Crossposted at Docudharma
Part II of this diary will be posted on Wednesday, July 27th.
In July 1936, the Spanish Army staged a military uprising against the democratically-elected Republican government of Spain, which had been in power for less than six months. The revolt started in the Protectorate of Morocco under the leadership of General Francisco Franco and by the next day, had spread to the mainland. The rebels had badly miscalculated and not anticipated that several army units would side with the government nor expected that the working classes in towns and cities would be quickly mobilized and armed in a popular resistance against the rebellion. In what would become a dress rehearsal for World War II, the struggle that ensued between Republican and Nationalist forces to determine the future direction of the country would rage on for the next three years.
In 1937, Bill Bailey (a son of Irish immigrants to America) wrote a letter from Spain to his mother in New Jersey. Unbeknownst to her and defying a travel embargo imposed by his own government, he had secretly traveled to that country to become one of almost 2,800 American volunteers to eventually fight on the Republican side in a brutal war against the defenders of authoritarian conservatism
You see, Mom, there are things that one must do in this life that are a little more than just living. In Spain there are thousands of mothers like yourself who never had a fair shake in life. They got together and elected a government that really gave meaning to their life. But a bunch of bullies decided to crush this wonderful thing. That's why I went to Spain, Mom, to help these poor people win this battle, then one day it would be easier for you and the mothers of the future. Don't let anyone mislead you by telling you that all this had something to do with Communism. The Hitlers and Mussolinis of this world are killing Spanish people who don't know the difference between Communism and rheumatism. And it's not to set up some Communist government either. The only thing the Communists did here was show the people how to fight and try to win what is rightfully theirs.
You should be proud that you have a son whose heart, soul and energy were directed toward helping the poor people of the world get back what was taken from them. When the horrible conditions of this world are eventually made right, you can look with pride at those who will be here to enjoy it and say, "My son gave his life to help make things better, and for that I am grateful."
If it will make my departure from the world of the living a little easier for you, just remember this, Mom: I love you dearly and warmly, and there was never a moment when I didn't feel that way.
I was always grateful and proud that you were my mom.
Bill Bailey's letter to his mother explaining why he was fighting in the Spanish Civil War, Photograph Source: Spartacus Educational, U.K. Sketch Source: GMT Games
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Introduction
In the midst of the Great Depression in the 1930's when economic despair gripped the country and the tenets of a capitalist economic system were being widely questioned -- and particularly if you were young, idealistic, leftist, or radical with perhaps a romantic bent -- Paris, Madrid, and Barcelona were the places to be for putting your ideological beliefs into practice. For some Americans, the Spanish Civil War and, more importantly, fighting Fascism and opponents of left-wing politics would become the great cause of their lives.
(members of the International Brigade in Spain, Source: ALBA - The Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives)
Vindication (of sorts) for their "radical" beliefs would eventually come but not until a world war would kill tens of millions, and cause unprecedented devastation over six long years from 1939-1945. Fascism was finally defeated in Germany and Italy but would survive in Spain for several more decades. During the Cold War years, many American veterans of the Spanish Civil War were treated with suspicion and blacklisted in their own country. The McCarthy Era spared no one with even the most tangential connection to "subversive" causes. Such was the level of anti-Communist hysteria in this country. (to read more about McCarthyism, see this earlier diary of mine about the Boomers, The Baby Boom Generation, Part I of III - The Wonder Years and another one on the remarkable life of Paul Robeson, "You Are the Un-Americans, and You Ought to be Ashamed of Yourselves")
Part I of this wide-ranging diary looks at a few of the American volunteers who fought in military battalions that collectively came to be known as the Abraham Lincoln Brigade (ALB); the tense political, economic, and social conditions that existed in pre-war Spain; the response by the American government and its insistence upon assuming a neutral position in this conflict; snippets about the ALB volunteers caught between economic depression at home and alarming developments on the international level; what eventually motivated them to secretly travel to and fight in Spain; and the ALB volunteers' exploits in Spain.
Part II (to be posted on Wednesday, July 27th) will continue the story of the ALB volunteers and evaluate the factors that contributed to the Republican side's defeat; the poetry, art, and images that resulted from this war; the return home and mistreatment by their own government; and, finally, how the ALB volunteers are perceived in historical terms. It is as long, if not a bit longer than Part I.
Almost 40,000 volunteers from 52 countries would join hands in helping the Republican Spanish government under siege by rebel forces and their foreign allies.
Spain in the 1930's
By 1936, Spain was still a country driven by 19th century traditions. Its societal structure was largely dominated by industrialists, wealthy landowners (the Catholic Church among the largest), and the military. Anticlerical feelings were rampant among the working classes and it was said that 'Spaniards followed their priests either with a candle or a club'. With its empire shrunk by defeat at the hands of the United States in the 1898 Spanish-American War, entrenched institutions were resistant to change; obsessed with upholding traditional values; hostile towards and stifling regional aspirations; maintaining law and order; and jealously guarding economic privileges that this status bestowed upon them.
The military dictatorship of General Miguel Primo de Rivera in the 1920's and the subsequent abdication of King Alfonso XIII in 1931 set into motion a series of political events over the next five years. The establishment of the Second Republic in 1931 and its goal of promoting secularism set the stage for General Franco's revolt of July 18, 1936
In a longer historical perspective the Spanish Civil War amounts to the opening battle of World War II, perhaps the only time in living memory when the world confronted -- in fascism and Nazism -- something like unqualified evil. The men and women who understood this early on and who chose of their own free will to stand against fascism have thus earned a special status in history. Viewed internally, on the other hand, the Spanish Civil War was the culmination of a prolonged period of national political unrest -- unrest in a country that was increasingly polarized and repeatedly unable to ameliorate the conditions of terrible poverty in which millions of its citizens lived. Spain was a country in which landless peasants cobbled together a bare subsistence living by following the harvests on vast, wealthy agricultural estates. The hierarchy of the Catholic Church, identifying more with wealthy landowners than with the Spanish people, was in full control of secondary education; education for women seemed to them unnecessary and universal literacy a danger rather than a goal. Divorce was illegal. The military, meanwhile, had come to see itself, rather melodramatically, as the only bulwark against civil disorder and as the ultimate guarantor of the core values of Spanish society.
When a progressive Popular Front government was elected in February 1936, with the promise of realistic land reform one of its key planks, conservative forces immediately gathered to plan resistance. The Spanish Left, meanwhile, celebrated the elections in a way that made conservative capitalists, military officers, and churchmen worried that much broader reform might begin. Rumors of plotting for a military coup led leaders of the Republic to transfer several high-ranking military officers to remote postings, the aim being to make communication and coordination between them more difficult. But it was not enough. The planning for a military rising continued...
The 1936 Spanish election had already been widely celebrated as a great victory in progressive publications in Britain, France, and the United States. In the midst of a worldwide depression, the military rising was thus immediately seen as an assault against working people's interests everywhere.
Cary Nelson, "The Spanish Civil War: An Overview" - 2001, Source: Modern American Poetry - University of Illinois, Sketch Source: Spanish Civil War - A Military Legacy. Read more about the 1936 Elections and what kinds of reforms the Popular Front government was trying to implement.
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As we have witnessed in our
own politics in recent years, opposition to a governing political party frequently unites disparate factions in pursuit of a common goal and, at times, papers over deep divisions. Once in power, the winning coalition often begins to fray over time. In the case in Spain, the government in power had barely had time to get its feet wet. The loose coalition that made up the Popular Front Government was now facing a united opposition which refused to accept the government's legitimacy. The Nationalists would now resort to military means to overturn the results of the February
1936 Elections.
When the first shots of the civil war were fired, the country was bitterly divided into two camps
On one side was the Republican government supported by liberals, socialists, Communists, anarchists, peasants, the working class, and advocates of regional autonomy. They ranged from those supportive of a moderately capitalist liberal democracy to those advocating a revolutionary state.
On the other side was the military led by General Francisco Franco, nationalists, conservatives, fascists, Roman Catholic clergy, large land owners, and monarchists. They generally favored a strong central state and a dominant role for the Roman Catholic Church in Spanish society and opposed democracy. The Republican side was divided while General Franco was able to unite the various right-wing forces.
Soon after the revolt started in July 1936, the country was split into two parts with the Republicans controlling the red areas and Franco's Nationalist the ones in grey, Map Source: Boston College.
Stuck in Neutral in the United States
After the great stock market crash of 1929, the supply of unemployed workers greatly exceeded the number of available jobs in the country. To secure better work conditions and ensure some measure of job security for themselves, the employed workers rallied to form and join labor unions. In 1930, Bill Bailey became a sailor, joined the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) and, later, the Communist Party of the USA (CPUSA).
In 1935, Bailey had traveled to Italy and seen firsthand for himself the corrosive effect Benito Mussolini's ultra-nationalist, Fascist dictatorship was having upon Italian society. It alarmed him. Later that year, Bailey had acquired quite a reputation as an anti-Fascist when he pulled the Swastika flag from the visiting German ocean liner SS Bremen and tossed it in the Hudson River in New York City. Bailey was arrested and beaten but only released later with the help of Congressman Vito Marcantonio. (read interesting details of this incident as described by Bailey in The Kid from Hoboken, Chapter XIV: Ripping the Swastika off the Bremen - 1993. The entire book is available online.)
The Bremen had been a symbol of pride for a resurgent Germany. In response to this perceived insult and humiliation, German Fuhrer Adolf Hitler would adopt the Swastika as the exclusive flag of Nazi Germany. As Bailey described it, "The old flag of the Weimar Republic was a thing of the past." Hitler was making a clean break from the past in his quest to have the Third Reich last for a thousand years.
Bailey was far from the only American concerned about the rise of Fascism in Europe but was helpless as his own government had different ideas about how to combat this rising menace. Pragmatic approaches are often wrong
In the 1930s well-intentioned politicians and pacifist groups adopted a seemingly pragmatic approach to conflict resolution, voiced moderation and diplomacy, and espoused the gospel of internationalism through the League of Nations. During the same period fascist expansionism made its mark with Japan's invasion of Manchuria in 1931, Hitler's rise to power in 1933, Italy's conquest of Ethiopia in 1935... In response to Italy's aggression, the U.S. Congress passed the Neutrality Act which forbade Americans to sell or transport arms out of the country once a state of war existed elsewhere in the world. Although the Neutrality Act did not apply to civil wars, the American government remained officially neutral during the Spanish Civil War. The Neutrality Act did not prevent American companies, however, from selling or trading other goods and materials such as food or oil to the warring factions in Spain.
"The Spanish Civil War: Foreign Intervention and the American Reaction" from the Spanish Civil War Collection and a leaflet promoting promoting a peaceful demonstration in front of the Italian Consulate in New York City, Sources: McMaster University Libraries, Canada.
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Separated by two oceans from much of the rest of the world, it is perhaps easy to understand the natural impulse towards isolationism in the United States.
President Woodrow Wilson's failure in having the United States Senate ratify the post-World War I Treaty of Versailles meant that lack of American participation in the League of Nations (the predecessor to the United Nation) would also promote a countrywide feeling of disinterest in international affairs. In the years prior to the outbreak of hostilities in Spain, isolationism was the fashion of the day in foreign policy and very prevalent in much of the country. In 1919, the treaty's fate had been sealed by stubborn Republican opposition (of course, with the help of some Democratic U.S. Senators) in a closely divided, Republican-controlled United States Senate (49-47 seats). Wilson's refusal to compromise with his political opponents did not help matters much, either.
In 1936, President Franklin Roosevelt was faced with difficult choices. While sympathetic to the Republican cause, he was preoccupied with implementing the New Deal to get the country out of economic depression. He also did not want to alienate an important Democratic constituency group: Irish-Americans, many of whom disliked the anti-clerical feelings amongst various Republican groups towards the Catholic Church in Spain. The Neutrality Laws further limited FDR's options.
To some degree, most politicians (even the great ones) tend to be cautious and play it safe when it comes policy decision making. FDR chose not to rock the boat and go against the current of mainstream public opinion
As the rise of Fascism in Europe posed an ever increasing threat to democratic societies, the Spanish Civil War challenged the American people, and the Roosevelt administration, to re-evaluate the role of the United States in international politics. Americans faced the question of how to respond to this crisis abroad. Should the U.S. maintain strict neutrality in the hope of avoiding another world war? Did the U.S. have a moral responsibility to send military and humanitarian supplies, or even troops to Spain? If some intervention was called for, on which side should the U.S. intervene?
The United States chose to maintain strict neutrality and passed laws to support this official policy in regard to Spain. This response was controversial. A few American men and women were so compelled by the danger of Fascism in Europe, and the immediate threat to the Spanish Republic, that they chose to defy these laws.
"The Spanish Civil War: U.S. Foreign Policy Between the World Wars" - Source: ALBA - The Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives. The poster 'Smash Fascism' shows a Catalan sandal "poised to stamp on a concrete swastika, a symbol of Fascism. The message is clear: although the Spanish worker appears vulnerable, he possesses the necessary strength to defeat the enemy" - Poster Source: The Visual Front, the University of California San Diego Southworth Collection.
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It would take
almost a decade of war from 1936-1945 before isolationism would become
passe in the United States.
The Abraham Lincoln Brigade Volunteers: Spain On Their Minds
By the early 1980's, many of the surviving volunteers of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade were entering their seventies. With financial assistance from the National Endowment for the Humanities, a group of independent film makers decided to make and release a documentary film in 1984 about the lives of a few of these volunteers. The Good Fight: The Abraham Lincoln Brigade in the Spanish Civil War focuses not as much on the complexities of war itself but, rather, looks at it from a human perspective. Narrated by Studs Terkel, it details the prevailing conditions in this country in the mid-1930's; takes us through their journey to Spain and into battle; has excellent footage of the war; examines their lives in the post-war years; and is interspersed with interviews about their personal initiatives to take concrete action and strongly oppose Fascism.
When the war started in the summer of 1936, American participation was strongly opposed by a small but growing group of American Fascists, foremost among them the pro-Nazi German American Bund and the Silver Shirts. The Ku Klux Klan and through the Christian Front, Father Charles Coughlin also railed against the dangers of creeping Communism. A coalition of communists, socialists, and liberals tried to rally American public support against Fascism.
It was an uphill task.
(I wrote about Father Charles Coughlin in 2009 soon after Dr. George Tiller was murdered in this diary - The Week in Editorial Cartoons - Demagogues Amongst Us. He was once described as a "combination of Huey Long and Joe McCarthy in clerical cassock, with a touch of Goebbels thrown in.")
By November 1936, Madrid was in danger of falling to General Franco's forces. Disappointed by its own government's inaction and alarmed by pro-Fascist efforts by these rightist groups, a number of young Americans decided to do something about it. This group included, in addition to Bill Bailey, Ed Balchowsky, Bill McCarthy, Salaria Kea, Steve Nelson, Abe Osheroff, Ruth Davidow, Tom Page, Dave Thompson, Milt Wolff, and Evelyn Hutchins. (watch their reactions to the growing threat of Fascism in "The Good Fight", Episode I of XII)
Not unlike many young leftists of that period, they viewed this struggle in ideological terms
"More clearly than any American combat in the past, wrote an American volunteer in 1937, "the war in Spain is a fight to the finish between all that is new and generous and hopeful in the world and all that is old, cruel, and fetid. It is the thing that moralists had almost given up hoping for -- a clear-cut struggle between the powers of light and the powers of darkness, and very little twilight zone to confuse us. How," he wanted to know, "can one stay out of this struggle?" The decision of the political Left in Spain -- and the Comintern elsewhere -- to confront the Franco insurrection with military force defined the conflict as an ideological struggle between world socialism and fascism. "It was a highly political war," explained the rank and filer Morris Mickenberg. "The first and primary meaning of everything was the political meaning. That is how we lived, that is how we thought, that is how we talked to each other. Indeed, the men engaged in endless political dialogue and debate, avidly following world events, and viewed their commitments in ideological terms." (Carroll, p. 107)
"The Good Fight" is available in full on YouTube. It is divided into 12 episodes with the total film length being about 100 minutes. Pictured on the very top of the DVD cover are (from left to right) Tom Page, Milt Wolff, Evelyn Hutchins, and Ed Balchowsky. The above photograph shows a demonstration in New York City urging the government to support the Republican cause. DVD Cover Source: Amazon.com. Photograph Source: "A Photo Essay on the Great Depression" - Modern American Poetry, University of Illinois.
The volunteers of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade came from every corner of the country, every walk of life, and virtually every state in the union except Delaware and Wyoming. Here are some interesting demographic facts about this diverse group of men and women:
- 70% were between 21 and 28 years old. The youngest was 18 and the oldest 60 years old. The group's median age was 27 and the median birth date 1910. Most were unmarried and around 30% were Jewish. Approximately 20% were New Yorkers including Bill Bailey, Milt Wolff, Abe Osheroff, Ruth Davidow, Tom Page, and Bill McCarthy.
- About 90 were African-Americans, including Oliver Law. A labor organizer from Chicago, he went on to command the very first fully integrated American military fighting unit in history. Race relations were mostly excellent in the group. (Law commanded this integrated force over a decade before President Harry Truman signed an Executive Order to desegregate the United States military in 1948. See this 2009 diary of mine for details -- The Week in Editorial Cartoons - Confronting Racism)
- Most came from working class backgrounds and a variety of professions. Over 1,000 were industrial workers coming from the mining, steel, and seafaring industries. About 500 were either students or teachers. At the time, Ed Balchowsky was a student in Chicago and Steve Nelson a labor organizer in Pennsylvania.
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60 volunteers were female. Ruth Davidow and Salaria Kea (originally from Georgia, she was living in NYC in 1936) worked as nurses. Evelyn Hutchins (pictured above, from Washington State) worked in transportation and drove a truck in Spain. Women had to fight for their rights but eventually came to be respected by their male peers.
- Most (60%) were members of the communist party. Others were either IWW members (Wobblies) or socialists. Some were unaffiliated.
The demographic facts come from a variety of sources. See here, here, here, and here. Poster Source: Spartacus Educational, U.K. Photograph Source: ALBA.
The good interpersonal relations between the volunteers of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade -- and two groups in particular -- were rooted in the emergence of a common threat and a desire to change their fortunes in American society. It was a harbinger of what would occur two decades later when the same groups would join hands in overcoming Jim Cow laws and confront an internal enemy in the American South: racial segregation
The motivations and experiences of the volunteers were multifarious. Political, social, economic and psychological factors all played their part and it would be wrong to generalize about a monolithic Jewish or African-American response to the war. Some volunteers considered themselves communists; others anti-fascists or liberals...
The Jewish and African-American Lincolns offer fascinating subjects for comparison. The two groups had a deep affinity based on a common victim status and rich cultural exchange. Jewish radicals were at the vanguard of the black civil rights movement. Hitler’s persecution of Jews and Mussolini’s attack on Ethiopia in 1935 were understood as part of the same racial threat. Black entertainer Paul Robeson recorded Yiddish songs for the Jewish Lincolns whilst Edwin Rolfe sang Negro spirituals in the company of Langston Hughes. Such moments typified Jewish-black relations on the radical Left in the mid-30s.
[M]any Jews saw the Left as a means of shedding their ethnicity, black radicals were attracted by its potential for racial uplift. Both groups hoped Spain would allow them to overcome their social marginalization and achieve integration within the American polity and the international proletariat. (Sackman, p. 8)
Sarah Sackman, "The Identity Politics of Jews and African Americans During the Spanish Civil War" - Source: Free Ebooks Online, U.K. Photograph Source: Black in the Day: Black American Volunteers in the Spanish Civil War. The above photograph show Salaria Kea working in a Republican hospital in Spain. To read more about Salaria Kea, see "Salaria Kea: A Negro Nurse in Republican Spain" -ALBA.
What finally motivated them to make the journey by late 1936 to Spain? At the time, Tom Page was a poor, unemployed, African-American living in New York City. Milt Wolff worked for the Civilian Conservation Corps. Ruth Davidow had graduated earlier that year from Brooklyn Jewish Hospital with a degree in nursing and had never been active in politics. Dave Thompson was unique in this group in that he was a magazine writer from a fairly affluent family in California.
Here's how they reacted to events in Spain
Tom Page: Any demonstration against Fascism, I would be there... I didn't have a nickel but I'd go. Go down to 14th Street. This is what I would do. And the beautiful thing about it was the feeling of camaraderie there. Everyone had a oneness, a singleness of purpose irrespective of their color or their sex. And this is a wonderful feeling.
Milt Wolff: I told them (in public forms) that the Spanish people have risen up and are resisting this. This is the first resistance to the march of Nazi aggression that has manifested itself. It has not happened in China. It has not happened in Africa. In both places, they were suppressed and defeated. But the Spanish people are fighting back and they are winning. And with your help, with our help, we can defeat Fascism in Spain. We can make Madrid the tomb of Fascism. And we can save our lives, our children's lives, and turn back this menace.
Ruth Davidow: First there was Hitler and the whole question of abuse of the Jews. Bad as I felt about it, I thought it was a German problem and not an American problem. And then the Italians went into Ethiopia and I still thought it was pretty much an Italian problem or an Ethiopian problem. I could not really connect it. What really shook me when both Hitler and Mussolini went into Spain and I realized they were not going gonna be satisfied with a piece here, a piece there. They were out for the whole world. And I began to feel pretty much involved in what was happening. I was pretty upset, as a matter of fact.
Dave Thompson: I became aware of what was going on over there and was very much on the side of the Republic because it seemed to me they were for all the things America stood for: a little less power to one church, a little less land for the nobility, more for the people, universal education. All the things America stood for. Well, the first thing you know is that England, France, and the United States aren't going to stand for anything like that. The next thing you know is that Congress has voted for non-intervention following the lead of Neville Chamberlain and not to get involved on either side. This was cutting off the Republic's chance to defend itself.
Tom Page's comments are from The Good Fight, Part II of XII beginning at the 0:40 mark. Comments by Milt Wolff, Ruth Davidow, and Dave Thompson are from The Good Fight, Part III of XII starting at the 4:20 mark. The above photograph shows 16 volunteers of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade Ambulance Corps in New York City. Photograph Source: A Photo Essay on the Great Depression, University of Illinois.
Reaching Spain and Fighting the Fascists
Having made the commitment in late 1936 to go fight in Spain, the volunteers began to organize. Often disguised as tourists, they left on ships for France and then took trains that put them near the Pyrenees Mountains. Making the treacherous trek through the mountains and evading border guards, they reached Catalonia in northern Spain.
As Bill Bailey describes it in his book, the difficult fighting lay ahead but their spirits were soaring, even after making an 8,000 miles long trip from all the way from San Francisco as he did
Almost every week, five or ten men from the West Coast would depart from San Francisco for New York, then Spain. When my passport arrived, there was a big inscription printed across the first page, "Not valid for travel in Spain." After a few warm handshakes and last minute instructions on whom to contact in New York, I was on the Greyhound bus as it headed east. There were five of us on that bus heading for Spain. Two comrades had come down from Seattle, one from Portland and two of us from the San Francisco Bay Area. Our limited funds for traveling allowed for nothing more than hamburgers and coffee for the next five days across the United States...
We had reached the southern edge of the Pyrenees. Ahead of us we could see a long valley and at the end of the valley an old Spanish farm house. The area looked like any scene of the backroad country of Nevada. There were no horses or cattle or decent grazing grounds. There were just deer paths and dried-up creeks that would be overflowing with water when the rainy season came.
Many of us had traveled some 8,000 miles to be able to stomp our feet on Spanish soil. As we trudged toward the farm house we were shouting within ourselves, "Hey, you bloody fascist bastards, Franco, Mussolini and Hitler! We've come a long way and waited a long time for this opportunity to join thousands of other anti-fascists from all over the world to form the International Brigades. By God, we're finally here on a battle ground that may one day help to decide the fate of the human race. We may not be the most skilled army in this world, but one thing's for sure -- we're going to make you pay for every indignity you committed against the peace-loving peoples of the world. We intend to give a good account of ourselves. From here on, you're going to know we're here."
Bill Bailey, The Kid from Hoboken, Chapter XXI: Journey to War in Spain. Photograph Source: "David Smith - Spanish Civil War Vet" - San Franciso Chronicle.
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From early 1937 onwards, the ALB volunteers fought in every major battle of the Spanish Civil War. Among other encounters, these included the battles of Jarama, Brunete, Belchite, Aragon, and the decisive last stand at Ebro before the fall of Madrid in late March 1939. This summary will give you a very good idea of the major campaigns they participated in, the losses they inflicted upon Franco's Nationalists, and the casualties they suffered themselves.
The above map (click this link for larger map version) gives a good visual overview of these battles. You can read an excellent week-by-week summary of the ALB's military activities and major developments in the war -- Chronology of the Spanish Civil War - Emphasizing the Lincoln Battalion Involvement. Although most of the volunteers of the international brigades left Spain by late 1938, a few stayed on until the bitter end. This withdrawal had been initiated by the Republican government to force Germany and Italy to also withdraw their troops. Both countries refused to do so.
The Spanish Civil War officially ended on April 1, 1939.
In January 1938, Paul Robeson and his wife Eslanda Cardozo Goode traveled to Spain where Paul met with and also the performed several times for the troops.
She made this entry in her diary
Saw lots of Negro comrades, Andrew Mitchell of Oklahoma, Oliver Ross of Baltimore, Frank Warfield ofSt Louis. All were thrilled to see us and talked at length with Paul. All the white Americans, Canadians and English troops were also thrilled to see Paul... Major Johnson told the men that they are to go up to the front line tomorrow. The men applauded uproariously at that news.
Then Paul sang, the men shouting for the songs they wanted: 'Water Boy', 'Old Man River', 'Lonesome Road', 'Fatherland'. They stomped and applauded each song and continued to shout requests. It was altogether a huge success. Paul loved doing it. Afterwards we had twenty minutes with the men and took messages for their families...
As we drove along, Lt. K. got talking and told us the story of Oliver Law. It seems he was a Negro - about 33 - who was a former army man from Chicago. He had risen to be a corporal in the US Army. Quiet, dark brown, dignified, strongly built. All the men liked him. He began here as a corporal, soon rose to sergeant, lieutenant, captain and finally was commander of the Battalion - the Lincoln-Washington Battalion. K. said warmly that many officers and men here in Spain considered him the best battalion commander in Spain. The men all liked him, trusted him, respected him and served him with confidence and willingly.
Read her full diary entry in which she recounts the details of Oliver Law's death from a sniper's bullet.
"Eslanda Goode" - Spartacus Educational, U.K. Photograph Source: "Oliver Law" - Spartacus Educational, U.K. In the photograph, Paul Robeson is in the middle with hat on and Oliver Law on the right.
Every war has its distinctive sounds. From the American Civil War in the 1860's to the two World Wars to the Vietnam War, music has always played a big role in how these wars are remembered and events seared into most people's minds. Songs capture the restlessness and fears every soldier experiences before going into battle; celebrate victories; express sorrow and dismay over defeats; and mourn their dead comrades. Big political aims and grand war strategies are secondary to actual combatants. Those are left for politicians and generals. As for soldiers, all they care about is survival. (see this 2007 diary of mine for more on war combatants -- "Shared National Sacrifice" and 'The War' Tonight on PBS).
The American government was officially not a participant in the Spanish Civil War. That didn't prevent the ALB volunteers from having their own songs which reflected their fears, hopes, and dreams. One of the more famous songs, "Jarama Valley" was recorded by, among others, folk singers/activists Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger.
Here is Pete Seeger's version (along with Arlo Gutrie), in which he narrates the history of the song, how this and other songs of his became very popular in the oppressive Franco years even in Spain! The video has excellent still shots of the bloody Battle of Jarama and its participants.
Jarama Valley
There's a valley in Spain called Jarama
It's a place that we all know so well
It was there that we gave of our manhood
And so many of our brave comrades fell.
We are proud of the Lincoln Battalion
And the fight for Madrid that it made
There we fought like true sons of the people
As part of the Fifteenth Brigade.
Now we're far from that valley of sorrow
But its memory we ne'er will forget
So before we conclude this reunion
Let us stand to our glorious dead.
Folk singer John McCutcheon also recorded a number of songs about the Abraham Lincoln Brigade. The songs are available on YouTube.
A Note About the Diary Poll
In the final episode of the The Good Fight (go to the 1:25 mark of this video), you will see a number of the ALB volunteers reflecting back on their experiences in Spain. There are no feelings of regret nor any second-guessing about their decision to go to Spain. In fact, there is nothing but real pride and satisfaction in their voices that they were true to themselves and their individual consciences.
If you believe passionately in a cause, if you did what you thought was right, then, your conscience has be clear and unburdened with any guilty feelings or sense of remorse. Having the courage of your convictions is hardly a human character flaw.
Believing in something is what really matters in life.
Abe Osheroff: Spain was the great, first love of our lives. And since you always remember it, in this instance, you remember it in the most positive and glowing terms when you gave some thought to it because it was one of your finest moments. We all live up and down lives and we all do things that we are sometimes proud of and sometimes not particularly proud of. And Spain is something one can never be ashamed of.
Salaria Kea: I'm very proud that I went to Spain because I feel like I've done something in this world to help people. And that's what we are here for. And that's what we are all here for. And I've done my share and I'm not over.
Ed Balchowsky: I really knew when I decided to go that I was doing what I wanted to do. And there was never any thought in my mind -- and I think we mentioned it before -- about whether I was going to get killed or wounded or anything at all. I didn't look ahead. I just was doing what I wanted to do. And I've never been sorry for loss of arm for I gained much more than I lost.
Ruth Davidow: As long as there is injustice and as long as people are struggling for justice, there will be other battles, there will be other victories. I don't think you win in one day. You have to have a long-term view.
Bill BaileyThe more we fight, the chances are of dragging other people into the battle, educating other people and one day we may live in a decent society where there is no such thing as a bomb or a gun, where it may be a big criminal offense to even allow someone to go hungry. That's the type of society we want. So, therefore we've got to keep going. To give up now would be the worst form of cowardice I can think of.
Milton Wolff: When the American Nazi Party was going to have a demonstration in Skokie, Illinois, I called Bill up and said, 'What do you think about you and I going out there to run a counter demonstration? And, we'll go to the press and this is a continuation of your life. In 1935, you pulled the Swastika off the Bremen and here you are in Skokie, IL and challenging the American Fascists'. He said, 'When are we leaving'?
The first photograph is of Abe Osheroff and the second of Milt Wolff, who commanded one of the ALB battalions in Spain. All the quotes that I have transcribed are from "The Good Fight" - Part XII. Sources for Photographs: "From Spanish Civil War to Iraq, Activist Abe Osheroff Looks Back" - Seattle Post-Intelligencer and "Fighting the Spanish Civil War All Over Again" - Tikun Olam.
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There is a lot more and the story continues in Part II of this diary on Wednesday, July 27th.