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Whittaker Chambers

Whittaker Chambers (born Jay Vivian Chambers; April 1, 1901 – July 9, 1961) was an American writer and intelligence agent. After early years as a Communist Party member (1925) and Soviet spy (1932–1938), he defected from the Soviet underground (1938), worked for Time magazine (1939–1948), and then testified about the Ware Group in what became the Hiss case for perjury (1949–1950), often referred to as the trial of the century, all described in his 1952 memoir Witness.[1] Afterwards, he worked as a senior editor at National Review (1957–1959). US President Ronald Reagan awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom posthumously in 1984.[2]

Whittaker Chambers
Chambers in 1948
Born
Jay Vivian Chambers

(1901-04-01)April 1, 1901
DiedJuly 9, 1961(1961-07-09) (aged 60)
Alma materColumbia University
Occupation(s)Journalist, writer, spy, poet, translator
SpouseEsther Shemitz
ChildrenEllen Chambers, John Chambers
Espionage activity
Allegiance Soviet Union
 United States
Service branch"Communist underground" controlled by the GRU
Service years1932–1938 (spy), 1922–1959 (writer, poet), 1926–1939 (translator)
CodenameCarl (Karl)
CodenameBob
CodenameDavid Breen
CodenameLloyd Cantwell
CodenameCarl Schroeder

Background edit

 
Hartley Hall at Columbia University, where Chambers boarded in the 1920s

Chambers was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,[3] and spent his infancy in Brooklyn. His family moved to Lynbrook, Long Island, New York State, in 1904, where he grew up and attended school.[2][4] His parents were Jay Chambers and Laha Whittaker. He described his childhood as troubled because of his parents' separation and their need to care for their mentally-ill grandmother. His father was an artist and member of the Decorative Designers; his mother was last a social worker. Chambers's brother, Richard Godfrey Chambers committed suicide shortly after he had withdrawn from college at age 22.[5] Chambers cited his brother's fate as one of many reasons that he was then drawn to communism. As he wrote, it "offered me what nothing else in the dying world had power to offer at the same intensity, faith and a vision, something for which to live and something for which to die."[1]

Education edit

After graduating from South Side High School in neighboring Rockville Centre in 1919, Chambers worked itinerantly in Washington and New Orleans, briefly attended Williams College and then enrolled as a day student at Columbia College of Columbia University.[1] At Columbia, his undergraduate peers included Meyer Schapiro, Frank S. Hogan, Herbert Solow, Louis Zukofsky, Arthur F. Burns, Clifton Fadiman, Elliott V. Bell, John Gassner, Lionel Trilling (who later fictionalized him as a main character in his novel The Middle of the Journey),[6] Guy Endore, and City College student poet Henry Zolinsky.[2] In the intellectual environment of Columbia, he gained friends and respect. His professors and fellow students found him a talented writer and believed he might become a major poet or novelist.[7]

In his sophomore year, Chambers joined the Boar's Head Society[8] and wrote a play called A Play for Puppets for Columbia's literary magazine The Morningside, which he edited. The work was deemed blasphemous by many students and administrators, and the controversy spread to New York City newspapers. Later, the play would be used against Chambers during his testimony against Hiss. Disheartened over the controversy, Chambers left Columbia in 1925.[1] From Columbia, Chambers also knew Isaiah Oggins, who went into the Soviet underground a few years earlier; Chambers's wife, Esther Shemitz Chambers, knew Oggins's wife, Nerma Berman Oggins, from the Rand School of Social Science, the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union, and The World Tomorrow.[9]

Communism espionage edit

In 1924, Chambers read Vladimir Lenin's Soviets at Work and was deeply affected by it. He now saw the dysfunctional nature of his family, he would write, as "in miniature the whole crisis of the middle class", a malaise from which communism promised liberation. Chambers's biographer Sam Tanenhaus wrote that Lenin's authoritarianism was "precisely what attracts Chambers. ... He had at last found his church."[citation needed] Chambers became a Marxist and, in 1925, joined the Communist Party of the United States (CPUSA), then known as the Workers Party of America.

Career edit

Communist edit

Chambers wrote and edited for the magazine New Masses and was an editor for the Daily Worker newspaper from 1927 to 1929.[2]

Combining his literary talents with his devotion to communism, Chambers wrote four short stories for New Masses in 1931 about proletarian hardship and revolt, including Can You Make Out Their Voices?, which was considered by critics as one of the best pieces of fiction of American communism.[10] Hallie Flanagan co-adapted and produced it as a play entitled Can You Hear Their Voices? (see Bibliography of Whittaker Chambers), staged across America and in many other countries. Chambers also worked as a translator, his works including the English version of Felix Salten's 1923 novel Bambi, a Life in the Woods.[11][12]

Soviet underground edit

Ware group edit

Chambers was recruited to join the "communist underground" and began his career as a spy, working for a GRU (Main Intelligence Directorate) spy ring headed by Alexander Ulanovsky, also known as Ulrich. Later, his main handler was Josef Peters, who was replaced by CPUSA General Secretary Earl Browder with Rudy Baker. Chambers claimed that Peters introduced him to Harold Ware (although he later denied Peters had ever been introduced to Ware, and also testified to HUAC that he, Chambers, never knew Ware). Chambers claimed that Ware was head of a communist underground cell in Washington that reportedly included the following:[13]

Name Description
Lee Pressman Assistant general counsel of Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA)
John Abt Chief of Litigation for AAA (1933–1935), assistant general counsel of the WPA 1935, chief counsel on Senator Robert La Follette Jr.'s La Follette Committee (1936–1937) and special assistant to U.S. Attorney General (1937–1938)
Marion Bachrach Sister of John Abt; office manager to Representative John Bernard of the Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party
Alger Hiss Attorney for Agricultural Adjustment Administration and Nye Committee; moved to Department of State in 1936, where he became an increasingly prominent figure
Donald Hiss Brother of Alger Hiss; employed at Department of State
Nathan Witt Employed at Agricultural Adjustment Administration; later moved to National Labor Relations Board
Victor Perlo Chief of Aviation Section of War Production Board; later, joined Office of Price Administration at Commerce and Division of Monetary Research at Treasury
Charles Kramer Employed at Department of Labor's NLRB
George Silverman Employed at RRB; later worked with Federal Coordinator of Transport, U.S. Tariff Commission and Labor Advisory Board of National Recovery Administration
Henry Collins Employed at National Recovery Administration and later Agricultural Adjustment Administration
Nathaniel Weyl Economist at Agricultural Adjustment Administration; later, defected from communism himself and gave evidence against party members
John Herrmann Author; assistant to Harold Ware; employed at Agricultural Adjustment Administration; courier and document photographer for Ware group; introduced Chambers to Hiss

Apart from Marion Bachrach, these individuals were all members of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal administration. Chambers worked in Washington as an organizer in communists in the city and as a courier between New York and Washington for stolen documents, which were delivered to Boris Bykov, the GRU station chief.[citation needed]

Other covert sources edit

Using the codename "Karl" or "Carl", Chambers served during the mid-1930s as a courier between various covert sources and Soviet intelligence. In addition to the Ware group mentioned above, other sources that Chambers alleged to have dealt with included the following:[14]

Name Description
Harry Dexter White Director of Division of Monetary Research at the US. Department of the Treasury
Harold Glasser Assistant Director, Division of Monetary Research, US. Department of the Treasury
Noel Field Employed at Department of State
Julian Wadleigh Economist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture; later, Trade Agreements section of the US. Department of State
Vincent Reno Mathematician at U.S. Army Aberdeen Proving Ground
Ward Pigman Employed at National Bureau of Standards, then Labor and Public Welfare Committee

Defection edit

 
Juliet Stuart Poyntz (circa 1918), whose disappearance spurred Chambers to defect

Chambers carried on his espionage activities from 1932 until 1937 or 1938 even while his faith in communism was waning. He became increasingly disturbed by Joseph Stalin's Great Purge, which began in 1936. He was also fearful for his own life since he had noted the murder in Switzerland of Ignace Reiss, a high-ranking Soviet spy who had broken with Stalin, and the disappearance of Chambers's friend and fellow spy Juliet Stuart Poyntz in the United States. Poyntz had vanished in 1937, shortly after she had visited Moscow and returned disillusioned with the communist cause because of the Stalinist Purges.[15]

Chambers ignored several orders that he travel to Moscow since he worried that he might be "purged". He also started concealing some of the documents he collected from his sources. He planned to use them[how?], along with several rolls of microfilm photographs of documents, as a "life preserver" to prevent the Soviets from killing him and his family.[1]

In 1938, Chambers broke with communism and took his family into hiding.[2] He stored the "life preserver" at the home of his wife's sister, whose son Nathan Levine was Chambers's lawyer.[1][16][17][18][19][20] Initially, he had no plans to give information on his espionage activities to the U.S. government. His espionage contacts were his friends, and he had no desire to inform on them.[1]

In his examination of Chambers's conversion from the left to the right, author Daniel Oppenheimer noted that Chambers substituted his passion for communism with a passion for God and saw the world in black-and-white terms both before and after his defection.[citation needed] In his autobiography, Chambers presented his devotion to communism as a reason for living, but after his defection, he saw his actions as being part of an "absolute evil".[21]

Berle meeting edit

 
Adolf A. Berle (circa 1965): Member of the FDR administration who took Chambers's 1939 report. Initially enthusiastic, he later downplayed the report.

The August 1939 Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact drove Chambers to take action against the Soviet Union.[22] In September 1939, at the urging of the anticommunist Russian-born journalist Isaac Don Levine, Chambers and Levine met with Assistant Secretary of State Adolf A. Berle. Levine had introduced Chambers to Walter Krivitsky, who was already informing American and British authorities about Soviet agents who held posts in both governments. Krivitsky told Chambers that it was their duty to inform. Chambers agreed to reveal what he knew on the condition of immunity from prosecution.[23] During the meeting, which took place at Berle's home, Woodley Mansion, in Washington, Chambers named several current and former government employees as spies or communist sympathizers. Many names mentioned held relatively minor posts or were already under suspicion. Some names, however, were more significant and surprising: Alger Hiss, his brother Donald Hiss, and Laurence Duggan, who were all respected, mid-level officials in the State Department, and Lauchlin Currie, a special assistant to Franklin Roosevelt. Another person named Vincent Reno had worked on a top secret bombsight project at the Aberdeen Proving Grounds.[2][24]

Berle found Chambers's information tentative, unclear, and uncorroborated. He took the information to the White House, but President Franklin Roosevelt dismissed it. Berle made little if any objection. He kept his notes, however, which were later used as evidence during Hiss's perjury trials.[25]

Berle notified the Federal Bureau of Investigation of Chambers's information in March 1940. In February 1941, Krivitsky was found dead in his hotel room. Police ruled the death a suicide, but it was widely speculated that Krivitsky had been killed by Soviet intelligence. Worried that the Soviets might try to kill Chambers too, Berle again told the FBI about his interview with Chambers. The FBI interviewed Chambers in May 1942 and June 1945 but took no immediate action in line with the political orientation of the United States, which viewed the potential threat from the Soviet Union as minor compared to that of Nazi Germany.[citation needed] Only in November 1945, when Elizabeth Bentley defected and corroborated much of Chambers's story, would the FBI begin to take Chambers seriously.[26]

Time edit

 
Henry Luce and Clare Boothe Luce (circa 1954) valued Chambers's writing at Time magazine

During the Berle meeting, Chambers had come out of hiding after a year and joined the staff of Time (April 1939). He landed a cover story within a month on James Joyce's latest book, Finnegans Wake.[27] He started at the back of the magazine, reviewing books and film with James Agee and then Calvin Fixx. When Fixx suffered a heart attack in October 1942, Wilder Hobson succeeded him as Chambers' assistant editor in Arts & Entertainment. Other writers working for Chambers in that section included novelist Nigel Dennis, future New York Times Book Review editor Harvey Breit, and poets Howard Moss and Weldon Kees.[28][29]

A struggle had arisen between those, like Theodore H. White and Richard Lauterbach, who raised criticism of what they saw as the elitism, corruption and ineptitude of Chiang Kai-shek's regime in China and advocated greater co-operation with Mao's Red Army in the struggle against Japanese imperialism, and Chambers and others like Willi Schlamm who adhered to a perspective that was staunchly pro-Chiang, anticommunist, and both later joined the founding editorial board of William F. Buckley, Jr.'s National Review. Time founder Henry Luce, who grew up in China and was a personal friend of Chiang and his wife, Soong Mei-ling, came down squarely on the side of Chambers to the point that White complained that his stories were being censored and even suppressed in their entirety, and he left Time shortly after the war as a result.[30]

In 1940, William Saroyan lists Fixx among "contributing editors" at Time in Saroyan's play, Love's Old Sweet Song.[31] Luce promoted him senior editor in either summer 1942 (Weinstein[32]) or September 1943 (Tanenhaus[33]) and became a member of Time's "Senior Group", which determined editorial policy, in December 1943.[33]

Chambers, close colleagues, and many staff members in the 1930s helped elevate Time and have been called "interstitial intellectuals" by the historian Robert Vanderlan.[34] His colleague John Hersey described them as follows:

Time was in an interesting phase; an editor named Tom Matthews had gathered a brilliant group of writers, including James Agee, Robert Fitzgerald, Whittaker Chambers, Robert Cantwell, Louis Kronenberger, and Calvin Fixx. ... They were dazzling. Time's style was still very hokey—"backward ran sentences till reeled the mind"—but I could tell, even as a neophyte, who had written each of the pieces in the magazine, because each of these writers had such a distinctive voice.[35]

By early 1948, Chambers had become one of the best known writer-editors at Time. First had come his scathing commentary "The Ghosts on the Roof" (March 5, 1945) on the Yalta Conference in which Hiss partook. Subsequent cover-story essays profiled Marian Anderson, Arnold J. Toynbee, Rebecca West and Reinhold Niebuhr. The cover story on Marian Anderson ("Religion: In Egypt Land", December 30, 1946) proved so popular that the magazine broke its rule of non-attribution in response to readers' letters:

Most Time cover stories are written and edited by the regular staffs of the section in which they appear. Certain cover stories, that present special difficulties or call for a special literary skill, are written by Senior Editor Whittaker Chambers.[36]

In a 1945 letter to Time colleague Charles Wertenbaker, Time-Life deputy editorial director John Shaw Billings said of Chambers, "Whit puts on the best show in words of any writer we've ever had ... a superb technician, particularly skilled in the mosaic art of putting a Time section together."[37] Chambers was at the height of his career when the Hiss case broke later that year.[38]

Meanwhile, Chambers and his family became Quakers, attending Pipe Creek Friends Meetinghouse near his Maryland farm.[39]

Hiss case edit

 
Alger Hiss (1948) denied Chambers's allegations but was convicted of perjury

On August 3, 1948, Chambers was called to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), where he gave the names of individuals he said were part of the underground "Ware group" in the late 1930s, including Alger Hiss. He once again named Hiss as a member of the Communist Party but did not yet make any accusations of espionage. In subsequent sessions, Hiss testified and initially denied that he knew anyone by the name of Chambers, but on seeing him in person and after it became clear that Chambers knew details about Hiss's life, Hiss said that he had known Chambers under the name "George Crosley". Hiss denied that he had ever been a communist, however. Since Chambers still presented no evidence, the committee had initially been inclined to take the word of Hiss on the matter. However, a committee member, Richard Nixon, received secret information from the FBI that had led him to pursue the issue. When it issued its report, HUAC described Hiss's testimony as "vague and evasive".[2]

Biographer Timothy Naftali describes the trial as "a battle between two queers,” an allusion to the fact that both parties were supposedly homosexual. Additionally, Hiss' stepson, Timothy Hobson, alleged that Chambers' accusation was borne out of unrequited romantic feelings for Hiss.[40]

"Red Herring" edit

 
Harry S. Truman (center) with Joseph Stalin (left) and Winston Churchill (right) in 1945. Truman called Chambers's allegations a "red herring".

The country quickly became divided over Hiss and Chambers. President Harry S. Truman, not pleased with the allegation that the man who had presided over the United Nations Charter Conference was a communist, dismissed the case as a "red herring".[41] In the atmosphere of increasing anticommunism that would later be termed McCarthyism, many conservatives viewed the Hiss case as emblematic of what they saw as Democrats' laxity towards the danger of communist infiltration and influence in the State Department.[citation needed] Many liberals, in turn, saw the Hiss case as part of the desperation of the Republican Party to regain the office of president since it had been out of power for 16 years.[citation needed] Truman also issued Executive Order 9835, which initiated a program of loyalty reviews for federal employees in 1947.[42]

"Pumpkin Papers" edit

Hiss filed a $75,000 libel suit against Chambers on October 8, 1948.[2] Under pressure from Hiss's lawyers, Chambers finally retrieved his envelope of evidence and presented it to the HUAC after it had subpoenaed them. It contained four notes in Hiss's handwriting, 65 typewritten copies of State Department documents and five strips of microfilm, some of which contained photographs of State Department documents. The press came to call these the "Pumpkin Papers" since Chambers had briefly hidden the microfilm in a hollowed-out pumpkin. The documents indicated that Hiss knew Chambers long after mid-1936, when Hiss said he had last seen "Crosley", and also that Hiss had engaged in espionage with Chambers. Chambers explained his delay in producing the evidence as an effort to spare an old friend from more trouble than necessary. Until October 1948, Chambers had repeatedly stated that Hiss had not engaged in espionage, even when Chambers testified under oath. Chambers was forced to testify at the Hiss trials that he had committed perjury several times, which reduced his credibility in the eyes of his critics.

The five rolls of 35 mm film known as the "pumpkin papers" were thought until late 1974 to be locked in HUAC files. The independent researcher Stephen W. Salant, an economist at the University of Michigan, sued the U.S. Justice Department in 1975 when his request for access to them under the Freedom of Information Act was denied. On July 31, 1975, as a result of this lawsuit and follow-on suits filed by Peter Irons and by Alger Hiss and William Reuben, the Justice Department released copies of the "pumpkin papers" that had been used to implicate Hiss. One roll of film turned out to be totally blank because of overexposure, two others are faintly-legible copies of nonclassified Navy Department documents relating to such subjects as life rafts and fire extinguishers, and the remaining two are photographs of the State Department documents introduced by the prosecution at the two Hiss trials, relating to US-German relations in the late 1930s.[43]

That story, however, as reported by The New York Times in the 1970s, contains only a partial truth. The blank roll had been mentioned by Chambers in his autobiography, Witness. However, in addition to innocuous farm reports, the documents on the other pumpkin patch microfilms also included "confidential memos sent from overseas embassies to diplomatic staff in Washington, D.C."[44] Worse, those memos had originally been transmitted in code, which, thanks to their presumable possession of both coded originals and the translations (claimed by Chambers, to be forwarded by Hiss), the Soviets now could easily understand.[44]

In taped recordings of President Nixon on July 1, 1971, he admitted that he had not checked the Pumpkin Papers prior to their use and he felt that the Justice Department was out to exonerate Hiss and a federal grand jury would indict Nixon's ally Chambers for perjury. The FBI continued investigating Hiss's innocence into 1953.[45][46][47][48]

Perjury edit

 
The trials against Hiss took place at the Foley Square Courthouse (now Thurgood Marshall Courthouse) in New York City (here, 2009)

Hiss was indicted for two counts of perjury relating to testimony he had given before a federal grand jury the previous December. He had denied giving any documents to Chambers and testified that he had not seen Chambers after mid-1936.

Hiss was tried twice for perjury. The first trial, in June 1949, ended with the jury deadlocked 8–4 for conviction. In addition to Chambers's testimony, a government expert testified that other papers typed on a typewriter belonging to the Hiss family matched the secret papers produced by Chambers. An impressive array of character witnesses appeared on behalf of Hiss: two Supreme Court justices, Felix Frankfurter and Stanley Reed, the former Democratic presidential nominee John W. Davis, and the future Democratic presidential nominee Adlai Stevenson. Chambers, on the other hand, was attacked by Hiss's attorneys as "an enemy of the Republic, a blasphemer of Christ, a disbeliever in God, with no respect for matrimony or motherhood".[41] In the second trial, Hiss's defense produced a psychiatrist who characterized Chambers as a "psychopathic personality" and "a pathological liar".[49]

The second trial ended in January 1950 with Hiss being found guilty on both counts of perjury. He was sentenced to five years in prison.[2]

Chambers had resigned from Time in December 1948. After the Hiss case, he wrote a few articles for Fortune, Life, and Look magazines.[1]

In 1951, during the HUAC hearings, William Spiegel of Baltimore identified a photo of "Carl Schroeder" as Chambers while Spiegel was describing his involvement with David Zimmerman, a spy in Chambers's network.[50][51]

Witness edit

In 1952, Chambers's book Witness was published to widespread acclaim.[2][52][53][54][55] It was a combination of autobiography and a warning about the dangers of communism. Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. called it "a powerful book".[56] Ronald Reagan credited the book as the inspiration behind his conversion from a New Deal Democrat to a conservative Republican.[41] Witness was a bestseller for more than a year[56] and helped to pay off Chambers's legal debts, but bills lingered ("as Odysseus was beset by a ghost").[57]

According to the commentator George Will in 2017:

Witness became a canonical text of conservatism. Unfortunately, it injected conservatism with a sour, whiney, complaining, crybaby populism. It is the screechy and dominant tone of the loutish faux conservatism that today is erasing [William F.] Buckley's legacy of infectious cheerfulness and unapologetic embrace of high culture. Chambers wallowed in cloying sentimentality and curdled resentment about "the plain men and women"—"my people, humble people, strong in common sense, in common goodness"—enduring the "musk of snobbism" emanating from the "socially formidable circles" of the "nicest people" produced by "certain collegiate eyries".[58]

National Review edit

 
right: William F. Buckley Jr., left: L. Brent Bozell Jr. Buckley in 1954 first asked Chambers to endorse their book on Joseph McCarthy.

In 1955, William F. Buckley Jr. started the magazine National Review, and Chambers worked there as senior editor, publishing articles there for a little over a year and a half (October 1957 – June 1959).[2][59] The most widely cited article to date[60][61][62][63][64] is a scathing review, "Big Sister is Watching You", of Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged.[65][66]

In 1959, after resigning[why?] from National Review, Chambers and his wife embarked on a visit to Europe, the highlight of which was a meeting with Arthur Koestler and Margarete Buber-Neumann at Koestler's home in Austria.[57] That fall, he recommenced studies at Western Maryland College (now McDaniel College) in Westminster, Maryland.[67]

Personal life and death edit

In 1930 or 1931,[68] Chambers married the artist Esther Shemitz (1900–1986).[1][69] Shemitz, who had studied at the Art Students League and integrated herself into New York City's intellectual circles, met Chambers at the 1926 textile strike at Passaic, New Jersey. They then underwent a courtship that faced resistance from her mentor comrade[clarification needed] Grace Hutchins.[1] Shemitz identified as "a pacifist rather than a revolutionary".[70] In the 1920s, she worked for The World Tomorrow, a pacifist magazine.[1]

The couple had two children, Ellen and John, during the 1930s. While some Communist leadership expected professional revolutionists to go childless, the couple refused, a choice Chambers cited as part of his gradual disillusionment with communism.[1] His daughter Ellen died in 2017.[71][72][73][74]

In 1978, Allen Weinstein's Perjury revealed that the FBI has a copy of a letter in which Chambers described homosexual liaisons during the 1930s.[75] The letter copy states that Chambers gave up the practices in 1938 when he left the underground, which he attributed to his newfound Christianity.[76] The letter has remained controversial from many perspectives.[77]

Chambers died of a heart attack on July 9, 1961, at his 300-acre (1.2 km2) farm in Westminster, Maryland.[78][79] He had had angina since the age of 38 and had several heart attacks.[1]

Awards edit

Legacy edit

In 2011, author Elena Maria Vidal interviewed David Chambers about his grandfather's legacy. Versions of the interview were published in the National Observer and The American Conservative.[83][84]

Presidential Medal of Freedom (1984) edit

 
Chambers received the Presidential Medal of Freedom posthumously from President Ronald Reagan in 1984

In 1984, President Ronald Reagan posthumously awarded Chambers the Presidential Medal of Freedom, for his contribution to "the century's epic struggle between freedom and totalitarianism". In 1988, Interior Secretary Donald P. Hodel granted national landmark status to the Pipe Creek Farm.[2][85] In 2001, members of the George W. Bush administration held a private ceremony to commemorate the hundredth anniversary of Chambers's birth. Speakers included William F. Buckley, Jr.[86]

Shortlived "Whittaker Chambers Award" (2017–2019) edit

In January 2017, the National Review Institute (NRI) inaugurated a "Whittaker Chambers Award"[87] for its 2017 Ideas Summit.[88]

Recipients:

  • Daniel Hannan: On March 16, 2017, the first recipient was Daniel Hannan MEP,[89] dubbed "the man who brought you Brexit" by The Guardian.[90]
  • Mark Janus: In February 2019, NRI announced its second biennial winner of the award, Mark Janus.[91][92] Supporters say Janus champions free speech; detractors say he seeks to erode public unions by enabling free rides.[93]

In March 2019, The Wall Street Journal reported strong opposition from the family of Whittaker Chambers.[94][95] It quoted from a family statement:

"All of us agree: the efforts of the two awardees run counter to the instincts and experience of Whittaker Chambers. All of us agree: their efforts have not matched his."[94]

Chambers's son said that the two awardees "are way, way off the target of the man whose name goes along with the award".[94] One grandchild said, "I almost thought, well, 'Gosh, did the National Review guys read his book?'"[94] Regarding the award to Daniel Hannan, another grandchild said, "My grandfather would have been horrified" by a Brexiteer who sought to divide the West (the European Union), as if it were a favor to the "very Stalin-like" Vladimir Putin.[94] Regarding the anti-union Mark Janus, the family noted that Chambers's wife, Esther Shemitz, had been a member of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union and that other family members were active in unions, including Chambers himself in the Newspaper Guild.[94]

In response, National Review conceded, "We don't own the Chambers name".[94] While it refused the family's request to withdraw the two awards, it did agree to discontinue it.[94] It also agreed to publish the Chambers' statement on its website the weekend after the award.[94]

After National Review did not publish on time as promised, the family published themselves ("Withdraw Whittaker").[96]

(Christopher Buckley, author and son of William F. Buckley Jr., supported the Chambers family with a similar story about the William F. Buckley Jr. Award for Media Excellence: when Media Research Center awarded Sean Hannity, Buckley objected, the center rescinded the award, and stopped making the award altogether.[94])

Proposed Whittaker Chambers monument (2020) edit

In September 2020, two senators from Carroll County to the Maryland General Assembly, Justin Ready and Michael Hough, announced their intention, reported in the Carroll County Times[97] to recommend a "Whittaker Chambers Memorial"[98] for a "National Garden of American Heroes, following an executive order by Donald J. Trump to create an Interagency Task Force for Building and Rebuilding Monuments to American Heroes to establish that garden.[99] Two members of the Whittaker Chambers family also wrote the Carroll County Times to say thank you but no to the senators intention:

Whittaker Chambers sought a simple life of farming the Pipe Creek Farm. He was a Quaker. His beliefs ran toward austerity and self-effacement. Quaker meeting houses stand unadorned, without monuments or statues. He would not have liked such fanfare.
The best way to remember our grandfather is to read his books. They are his memoir Witness (1952) and his later writings in Cold Friday (1964). Rather than a monument, he left testimony to read.
As President Ronald Reagan said, when posthumously presenting the Medal of Freedom to him in 1984, "The witness is gone; the testimony will stand."[100][101]

Works edit

See Bibliography of Whittaker Chambers

 
Chambers translated Bambi, a Life in the Woods from its original German (Bambi: Eine Lebensgeschichte aus dem Walde)

In 1928, Chambers translated Bambi, a Life in the Woods, by Felix Salten, into English.[102]

Chambers's book Witness is on the reading lists of The Heritage Foundation, The Weekly Standard, The Leadership Institute, and the Russell Kirk Center for Cultural Renewal. He is regularly cited by conservative writers such as Heritage's president Edwin Feulner[103][104] and George H. Nash.[105][106][107][108]

Cold Friday, Chambers's second memoir, was published posthumously in 1964 with the help of Duncan Norton-Taylor. The book predicted that the fall of communism would start in the satellite states surrounding the Soviet Union in Eastern Europe. A collection of his correspondence with William F. Buckley, Jr., Odyssey of a Friend, was published in 1968; a collection of his journalism—including several of his Time and National Review writings, was published in 1989 as Ghosts on the Roof: Selected Journalism of Whittaker Chambers.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Chambers, Whittaker (1952). Witness. New York: Random House. pp. 799 pages. ISBN 9780895269157. Retrieved December 29, 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Chambers, David; Nolen, Jeannette L. (April 15, 2020). "Whittaker Chambers". Encyclopedia Britannica. from the original on March 7, 2021. Retrieved August 10, 2020.
  3. ^ Alger Hiss
  4. ^ Vinciguerra, Thomas (March 30, 1997). "Ghosts Rest at Whittaker Chambers Home". The New York Times. Retrieved October 31, 2018.
  5. ^ "Dies with Head in Oven". Ithaca Journal. September 13, 1926. Retrieved May 31, 2019.
  6. ^ "Education: A Sad, Solemn Sweetness". Time. November 17, 1975. Retrieved July 23, 2021.
  7. ^ Tanenhaus 1998, p. 28
  8. ^ Ahearn, Barry (1983). Zukofsky's "A": An Introduction. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. p. 12. ISBN 9780520049659. Retrieved March 5, 2016.
  9. ^ Meier, Andrew (2008). The Lost Spy: An American in Stalin's Secret Service. W. W. Norton. pp. 224–267, 289–300. ISBN 978-0-393-06097-3.
  10. ^ Tanenhaus 1998, pp. 70–71
  11. ^ "Translations". WhittakerChambers.org. from the original on April 13, 2013. Retrieved January 28, 2012.
  12. ^ Vinciguerra, Thomas (October 3, 2004). "The Old College Try". The New York Times. from the original on October 31, 2018. Retrieved October 31, 2018.
  13. ^ Haynes, John Earl; Klehr, Harvey (2000). Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America. Yale University Press. pp. 62, 63, 64. ISBN 0-300-08462-5.
  14. ^ Haynes, John Earlne; Klehr, Harvey (2000). Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America. Yale University Press. pp. 65, 90–91, 126. ISBN 0-300-08462-5.
  15. ^ Tanenhaus 1998, pp. 131–133
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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Authors Guild
  • Whittaker Chambers at IMDb
  • at the TCM Movie Database
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • "Writings of Whittaker Chambers". American Writers: A Journey Through History. C-SPAN. May 26, 2002. 170139-1.
  • Berresford, John (February 2014). "A Pumpkin Patch, A Typewriter, And Richard Nixon: The Hiss–Chambers Espionage Case". YouTube. Lecture series, 38 pt.
  • Tanenhaus, Sam (February 23, 1997). "Whittaker Chambers: A Biography". Part 1. Booknotes. C-SPAN. 78890-1., "Part 2". March 2, 1997. 78894-1.
  • "Whittaker Chambers". Contemporary Authors Online (CAO). Gale. 2009. H1000016972.
  • Truman Library July 7, 2019, at the Wayback Machine: Transcripts of Grand Jury Testimony in the Alger Hiss Case Record Group 118

whittaker, chambers, born, vivian, chambers, april, 1901, july, 1961, american, writer, intelligence, agent, after, early, years, communist, party, member, 1925, soviet, 1932, 1938, defected, from, soviet, underground, 1938, worked, time, magazine, 1939, 1948,. Whittaker Chambers born Jay Vivian Chambers April 1 1901 July 9 1961 was an American writer and intelligence agent After early years as a Communist Party member 1925 and Soviet spy 1932 1938 he defected from the Soviet underground 1938 worked for Time magazine 1939 1948 and then testified about the Ware Group in what became the Hiss case for perjury 1949 1950 often referred to as the trial of the century all described in his 1952 memoir Witness 1 Afterwards he worked as a senior editor at National Review 1957 1959 US President Ronald Reagan awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom posthumously in 1984 2 Whittaker ChambersChambers in 1948BornJay Vivian Chambers 1901 04 01 April 1 1901Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S DiedJuly 9 1961 1961 07 09 aged 60 Westminster Maryland U S Alma materColumbia UniversityOccupation s Journalist writer spy poet translatorSpouseEsther ShemitzChildrenEllen Chambers John ChambersEspionage activityAllegiance Soviet Union United StatesService branch Communist underground controlled by the GRUService years1932 1938 spy 1922 1959 writer poet 1926 1939 translator CodenameCarl Karl CodenameBobCodenameDavid BreenCodenameLloyd CantwellCodenameCarl Schroeder Contents 1 Background 1 1 Education 1 2 Communism espionage 2 Career 2 1 Communist 2 2 Soviet underground 2 2 1 Ware group 2 2 2 Other covert sources 2 3 Defection 2 4 Berle meeting 2 5 Time 2 6 Hiss case 2 6 1 Red Herring 2 6 2 Pumpkin Papers 2 6 3 Perjury 2 6 4 Witness 2 7 National Review 3 Personal life and death 4 Awards 5 Legacy 5 1 Presidential Medal of Freedom 1984 5 2 Shortlived Whittaker Chambers Award 2017 2019 5 3 Proposed Whittaker Chambers monument 2020 6 Works 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground edit nbsp Hartley Hall at Columbia University where Chambers boarded in the 1920sChambers was born in Philadelphia Pennsylvania 3 and spent his infancy in Brooklyn His family moved to Lynbrook Long Island New York State in 1904 where he grew up and attended school 2 4 His parents were Jay Chambers and Laha Whittaker He described his childhood as troubled because of his parents separation and their need to care for their mentally ill grandmother His father was an artist and member of the Decorative Designers his mother was last a social worker Chambers s brother Richard Godfrey Chambers committed suicide shortly after he had withdrawn from college at age 22 5 Chambers cited his brother s fate as one of many reasons that he was then drawn to communism As he wrote it offered me what nothing else in the dying world had power to offer at the same intensity faith and a vision something for which to live and something for which to die 1 Education edit After graduating from South Side High School in neighboring Rockville Centre in 1919 Chambers worked itinerantly in Washington and New Orleans briefly attended Williams College and then enrolled as a day student at Columbia College of Columbia University 1 At Columbia his undergraduate peers included Meyer Schapiro Frank S Hogan Herbert Solow Louis Zukofsky Arthur F Burns Clifton Fadiman Elliott V Bell John Gassner Lionel Trilling who later fictionalized him as a main character in his novel The Middle of the Journey 6 Guy Endore and City College student poet Henry Zolinsky 2 In the intellectual environment of Columbia he gained friends and respect His professors and fellow students found him a talented writer and believed he might become a major poet or novelist 7 In his sophomore year Chambers joined the Boar s Head Society 8 and wrote a play called A Play for Puppets for Columbia s literary magazine The Morningside which he edited The work was deemed blasphemous by many students and administrators and the controversy spread to New York City newspapers Later the play would be used against Chambers during his testimony against Hiss Disheartened over the controversy Chambers left Columbia in 1925 1 From Columbia Chambers also knew Isaiah Oggins who went into the Soviet underground a few years earlier Chambers s wife Esther Shemitz Chambers knew Oggins s wife Nerma Berman Oggins from the Rand School of Social Science the International Ladies Garment Workers Union and The World Tomorrow 9 Communism espionage edit In 1924 Chambers read Vladimir Lenin s Soviets at Work and was deeply affected by it He now saw the dysfunctional nature of his family he would write as in miniature the whole crisis of the middle class a malaise from which communism promised liberation Chambers s biographer Sam Tanenhaus wrote that Lenin s authoritarianism was precisely what attracts Chambers He had at last found his church citation needed Chambers became a Marxist and in 1925 joined the Communist Party of the United States CPUSA then known as the Workers Party of America Career editCommunist edit Chambers wrote and edited for the magazine New Masses and was an editor for the Daily Worker newspaper from 1927 to 1929 2 Combining his literary talents with his devotion to communism Chambers wrote four short stories for New Masses in 1931 about proletarian hardship and revolt including Can You Make Out Their Voices which was considered by critics as one of the best pieces of fiction of American communism 10 Hallie Flanagan co adapted and produced it as a play entitled Can You Hear Their Voices see Bibliography of Whittaker Chambers staged across America and in many other countries Chambers also worked as a translator his works including the English version of Felix Salten s 1923 novel Bambi a Life in the Woods 11 12 Soviet underground edit Ware group edit Chambers was recruited to join the communist underground and began his career as a spy working for a GRU Main Intelligence Directorate spy ring headed by Alexander Ulanovsky also known as Ulrich Later his main handler was Josef Peters who was replaced by CPUSA General Secretary Earl Browder with Rudy Baker Chambers claimed that Peters introduced him to Harold Ware although he later denied Peters had ever been introduced to Ware and also testified to HUAC that he Chambers never knew Ware Chambers claimed that Ware was head of a communist underground cell in Washington that reportedly included the following 13 Name DescriptionLee Pressman Assistant general counsel of Agricultural Adjustment Administration AAA John Abt Chief of Litigation for AAA 1933 1935 assistant general counsel of the WPA 1935 chief counsel on Senator Robert La Follette Jr s La Follette Committee 1936 1937 and special assistant to U S Attorney General 1937 1938 Marion Bachrach Sister of John Abt office manager to Representative John Bernard of the Minnesota Farmer Labor PartyAlger Hiss Attorney for Agricultural Adjustment Administration and Nye Committee moved to Department of State in 1936 where he became an increasingly prominent figureDonald Hiss Brother of Alger Hiss employed at Department of StateNathan Witt Employed at Agricultural Adjustment Administration later moved to National Labor Relations BoardVictor Perlo Chief of Aviation Section of War Production Board later joined Office of Price Administration at Commerce and Division of Monetary Research at TreasuryCharles Kramer Employed at Department of Labor s NLRBGeorge Silverman Employed at RRB later worked with Federal Coordinator of Transport U S Tariff Commission and Labor Advisory Board of National Recovery AdministrationHenry Collins Employed at National Recovery Administration and later Agricultural Adjustment AdministrationNathaniel Weyl Economist at Agricultural Adjustment Administration later defected from communism himself and gave evidence against party membersJohn Herrmann Author assistant to Harold Ware employed at Agricultural Adjustment Administration courier and document photographer for Ware group introduced Chambers to HissApart from Marion Bachrach these individuals were all members of Franklin Roosevelt s New Deal administration Chambers worked in Washington as an organizer in communists in the city and as a courier between New York and Washington for stolen documents which were delivered to Boris Bykov the GRU station chief citation needed Other covert sources edit Using the codename Karl or Carl Chambers served during the mid 1930s as a courier between various covert sources and Soviet intelligence In addition to the Ware group mentioned above other sources that Chambers alleged to have dealt with included the following 14 Name DescriptionHarry Dexter White Director of Division of Monetary Research at the US Department of the TreasuryHarold Glasser Assistant Director Division of Monetary Research US Department of the TreasuryNoel Field Employed at Department of StateJulian Wadleigh Economist with the U S Department of Agriculture later Trade Agreements section of the US Department of StateVincent Reno Mathematician at U S Army Aberdeen Proving GroundWard Pigman Employed at National Bureau of Standards then Labor and Public Welfare CommitteeDefection edit nbsp Juliet Stuart Poyntz circa 1918 whose disappearance spurred Chambers to defectChambers carried on his espionage activities from 1932 until 1937 or 1938 even while his faith in communism was waning He became increasingly disturbed by Joseph Stalin s Great Purge which began in 1936 He was also fearful for his own life since he had noted the murder in Switzerland of Ignace Reiss a high ranking Soviet spy who had broken with Stalin and the disappearance of Chambers s friend and fellow spy Juliet Stuart Poyntz in the United States Poyntz had vanished in 1937 shortly after she had visited Moscow and returned disillusioned with the communist cause because of the Stalinist Purges 15 Chambers ignored several orders that he travel to Moscow since he worried that he might be purged He also started concealing some of the documents he collected from his sources He planned to use them how along with several rolls of microfilm photographs of documents as a life preserver to prevent the Soviets from killing him and his family 1 In 1938 Chambers broke with communism and took his family into hiding 2 He stored the life preserver at the home of his wife s sister whose son Nathan Levine was Chambers s lawyer 1 16 17 18 19 20 Initially he had no plans to give information on his espionage activities to the U S government His espionage contacts were his friends and he had no desire to inform on them 1 In his examination of Chambers s conversion from the left to the right author Daniel Oppenheimer noted that Chambers substituted his passion for communism with a passion for God and saw the world in black and white terms both before and after his defection citation needed In his autobiography Chambers presented his devotion to communism as a reason for living but after his defection he saw his actions as being part of an absolute evil 21 Berle meeting edit nbsp Adolf A Berle circa 1965 Member of the FDR administration who took Chambers s 1939 report Initially enthusiastic he later downplayed the report The August 1939 Molotov Ribbentrop Pact drove Chambers to take action against the Soviet Union 22 In September 1939 at the urging of the anticommunist Russian born journalist Isaac Don Levine Chambers and Levine met with Assistant Secretary of State Adolf A Berle Levine had introduced Chambers to Walter Krivitsky who was already informing American and British authorities about Soviet agents who held posts in both governments Krivitsky told Chambers that it was their duty to inform Chambers agreed to reveal what he knew on the condition of immunity from prosecution 23 During the meeting which took place at Berle s home Woodley Mansion in Washington Chambers named several current and former government employees as spies or communist sympathizers Many names mentioned held relatively minor posts or were already under suspicion Some names however were more significant and surprising Alger Hiss his brother Donald Hiss and Laurence Duggan who were all respected mid level officials in the State Department and Lauchlin Currie a special assistant to Franklin Roosevelt Another person named Vincent Reno had worked on a top secret bombsight project at the Aberdeen Proving Grounds 2 24 Berle found Chambers s information tentative unclear and uncorroborated He took the information to the White House but President Franklin Roosevelt dismissed it Berle made little if any objection He kept his notes however which were later used as evidence during Hiss s perjury trials 25 Berle notified the Federal Bureau of Investigation of Chambers s information in March 1940 In February 1941 Krivitsky was found dead in his hotel room Police ruled the death a suicide but it was widely speculated that Krivitsky had been killed by Soviet intelligence Worried that the Soviets might try to kill Chambers too Berle again told the FBI about his interview with Chambers The FBI interviewed Chambers in May 1942 and June 1945 but took no immediate action in line with the political orientation of the United States which viewed the potential threat from the Soviet Union as minor compared to that of Nazi Germany citation needed Only in November 1945 when Elizabeth Bentley defected and corroborated much of Chambers s story would the FBI begin to take Chambers seriously 26 Time edit nbsp Henry Luce and Clare Boothe Luce circa 1954 valued Chambers s writing at Time magazineDuring the Berle meeting Chambers had come out of hiding after a year and joined the staff of Time April 1939 He landed a cover story within a month on James Joyce s latest book Finnegans Wake 27 He started at the back of the magazine reviewing books and film with James Agee and then Calvin Fixx When Fixx suffered a heart attack in October 1942 Wilder Hobson succeeded him as Chambers assistant editor in Arts amp Entertainment Other writers working for Chambers in that section included novelist Nigel Dennis future New York Times Book Review editor Harvey Breit and poets Howard Moss and Weldon Kees 28 29 A struggle had arisen between those like Theodore H White and Richard Lauterbach who raised criticism of what they saw as the elitism corruption and ineptitude of Chiang Kai shek s regime in China and advocated greater co operation with Mao s Red Army in the struggle against Japanese imperialism and Chambers and others like Willi Schlamm who adhered to a perspective that was staunchly pro Chiang anticommunist and both later joined the founding editorial board of William F Buckley Jr s National Review Time founder Henry Luce who grew up in China and was a personal friend of Chiang and his wife Soong Mei ling came down squarely on the side of Chambers to the point that White complained that his stories were being censored and even suppressed in their entirety and he left Time shortly after the war as a result 30 In 1940 William Saroyan lists Fixx among contributing editors at Time in Saroyan s play Love s Old Sweet Song 31 Luce promoted him senior editor in either summer 1942 Weinstein 32 or September 1943 Tanenhaus 33 and became a member of Time s Senior Group which determined editorial policy in December 1943 33 Chambers close colleagues and many staff members in the 1930s helped elevate Time and have been called interstitial intellectuals by the historian Robert Vanderlan 34 His colleague John Hersey described them as follows Time was in an interesting phase an editor named Tom Matthews had gathered a brilliant group of writers including James Agee Robert Fitzgerald Whittaker Chambers Robert Cantwell Louis Kronenberger and Calvin Fixx They were dazzling Time s style was still very hokey backward ran sentences till reeled the mind but I could tell even as a neophyte who had written each of the pieces in the magazine because each of these writers had such a distinctive voice 35 By early 1948 Chambers had become one of the best known writer editors at Time First had come his scathing commentary The Ghosts on the Roof March 5 1945 on the Yalta Conference in which Hiss partook Subsequent cover story essays profiled Marian Anderson Arnold J Toynbee Rebecca West and Reinhold Niebuhr The cover story on Marian Anderson Religion In Egypt Land December 30 1946 proved so popular that the magazine broke its rule of non attribution in response to readers letters Most Time cover stories are written and edited by the regular staffs of the section in which they appear Certain cover stories that present special difficulties or call for a special literary skill are written by Senior Editor Whittaker Chambers 36 In a 1945 letter to Time colleague Charles Wertenbaker Time Life deputy editorial director John Shaw Billings said of Chambers Whit puts on the best show in words of any writer we ve ever had a superb technician particularly skilled in the mosaic art of putting a Time section together 37 Chambers was at the height of his career when the Hiss case broke later that year 38 Meanwhile Chambers and his family became Quakers attending Pipe Creek Friends Meetinghouse near his Maryland farm 39 Hiss case edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Whittaker Chambers news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Alger Hiss 1948 denied Chambers s allegations but was convicted of perjuryOn August 3 1948 Chambers was called to testify before the House Un American Activities Committee HUAC where he gave the names of individuals he said were part of the underground Ware group in the late 1930s including Alger Hiss He once again named Hiss as a member of the Communist Party but did not yet make any accusations of espionage In subsequent sessions Hiss testified and initially denied that he knew anyone by the name of Chambers but on seeing him in person and after it became clear that Chambers knew details about Hiss s life Hiss said that he had known Chambers under the name George Crosley Hiss denied that he had ever been a communist however Since Chambers still presented no evidence the committee had initially been inclined to take the word of Hiss on the matter However a committee member Richard Nixon received secret information from the FBI that had led him to pursue the issue When it issued its report HUAC described Hiss s testimony as vague and evasive 2 Biographer Timothy Naftali describes the trial as a battle between two queers an allusion to the fact that both parties were supposedly homosexual Additionally Hiss stepson Timothy Hobson alleged that Chambers accusation was borne out of unrequited romantic feelings for Hiss 40 Red Herring edit nbsp Harry S Truman center with Joseph Stalin left and Winston Churchill right in 1945 Truman called Chambers s allegations a red herring The country quickly became divided over Hiss and Chambers President Harry S Truman not pleased with the allegation that the man who had presided over the United Nations Charter Conference was a communist dismissed the case as a red herring 41 In the atmosphere of increasing anticommunism that would later be termed McCarthyism many conservatives viewed the Hiss case as emblematic of what they saw as Democrats laxity towards the danger of communist infiltration and influence in the State Department citation needed Many liberals in turn saw the Hiss case as part of the desperation of the Republican Party to regain the office of president since it had been out of power for 16 years citation needed Truman also issued Executive Order 9835 which initiated a program of loyalty reviews for federal employees in 1947 42 Pumpkin Papers edit Hiss filed a 75 000 libel suit against Chambers on October 8 1948 2 Under pressure from Hiss s lawyers Chambers finally retrieved his envelope of evidence and presented it to the HUAC after it had subpoenaed them It contained four notes in Hiss s handwriting 65 typewritten copies of State Department documents and five strips of microfilm some of which contained photographs of State Department documents The press came to call these the Pumpkin Papers since Chambers had briefly hidden the microfilm in a hollowed out pumpkin The documents indicated that Hiss knew Chambers long after mid 1936 when Hiss said he had last seen Crosley and also that Hiss had engaged in espionage with Chambers Chambers explained his delay in producing the evidence as an effort to spare an old friend from more trouble than necessary Until October 1948 Chambers had repeatedly stated that Hiss had not engaged in espionage even when Chambers testified under oath Chambers was forced to testify at the Hiss trials that he had committed perjury several times which reduced his credibility in the eyes of his critics The five rolls of 35 mm film known as the pumpkin papers were thought until late 1974 to be locked in HUAC files The independent researcher Stephen W Salant an economist at the University of Michigan sued the U S Justice Department in 1975 when his request for access to them under the Freedom of Information Act was denied On July 31 1975 as a result of this lawsuit and follow on suits filed by Peter Irons and by Alger Hiss and William Reuben the Justice Department released copies of the pumpkin papers that had been used to implicate Hiss One roll of film turned out to be totally blank because of overexposure two others are faintly legible copies of nonclassified Navy Department documents relating to such subjects as life rafts and fire extinguishers and the remaining two are photographs of the State Department documents introduced by the prosecution at the two Hiss trials relating to US German relations in the late 1930s 43 That story however as reported by The New York Times in the 1970s contains only a partial truth The blank roll had been mentioned by Chambers in his autobiography Witness However in addition to innocuous farm reports the documents on the other pumpkin patch microfilms also included confidential memos sent from overseas embassies to diplomatic staff in Washington D C 44 Worse those memos had originally been transmitted in code which thanks to their presumable possession of both coded originals and the translations claimed by Chambers to be forwarded by Hiss the Soviets now could easily understand 44 In taped recordings of President Nixon on July 1 1971 he admitted that he had not checked the Pumpkin Papers prior to their use and he felt that the Justice Department was out to exonerate Hiss and a federal grand jury would indict Nixon s ally Chambers for perjury The FBI continued investigating Hiss s innocence into 1953 45 46 47 48 Perjury edit nbsp The trials against Hiss took place at the Foley Square Courthouse now Thurgood Marshall Courthouse in New York City here 2009 Hiss was indicted for two counts of perjury relating to testimony he had given before a federal grand jury the previous December He had denied giving any documents to Chambers and testified that he had not seen Chambers after mid 1936 Hiss was tried twice for perjury The first trial in June 1949 ended with the jury deadlocked 8 4 for conviction In addition to Chambers s testimony a government expert testified that other papers typed on a typewriter belonging to the Hiss family matched the secret papers produced by Chambers An impressive array of character witnesses appeared on behalf of Hiss two Supreme Court justices Felix Frankfurter and Stanley Reed the former Democratic presidential nominee John W Davis and the future Democratic presidential nominee Adlai Stevenson Chambers on the other hand was attacked by Hiss s attorneys as an enemy of the Republic a blasphemer of Christ a disbeliever in God with no respect for matrimony or motherhood 41 In the second trial Hiss s defense produced a psychiatrist who characterized Chambers as a psychopathic personality and a pathological liar 49 The second trial ended in January 1950 with Hiss being found guilty on both counts of perjury He was sentenced to five years in prison 2 Chambers had resigned from Time in December 1948 After the Hiss case he wrote a few articles for Fortune Life and Look magazines 1 In 1951 during the HUAC hearings William Spiegel of Baltimore identified a photo of Carl Schroeder as Chambers while Spiegel was describing his involvement with David Zimmerman a spy in Chambers s network 50 51 Witness edit In 1952 Chambers s book Witness was published to widespread acclaim 2 52 53 54 55 It was a combination of autobiography and a warning about the dangers of communism Arthur M Schlesinger Jr called it a powerful book 56 Ronald Reagan credited the book as the inspiration behind his conversion from a New Deal Democrat to a conservative Republican 41 Witness was a bestseller for more than a year 56 and helped to pay off Chambers s legal debts but bills lingered as Odysseus was beset by a ghost 57 According to the commentator George Will in 2017 Witness became a canonical text of conservatism Unfortunately it injected conservatism with a sour whiney complaining crybaby populism It is the screechy and dominant tone of the loutish faux conservatism that today is erasing William F Buckley s legacy of infectious cheerfulness and unapologetic embrace of high culture Chambers wallowed in cloying sentimentality and curdled resentment about the plain men and women my people humble people strong in common sense in common goodness enduring the musk of snobbism emanating from the socially formidable circles of the nicest people produced by certain collegiate eyries 58 National Review edit nbsp right William F Buckley Jr left L Brent Bozell Jr Buckley in 1954 first asked Chambers to endorse their book on Joseph McCarthy In 1955 William F Buckley Jr started the magazine National Review and Chambers worked there as senior editor publishing articles there for a little over a year and a half October 1957 June 1959 2 59 The most widely cited article to date 60 61 62 63 64 is a scathing review Big Sister is Watching You of Ayn Rand s Atlas Shrugged 65 66 In 1959 after resigning why from National Review Chambers and his wife embarked on a visit to Europe the highlight of which was a meeting with Arthur Koestler and Margarete Buber Neumann at Koestler s home in Austria 57 That fall he recommenced studies at Western Maryland College now McDaniel College in Westminster Maryland 67 Personal life and death editIn 1930 or 1931 68 Chambers married the artist Esther Shemitz 1900 1986 1 69 Shemitz who had studied at the Art Students League and integrated herself into New York City s intellectual circles met Chambers at the 1926 textile strike at Passaic New Jersey They then underwent a courtship that faced resistance from her mentor comrade clarification needed Grace Hutchins 1 Shemitz identified as a pacifist rather than a revolutionary 70 In the 1920s she worked for The World Tomorrow a pacifist magazine 1 The couple had two children Ellen and John during the 1930s While some Communist leadership expected professional revolutionists to go childless the couple refused a choice Chambers cited as part of his gradual disillusionment with communism 1 His daughter Ellen died in 2017 71 72 73 74 In 1978 Allen Weinstein s Perjury revealed that the FBI has a copy of a letter in which Chambers described homosexual liaisons during the 1930s 75 The letter copy states that Chambers gave up the practices in 1938 when he left the underground which he attributed to his newfound Christianity 76 The letter has remained controversial from many perspectives 77 Chambers died of a heart attack on July 9 1961 at his 300 acre 1 2 km2 farm in Westminster Maryland 78 79 He had had angina since the age of 38 and had several heart attacks 1 Awards edit1952 Honorary Doctorate of Law from Mount Mary College Milwaukee 80 1953 National Book Award finalist for nonfiction Witness 81 1984 Presidential Medal of Freedom posthumously for contribution to the century s epic struggle between freedom and totalitarianism 82 Legacy editIn 2011 author Elena Maria Vidal interviewed David Chambers about his grandfather s legacy Versions of the interview were published in the National Observer and The American Conservative 83 84 Presidential Medal of Freedom 1984 edit nbsp Chambers received the Presidential Medal of Freedom posthumously from President Ronald Reagan in 1984In 1984 President Ronald Reagan posthumously awarded Chambers the Presidential Medal of Freedom for his contribution to the century s epic struggle between freedom and totalitarianism In 1988 Interior Secretary Donald P Hodel granted national landmark status to the Pipe Creek Farm 2 85 In 2001 members of the George W Bush administration held a private ceremony to commemorate the hundredth anniversary of Chambers s birth Speakers included William F Buckley Jr 86 Shortlived Whittaker Chambers Award 2017 2019 edit In January 2017 the National Review Institute NRI inaugurated a Whittaker Chambers Award 87 for its 2017 Ideas Summit 88 Recipients Daniel Hannan On March 16 2017 the first recipient was Daniel Hannan MEP 89 dubbed the man who brought you Brexit by The Guardian 90 Mark Janus In February 2019 NRI announced its second biennial winner of the award Mark Janus 91 92 Supporters say Janus champions free speech detractors say he seeks to erode public unions by enabling free rides 93 In March 2019 The Wall Street Journal reported strong opposition from the family of Whittaker Chambers 94 95 It quoted from a family statement All of us agree the efforts of the two awardees run counter to the instincts and experience of Whittaker Chambers All of us agree their efforts have not matched his 94 Chambers s son said that the two awardees are way way off the target of the man whose name goes along with the award 94 One grandchild said I almost thought well Gosh did the National Review guys read his book 94 Regarding the award to Daniel Hannan another grandchild said My grandfather would have been horrified by a Brexiteer who sought to divide the West the European Union as if it were a favor to the very Stalin like Vladimir Putin 94 Regarding the anti union Mark Janus the family noted that Chambers s wife Esther Shemitz had been a member of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union and that other family members were active in unions including Chambers himself in the Newspaper Guild 94 In response National Review conceded We don t own the Chambers name 94 While it refused the family s request to withdraw the two awards it did agree to discontinue it 94 It also agreed to publish the Chambers statement on its website the weekend after the award 94 After National Review did not publish on time as promised the family published themselves Withdraw Whittaker 96 Christopher Buckley author and son of William F Buckley Jr supported the Chambers family with a similar story about the William F Buckley Jr Award for Media Excellence when Media Research Center awarded Sean Hannity Buckley objected the center rescinded the award and stopped making the award altogether 94 Proposed Whittaker Chambers monument 2020 editIn September 2020 two senators from Carroll County to the Maryland General Assembly Justin Ready and Michael Hough announced their intention reported in the Carroll County Times 97 to recommend a Whittaker Chambers Memorial 98 for a National Garden of American Heroes following an executive order by Donald J Trump to create an Interagency Task Force for Building and Rebuilding Monuments to American Heroes to establish that garden 99 Two members of the Whittaker Chambers family also wrote the Carroll County Times to say thank you but no to the senators intention Whittaker Chambers sought a simple life of farming the Pipe Creek Farm He was a Quaker His beliefs ran toward austerity and self effacement Quaker meeting houses stand unadorned without monuments or statues He would not have liked such fanfare The best way to remember our grandfather is to read his books They are his memoir Witness 1952 and his later writings in Cold Friday 1964 Rather than a monument he left testimony to read As President Ronald Reagan said when posthumously presenting the Medal of Freedom to him in 1984 The witness is gone the testimony will stand 100 101 Works editSee Bibliography of Whittaker Chambers nbsp Chambers translated Bambi a Life in the Woods from its original German Bambi Eine Lebensgeschichte aus dem Walde In 1928 Chambers translated Bambi a Life in the Woods by Felix Salten into English 102 Chambers s book Witness is on the reading lists of The Heritage Foundation The Weekly Standard The Leadership Institute and the Russell Kirk Center for Cultural Renewal He is regularly cited by conservative writers such as Heritage s president Edwin Feulner 103 104 and George H Nash 105 106 107 108 Cold Friday Chambers s second memoir was published posthumously in 1964 with the help of Duncan Norton Taylor The book predicted that the fall of communism would start in the satellite states surrounding the Soviet Union in Eastern Europe A collection of his correspondence with William F Buckley Jr Odyssey of a Friend was published in 1968 a collection of his journalism including several of his Time and National Review writings was published in 1989 as Ghosts on the Roof Selected Journalism of Whittaker Chambers See also editWhittaker Chambers Wikiquote Witness memoir Bibliography of Whittaker Chambers History of Soviet espionage in the United States List of Presidential Medal of Freedom recipients List of American spies John Abt Jacob Burck Chambers surname Noel Field Harold Glasser John Herrmann Alger Hiss Donald Hiss Nathan Levine Victor Perlo J Peters Ward Pigman Lee Pressman Vincent Reno Esther Shemitz Reuben Shemitz Julian Wadleigh Harold Ware Nathaniel Weyl Harry Dexter White Nathan WittReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m Chambers Whittaker 1952 Witness New York Random House pp 799 pages ISBN 9780895269157 Retrieved December 29 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l Chambers David Nolen Jeannette L April 15 2020 Whittaker Chambers Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on March 7 2021 Retrieved August 10 2020 Alger Hiss Vinciguerra Thomas March 30 1997 Ghosts Rest at Whittaker Chambers Home The New York Times Retrieved October 31 2018 Dies with Head in Oven Ithaca Journal September 13 1926 Retrieved May 31 2019 Education A Sad Solemn Sweetness Time November 17 1975 Retrieved July 23 2021 Tanenhaus 1998 p 28 Ahearn Barry 1983 Zukofsky s A An Introduction Berkeley CA University of California Press p 12 ISBN 9780520049659 Retrieved March 5 2016 Meier Andrew 2008 The Lost Spy An American in Stalin s Secret Service W W Norton pp 224 267 289 300 ISBN 978 0 393 06097 3 Tanenhaus 1998 pp 70 71 Translations WhittakerChambers org Archived from the original on April 13 2013 Retrieved January 28 2012 Vinciguerra Thomas October 3 2004 The Old College Try The New York Times Archived from the original on October 31 2018 Retrieved October 31 2018 Haynes John Earl Klehr Harvey 2000 Venona Decoding Soviet Espionage in America Yale University Press pp 62 63 64 ISBN 0 300 08462 5 Haynes John Earlne Klehr Harvey 2000 Venona Decoding Soviet Espionage in America Yale University Press pp 65 90 91 126 ISBN 0 300 08462 5 Tanenhaus 1998 pp 131 133 de Toledano Ralph Lasky Victor 1950 Seeds of Treason The True Story of the Hiss Chambers Tragedy Funk amp Wagnalls pp 71 stash 76 accompany 213 dumbwaiter Retrieved July 31 2017 White G Edward 2003 Alger Hiss s Campaign for Vindication PDF Boston University Law Review p 11 Retrieved July 31 2017 permanent dead link Weinstein Allen Irons Peter H Salant Stephen W September 16 1976 The Hiss Case Another Exchange The New York Review of Books Archived from the original on July 31 2017 Retrieved July 31 2017 Berresford John W June 1 2008 The Grand Jury in the Hiss Chambers Case American Communist History 7 1 1 38 doi 10 1080 14743890802121878 S2CID 159487134 United States of America appellee against Alger Hiss appellant appellant s brief on appeal from order denying motion for new trial Hecla Press 1952 pp 6 7 19 Retrieved July 31 2017 Packer George February 22 2016 Turned Around The New Yorker Archived from the original on February 24 2016 Retrieved February 24 2016 Tanenhaus 1998 pp 159 161 Weinstein 1997 p 292harvnb error no target CITEREFWeinstein1997 help Chambers Whittaker 1952 Witness Washington Gateway Editions pp 27 29 463 470 ISBN 9780895267894 Tanenhaus 1998 pp 163 203 204 Olmsted Kathryn S 2002 Red Spy Queen A Biography of Elizabeth Bentley The University of North Carolina Press p 32 ISBN 0 8078 2739 8 Night Thoughts Time May 8 1948 Archived from the original on February 16 2008 Retrieved June 3 2010 Tanenhaus 1998 pp 174 175 Reidel James 2007 Vanished Act The Life and Art of Weldon Kees University of Nebraska Press p 121 ISBN 9780803259775 Archived from the original on August 6 2022 Retrieved January 19 2023 Herzstein Robert E 2005 Henry R Luce Time and the American Crusade in Asia Cambridge University Press pp 42 43 ISBN 978 0 521 83577 0 Saroyan William 1940 Love s Old Sweet Song A Play in Three Acts Samuel French pp 72 76 Retrieved July 15 2017 Weinstein 1997 p 354harvnb error no target CITEREFWeinstein1997 help a b Tanenhaus 1998 p 175 Vanderlan Robert 2011 Intellectuals Incorporated Politics Art and Ideas Inside Henry Luce s Media Empire University of Pennsylvania Press p 239 ISBN 978 0812205633 Retrieved December 15 2016 Dee Jonathan 1986 John Hersey The Art of Fiction No 92 The Paris Review Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 16 2016 Time s People and Time s Children Time March 8 1948 Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Weinstein Allen 1978 Perjury The Hiss Chambers Case New York Knopf p 183 ISBN 9780394495460 Retrieved August 7 2017 Time Cover Stories WhittakerChambers org Archived from the original on June 30 2013 Retrieved June 21 2013 Weinstein 1997 p 308harvnb error no target CITEREFWeinstein1997 help At Alger Hiss conference gay debate gets red hot amNewYork April 17 2007 a b c Linder Douglas The Alger Hiss Trials Famous Trials University of Missouri Kansas City School of Law Retrieved March 20 2020 Truman Harry March 21 1947 Executive Order 9835 Prescribing Procedures For The Administration Of An Employees Loyalty Program In The Executive Branch Of The Government The Harry S Truman Library and Museum Archived from the original on November 11 2017 Retrieved November 11 2017 Gold Tom August 1 1975 U S Releases Copies of Pumpkin Papers The New York Times Archived from the original on July 28 2019 Retrieved October 31 2018 a b Tanenhaus Sam c cpan interview 5 26 02 Archived from the original on October 31 2021 Retrieved December 8 2014 Parry Robert February 8 1999 The Tapes Nixon s Long Dark Shadow Consortium News Archived from the original on February 8 1999 Retrieved September 9 2021 Bird Kai Chervonnaya Svetlana June 1 2007 The Mystery of Ales Expanded Version The argument that Alger Hiss was a WWII era Soviet asset is flawed New evidence points to someone else The American Scholar Archived from the original on January 19 2023 Retrieved September 9 2021 Haynes John Earl June 7 2007 Ales Hiss Foote Stettinius johnearlhaynes org Archived from the original on May 18 2017 Retrieved September 9 2021 Lowenthal John 2000 The Alger Hiss Story A Search for the Truth The Times Literary Supplement Vol 15 Retrieved September 9 2021 Weinstein 1997 pp 487 493harvnb error no target CITEREFWeinstein1997 help Hiss Accuser Cited in Black Box Tale The New York Times June 29 1951 p 8 Archived from the original on January 19 2023 Retrieved October 10 2018 Whittaker Chambers Named Anew The Washington Post June 29 1951 p 14 Review Kirkus WhittakerChambers org May 21 1952 Archived from the original on June 30 2013 Retrieved June 14 2013 Review New York Times The Two Faiths of Whittaker Chambers WhittakerChambers org May 25 1952 Archived from the original on June 15 2013 Retrieved June 14 2013 Review Time Books Publican amp Pharisee WhittakerChambers org May 26 1952 Archived from the original on January 19 2023 Retrieved June 14 2013 Review BBC WhittakerChambers org July 7 1953 Archived from the original on June 15 2013 Retrieved June 14 2013 a b Schlesinger Jr Arthur March 9 2013 The Truest Believer The New York Times Archived from the original on March 30 2013 Retrieved July 14 2013 a b Chambers Whittaker 1969 Odyssey of a Friend New York Putnam p 211 bills 249 Koestler George F Will Conservatism is soiled by scowling primitives The Washington Post May 31 2017 National Review WhittakerChambers org Archived from the original on June 30 2013 Retrieved June 21 2013 Burns Jennifer August 14 2012 Atlas Spurned The New York Times Archived from the original on January 19 2023 Retrieved June 21 2013 Berliner Michael November 26 2007 Whittaker Chambers s Review of Ayn Rand s Novel Atlas Shrugged in The National Review Capitalism Magazine Archived from the original on June 24 2013 Retrieved June 21 2013 Bray Hiawatha August 27 2007 BioShock lets users take on fanaticism through fantasy The Boston Globe Archived from the original on October 14 2007 Retrieved June 21 2013 William F Buckley Jr living at full sail Conservative writer editor looks back on remarkable career The Washington Post August 8 2004 Archived from the original on January 19 2023 Retrieved June 21 2013 Teachout Terry July 1986 The Passion of Ayn Rand by Barbara Branden Review Commentary Archived from the original on January 19 2023 Retrieved June 21 2013 Big Sister is Watching You WhittakerChambers org Archived from the original on June 30 2013 Retrieved June 21 2013 Chambers Whittaker December 28 1957 Big Sister Is Watching You National Review Archived from the original on January 19 2023 Retrieved August 24 2022 Chambers Whittaker 1964 Cold Friday New York Random House p xii ISBN 9780394419695 The New York Times uses the year 1930 while Time and The Milwaukee Sentinel uses the year 1931 Widow of Chambers Dies The New York Times August 20 1986 Archived from the original on January 19 2023 Retrieved June 20 2008 She Lives in Fear In Her First Interview Mrs Whittaker Chambers Reveals Her Ordeal Milwaukee Sentinel November 23 1952 p 5 permanent dead link Dr Ellen Chambers Into Thomas Funeral Home 2017 Archived from the original on March 31 2019 Retrieved March 30 2019 Dr Ellen Chambers Into Baltimore Sun December 9 2017 Archived from the original on March 31 2019 Retrieved March 30 2019 Dr Ellen Chambers Into San Francisco Chronicle December 3 2017 Archived from the original on March 31 2019 Retrieved March 30 2019 Ellen Chambers Carroll County Times December 1 2017 Archived from the original on January 19 2023 Retrieved July 9 2019 Kimmage Michael 2009 The Conservative Turn Lionel Trilling Whittaker Chambers and the Lessons of Anti Communism Harvard University Press pp 52 54 ISBN 978 0 674 03258 3 Johnson David K 2004 The Lavender Scare The Cold War Persecution of Gays and Lesbians in the Federal Government University of Chicago Press pp 32 33 ISBN 0 226 40481 1 Archived from the original on January 19 2023 Retrieved March 20 2020 Gold Ed April 11 17 2007 At Alger Hiss conference gay debate gets red hot The Villager Volume 76 Number 46 Archived from the original on January 19 2023 Retrieved August 19 2009 Death of the Witness Time July 21 1961 Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved June 20 2008 Chambers Is Dead Hiss Case Witness Whittaker Chambers Hiss Accuser Dies The New York Times July 11 1961 Archived from the original on July 23 2018 Retrieved March 17 2008 Winners amp Finalists Since 1950 Mount Mary University June 1952 p 52 Archived from the original on October 9 2016 Retrieved October 8 2016 Winners amp Finalists Since 1950 PDF National Book Awards Archived PDF from the original on September 21 2018 Retrieved October 8 2016 Cannon Lou March 27 1984 Reagan Honors Whittaker Chambers The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Archived from the original on August 2 2018 Retrieved August 2 2018 Whittaker Chambers remembered Elena Maria Vidal interviews David Chambers National Observer 84 2011 Archived from the original on February 8 2012 Retrieved November 9 2012 Maria Elena April 28 2011 History s Witness The American Conservative Archived from the original on September 4 2011 Retrieved November 9 2012 Site in Hiss Chambers Case Now a Landmark The New York Times May 18 1988 Archived from the original on February 14 2009 Retrieved June 20 2008 Witness and Friends Remembering Whittaker Chambers on the centennial of his birth National Review August 6 2001 Archived from the original on May 13 2008 Retrieved June 20 2008 2017 Ideas Summit National Review Institute 2017 Archived from the original on March 30 2019 Retrieved March 30 2019 2017 Ideas Summit National Review Institute January 2017 Archived from the original on February 2 2017 Retrieved January 23 2017 Fowler Jack February 9 2017 From Atop the Summit National Review Institute Archived from the original on February 11 2017 Retrieved February 12 2017 Knight Sam September 29 2016 The man who brought you Brexit The Guardian Archived from the original on February 11 2017 Retrieved February 12 2017 Mark Janus to Be Honored with Whittaker Chambers Award at NR Institute Ideas Summit National Review February 20 2019 Archived from the original on March 30 2019 Retrieved March 30 2019 National Review Institute to present Mark Janus with the 2019 Whittaker Chambers Award PDF National Review February 2019 Archived PDF from the original on March 30 2019 Retrieved March 30 2019 Janus and fair share fees The organizations financing the attack on unions ability to represent workers Economic Policy Institute February 21 2018 Archived from the original on April 4 2019 Retrieved April 4 2019 a b c d e f g h i j Bravin Jess March 28 2019 Whittaker Chambers Award Draws Criticism From His Family Family members say the conservative icon would be appalled by the recipients of the National Review s prize The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on March 30 2019 Retrieved March 30 2019 National Review Institute ends Whittaker Chambers Award amid his descendants outcry over recipients Washington Examiner March 29 2019 Archived from the original on March 30 2019 Retrieved March 30 2019 Chambers David March 31 2019 Withdraw Whittaker WhittakerChambers org Archived from the original on August 4 2020 Retrieved March 31 2019 Blubaugh Bob September 4 2020 State senators nominate Westminster resident Whittaker Chambers for federal honor Carroll County Times Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on September 4 2020 Retrieved September 19 2020 Senators Hough amp Ready Urge Creation of Whittaker Chambers Memorial Justin Ready September 3 2020 Archived from the original on October 1 2020 Retrieved September 19 2020 Executive Order on Building and Rebuilding Monuments to American Heroes whitehouse gov July 3 2020 Archived from the original on January 26 2021 Retrieved September 19 2020 via National Archives Chambers Joseph Chambers David September 17 2020 Family says no thanks to Whittaker Chambers monument Carroll County Times Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on November 7 2020 Retrieved September 19 2020 Whittaker Chambers Monument No Thanks WhittakerChambers org September 28 2020 Archived from the original on October 29 2020 Retrieved September 28 2020 Chamberlain John R July 8 1928 Poetry and Philosophy in A Tale of Forest Life In Bambi Felix Salten Writes an Animal Story that is Literature of a High Order The New York Times pp 53 54 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 30 2019 Retrieved March 30 2019 Feulner Ed August 16 2001 Monuments to Ignorance The Heritage Foundation Archived from the original on February 13 2017 Retrieved February 12 2017 Feulner Edwin J Tracy Brian 2012 The American Spirit Celebrating the Virtues and Values that Make Us Great Thomas Nelson Inc pp 100 101 ISBN 9781595553904 Retrieved February 12 2017 Nash George H September 2016 Populism I American conservatism and the problem of populism New Criterion Archived from the original on February 13 2017 Retrieved February 12 2017 Nash George H April 26 2016 The Conservative Intellectual Movement in America Then and Now National Review Archived from the original on November 25 2016 Retrieved February 12 2017 Nash George H 2009 Reappraising the Right The Past and Future of American Conservatism Intercollegiate Studies Institute pp 37 47 ISBN 9781935191650 Retrieved February 12 2017 Nash George H 2009 The Conservative Intellectual Movement in America Since 1945 Intercollegiate Studies Institute pp 66 88 94 108 116 117 131 135 137 143 145 163 201 213 227 238 243 253 325 367 368 379 391 405 ISBN 9781497636408 Retrieved February 12 2017 Further reading editChambers Whittaker 1952 Witness New York Random House LCCN 52005149 Chambers Whittaker 1964 Cold Friday New York Random House ISBN 9780394419695 Tanenhaus Sam 1998 Whittaker Chambers A Biography Modern Library ISBN 0 375 75145 9 Weinstein Allen 1978 Perjury The Hiss Chambers Case New York Knopf External links editWhittaker Chambers at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource Official website Authors Guild Whittaker Chambers at IMDb Whittaker Chambers at the TCM Movie Database Appearances on C SPAN Writings of Whittaker Chambers American Writers A Journey Through History C SPAN May 26 2002 170139 1 Berresford John February 2014 A Pumpkin Patch A Typewriter And Richard Nixon The Hiss Chambers Espionage Case YouTube Lecture series 38 pt Tanenhaus Sam February 23 1997 Whittaker Chambers A Biography Part 1 Booknotes C SPAN 78890 1 Part 2 March 2 1997 78894 1 Whittaker Chambers Contemporary Authors Online CAO Gale 2009 H1000016972 Truman Library Archived July 7 2019 at the Wayback Machine Transcripts of Grand Jury Testimony in the Alger Hiss Case Record Group 118 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Whittaker Chambers amp oldid 1191585029, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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