Paul Robeson

Home > Other > Paul Robeson > Page 84
Paul Robeson Page 84

by Martin Duberman


  His antipathy to keeping a personal record has been the chief stumbling block to this biography, and especially to any effort at probing his inner life. Time and again, the material in the Robeson Archives consists of Essie’s, rather than Paul’s, jottings and musings. Since they were very different people, often at odds emotionally and politically, her account can hardly be taken as an accurate reflection of his. Yet, in the absence of other material, I have sometimes had to use Essie’s letters and diary (especially for the period of the twenties) as the chief sources for a given event. In doing so, I’ve tried to remain alert to the danger of equating her attitude with his—and have periodically alerted the reader as well (see, for example, note 43, page 601; note 38, page 624; note 41, pages 644–45). Robeson’s refusal to leave behind a detailed record of his own is consonant with his temperament. Accurately described by one of his close friends as “a man with a thousand pockets,” he disliked the notion of anyone’s being able to rummage through them all, to pierce the secretiveness he came to regard as necessary protection.

  Since the Robeson Archives is heavily weighted with material Essie Robeson herself accumulated or wrote, I’ve attempted to leaven that bias by interviewing some 135 friends and associates of Robeson’s and by reading widely in other manuscript collections. Finally, nothing can substitute for Robeson’s own voice (nor can any amount of scholarly diligence invent one), but the interviews have thickened the number of perspectives on him, and the supplementary manuscript sources have yielded much additional material about him (and even a few supplementary letters by him)—as well as enriching the general contextual background. Below is a full listing of interviewees, followed by the manuscript sources consulted other than the Robeson Family Archives itself.

  People Interviewed

  James Aronson

  Peggy Ashcroft

  Etta Moten Barnett

  Cedric Belfrage

  Mirel Bercovici

  Rada Bercovici

  Eubie Blake

  Charles L. Blockson

  Leonard Boudin

  Anne Braden

  Geri Branton

  Fredda Brilliant

  Oscar Brown, Jr.

  Oscar Brown, Sr.

  Margaret Burroughs

  Alan Bush

  Angus Cameron

  Lee Cayton

  Revels Cayton

  Frances Quiett Challenger

  Si-lan Chen

  Alice Childress

  Herbert E. Cohen

  Gertrude Cunningham

  Peggy Dennis

  Freda Diamond

  Earl Dickerson

  Hazel Ericson Dodge

  Bess Eitingon

  Inger McCabe Elliot

  Emma Epps

  Howard Fast

  Andrew Faulds

  Max Fink

  Ishmael Flory

  Moe Foner

  Harry Francis

  Milton Friedman

  Indira Gandhi

  John Gates

  Nina Goodman (Mrs. Ben Davis, Jr.)

  Sally Gorton (Mrs. Rockwell Kent)

  Joseph Gould

  Victor Grossman

  Bonnie Bird Gundlach

  Uta Hagen

  John Hammond

  Ollie Harrington

  Dorothy Healey

  Jean Herskovits

  Lena Horne

  Micki Hurwitt

  Jean Blackwell Hutson

  C. L. R. James

  Ruth Jett

  Howard Eugene (“Stretch”) Johnson

  Barney Josephson

  Alfred Katzenstein

  Ursula Katzenstein

  Larry Kerson

  Ari Kiev

  Bernard Koten

  Joseph Lederer

  Harold Leventhal

  Elma Lewis

  Jay Leyda

  Marian Liggins

  Diana Loesser

  Sanford Meisner

  Herbert Marshall

  Josephine Martin

  Carl Marzani

  Jan Mason

  Ivor Montagu

  Chuck Moseley

  H. A. Murray

  William Mutch

  Richard Nachtigall

  Kay (Mrs. Aubrey) Pankey

  Sam Parks

  Graham Payn

  Theodora Peck

  Thelma Dale Perkins

  Morris Perlmutter

  Rose Perry

  William Pickens III

  Sidney Poitier

  Martin Popper

  Louis Rawls

  Edward Rettenberg

  Milton Rettenberg

  Jim Richards

  Alan Rinzler

  Marilyn Robeson

  Paul Robeson, Jr.

  Earl Robinson

  Robert Robinson

  Flora Robson

  Clara Rockmore

  Ted Rolfs

  Helen Rosen

  Norman Roth

  Rose Rubin

  Annette Rubinstein

  S. A. Russell

  Bayard Rustin

  Homer Sadler

  Antonio Salemmé

  G. Foster Sanford, Jr.

  Junius Scales

  Sylvia Schwartz

  Pete Seeger

  Jean Seroity

  Marie Seton

  Sadie Davenport Shelton

  Robert Sherman

  Frederick Shields

  Julius Silverman

  Ruby Silverstone

  Abbott Simon

  Anita Sterner

  Michael Straight

  Alexander Taylor

  Studs Terkel

  Edith Tiger

  Chatman Wailes

  Ruth Walker

  Fredi Washington (Bell)

  Elizabeth Welch

  Aaron Wells

  Rebecca West

  Monroe Wheeler

  Mrs. Harry White

  Henry Wilcoxon

  Doxey Wilkerson

  Aminda Badeau (Mrs. Roy) Wilkins

  Addie Wyatt

  Asa Zatz

  In addition, I have had access to Paul Robeson, Jr.’s interviews with: Peter Blackman, Bruno Raikin, and Marie Seton; and to Anita Sterner’s interviews (done for a 1978 BBC program on Robeson) with: Tommy Adlam, George Baker, Frank Barnes, Alfie Bass, Alan Booth, Dave Bowman, Lord Brockway, J. Douglas Brown, May Chinn, George C. Crockett, Jr., Ossie Davis, Ruby Dee, Leonard de Paur, Dai Francis, John Gerstadt, Leo Hurwitz, Emlyn Jenkins, Roderick Jones, Armina Marshall, James Monk, Mrs. Northcote, Will Paynter, “Princeton Old People,” Philip Stein, Phillip Thomas, Rachel Thomas, André Van Gyseghem, Otto Wallen, Charles Wright, Ellsworth Wright, Coleman Young.

  Manuscript Sources

  (other than the Robeson Family Archives)

  AKADEMIE DER KÜNSTE DER DDR, PAUL ROBESON ARCHIV: assorted manuscript letters, first-person reminiscences of Robeson, extensive newspaper and photo collection.

  AMISTAD RESEARCH CENTER: Fredi Washington Papers; Countee Cullen Papers

  CHICAGO HISTORICAL SOCIETY: Claude A. Barnett Papers

  COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY: Robert Minor Papers; Oral History Research Office (some two dozen pertinent interviews including especially those done with: Charles Ascher, Eric Barnouw, A. Philip Randolph, William Jay Schieffelin, Carl Van Vechten, Roy Wilkins, and Henry Agard Wallace); Paul Robeson Law School Records

  COUNTWAY MEDICAL LIBRARY, HARVARD: Louis Wright Papers

  DUSABLE MUSEUM, CHICAGO: Metz Lorchard Papers; Margaret Burroughs Papers

  FDR LIBRARY, HYDE PARK: Eleanor Roosevelt Papers

  INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL HISTORY, AMSTERDAM: Emma Goldman Papers

  KURT WEILL FOUNDATION FOR MUSIC: Weill/Eslanda Robeson Correspondence

  LIBRARY OF CONGRESS: Nannie H. Burroughs Papers; NAACP Papers; Mary Church Terrell Papers; Margaret Webster Papers

  MOORLAND-SPINGARN RESEARCH CENTER, HOWARD UNIVERSITY: Bustill-Bowen-Asbury Collection; E. Franklin Frazier Papers; George Murphy Papers; William L. Patterson Papers; Jessica Smith Papers; Jacob C.
White Collection

  NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY, MANUSCRIPT DIVISION: Paul Kester Papers; Vito Marcantonio Papers; Joel E. Spingarn Papers; Carl Van Vechten Papers

  NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY, SCHOMBURG COLLECTION: Lawrence Brown Papers; Civil Rights Congress Papers; Melville J. Herskovits Papers; Alberta Hunter Papers; National Negro Congress Papers; Papers of the Black Academy of Arts and Letters; Pettis Perry Papers; William Pickens Papers; Paul Robeson Collection; Arthur Schomburg Papers

  NEW YORK UNIVERSITY, WAGNER ARCHIVES: Actors’ Equity Association Records

  NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY LIBRARY: Melville J. Herskovits Papers; Ira Aldridge Collection

  PRESBYTERIAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY: Records of New Brunswick Presbytery

  PRINCETON UNIVERSITY: Sylvia Beach Collection; Otto Kahn Papers

  RUTGERS UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES: assorted Paul Robeson-related material

  SCHLESINGER LIBRARY, RADCLIFFE: Charlotte Hawkins Brown Papers; Margaret Cardozo Holmes interview

  SMITH COLLEGE, SOPHIA SMITH COLLECTION, WOMEN’S HISTORY ARCHIVE: Ella Reeve Bloor (“Mother Bloor”) Papers

  SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY, CARBONDALE, SPECIAL COLLECTIONS: Herbert Marshall Papers

  STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY, WISCONSIN: Eugene and Peggy Dennis Papers Syracuse university: Earl Browder Papers

  UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES, SPECIAL COLLECTIONS: R. Golding Bright Papers; Oral History interviews with Edwin Lester and Ed Biberman; Ralph Bunche Papers; George Johnson Film Collection

  UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS, AMHERST: W. E. B. Du Bois Papers

  UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY, BANCROFT LIBRARY: Noel Sullivan Papers

  UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN, LABADIE COLLECTION: Maurice Brown/Ellen Van Volkenburg Papers

  UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS, RANSOM HUMANITIES CENTER: Maxwell Anderson Papers; Frank Harris Papers; Alfred and Blanche Knopf Papers

  YALE UNIVERSITY: James Weldon Johnson Memorial Collection of Negro Arts and Letters; Laurence Langner Papers; Eugene O’Neill Correspondence; Gertrude Stein Correspondence; Theater Guild Papers; Carl Van Vechten Papers

  Additionally, a number of people have given me access to privately held manuscript material:

  Peggy Ashcroft (ms. memoir)

  Cedric Belfrage (Belfrage-Peggy Middleton correspondence)

  Maimie Neale Bledsoe (ms. memoir and speeches)

  Leonard Boudin (files on Robeson passport case)

  A’Lelia P. Bundles (ms. letter)

  Revels Cayton (ms. letter, biographicar materials)

  Tim Couzzens (Robeson materials in William Ballinger and Winifred Holtby Papers)

  Gertrude Cunningham (Nathan F. Mossell papers)

  Lloyd L. Davies (ms. letters, reminiscences)

  Freda Diamond (ms. letters)

  Paulina Forsythe (ms. letters to Robeson during the dozen years, 1965–76, when he lived with her and her mother, Marian Forsythe, in Philadelphia)

  Milton Friedman (court briefs)

  Walter Goldwater (ms. letters)

  Nina Goodman [Mrs. Ben Davis, Jr.] (ms. letters)

  Rupert Hart-Davis (ms. letters)

  Marie Jones (ms. letters)

  Corliss Lamont (ms. letter)

  H. A. Murray (ms. letters)

  Kay [Mrs. Aubrey] Pankey (ms. letters)

  Juliet [Mrs. Malcolm] Pitt (ms. letters)

  Paul Robeson, Jr. (hospital records; book manuscripts (“With Malice Toward One,” “Gideon’s Journey”); Washington, D.C., FBI files)

  Clara Rockmore (Rockmore-Robeson correspondence)

  Helen Rosen (Rosen-Robeson correspondence)

  Junius Scales (ms. memoir)

  Marie Seton (ms. letters, book ms.)

  Louis Shaeffer (interview notes)

  Anita Sterner (tapes and transcripts of three dozen interviews for 1978 BBC program on Robeson)

  Leonora [Pat] Gregory [Stitt] (ms. memoir and draft of book started with Robeson)

  Studs Terkel (tape of others reminiscing about Robeson)

  Nancy Wills (ms. memoir)

  A number of people I corresponded with added further to the stock of primary materials through their anecdotes and personal recollections of Robeson (as well as by providing leads to others with firsthand accounts). In this regard, I owe special thanks to Kathryn Cavan Avery, Paul Avrich, Edward Biberman, Charles L. Blockson, George Breitman, Harry Bridges, Bob Cohen, Malcolm Cowley, Millia Davenport, Michael H. Ebner, Veit Erlmann, Kim Fellner, Bernard Forer, Joseph Gould, James Frederick Green, Judith Green, John Devereux Kernan, Ralph Kessler, David Randall Luce, Luretta Bagby Martin, Ruth C. McCreary, Jim Murray, Paul G. Partington, Robert Richter, Naomi Rogers, Irene Runge, Stanley Schear, Athene Seyler, Harry Slochower, George Spector, C. A. Tripp, Jules Tygiel, Mrs. William A. P. White, Nancy Wills, and Jane Wright.

  Finally, additional documentation about Robeson was secured under the Freedom of Information Act. Some time ago, when access under the FOIA remained comparatively open, Paul Robeson, Jr., got considerable material from the Main Office files of the FBI (as well as some CIA and State Department documentation). Some of that material, however, consisted of condensations sent from the FBI’s New York Field Office, the originating branch for surveillance of Robeson. I felt it was urgent to secure the New York files themselves—especially after I discovered that surveillance had been so continuous and intense that the field office file had generated its own internal index (a so-called Correlation Summary, developed only for the very largest FBI collections). Unfortunately, by the time I began this biography in 1981, open access under the FOIA was a policy of the past. When I applied for Robeson’s New York file, I did get some material from the early forties, but for the later period I received little more than page after page of inked-out reports. In denying me access, the Bureau cited the now catchall justification of “national security.”

  Given the persistent rumors that the FBI (as well as other government agencies) had had a direct hand in causing the deterioration in Robeson’s health during the fifties, I felt it was essential to try to extract additional materials from the recalcitrant Bureau. To that end, I initiated a formal lawsuit against the FBI through Edward Greer, the Boston lawyer with special expertise in FOIA files. Litigation dragged on for nearly three years. Ultimately, running out of money and nearing completion of the book, I had to agree to an out-of-court settlement that did secure for me some additional documentation, but not enough either definitively to corroborate or to disprove the rumored involvement of the FBI in Robeson’s physical and emotional collapse. None of the limited amount of material I received as a result of the court case contains any suggestion of FBI (or other governmental) complicity. Still, the issue must be considered unresolved. The mere existence (apparently unique, according to Ed Greer) of an FBI “Status of Health” file on Robeson remains unexplained, and there are enough other loose ends in the available evidence to make it impossible at this point in time either wholly to absolve or clearly to indict U.S. government agencies for playing a role in Robeson’s decline. Final judgment must await the release of all pertinent material. Unfortunately, that day may never come: during the course of litigation, the FBI lawyers told Greer—their tone sardonic—that some 56 volumes (out of a probable 103) in the Robeson file of the New York Field Office had “unaccountably disappeared.”

  Notes

  LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS FOR MANUSCRIPT COLLECTIONS IN LIBRARIES

  ARC

  Amistad Research Center, Tulane University

  BLUC

  Bancroft Library, University of California at Berkeley

  CHS

  Chicago Historical Society

  CML

  Countway Medical Library, Harvard University

  CU

  Columbia University

  DSMC

  DuSable Museum for Black History and Culture, Chicago

  FDR

  FDR Library, Hyde Park, New York

  IISH

  International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam
/>   KWF

  Kurt Weill Foundation for Music, New York

  LC

  Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.

  MSRC

  Moorland-Spingarn Research Center, Howard University

  NYPL/Ms. Div.

  New York Public Library, Manuscript Division

  NYPL/Schm

  New York Public Library, Schomburg Collection

  NUL

  Northwestern University Library

  PHS

  Presbyterian Historical Society

  PR Archiv, GDR

  Paul Robeson Archiv, East Berlin

  PU

  Princeton University Library

  RA

  Robeson Archives, Howard University

  RUA

  Special Collections, Rutgers University Library

  SIU

  Southern Illinois University, Carbondale

  SL

  Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe

  SSC

  Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College

  SU

  Syracuse University

  UCLA

  University of Southern California, Special Collections

  U.Mass.

  University of Massachusetts, Amherst

  UM

  Labadie Collection, University of Michigan

  UT

  Ransom Humanities Center, University of Texas

  Yale

  Beinecke Library, Yale University

  CHAPTER 1 BOYHOOD (1898–1914)

  1. It would serve no useful purpose to list the voluminous literature on race for this period—expecially since August Meier and Elliott Rudwick’s excellent From Plantation to Ghetto (Hill and Wang, 1970) summarizes the pertinent evidence and sources. For an updating, see Louis R. Harlan, Booker T. Washington: The Wizard of Tuskegee, 1901–1915 (Oxford, 1983).

  2. WDR obituary in the Somerset Messenger, May 22, 1918 (year of degrees). The classmate (and subsequent relative by marriage) was Nathan F. Mossell. His comment on Lincoln University is in his ms. autobiography (which also includes part of his correspondence), generously loaned to me by a descendant, Mrs. Gertrude Cunningham. She also gave me a number of other documents of special value in reconstructing the history of the Robeson family; these are too scattered and numerous to list in full. Besides the Cunningham documents, I have found of special value, despite its distortions, Eslanda Robeson, Paul Robeson, Negro (Gollancz, 1930), hereafter ER, PR, Negro; Robeson’s own autobiography, Here I Stand (Beacon Press, 1970), hereafter PR, Stand; the Jacob C. White and Bustill-Bowser-Asbury ms. collections at the Moorland-Spingarn Research Center at Howard University, hereafter MSRC; Anna Bustill Smith, “The Bustill Family,” Journal of Negro History, Oct. 1925; and the collection of ms. letters given me by Paulina Forsythe, daughter of Marian Robeson Forsythe (Paul’s sister).

 

‹ Prev