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Max Bedacht

Max Bedacht Sr. (October 13, 1883 – July 4, 1972) was a German-born American revolutionary socialist political activist, journalist, and functionary who helped establish the Communist Party of America. Bedacht is best remembered as the long-time head of the International Workers Order, a Communist Party-sponsored fraternal benefit organization.

Max Bedacht
Max Bedacht in November 1922
Born(1883-10-13)October 13, 1883
Munich, Germany
DiedJuly 4, 1972(1972-07-04) (aged 88)
Years active1905–1949
Known forco-founder of CPUSA and general secretary of IWO
SpouseElizabeth Bedacht
ChildrenElsie, Edith, Ethel, and Max

Biography

Early years

Max Bedacht, Sr. was born in Munich, Germany to an ethnically German mother on October 13, 1883. He was the son of a single mother who worked as a domestic servant and was raised Catholic by a maternal aunt and uncle.[1]

Early labor activities

Bedacht apprenticed and worked as a barber in Germany and Switzerland, working in the towns of Gossau and Herisau. He organized fellow journeymen barbers into a union during his European years. In 1905 he joined the Social Democratic Party of Switzerland. In 1907, Bedacht was elected president of the Swiss National Barbers' Union and edited the organization's newspaper. That same year he took part in his first labor action, a sympathy strike held for the striking chocolate workers on the banks of Lake Geneva.[1]

During a barbers' strike the following year, Bedacht rented a building for a cooperative barber shop in his name. In the settlement of the strike, the plan for the cooperative facility was abandoned, however, and Bedacht was sued for breach of contract by the building's landlord. While the union's members offered to pay the money for him, Bedacht decided to emigrate to the United States rather than allow this to take place.[1]

Activities: New York City

Bedacht immigrated to the United States in 1908 and joined the Socialist Party of America (SPA) during that same year. He lived and worked in Manhattan from 1910 to 1912, cutting hair by day while spending his evenings as a German-language socialist agitator.[1] After this he spent a brief period in Detroit as editor of both German-language and English-language Socialist newspapers.[1]

Activities: San Francisco

In June 1913 he moved to San Francisco to become the editor of the German-language labor newspaper Vorwärts der Pacific Küste (Forward of the Pacific Coast), a job which he retained until the paper's termination in 1917 due to draconian postal regulations being placed on the foreign language press during World War I. He briefly moved to South Dakota to edit a paper called The New Era following the demise of the Vorwärts, but soon returned to San Francisco when he found that publication unviable, taking up the barbers' shears again.

Bedacht was long an adherent of the so-called impossibilist wing of the Socialist Party, placing his faith in socialist revolution rather than the ameliorative reform of elected officials. As was the case with many radicals in America, Bedacht was inspired by the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 and was an early adherent of the 1919 Left Wing Manifesto written by Louis C. Fraina and the Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party, which emerged in conjunction with that document. Bedacht was a Left Wing candidate for the SPA's governing National Executive Committee in 1919 and a delegate to the SPA's pivotal 1919 Emergency National Convention.[2]

Chicago convention of 1919

At the Chicago convention in August 1919, the Left Wing California delegation was challenged at the time the gathering was convened, placing the delegates in limbo, their fate held in the mercy of a committee firmly controlled by the "Regular" faction of National Executive Secretary Adolph Germer and James Oneal. The Credentials Committee, headed by Judge Jacob Panken of New York City, stalled the hearings on the California delegation until after the convention was underway and until it was clear that a safe majority of delegates were in the Regulars' camp.

As a result, although they were ultimately approved by the committee, the California delegation refused to take their seats in protest and went downstairs to attend the parallel convention of the Communist Labor Party (CLP) convened by NEC members Alfred Wagenknecht and L.E. Katterfeld. Bedacht was elected at the founding convention to the 5 member National Executive Committee which governed the CLP.

During the Palmer Raids in California and Chicago, Bedacht was arrested and tried for conspiracy. However, despite conviction, he avoided prison. Soon afterwards, he traveled to Europe and Russia as an international delegate for the Communist Party.[2]

In 1924, Bedacht was a delegate of the Workers Party of America to the 5th World Congress of the Communist International.[1]

Bedacht lived in Chicago at 3101 North Nordica Avenue, from 1923 to 1928, according to his testimony before HUAC in 1949.[3]

Activities: New York City

In 1929, Bedacht took over as liaison with the Soviet underground after the expulsion of Jay Lovestone from the Party in 1929.[4]

In the summer of 1932, Bedacht invited Whittaker Chambers to join the Soviet underground.[5] Chambers described Bedacht's approach as follows:

"What are you doing now, Comrade Chambers?" Bedacht asked me. I said that I was editing the New Masses. "You were out of the party for a while, weren't you?" he asked . I said that I had been out of the party. "For some reason," he said, as if he strongly disapproved of the whole business, "they want you to go into one of the party's 'special institutions'." Bedacht always used that expression in referring to any of the Communist underground apparatuses. But it was a term new to me.

I asked what he meant.

"It is a 'special institution'," he repeated. As I still looked blank, he added: "They want you to do underground work." ...

Then I said: "I am sorry, but I have decided not to do it."

"You have no choice," said the little man. He meant, of course, that I was under the discipline of the party and that, if I did not go into the underground, I would go out of the party. "In fact," he added, "in a few minutes I am going to take you to someone from the 'special institution'.[6]

In 1934, he ran on the Communist ticket for U.S. Senator from New York and received 45,396 votes (1.23%).[7]

In 1937, he said under oath in 1948, "I went to Spain with a committee of eight to the International Brigade in Spain. I think it was 1937."[3]

In 1939, Time Magazine cited Bedacht in connection with the arrest of Party leader Earl Browder on charges of indicted a Federal Grand Jury in New York City on two counts connected to passport: "Possible was the bagging by Frank Murphy of such Reds as Executive Committeeman Max Bedacht, Publisher Alexander Trachtenberg."[8]

International Workers Order

In the 1930s, Bedacht became general secretary of the International Workers Order (IWO), a Communist Party-affiliated insurance, mutual benefit, and fraternal organization (1930–1954), whose membership peaked in the late 1940s at 200,000 members. In the mid-1940s, Bedacht appeared under subpoena before the Special Committee on Un-American Activities of the US House of Representatives (or "Dies Committee").

Expulsion

In November 1948, Bedacht was expelled from the national CPUSA.[9]

In November 1949, Bedacht appeared before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). Regarding his activities, he answered when asked:

Mr. Tavenner: Will you please state for the committee the official positions which you have held in the past in the Communist Party of the United States?
Mr. Bedacht: Almost everything up to secretary. I was never the editor of the Daily Worker.[3]

Regarding his expulsion from the CPUSA, he held this exchange:

Mr. Tavenner: I believe you have recently been expelled from Communist Party, have you not?
Mr. Bedacht. Yes, sir.
Mr. Tavenner. On what grounds did this expulsion take place?
Mr. Bedacht: I don't know that I know myself, but, anyway, this committee is surely not a court of appeals against my expulsion, and my explanation for it would take quite a while, and you would have to listen to the other side, too.
Mr. Tavenner: I will not go into that. It was the result of a factional dispute within the party; is that substantially right?
Mr. Bedacht: You may say so.[3]

Personal life and death

Bedacht was married and had four children, three daughters and a son: Elsie, Edith, Ethel, and Max. His eldest daughter worked for a time in the National Office of the American Communist Party in the early 1930s.[1][10]

Max Bedacht died on July 4, 1972. His Communist Party membership had been reinstated a few years prior.[11]

Works

Books and pamphlets

  • In Memoriam: To our comrades Karl Liebknecht, 1871–1919, Rosa Luxemburg, 1871–1919, Martyrs to the German Revolution. San Francisco : Socialist Party of San Francisco, 1919
  • Principles of Communism: Engel's Original Draft of the Communist Manifesto. (Editor.) Chicago: Daily Worker Publishing Co., 1925
  • The Menace of Opportunism: A Contribution to the Bolshevization of the Workers (Communist) Party. Chicago: Daily Worker Publishing Co., 1926
  • Anti-Soviet Lies and the Five-Year Plan: The "Holy" Capitalist War Against the Soviet Union. New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1931
  • Karl Marx, 1883-1933 With Earl Browder and Sam Don. New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1933
  • Unity of the Workers' Fraternal Movement: A Speech. New York: Cultural Committee of the International Workers Order, 1936
  • Labor Fraternalism: The Fraternal Principles and Program of the IWO. New York: National Education Dept., International Workers Order, 1941
  • An Appeal of the German Communists: Destroy Hitler! Free Germany! With Alfred Wagenknecht. New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1942
  • The International Workers Order from the Fifth to the Sixth Convention: Report of the General Secretary Max Bedacht to the IWO Sixth National Convention, July 2–7, 1944, New York City. New York: International Workers Order, 1944
  • The Task Before Us: Address. New York: International Workers Order, 1944
  • Complete Equality: Democracy and the Negroes. New York: International Workers Order, 1945
  • Your Health — America's Wealth. New York: International Workers Order, 1945
  • On the Path of Life (memoirs), 1967

Articles

All articles listed here come from the Marxists Internet Archive except the 1926 Daily Worker article entitled "Eastman Drops His Mask."[12]

  • Communist Labor Party Mail Referendum for NEC Motions 3 and 4 (1919)
  • Letter to the Central Executive Committee of the United Communist Party (1921)
  • To the CEC of the CPA (PDF) (1926)
  • Report on the 4th Comintern Congress to the CEC of the Workers Party of America (1921)
  • Circular Letter to All District Organizers of the Unified CPA (1922)
  • Letter to the Executive Committee of the Communist International in Moscow (1924)
  • "Eastman Drops His Mask," The Daily Worker, vol. 3, no. 237 (October 20, 1926), pp. 1, 6
  • Editorial (1927)

Miscellaneous

  • Letter to Theodore Draper (1954)[12]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Sterling, Philip (13 October 1933). "Max Bedacht, Thirty Years in the Revolutionary Labor Movement, Celebrates 50th Birthday". Vol. 10, no. 246. The Daily Worker. p. 5.
  2. ^ a b . Tamiment Library. Archived from the original on 2 July 2011. Retrieved 9 October 2011.
  3. ^ a b c d "Hearings Regarding Communist Espionage: Hearings before the Committee on Un-American Activities, House of Representatives, Eighty-First Congress, First Session". Archives.org. 8 November 1949. Retrieved 9 October 2011.
  4. ^ Sakmyster, Thomas L. (2011). Red Conspirator: J. Peters and the American Communist Underground. University of Illinois Press. p. 62. ISBN 9780252035982. Retrieved 9 October 2011.
  5. ^ Sakmyster, Thomas L. (12 August 2007). "Max Bedacht". History of American Communism (HOAC). Retrieved 9 October 2011.
  6. ^ Chambers, Whittaker (1952). Witness. New York: Random House. pp. 271–280. ISBN 978-0-8488-0958-4. LCCN 52005149.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ Our Campaigns – NY US Senate Race – Nov 06, 1934
  8. ^ "CRIME: Curious Coincidence". Time Magazine. 30 October 1939. Retrieved 27 July 2021.
  9. ^ "Bedacht Expelled by Reds in Jersey: The Communist Party's Review Commission in State Says He Opposed Foster, Dennis". New York Times. 20 November 1948. Retrieved 9 October 2011.
  10. ^ "Bedacht Family". Marxist History. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
  11. ^ "Max Bedacht, 89, Co-Founder Of U.S. Communist Party, Dead". New York Times. July 1972. Retrieved 9 October 2011.
  12. ^ a b "Max Bedacht Library". Marxists Internet Archive. Retrieved 9 October 2011.

External sources

  • Chambers, Whittaker (1952). Witness. New York: Random House. pp. 237, 271, 275, 276, 279, 280, 287, 288, 295–297, 302–303, 309–310. ISBN 978-0-8488-0958-4. LCCN 52005149.[permanent dead link]
  • Sakmyster, Thomas L. (2011). "Red Conspirator: J. Peters and the American Communist Underground". University of Illinois Press. pp. xvii, 19, 28, 31, 56, 61–62, 67, 69, 79, 113, 194.
  • Emory University: Manunscripts and Archives on Communism: Theodore Draper Papers
  • Marxists Internet Archive: Max Bedacht Library

bedacht, october, 1883, july, 1972, german, born, american, revolutionary, socialist, political, activist, journalist, functionary, helped, establish, communist, party, america, bedacht, best, remembered, long, time, head, international, workers, order, commun. Max Bedacht Sr October 13 1883 July 4 1972 was a German born American revolutionary socialist political activist journalist and functionary who helped establish the Communist Party of America Bedacht is best remembered as the long time head of the International Workers Order a Communist Party sponsored fraternal benefit organization Max BedachtMax Bedacht in November 1922Born 1883 10 13 October 13 1883Munich GermanyDiedJuly 4 1972 1972 07 04 aged 88 Jamaica Queens New York City United StatesYears active1905 1949Known forco founder of CPUSA and general secretary of IWOSpouseElizabeth BedachtChildrenElsie Edith Ethel and Max Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Early labor activities 1 3 Activities New York City 1 4 Activities San Francisco 1 5 Chicago convention of 1919 1 6 Activities New York City 1 7 International Workers Order 1 8 Expulsion 2 Personal life and death 3 Works 3 1 Books and pamphlets 3 2 Articles 3 3 Miscellaneous 4 Footnotes 5 External sourcesBiography EditEarly years Edit Max Bedacht Sr was born in Munich Germany to an ethnically German mother on October 13 1883 He was the son of a single mother who worked as a domestic servant and was raised Catholic by a maternal aunt and uncle 1 Early labor activities Edit Bedacht apprenticed and worked as a barber in Germany and Switzerland working in the towns of Gossau and Herisau He organized fellow journeymen barbers into a union during his European years In 1905 he joined the Social Democratic Party of Switzerland In 1907 Bedacht was elected president of the Swiss National Barbers Union and edited the organization s newspaper That same year he took part in his first labor action a sympathy strike held for the striking chocolate workers on the banks of Lake Geneva 1 During a barbers strike the following year Bedacht rented a building for a cooperative barber shop in his name In the settlement of the strike the plan for the cooperative facility was abandoned however and Bedacht was sued for breach of contract by the building s landlord While the union s members offered to pay the money for him Bedacht decided to emigrate to the United States rather than allow this to take place 1 Activities New York City Edit Bedacht immigrated to the United States in 1908 and joined the Socialist Party of America SPA during that same year He lived and worked in Manhattan from 1910 to 1912 cutting hair by day while spending his evenings as a German language socialist agitator 1 After this he spent a brief period in Detroit as editor of both German language and English language Socialist newspapers 1 Activities San Francisco Edit In June 1913 he moved to San Francisco to become the editor of the German language labor newspaper Vorwarts der Pacific Kuste Forward of the Pacific Coast a job which he retained until the paper s termination in 1917 due to draconian postal regulations being placed on the foreign language press during World War I He briefly moved to South Dakota to edit a paper called The New Era following the demise of the Vorwarts but soon returned to San Francisco when he found that publication unviable taking up the barbers shears again Bedacht was long an adherent of the so called impossibilist wing of the Socialist Party placing his faith in socialist revolution rather than the ameliorative reform of elected officials As was the case with many radicals in America Bedacht was inspired by the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 and was an early adherent of the 1919 Left Wing Manifesto written by Louis C Fraina and the Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party which emerged in conjunction with that document Bedacht was a Left Wing candidate for the SPA s governing National Executive Committee in 1919 and a delegate to the SPA s pivotal 1919 Emergency National Convention 2 Chicago convention of 1919 Edit At the Chicago convention in August 1919 the Left Wing California delegation was challenged at the time the gathering was convened placing the delegates in limbo their fate held in the mercy of a committee firmly controlled by the Regular faction of National Executive Secretary Adolph Germer and James Oneal The Credentials Committee headed by Judge Jacob Panken of New York City stalled the hearings on the California delegation until after the convention was underway and until it was clear that a safe majority of delegates were in the Regulars camp As a result although they were ultimately approved by the committee the California delegation refused to take their seats in protest and went downstairs to attend the parallel convention of the Communist Labor Party CLP convened by NEC members Alfred Wagenknecht and L E Katterfeld Bedacht was elected at the founding convention to the 5 member National Executive Committee which governed the CLP During the Palmer Raids in California and Chicago Bedacht was arrested and tried for conspiracy However despite conviction he avoided prison Soon afterwards he traveled to Europe and Russia as an international delegate for the Communist Party 2 In 1924 Bedacht was a delegate of the Workers Party of America to the 5th World Congress of the Communist International 1 Bedacht lived in Chicago at 3101 North Nordica Avenue from 1923 to 1928 according to his testimony before HUAC in 1949 3 Activities New York City Edit In 1929 Bedacht took over as liaison with the Soviet underground after the expulsion of Jay Lovestone from the Party in 1929 4 In the summer of 1932 Bedacht invited Whittaker Chambers to join the Soviet underground 5 Chambers described Bedacht s approach as follows What are you doing now Comrade Chambers Bedacht asked me I said that I was editing the New Masses You were out of the party for a while weren t you he asked I said that I had been out of the party For some reason he said as if he strongly disapproved of the whole business they want you to go into one of the party s special institutions Bedacht always used that expression in referring to any of the Communist underground apparatuses But it was a term new to me I asked what he meant It is a special institution he repeated As I still looked blank he added They want you to do underground work Then I said I am sorry but I have decided not to do it You have no choice said the little man He meant of course that I was under the discipline of the party and that if I did not go into the underground I would go out of the party In fact he added in a few minutes I am going to take you to someone from the special institution 6 In 1934 he ran on the Communist ticket for U S Senator from New York and received 45 396 votes 1 23 7 In 1937 he said under oath in 1948 I went to Spain with a committee of eight to the International Brigade in Spain I think it was 1937 3 In 1939 Time Magazine cited Bedacht in connection with the arrest of Party leader Earl Browder on charges of indicted a Federal Grand Jury in New York City on two counts connected to passport Possible was the bagging by Frank Murphy of such Reds as Executive Committeeman Max Bedacht Publisher Alexander Trachtenberg 8 International Workers Order Edit In the 1930s Bedacht became general secretary of the International Workers Order IWO a Communist Party affiliated insurance mutual benefit and fraternal organization 1930 1954 whose membership peaked in the late 1940s at 200 000 members In the mid 1940s Bedacht appeared under subpoena before the Special Committee on Un American Activities of the US House of Representatives or Dies Committee Expulsion Edit In November 1948 Bedacht was expelled from the national CPUSA 9 In November 1949 Bedacht appeared before the House Un American Activities Committee HUAC Regarding his activities he answered when asked Mr Tavenner Will you please state for the committee the official positions which you have held in the past in the Communist Party of the United States Mr Bedacht Almost everything up to secretary I was never the editor of the Daily Worker 3 Regarding his expulsion from the CPUSA he held this exchange Mr Tavenner I believe you have recently been expelled from Communist Party have you not Mr Bedacht Yes sir Mr Tavenner On what grounds did this expulsion take place Mr Bedacht I don t know that I know myself but anyway this committee is surely not a court of appeals against my expulsion and my explanation for it would take quite a while and you would have to listen to the other side too Mr Tavenner I will not go into that It was the result of a factional dispute within the party is that substantially right Mr Bedacht You may say so 3 Personal life and death EditBedacht was married and had four children three daughters and a son Elsie Edith Ethel and Max His eldest daughter worked for a time in the National Office of the American Communist Party in the early 1930s 1 10 Max Bedacht died on July 4 1972 His Communist Party membership had been reinstated a few years prior 11 Works EditBooks and pamphlets Edit In Memoriam To our comrades Karl Liebknecht 1871 1919 Rosa Luxemburg 1871 1919 Martyrs to the German Revolution San Francisco Socialist Party of San Francisco 1919 Principles of Communism Engel s Original Draft of the Communist Manifesto Editor Chicago Daily Worker Publishing Co 1925 The Menace of Opportunism A Contribution to the Bolshevization of the Workers Communist Party Chicago Daily Worker Publishing Co 1926 Anti Soviet Lies and the Five Year Plan The Holy Capitalist War Against the Soviet Union New York Workers Library Publishers 1931 Karl Marx 1883 1933 With Earl Browder and Sam Don New York Workers Library Publishers 1933 Unity of the Workers Fraternal Movement A Speech New York Cultural Committee of the International Workers Order 1936 Labor Fraternalism The Fraternal Principles and Program of the IWO New York National Education Dept International Workers Order 1941 An Appeal of the German Communists Destroy Hitler Free Germany With Alfred Wagenknecht New York Workers Library Publishers 1942 The International Workers Order from the Fifth to the Sixth Convention Report of the General Secretary Max Bedacht to the IWO Sixth National Convention July 2 7 1944 New York City New York International Workers Order 1944 The Task Before Us Address New York International Workers Order 1944 Complete Equality Democracy and the Negroes New York International Workers Order 1945 Your Health America s Wealth New York International Workers Order 1945 On the Path of Life memoirs 1967Articles Edit All articles listed here come from the Marxists Internet Archive except the 1926 Daily Worker article entitled Eastman Drops His Mask 12 Communist Labor Party Mail Referendum for NEC Motions 3 and 4 1919 Letter to the Central Executive Committee of the United Communist Party 1921 To the CEC of the CPA PDF 1926 Report on the 4th Comintern Congress to the CEC of the Workers Party of America 1921 Circular Letter to All District Organizers of the Unified CPA 1922 Letter to the Executive Committee of the Communist International in Moscow 1924 Eastman Drops His Mask The Daily Worker vol 3 no 237 October 20 1926 pp 1 6 Editorial 1927 Miscellaneous Edit Letter to Theodore Draper 1954 12 Footnotes Edit a b c d e f g Sterling Philip 13 October 1933 Max Bedacht Thirty Years in the Revolutionary Labor Movement Celebrates 50th Birthday Vol 10 no 246 The Daily Worker p 5 a b Guide to the Max Bedacht Autobiographical Typescript On the Path of Life Memoirs of Your Father Tamiment Library Archived from the original on 2 July 2011 Retrieved 9 October 2011 a b c d Hearings Regarding Communist Espionage Hearings before the Committee on Un American Activities House of Representatives Eighty First Congress First Session Archives org 8 November 1949 Retrieved 9 October 2011 Sakmyster Thomas L 2011 Red Conspirator J Peters and the American Communist Underground University of Illinois Press p 62 ISBN 9780252035982 Retrieved 9 October 2011 Sakmyster Thomas L 12 August 2007 Max Bedacht History of American Communism HOAC Retrieved 9 October 2011 Chambers Whittaker 1952 Witness New York Random House pp 271 280 ISBN 978 0 8488 0958 4 LCCN 52005149 permanent dead link Our Campaigns NY US Senate Race Nov 06 1934 CRIME Curious Coincidence Time Magazine 30 October 1939 Retrieved 27 July 2021 Bedacht Expelled by Reds in Jersey The Communist Party s Review Commission in State Says He Opposed Foster Dennis New York Times 20 November 1948 Retrieved 9 October 2011 Bedacht Family Marxist History Retrieved 16 July 2016 Max Bedacht 89 Co Founder Of U S Communist Party Dead New York Times July 1972 Retrieved 9 October 2011 a b Max Bedacht Library Marxists Internet Archive Retrieved 9 October 2011 External sources EditChambers Whittaker 1952 Witness New York Random House pp 237 271 275 276 279 280 287 288 295 297 302 303 309 310 ISBN 978 0 8488 0958 4 LCCN 52005149 permanent dead link Sakmyster Thomas L 2011 Red Conspirator J Peters and the American Communist Underground University of Illinois Press pp xvii 19 28 31 56 61 62 67 69 79 113 194 Emory University Manunscripts and Archives on Communism Theodore Draper Papers Marxists Internet Archive Max Bedacht Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Max Bedacht amp oldid 1113009108, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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