of where and how the socialist movement was headed that is whether it was to be led by those schooled in theoretical Marxian exegesis and historical study or by those who discarded such exegesis and study and opted instead for direct catastrophic action 23 The brewing skirmish erupted into an open fight at the 1912 National Convention of the Socialist Party to which Spargo was once again a delegate from New York as well as the elected Chairman of the Resolutions Committee At issue was language to be inserted into the party constitution which called for the expulsion of any member of the party who opposes political action or advocates crime sabotage or other methods of violence as a weapon of the working class to aid in its emancipation 24 The debate was vitriolic with Victor L Berger of Wisconsin stating the matter in its most bellicose form Comrades the trouble with our party is that we have men in our councils who claim to be in favor of political action when they are not We have a number of men who use our political organization our Socialist Party as a cloak for what they call direct action for IWW ism sabotage and syndicalism It is anarchism by a new name Comrades I have gone through a number of splits in this party It was not always a fight against anarchism in the past In the past we often had to fight Utopianism and fanaticism Now it is anarchism again that is eating away at the vitals of our party If there is to be a parting of the ways if there is to be a split and it seems that you will have it and must have it then I am ready to split right here I am ready to go back to Milwaukee and appeal to the Socialists all over the country to cut this cancer out of our organization 25 Spargo played a leading role in this purge of the party s left wing with his 1913 book entitled Syndicalism Industrial Unionism and Socialism an attack on the syndicalism of the IWW and its supporters Spargo charged that the IWW s tactic of encouraging sabotage would have the effect of undermining the honor courage and self respect of the working class causing it to lose sight of the spiritual ideals of socialism He held that the IWW form of organization which denies autonomy to local unions and centralizes power in the hands of the executive really involves the ideal of a bureaucratic government in the future society 26 For Spargo the ideal of one big union meant in practice authoritarianism and bureaucracy and the creation of a despotic industrial State in place of a political State He asked his readers If all the unions are to be centralized in one big union and its power centralized in the hands of a single authority can the government of society by that union be other than democratic 27 While many adhering to the syndicalist and revolutionary socialist ideals of the SPA s left wing exited the party following their defeat at the 1912 National Convention and the successful recall of Big Bill Haywood from the party s National Executive Committee there remained a strong radical current in the party dissatisfied with the temporizing parliamentarism of the party majority In the summer of 1914 would come an issue which would sweep the syndicalist controversy aside and fundamentally alter political discourse within the international socialist movement and the Socialist Party of America the crisis of international war in Europe The year 1912 also marked Spargo s only foray into American electoral politics when he ran for the United States Congress in the 1st Congressional District of Vermont as the nominee of the Socialist Party Spargo received 456 votes as opposed to the more than 3 000 that the victorious candidate received 28 nbsp John Spargo 1919The war and after edit At the 1917 National Convention of the Socialist Party Spargo was the author of a minority resolution in the Committee on War and Militarism calling for American support of the Allied war effort as the least onerous alternative facing the socialist movement This proposal was decisively defeated garnering the support of only 5 delegates in favor of the militant St Louis Resolution which called for an active struggle against the American war effort Up until the party voted to ratify the St Louis Resolution Spargo clung to the hope that a majority of the rank and file would endorse his own views of the European conflict When on the other hand the party s membership enthusiastically endorsed the party s line established at the 1917 convention Spargo decided to make a decisive exit from the organization On May 30 1917 he resigned his seat on the SP s governing National Executive Committee followed three days later by his resignation from the party itself 29 Spargo wrote to his former comrade Morris Hillquit co author of the St Louis Resolution that his resignation from the Socialist Party probably means the end of practically everything In the absence of any other Socialist organization in which I can function I shall probably devote myself exclusively to my personal affairs and leave the political struggle alone 30 Spargo did not drop out of politics however choosing instead to actively endorse and collaborate with the Wilson administration in its war effort He conceived of the US government sponsored pro war labor organization the American Alliance for Labor and Democracy which together with Samuel Gompers of the AF of L he subsequently helped lead and for which he occasionally wrote 29 Spargo also joined the Social Democratic League of America SDL a pro war organization which emerged through the venerable socialist weekly the Appeal to Reason now named The New Appeal by its pro war editors Louis Kopelin and Emanuel Haldeman Julius Spargo was chosen as the first Chairman of the SDL 31 with Haldeman Julius apparently handling the day to day operations of the organization through the offices of the Appeal in Girard Kansas Spargo conceived of the SDL as a group akin to the Independent Labour Party in England and sought to involve it in a broader pro war organization analogous to the British Labour Party Spargo himself conceived of this broader group the National Party and sat on the Executive Committee of this new political organization The National Party dissolved following disappointing returns in the elections of 1918 By the middle 1920s Spargo had turned away from leftist politics developing his own theories of what he called socialized individualism He became a member of the Republican Party supported Calvin Coolidge in the election of 1924 and was regarded as a prospective United States Secretary of Labor during the presidency of Herbert Hoover 32 His biographer characterized the change as that from a Marxian socialist who became a Goldwater Republican and was throughout an American anti communist 33 Spargo became the director curator of the Bennington Vermont Historical Museum and wrote several books on ceramics He researched and wrote a booklet on the history of his family name Spargo is also the name of the locality around Mabe Church in the parish of Mabe He postulated that evidence supported the place name and Spargo family name being in existence c 400AD This pre dated the arrival by some 400 years of the Christian Church Footnotes edit Richard Seymour John Spargo and American Socialism Historical Materialism 2009 17 2 pp 272 285 Markku Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism New York Palgrave Macmillan 2006 pg 13 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 14 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 15 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pp 17 20 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 17 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 25 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 30 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pp 31 32 a b Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 36 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 37 John Patrick Diggins The Rise and Fall of the American Left New York W W Norton amp Co 1992 pp 93 98 Cited in Ruotsila pg 37 Willam Mailly ed National Convention of the Socialist Party Held at Chicago Illinois May 1 to 6 1904 Stenographic Report Chicago National Committee of the Socialist Party 1904 pg 65 Hereafter 1904 National Convention Stenographic Report 1904 National Convention Stenographic Report pp 92 93 It seems that Prudence Spargo had been sent to the same sanitarium for tuberculosis patients at Saranac Lake New York at which Morris Hillquit later spent time Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 45 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 45 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 46 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 47 Socialism and Motherhood by John Spargo 1914 John M Work ed National Convention of the Socialist Party Held at Chicago Illinois May 10 to 17 1908 Stenographic Report Chicago The Socialist Party 1908 pg 122 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 53 May Wood Simons Report of Socialist Party Delegation and Proceedings of the International Socialist Congress at Copenhagen 1910 Chicago the Socialist Party 1910 pg 4 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 60 Amendment to Article 2 Section 6 proposed by William Lincoln Garver of Missouri John Spargo ed National Convention of the Socialist Party Held at Indianapolis Ind May 12 to 18 1912 Stenographic Report Chicago the Socialist Party 1912 pg 122 Hereafter 1912 National Convention Stenographic Report Speech of Victor Berger 1912 National Convention Stenographic Report pg 130 Quoted in Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 59 Spargo Syndicalism Industrial Unionism and Socialism New York B W Huebsch 1913 pp 39 40 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 69 a b Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 78 Letter from John Spargo to Morris Hillquit May 23 1917 John Spargo Papers box 13 University of Vermont Quoted in Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 78 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 79 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 2 Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism pg 3 Works editThe socialist years edit A Socialist View of Mr Rockefeller Chicago Charles H Kerr 1905 Forces That Make For Socialism in America Chicago Charles H Kerr 1905 The Bitter Cry of the Children New York Macmillan 1906 Underfed School Children The Problem and the Remedy Chicago Charles H Kerr 1906 Socialism A Summary and Interpretation of Socialist Principles New York Macmillan 1906 The Socialists Who They Are and What they Stand For Chicago Charles H Kerr 1906 Capitalist and Laborer An Open Letter to Professor Goldwin Smith DCL in Reply to his Capital and Labor and Modern Socialism A Lecture Delivered and the New York School of Philanthropy Chicago Charles H Kerr 1907 Leon Dabo Poet in Color The Craftsman December 1907 The Socialism of William Morris Westwood Mass Ariel Press 1908 The Common Sense of Socialism A Series of Letters Addressed to Jonathan Edwards of Pittsburg Chicago Charles H Kerr 1908 The Common Sense of the Milk Question New York Macmillan 1908 The Spiritual Significance of Modern Socialism New York B W Huebsch 1908 Where We Stand A Lecture Originally Delivered Under the Title Our Position Economic Ethical and Political Chicago Charles H Kerr n d 1908 Karl Marx His Life and Work New York B W Huebsch 1908 The Substance of Socialism New York B W Huebsch 1909 The Marx He Knew Chicago Charles H Kerr 1909 The Socialists Who They Are and What They Stand For Chicago Charles H Kerr 1910 Sidelights on Contemporary Socialism New York B W Huebsch 1911 Elements of Socialism A Text Book with George Arner New York Macmillan 1912 Applied Socialism A Study of the Application of Socialistic Principles to the State New York B W Huebsch 1912 Syndicalism Industrial Unionism and Socialism New York B W Huebsch 1913 Socialism and Motherhood New York B W Huebsch 1914 Marxian Socialism and Religion A Study of the Relation of the Marxian Theories to the Fundamental Principles of Religion New York B W Huebsch 1915 The social democratic years edit Our Aims in the War An Address Delivered by John Spargo at Minneapolis Minn September 5 1917 under the Auspices of the American Alliance for Labor and Democracy New York American Alliance for Labor and Democracy 1917 America s Democratic Opportunities An Address Delivered before the City Club of Cleveland October 6th 1917 Being the First Public Exposition of the Principles of the National Party Cleveland OH City Club of Cleveland 1917 Social Democracy Explained Theories and Tactics of Modern Socialism New York Harper 1918 Americanism and Social Democracy New York Harper 1918 Russia and the World Problem of the Jew Harper s Monthly Magazine vol 137 no 817 June 1918 pp 65 75 Bolshevism The Enemy of Political and Industrial Democracy New York Harper 1919 The Psychology of Bolshevism New York Harper and Brothers 1919 The Greatest Failure in All History A Critical Examination of the Actual Workings of Bolshevism in Russia New York Harper 1920 Russia as an American Problem New York Harper 1920 The Jew and American Ideals New York Harper 1921 A Memorandum on Trade with Soviet Russia New York Russian Information Bureau in the U S 1921 Post radical works edit Anthony Haswell Printer Patriot Ballader A Biographical Study with a Selection of his Ballads and an Annotated Bibliographical List of his Imprints Rutland VT The Tuttle Co 1925 Ethan Allen at Ticonderoga An Address Delivered By Spargo At Castleton Vermont May 9 1925 At The 150th Anniversary Of The Green Mountain Boys Under Ethan Allen And Their Departure For Ticonderoga city publisher date Early American Pottery and China Garden City NY The Century Co 1926 Potters And Potteries of Bennington Boston Houghton Mifflin Company Antiques Incorporated 1926 The Stars and Stripes in 1777 An Account of the Birth of the Flag and its First Baptism of Victorious Fire Bennington VT Bennington Battle Monument and Historical Association 1928 The True Story of Capt David Mathews and His State Line House Being the Vindication of the Memory of a Revolutionary Patriot amp the Exposure of Fantastic Legends Concerning the House He Built Bennington VT Bennington Historical Museum Publications 1930 Republicans Must Choose New York Review of Reviews 1936 Iron mining and smelting in Bennington Vermont 1786 1842 Bennington VT Bennington Battle Monument and Historical Association 1938 The A B C of Bennington Pottery Wares a Manual for Collectors and Dealers Bennington VT Bennington Historical Museum 1938 The Rise and Progress of Freemasonry in Vermont the Green Mountain State 1765 1944 Written for the Sesqui centennial Anniversary Celebration of the Grand Lodge of Vermont June 13 15 1944 Burlington VT Grand Lodge of Vermont Lane Press 1944 The Return of Russell Colvin Bennington VT Bennington Historical Museum and Art Gallery 1945 Amabimus amamus amabimus In memory of John Spargo Jr December 20 1919 October 10 1945 Bennington VT John Spargo 1946 Verses Grave and Gay Bennington VT John Spargo 1946 An Illustrated Descriptive Sketch of Bennington Battle Monument With an Account of Bennington Battle August 16 1777 Bennington VT Bennington Battle Monument and Historical Association 1947 Two Bennington Born Explorers and Makers of Modern Canada Bradford VT Green Mountain Press 1950 Faith and Fun at Sunset Bennington VT John Spargo 1951 Covered Wooden Bridges of Bennington County Historical and Descriptive Account Bennington VT Bennington Historical Museum and Art Gallery 1953 The Old First Church of Bennington Bennington VT Broad Brook Press n d 1950s The Reminiscences of John Spargo microfilm n c n p 1957 OCLC 1458902 Further reading edit nbsp Cornwall portalGerald Friedberg Marxism in the United States John Spargo and the Socialist Party of America PhD dissertation Harvard University 1964 Kenneth Howard Hilton A Well Marked Course The Life and Works of John Spargo PhD dissertation Syracuse University 1991 Ronald Radosh John Spargo and Wilson s Russian Policy 1920 Journal of American History vol 52 no 3 Dec 1965 pp 548 565 JSTOR 1890847 Markku Ruotsila John Spargo and American Socialism New York Palgrave Macmillan 2006 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Spargo Articles in The Craftsman 1906 1907 Inventory of the John Spargo Papers Special Collections University of Vermont Library Works by John Spargo at Project Gutenberg Works by or about John Spargo at Internet Archive Spargo John Collier s New Encyclopedia 1921 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Spargo amp oldid 1166507915, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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