Daniel Bell Research Files on U.S. Communism, Socialism, and the Labor Movement
Call Number
Dates
Creator
Extent
Language of Materials
Abstract
Sociologist Daniel Bell (1919-2011) was a writer and teacher of the history of the American left and of American Labor. He was managing editor of the New Leader in the 1940s, labor editor of Fortune from 1948 to 1958 and is the author of several books and monographs. The papers represent materials gathered by Bell for his writing and research. They include correspondence, clippings, minutes, pamphlets, research notes, articles, reports, congressional testimony and interviews.
Historical/Biographical Note
Sociologist Daniel Bell (1919-2011) was a writer and teacher of the history of the American left and of American Labor. A 1939 graduate of City College (CUNY), where he was a member of the Young Peoples Socialist League, Bell was managing editor of the New Leader (a social democratic journal of opinion) in the 1940s, labor editor of Fortune magazine from 1948 to 1958 and author of several books and monographs, including The End of Ideology (1962), The Birth of Post-Industrial Society (1974), and The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism (1976). Daniel Bell's life and ideas are described in Arguing the World (1997) a documentary film about three notable City College graduates: Bell, Irving Howe, and Nathan Glazer.
Arrangement
Folders are arranged alphabetically within each box or subseries.
The files are grouped into seven series:
Series I. The Communist Party, U.S.A.: Organization and Policy Development
Subseries I:A: Organization, Policy Development, Political Activities
Subseries I:B: Earl Browder Materials
Subseries I:C: Communist Party Influence in the CIO and in Government re Labor
Subseries I:D: Government and Industry's anti Communist campaign
Series II. The Communist Party, U.S.A. and the American Labor Movement.
Subseries II:A: Distributive, Processing and Office Workers of America; Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union
Subseries II:B: International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers.
Subseries II:C: United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (U.E.)
Subseries II:D: Cloth, Hat, Cap and Millinery Workers International Union
Subseries II:E: Joint Board of Cloak, Skirt, Dress and Reefer Makers Unions of N.Y. (ILGWU) & Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union
Subseries II:F: Miscellaneous Unions
Series III. American Labor Unions and Industrial Relations.
Subseries III:A: General studies of the labor movement
Subseries III:B: Labor and Government (articles, news reports, pamphlets, etc.)
Subseries III:C: International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen
Subseries III:D: United Auto Workers
Subseries III:E: International Ladies Garment Workers Union (articles & news reports)
Subseries III:F: United Mineworkers of America (articles & news reports)
Subseries III:G: Miscellaneous Articles and News Clippings on Other Unions Subseries III:H: A.F.L. C.I.O. (articles, clippings, notes)
Series IV. The American Socialist Party.
Subseries IV:A: The Socialist Party before World War I
Subseries IV:B: The Socialist Party: 1920s
Subseries IV:C: The Socialist Party: 1930-1933
Subseries IV:D: Young People's Socialist League: 1930-1940
Subseries IV:E: The Socialist Party: 1934-1935 ("Old Guard" - "Militant" split)
Subseries IV:F: The Socialist Party: 1936 ("Old Guard" - "Militant" split)
Subseries IV:G: The Socialist Party: 1937
Subseries IV:H: The Socialist Party: 1938-1939
Subseries IV:I: The Socialist Party and the United Auto Workers, 1937-1941
Subseries IV:J: The Socialist Party: 1940-1941
Subseries IV:K: The Socialist Party: 1942 present
Subseries IV:L: International Socialism
Series V. Princeton Conference on Socialism and American Life.
Series VI. The Communist Party and Its Relations with the American Labor Movement.
Series VII. Addendum: Miscellaneous Writings and Research Materials.
Subseries VII:A: Writings; Research Correspondence & Materials.
Subseries VII:B: Writings; Research Correspondence & Materials.
Scope and Content Note
The Daniel Bell Research Files on U.S. Communism, Socialism, and the Labor Movement represent materials gathered by Bell for his writing and research. It includes clippings, correspondence, minutes, proceedings, reports, resolutions, circulars and other internal documents; articles, research notes, pamphlets, congressional testimony and interviews. Notable individuals represented herein, sometimes by biographical studies, correspondence, manuscripts, and oral history interview notes include: John Brophy, Earl Browder, Sam Darcy, James Carey, Sidney Hillman, George Meany, H.L. Mitchell, Philip Murray, Norman Thomas, and fellow researcher William Goldsmith.
Subjects
Organizations
Genres
People
Donors
Conditions Governing Access
Materials are open without restrictions.
Conditions Governing Use
Copyright (or related rights to publicity and privacy) for materials in this collection, created by Daniel Bell was not transferred to New York University. Permission to use materials must be secured from the copyright holder.
Preferred Citation
Published citations should take the following form:
Identification of item, date; Daniel Bell Research Files on U.S. Communism, Socialism, and the Labor Movement; TAM 080; box number; folder number;
Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives
Elmer Holmes Bobst Library
70 Washington Square South
New York, NY 10012, New York University Libraries.
Location of Materials
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Donated by Daniel Bell in 1969 and 1982. The accession numbers associated with these gifts are 1969.001 and 1969.003.
About this Guide
Processing Information
Folder titles usually reflect Daniel Bell's research interests, which may or may not coincide with the overall topical focus and/or provenance of the documents therein.
Photographs separated from this collection during processing were established as a separate collection, the Daniel Bell Photographs (PHOTOS 189). In 2014, the photograph collection was reincorporated into the Daniel Bell Research Files on U.S. Communism, Socialism, and the Labor Movement (TAM 080).
Edition of this Guide
Repository
Series I: The Communist Party U.S.A.
Language of Materials
Subseries I:A: Organization, Policy Development, Political Activities
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
The news clippings, correspondence, and reading notes assembled here outline the internal development of the CPUSA and are particularly useful for the period 1919-1929. Party minutes, letters, and reports of 1928 and 1929 provide additional information on the labor situation in the needle trades and in mining and on intra Party affairs, in particular on the expulsion of the Lovestoneites in 1929. For the period after 1929 there are articles, newsclippings, and pamphlets illustrating the CPUSA's economic and political orientation. Some of the political activities of the CPUSA are suggested in these reading notes, articles, and news reports concerning the "united fronts" of the 1920s, the Farmer Labor movements of 1922-1925, Henry Wallace, and Vito Marcantonio.
Bolshevization, 1925-1929: Notes, Typescripts, undated, inclusive
Browderism: Theory, Expulsion: Clippings, 1943-1947, inclusive
CPUSA Internal Documents, 1920s (Factionalism, etc.), undated , 1926-1927, inclusive
Duclos, Jacques. Notes on the Dissolution of the American Communist Party (ts, 13 p), Apr 1945
Clippings & Ephemera, 1940s-1950s, inclusive
Expulsion of Lovestoneites: Copes of Letters & Statements, 1929, inclusive
Farmer-Labor Maneuvers, 1922-1925: Bell Notes & CP Documents, undated, inclusive
Foster, William Z.: Bibliography, Notes, undated, inclusive
Foster, William Z.: Monthly Industrial Report of Dist. #3 (Oct. 1924), Nov 1, 1924
Fronts, 1920s: Notes & Typescripts (Includes: "The United Front: a History/Draper," 7 p), undated, inclusive
Hall, Gus: Speech at Madison Square Garden, New York, Sep 19, 1950
Hungary: Reaction by Intellectuals: Clippings, 1956-1957, inclusive
Letter to the ECCI: the Need for Communist Unity (Lovestone, et al), Nov 9, 1935
Materials Owned by the Communism Study of the Fund for the Republic (27 p), Apr 1956
National Unemployment Council: Unititled ts on the Unification of All Unemployed Organizations, 1935, inclusive
1935: (re AFL Convention): Typescript, Reading Notes, Articles & Clippings from the CP Press, undated , 1935, inclusive
Peter V. Cacchione, Vito Marcantonio: Ephemera re Campaign Tactics, undated, inclusive
Political Committee Minutes, Jan 1928-Mar 1928
Political Committee Minutes, Apr 1928-Jun 1928
Progressive Party: News Reports, 1948-1955, inclusive
Split in the American CP Articles, Clippings, News Reports, 1957-1958, inclusive
Wallace, Henry: Clippings & Ephemera; Bell Notes, undated , 1941-1947, inclusive
Subseries I:B: Earl Browder Materials
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
Most of these files contain reports of interest to the CPUSA during World War II. There are, in addition, a report by Earl Browder to the CPUSA National Committee, 1939; a financial report of the Communist Political Association for 1944; and a statement concerning political tactics, 1946.
Bittelman, Alex [?]: Important elements for winning the war are…" (ts, 5p.), Jun 3, 1942
Browder, Earl: Plenum Report, Untitled (on intensifying war production), 80 pp., Nov 29, 1942
Browder, Earl: Report to the National Committee, CPUSA Meeting on the 20th Anniversary of the Founding of the Party. Chicago (47 pp), Sep 1, 1939
Communist Political Association: Monthly Financial Rept, Sep 30, 1944
CPUSA Intensive Pro-War Efforts, General (Includes memos from Roy Hudson, others), 1943-1945, inclusive
Early American Writings on (U.S.) Constitution, undated, inclusive
Maritime: Special Report (pp. 551-554/5). Covers CPUSA role in the National Maritime Union (by an anti-communist leftist, apparently based on internal sources), Sep 1, 1942
National Groups as a Problem in Trade Union Work. (Typescript, 12 pp., of a CPUSA meeting, with remarks by Roy Hudson, et al), ca.1940, inclusive
Republican Party: Suggested Workplan for Subcommittees on Labor (confidential to program committee), Nov 19, 1938
Trotskyites, Lovestoneites: Internal Documents (ALP, ILLA - Trotsky, attack on), May 1940
United Automobile Workers of America: Factional Conflict. Contents include (principally pertaining to the Aug 1938 trial of Frankensteen, Mortimer, et al.): letters from Homer Martin to Jay Lovestone; a report by Bill (Foster?); transcripts of Jay Lovestone's and Lovestoneite's telephone conversations; statements by Mortimer, et al, 1936 , 1938, inclusive
United Automobile Workers of America: Intensive War Work, 1942-1943, inclusive
United Electrical Workers: Pro-War Efforts (includes Browder correspondence with UE officials, Browder speeches to UE), 1943-1944, inclusive
United Office & Professional Workers of America - War Policy, 1943-1944, inclusive
Subseries I:C: Communist Party Influence in the CIO and in Government re Labor
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
Material on the role of the Party in the labor movement in general is included in this section of the collection. Much of it is congressional testimony concerning communist influence in the Congress of Industrial Organizations and the National Labor Relations Board. The testimony is supplemented by interviews with CIO officials and articles by prominent communists outlining CPUSA labor policy. There are also articles, news reports, and CIO committee reports concerning the CIO's purge of communists in the years 1948-1950. Communist activity in specific unions is dealt with in Series II.
Communism, CIO, Anti-War AgitationContents: Contains reports, possibly by Victor Riesel, about strength of Communists and their efforts to keep the U.S. out of WWII, 1940-1941, inclusive
Approaching the Drive(ts, 55 leaves); The Drive Begins(ts, 7 leaves)Contents: Two anonymous reports (by Daniel Bell?) discussing the formation and early work of the Steel Workers Organizing Committee, undated, inclusive
Carey, James B.: World Federation of Trade Unions - MeetingsContains: Report of CIO Secretary-Treasurer James B. Carey covering meetings of the WFTU Executive Bureau and Executive Committee, April 30 to May 10, 1948 (ts, 17 l.)Contains: Text of conversations between James B. Carey…and Giuseppe Di Vittorio, Secretary General, Italian Confederation of Labor and Fernando Santi, also of DGIL, on March 12, 1948, London (ts, 10 l.)Contents: Report on CIO Representative's Trip to Europe: for immediate release, March 22, 1948 (ts, with appendices, 9 l.), Mar 1948-May 1948
Catholics (clippings, reports, telegrams), 1949, inclusive
Centralized Direction of Labor Policy in the United States Steel Corporation / National Labor Relations Board Memorandum from Jacob Karro to David J. Saposs (37 leaves), Feb 2, 1937
CIO Charges Against Communist UnionsContents: Report of the Committees to Investigate Charges Against the: Food, Tobacco, Agricultural and Allied Workers of America; International Union of Mine, Mille and Smelter Workers; United Office and Professional Workers of America; United Public Workers of America., Feb 1950
CIO 11th Convention, Cleveland (Nov. 1949)Contents: typescripts of DB articles, and clippings, covering the lead-up to the convention, the convention and its aftermath., 1948-1950, inclusive
CIO Left-Wing Labor Leaders Meeting, Sep 1949-Oct 1949
Clippings on Communism and Labor, 1950s, inclusive
The End of the (Party) LineDescription: typescript (6 p.) of article, including a useful table, on the decline/demise of Communist-led unions, Jan 30, 1956
Interviews with James Carey, Henry Fleischer, and Clint GoldenContents: covers Phil Murray, Lee Pressman, Len De Caux, and Communist influence in the CIO, 1955, inclusive
Mitchell, H.L (National Agricultural Workers Union): Letter (3 p.) re Don West, Claude Williams, Owen H. Whitfield (leading Southern Communists and/or fellow travelers), Jan 16, 1956
Jack Stachel and John Steuben: Correspondence and Notes re Organizing Steelworkers in Youngstown, Ohio, Aug 31, 1936-Nov 1936
National Labor Relations Board, Communist Influence in.Contents: Includes DB notes on interview with David Saposs, correspondence with Jack Barbash and Morris Weisz (NATO Labor Division)., 1955, inclusive
Pacific Northwest: News cables to Time (not from DB) re Government Hearings on Individual Communists Contents: principally re Barbara Hartle, Organizational Secretary of the CPUSA's 12th District, convicted Smith Act defendant, then cooperative witness., 1953-1955, inclusive
WFTU/CIO/International Labor Cooperation: Clippings, 1945-1958, inclusive
Subseries I:D: Government and Industry's anti Communist campaign
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
General aspects of the anticommunist campaign are treated in this section. Articles and reports concerning government actions against union officials associated with the CPUSA and business reports illustrating private harassment of communists and "left wingers" in the labor movement are included here.
Bell, Daniel, et al. Press telegrams re anti-communist activity of government and industry., undated , 1952-1954, inclusive
Clippings and Printed Ephemera re anti-communist activity of government and industry., undated , 1953-1954, inclusive
Photographs: Herbert Brownell, Apr 1954, inclusive
Series II: The Communist Party U.S.A. and the American Labor Movement: Individual Labor Unions
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
The CPUSA has always emphasized the importance of working within the labor movement. Many Party members have been actively involved in CP caucuses within individual unions and, on occasion, Party sympathizers have achieved positions of prominence. This section of the collection is devoted to unions in which there has been active or influential communist participation. It is arranged by union and includes information on Distributive, Processing, and Office Workers of America; Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Workers Union; Amalgamated Food Workers Union; United Electrical, Radio, and Machine Workers of America; United Rubber, Cork, Linoleum, and Plastic Workers of America; International Fur and Leather Workers Union of the U. S. and Canada; United Public Workers of America; Transport Workers Unions; International Longshoremen and Warehousemen's Union; Packinghouse Workers Union; United Gas, Coke, and Chemical Workers of America; National Maritime Union; Upholsterers International Union; Cloth, Hat, Cap, and Millinery Workers International Union; Cutters Local 10; International Ladies' Garment Workers Union; Joint Board of Cloak, Skirt, Dress, and Reefer Makers Unions of New York.
There are many sources of information about communist activity in the labor movement. Articles, notes, and news clippings reveal some aspects of the CP 's relations with organized labor and make up part of the files of all the unions listed above. For a few unions, these are supplemented by more extensive descriptions; there are a short history of the Packinghouse Workers Union, detailed notes on the Amalgamated Food Workers Union, and a substantial history in manuscript of the United Electrical Workers by William Goldsmith.
Both public and private efforts to expose communist "subversion" of the labor movement are useful, though not always reliable sources. Reports of congressional hearings concerning the Distributing, Processing, and Office Workers of America; the Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers Union; and the United Electrical Workers; and N. L. R. B. reports regarding the filing of false noncommunist affidavits on the part of the International Fur and Leather Workers Union and the Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers Union, are included in the files of the respective unions. Anticommunist propaganda put out by Oppenheim Collins against Local 1250 of the D. P. O. W. A. is the only example of the private "expose."
Finally, there is a variety of primary materials. The internal struggles occasioned by CP activities in unions are reflected in leaflets and statements of the Communist and anticommunist factions within the Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Union; the International Ladies' Garment Workers Union; and the International Fur and Leather Workers Union and in the report of the trial and expulsion of the United Public Workers of America from the CIO The files of the United Electrical Radio and Machine Workers Union include a class book of the District Fraction Training School for 1937-1938. The material on the needle trades unions is most helpful for an understanding of CP policies and daily activities in the labor movement: the correspondence of Herman Zukowsky with accompanying union material for the period 1926-1937; Trade Union Educational League and Trade Union Unity League material concerning the Cloth, Hat, Cap, and Millinery Workers Union; and reports and statements of the State Board of the Cloak, Skirt, Dress, and Reefer Makers Unions of New York.
Subseries II:A: Distributive, Processing and Office Workers of America; Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union
Language of Materials
Burke, Robert (Alias William Burke) Vice-President DPOWA, undated, inclusive
Communism vs Democracy: a Short History of DPOWA & District 65, undated, inclusive
Department Store Communists: Clippings, Notes, and ReportsContents: Include several summaries of 1948 interviews by "Levering" with anti-communist union officials (Samuel Wolchok, Jack Altman, et al.), 1940s-1950s, inclusive
DPOW Clippings, undated , 1953-1954, inclusive
DPOW District 65 Clippings, 1952 , 1954, inclusive
Livingston, David - President, District 65, DPOWA, undated, inclusive
Osman, Arthur - President, DPOWA, undated, inclusive
Paley, Jack - Secretary-Treasurer, District 65, DPOWA, undated, inclusive
RWDSU Committee for a Decent Democratic Trade Union (vs Wolchok)Contents: a thick file containing leaflets, statements, 1947, inclusive
Subseries II:B: International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers.
Language of Materials
International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter WorkersIncludes: statements by James Carey., 1936 , 1954-1955, inclusive
Metal Workers HistoryIncludes: affidavit by Sidney Mason re Communist Party work, James Matles; National Radio and Allied Trades internal documents, ca.1930s-1950s, inclusive
Subseries II:C: United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (U.E.)
Language of Materials
Carey, James B., Documents and Publications Relating to., 1940-1957, inclusive
CPUSA District Fraction Training School (UERMWA), Dec 1937-Feb 1938
Daily Worker, Excerpts From, 1933 , 1940-1942, inclusive
Emspak, Julius - Biographical File, 1944 , 1951 , 1952, inclusive
Fitzgerald, Albert - Biographical File, 1948, inclusive
Goldsmith, William: Untitled Typescript (History of UE), Incomplete? 49 pp., undated, inclusive
Hathaway, Clarence - Biographical File, undated , 1925, inclusive
Paul M. Herzog, et al v. UERMWA, 1953, inclusive
Matles, James - Biographical File, undated , 1948, inclusive
Overgaard, Andrew - Biographical File, undated, inclusive
Rivers, Charles - Biographical File, undated, inclusive
Sentner, William - Biographical File, undated, inclusive
Young, Ruth - Biographical File, undated , 1944, inclusive
Subseries II:D: Cloth, Hat, Cap and Millinery Workers International Union
Language of Materials
Correspondence of Isidore Feingold and Herman Zukowsky, 1923 , 1926-1927, inclusive
Correspondence of Isidore Feingold and Herman Zukowsky, Jan 1928-Jul 1928
Correspondence of Isidore Feingold and Herman Zukowsky, Jul 1928-Oct 1928
Correspondence of Isidore Feingold and Herman Zukowsky, 1929, inclusive
Internal Documents, Clippings, 1921-1940, inclusive
Miscellaneous Hand-Written materials (Herman Zukowsky and Isidore Feingold), undated, inclusive
Trade Union Educational League Materials re: CHCMWIU, undated, inclusive
Trade Union Educational League Materials re: CHCMWIU, undated, inclusive
Yiddish Language Materials re: CHCMWIU, undated, inclusive
Subseries II:E: Joint Board of Cloak, Skirt, Dress and Reefer Makers Unions of N.Y. (ILGWU) & Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union
Language of Materials
Dubinsky / Stolberg - Notes, undated, inclusive
Index Card Notes, undated, inclusive
Needle Trades / NTWIU - Internal Documents, Memos, Reports By/About NTWIU, CPUSA Role, 1925 Expulsions, Industry Conditions, undated , 1925-1926, inclusive
Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union Conventions, 1929-1932, inclusive
NTWIU Youth Section, undated, inclusive
Subseries II:F: Miscellaneous Unions
Language of Materials
Amalgamated Food Workers Union - Notes for 1920-1940 Period, undated, inclusive
Bridges, Harry (Longshore), 1949-1953, inclusive
Fur Workers (Includes Furriers' Bulletin, Oct 1933), 1927 , 1933 , 1950-1954, inclusive
International Ladies Garment Workers Union. Cutters Local 10 - Propaganda from Three-Cornered Leadership Struggle, 1939, inclusive
National Maritime Union, 1948, inclusive
Pacific Maritime Assn: Longshore Wage Review; Hourly Wage & Fringe Costs, 1953, inclusive
Packinghouse Workers Union (Includes: "Early Unionism in Packing…1840 to 1933"), 1947-1949, inclusive
Passaic Textile Strike, 1926 - Notes, undated, inclusive
Rubber Workers, 1948-1955, inclusive
Transport Workers Union / Michael Quill - Clippings, 1948 , 1951-1955, inclusive
United Auto Workers / Walter Reuther - Clips, Reports, Statements re Struggle with Communist Party, 1951-1952, inclusive
United Public Workers Expulsion from CIO [ts of CIO Hearings, 150 pp], Jan 1950
Upholsterers' International Union / Salvatore B. Hoffman (President), undated, inclusive
Series III: American Labor Unions and Industrial Relations
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
This section consists of both general studies of the labor movement and information pertaining to specific unions.
Subseries III:A: General studies of the labor movement
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
The general studies include articles, reports, and book reviews arranged topically under the headings: union leadership, union structure, labor and economic conditions, union membership and organizing drives, industrial relations, labor ideology, labor and government, and foreign unions.
Bibliographies - Labor, Industrial Relations, undated , 1954-1957, inclusive
Conflict and Cooperation in Industry ( Journal of Social Issues, 2:1), Feb 1946
Industrial Relations: Collective Bargaining, 1938 , 1940 , 1949-1955, inclusive
Industrial Relations: Determinants of Strikes, undated, inclusive
Industrial Relations: Jurisdictional Disputes, undated , 1946-1955, inclusive
Industrial Relations: Pensions, 1949, inclusive
Industrial Relations: Unions in Public Service, 1946-1955, inclusive
Industrial Relations: Work Rules, Industrial Factors, Psychological Influences, 1950-1963, inclusive
Labor and Economic Conditions - Industry, 1946-1963, inclusive
Labor Economics - Agriculture, 1938-1946, inclusive
Labor Economics - Effect of Unions on Wages, undated , 1950, inclusive
Labor Economics - Trends and Conditions in Industry, 1942-1958, inclusive
Labor Ideology, 1947-1955, inclusive
Labor Leadership - General, 1944-1955, inclusive
Non-U.S. Labor Unions, undated , 1938-1957, inclusive
Union Membership and Labor Monopoly, 1944-1961, inclusive
Union Membership and Organization, 1944 , 1950-1956, inclusive
Union Structure: Democracy & Bureaucracy; A Force in Community, 1943-1960, inclusive
Subseries III:B: Labor and Government (articles, news reports, pamphlets, etc.)
Language of Materials
Government Labor Regulation - Railroad Unions, 1939-1954, inclusive
Government Policy Toward Labor 1930s-1950s, 1939-1957, inclusive
Labor at 1952 [Democratic] Convention, 1940-1952, inclusive
Labor - Postwar Planning, 1943-1948, inclusive
Labor Representation in Government, 1944-1954, inclusive
National Labor Relations Board, 1939-1954, inclusive
National War Labor Board, 1943-1944, inclusive
Secretaries of Labor: Martin Durkin, James P. Mitchell, 1953, inclusive
Wage Stabilization Board, 1946-1952, inclusive
Subseries III:C: International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
The material specifically devoted to the Teamsters provides a substantial introduction to the recent history of the union. It includes biographical studies of Dan Tobin, Dave Beck, and James Hoffa, articles on Teamster history and structure and news reports concerning Teamster relations with other unions. Almost half the material deals with the charges of racketeering made against union officials during the 1950's. These files are composed primarily of articles and news reports but also include the Report of the AFL CIO Ethical Practices Committee to the AFL CIO Executive Council re: International Brotherhood of Teamsters, September 16, 1957, and the Proceedings of the Seventeenth Convention of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, September 1957.
Beck, Dave, 1948-1955, inclusive
Hoffa, James, 1953-1957, inclusive
Racketeering Charges (1957-58), 1957-1958, inclusive
Racketeering Charges (1957-58) News Reports (1), 1957-1958, inclusive
Racketeering Charges (1957-58) News Reports (2), 1957-1958, inclusive
Racketeering; Intra-Union Disputes (1953-54), 1953-1954, inclusive
Structure and Expansion, 1948-1953, inclusive
Tobin, Dan, 1947-1952, inclusive
Subseries III:D: United Auto Workers
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
The United Auto Workers material also heavily emphasizes the post War period. There are biographical sketches of important union officials, notes on the history of the union, and articles concerning the important question of internal democracy. Much of the material concerns the industrial relations of the United Auto Workers: strikes, negotiations, and innovations such as the Guaranteed Annual Wage.
History, 1936-1956, inclusive
Industrial Relations: Chrysler Dispute, 1950, 1948-1955, inclusive
Industrial Relations: GM Dispute, 1945-46; Boeing Aircraft, 1945; Ford, 1949; GM Formula, 1948; UAW in Toledo, 1949 & Richard Gasser, 1945-1958, inclusive
Reuther, Walter - Biographical, 1945-1958, inclusive
Reuther , Walter - Policies, 1946-1957, inclusive
Toledo, Ohio, 1949-1950, inclusive
UAW Conventions - News Clippings, 1949-1953, inclusive
Subseries III:E: International Ladies Garment Workers Union (articles & news reports)
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
The International Ladies' Garment Workers Union and United Mine Workers Union files consist of biographical studies of the unions' leaders and articles concerning their history, structure, and industrial relations. Together with these files there are miscellaneous articles and news clippings on the Pulp, Sulphite, and Paper Mill Workers Union; the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners; and the Textile Workers Union of America.
Dubinsky, History, Industrial Relations, Structure, 1934-1949, inclusive
Subseries III:F: United Mineworkers of America (articles & news reports)
Language of Materials
History; John L. Lewis, 1939-1954, inclusive
Leaders' Bios: Thomas Kennedy, John L. Lewis, John Owens, 1953-1954, inclusive
Subseries III:G: Miscellaneous Articles and News Clippings on Other Unions
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
This subseries contains selections from the convention proceedings of the Federation of Trades and Labor Unions and the American Federation of Labor showing the list of delegates to the conventions, together with notes on the elections at the national conventions of the AFL for the period of 1886-1905.
Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters : book review by DB, 1946, inclusive
Entertainment Industry Unions, 1949 , 1953-1954, inclusive
International Association of Machinists, 1949-1952, inclusive
International Brotherhood of Pulp, Sulphite & Paper Mill Workers Journal, volume 36, number1.Contents: "Fifty Years of Trade Unionism in Berlin, New Hampshire," by H.W. Sullivan, Jan 1952-Feb 1952
Textile Workers Union of America, undated , 1948-1952, inclusive
United Brotherhood of Carpenters, 1949-1953, inclusive
Olander, Victor A. Confidential Report to Matthew Woll (re Newspaper Guild), Oct 19, 1940
Subseries III:H: A.F.L. C.I.O. (articles, clippings, notes)
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
This subseries includes biographical studies of George Meany, Phil Murray, Alan Haywood, and Sidney Hillman, together with articles and pamphlets concerning the history of the CIO and the AFL CIO merger.
AFL, 1939-1958, inclusive
CIO Formation: Pamphlets, Articles, 1930-1952, inclusive
CIO Leaders: Clinton S. Golden, Sidney Hillman, Allen Maywood, undated , 1951-1953, inclusive
CIO Postwar Planning, Political & Economic: Pamphlets, undated , 1943-1948, inclusive
Corruption, Role of Charters, undated , 1952-1956, inclusive
Merger Negotiations, 1953-1958, inclusive
Merger Negotiations: Photographs, 1955-1956, inclusive
Murry, Phil: Biographical, 1946-1952, inclusive
Waterfront Racketeering, 1948-1951, inclusive
Waterfront Racketeering: Photograph, 1948, inclusive
Series IV: The American Socialist Party
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
The section of the collection devoted to the Socialist Party heavily emphasizes the 1930s.
Subseries IV:A: The Socialist Party before World War I
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
For the period before World War I there is some Connecticut SP material; minutes of the State Convention at New Haven, 1906; state constitutions of 1906 and 1909; letters, platforms, and bulletins concerning the elections of 1906, 1910, 1912, and 1913; and newspaper clippings concerning the Socialists in office.
Connecticut SP Documents.Contents: Minutes of the convention at New Haven, 1906; constitutions, 1906 and 1909; election material: letter of nomination and acceptance letter of E. D. Hall for SP nomination for Governor, 1906; state SP platforms of 1906, 1912, 1913; sample ballots for 1910, 1912; party bulletins and resolutions; clippings concerning the SP in office, 1906-1913, inclusive
O'Sheel, Shaemas: Letter to Daniel Bell, re Socialist Party in NYC, Early 20th Century, Aug 25, 1947
Socialism in America: Articles by Earl Browder, Maurice Goldbloom, Norman Thomas, Will Herberg, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., James Weinstein, 1950s-1960s, inclusive
Subseries IV:B: The Socialist Party: 1920s
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
For the 1920's there are news clippings concerning relations between the Socialist Party and the Conference for Progressive Political Action; miscellaneous National Convention Papers for 1924 and 1928; and the Twenty first Anniversary Convention Book, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, 1922.
Cuyahoga County Local Socialist Party: 21st Anniversary Convention Book, 1922, inclusive
La Follette's Presidential Candidacy: News clippings re campaign and the relation of the SP to the Conference for Progressive Political Action, 1924, inclusive
SP Convention (New York; Apr 13-17): Partial Minutes and Miscellaneous Documents, 1928, inclusive
Subseries IV:C: The Socialist Party: 1930-1933
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
In the years between 1930 and 1933 two groups within the Party organized themselves into loose but identifiable factions: the "Militants," a coalition surrounding Norman Thomas, composed of younger and, in the main, more radical Socialists, and the "Old Guard," a group associated with Morris HilIquit and the New York Socialist establishment. The early stages of the party schism are reflected here in correspondence concerning the dispute between The New Leaderand The American Guardian; in a statement by Jack Altman to the "Militant" group in 1933; in letters from Sidney Yellin, Ohio S. P., and Birch Wilson, Pennsylvania SP, concerning disagreements with the National Office, 1933; and in policy statements concerning a proposed united front with the Communist Party. In addition to the factional material, this section includes proposals submitted to the City Convention of New York, 1930; miscellaneous National Convention Papers for 1932; minutes of the National Executive Committee for December 1932; presidential election material, 1932; instructions from the Socialist Speakers Service; and statements, propaganda, and letters of the Continental Congress of Workers and Farmers, 1933.
Continental Congress of Workers and Farmers: Statements, propaganda and letters, 1933, inclusive
Militant Caucus (Jack Altman Statement), 1932, inclusive
N.E.C. Minutes, 1932, inclusive
New LeaderIssue: Correspondence concerning the dispute between The New Leaderand the American Guardian, and Norman Thomas' resignation from The New Leader, 1933, inclusive
Old Guard Views: Letters from Sidney Yellin, Ohio S.P. and Birch Wilson, Pennsylvania S.P. concerning disagreements with the National Office, 1933, inclusive
Platforms and Principles, 1932, inclusive
Proposals (Militant) submitted to the convention of the NYC S.P., 1930, inclusive
Reports on Activities, 1932, inclusive
Socialist Speakers Service Instructions, undated, inclusive
United Front Issue: Policy statements, comments and news clippings., 1933, inclusive
Subseries IV:D: Young People's Socialist League: 1930-1940
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
The Young People's Socialist League (YPSL) material comes from a variety of chapters, although New York City groups are best represented. It includes minutes and reports from groups in Wisconsin, Ohio, Illinois, and New York; miscellaneous National Convention Papers; and some of the minutes and office releases of the National Executive Committee. There are also letters and statements concerning issues of importance to the YPSL: the George Smerkin affair, relations with the Young Communist League, unity with the Social Democratic Federation, and the ultimately consuming problem of world war. Like its parent body, YPSL suffered from factional disputes that are reflected in statements and circulars put out by the "Militants," the "Old Guard," the "Clarity" caucus, and the "Appeal" group. And finally, there are representative periodicals interfiled with the other material in chronological order.
Appeal Group, Clarity, Trotskyists, 1937, inclusive
Cleveland, 1932-1933, inclusive
Committee for Unity, Unity Socialists, 1936, inclusive
May Day Manifesto, 1939, inclusive
National Convention Proceedings, 1933-1935, inclusive
National Convention Proceedings, Resolutions, 1932, inclusive
National Convention Proceedings, 1934, inclusive
National Convention Proceedings, 1934, inclusive
National Executive Committee, 1931-1938, inclusive
New York (N.Y.) Convention Reports, 1934-1937, inclusive
New York Activities, Convention Minutes, Organization Manual, 1930-1938, inclusive
Old Guard: National, 1936, inclusive
Old Guard: New York, 1933-1935, inclusive
Propaganda Material, undated , 1935, inclusive
Red Falcons, 1937, inclusive
S.D.F. Unity (Statement), undated, inclusive
United Front; Young Communist League; Larks-Smerkin Case, 1933-1934, inclusive
Wisconsin, undated, inclusive
Youth Committee Against War, undated, inclusive
Subseries IV:E: The Socialist Party: 1934-1935 ("Old Guard" - "Militant" split)
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
After 1934 the "Militant" - "Old Guard" conflict became more intense. The National Convention Papers of 1934, particularly the Declaration of Principles adopted at the Convention and the majority and minority reports of the American delegates to the Labor and Socialist International, reveal some aspects of the feud. These are supplemented by letters, statements, and pamphlets from both factions and analyses of the Socialist Party published by other "left wing" groups.
Comments of Non-SP Left-Wing Groups on Convention Split in SP, 1934-1935, inclusive
Detroit Convention: Agenda; Debates; Resolutions; Report of the American Delegates to the Labor & Socialist International (majority/minority) and resolutions thereon, 1945, inclusive
Detroit Platform; Declaration of Principles; NYS Resolutions for the Agenda of of the National Convention, 1934, inclusive
Militant letters, statements, pamphlets, 1934, inclusive
Militant letters, statements position papers, 1935, inclusive
New Leader: Red Vienna Special, Feb 17, 1934
Old Guard, 1934, inclusive
Old Guard, 1935, inclusive
Revolutionary Policy Committee; Revolutionary Policy Publishing House, 1934-1936, inclusive
Socialist Appeal, 1935, inclusive
Socialist Party Election Platforms (Bronx, Illinois, Minnesota); Critique of NRA, 1934, inclusive
Subseries IV:F: The Socialist Party: 1936 ("Old Guard" - "Militant" split)
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
The ""Old Guard" left the Socialist Party to form the Social Democratic Federation in 1936. Letters and statements of the "Militants," the "Old Guard," and the Committee for Unity in the Socialist Party illuminate the parting. For 1936 we also have statements and resolutions on the question of the united front, miscellaneous National Convention Papers, and election propaganda.
Altman, Jack: Personal Materials and Letters Concerning His Censure by the California SP, 1936, inclusive
Convention Minutes, Reports, Resolutions, 1936, inclusive
Election Propaganda, 1936, inclusive
Militants: (Includes: Call, Pennsylvania, Racism), 1936, inclusive
Organization and Activities (Includes Reports to Convention; Militant Campaign Tactics), 1936, inclusive
Party Affairs, 1936-1937, inclusive
Socialist Appeal, 1936, inclusive
Topics on Time / Yar Yochno, Apr 1936
United Front, 1936, inclusive
Subseries IV:G: The Socialist Party: 1937
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
The exit of the "Old Guard" did not end factional dispute within the Party. No sooner was the schism accomplished than the "Militants" split into two new factions, the "Old Militants" and the "Clarity" caucus, and shortly thereafter a third group was added, the "Appeal" group, which consisted of former members of the Trotskyist Workers Party who joined the SP en masse toward the end of 1936. Accordingly, 1937 was characterized by internal party feuds, and the letters, statements, and resolutions of the three factions form the bulk of the material. There are also letters and statements concerning the Spanish Civil War, the American Committee for the Defense of Leon Trotsky, and miscellaneous minutes of the National Executive Committee, the National Action Committee, the New York City Executive Committee, and the New York City Central Committee.
Appeal Group, Marxist Policy Committee: Letters, Statements and Resolutions re their Expulsion from the SP, 1937, inclusive
Clarity Group: Letters and Statements re: NYC municipal campaign, relations with the American Labor Party, the SP position on the Appeal group, and the election of delegates to the 1938 convention., 1037, inclusive
Miscellaneous:List of union affiliations of New York City SP members, Socialist Handbook, The Socialist Call, October 9, 1937, on the New York City campaign, Newsbulletinof the American Committee for the Defense of Leon Trotsky, Articles on the SP by Howard Bronson, Committee of the Fourth International, Statements of socialists for party unity., 1937, inclusive
Minutes: National Unemployment Committee, State Executive Committee of Maine, National Executive Committee, National Action Committee, New York City Executive Committee, New York City Central Committee , 1937, inclusive
Miscellaneous, undated, inclusive
Old Militants: Letters and Statements, 1937, inclusive
Spanish Civil War: Letters and Statements, 1937, inclusive
Subseries IV:H: The Socialist Party: 1938-1939
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
The "Appeal" group was expelled from the Socialist Party at the end of 1937, but they did not leave a harmonious party behind them. Letters, statements, and reports concerning the election of delegates to the 1938 National Convention reveal continuing dissension. To some extent this dissension can be attributed to disagreements concerning unity with the Social Democratic Federation, the socialist attitude toward war, and political tactics, in particular the relationship of the SP to the American Labor Party. These disagreements are reflected in letters and notes of the various groups, in the literature of the American Commonwealth Federation and the Keep America Out of War Congress; and in the minutes of the National Executive Committee, the National Action Committee, the National Labor Committee, the State Executive Committee of New York, and the City Central Committee, New York, for 1939, which are included here.
American Commonwealth Federation and the Keep America Out of War Congress, undated, inclusive
National Convention: Letters, statements and reports concerning factional disputes in New York City over the election of delegates to the National Convention, 1938, inclusive
National Convention: Reports, Minutes, etc., 1938, inclusive
Third Party Question, 1038, inclusive
Correspondence, Letters, reports and notes concerning party tactics, the 1939 New York City campaign, relations with theAmerican Labor Party, question of unity with the Social Democratic Federation, union activity, and war, 1939, inclusive
Minutes, Resolutions, Statements: National Executive committee, National Action Committee, National Labor Committee, State Executive Committee, New York, City Central Committee, New York, 1939, inclusive
Subseries IV:I: The Socialist Party and the United Auto Workers, 1937-1941
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
The Socialist Party actively participated in the formation and the early struggles of the UAW Some appreciation of this activity can be gained from the Socialist Auto League materials in this section: bulletins and reports for 1938 and 1939, minutes of the National Steering Committee, 1938, and reports of the National Action Committee, 1938. These are supplemented by the correspondence of Arthur McDowell, Ben Fisher, Gerry Allard, Roy Burt, and Norman Thomas concerning the UAW, 1937-1939, and SP policy statements, reports and miscellaneous bulletins on the situation, 1937-1941.
Socialist Party and the United Automobile Workers Union. Contents: Letters and memos on S.P. activities and policies in auto; Gerry Allard, editor of The Socialist Call, correspondence on the situation in auto, 1937 1938; Roy Burt, Executive Secretary, correspondence on auto, 1937 1939; Norman Thomas, correspondence on auto, 1938 1939; Socialist Auto League Reports, 1938 1939; Contents: Socialist Auto League Bulletins, 1938; Minutes of the National Steering Committee, Socialist Auto League, 1938; Reports of the National Action Committee, Socialist Auto League, 1938; Policy statements, reports, pamphlets and miscellaneous bulletins concerning the auto situation, 1937 1941; Report issued by Homer Martin concerning a Communist Party meeting with auto leaders., 1937-1941, inclusive
Subseries IV:J: The Socialist Party: 1940-1941
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
The SP's militant antiwar position proved intolerable, not only to much of the Party's rank and file, but also to such leading socialists as Alfred Baker Lewis, Paul Porter, Arthur McDowell, and Jack Altman. Party statements, miscellaneous minutes of the National Executive Committee and the National Action Committee, and antiwar propaganda, including the text of Norman Thomas's speech at Madison Square Garden (May 24, 1941), explaining the official position. The opposition is represented by statements, resignations, and correspondence, particularly the correspondence of Arthur McDowell, who fought unsuccessfully to change the Party's position.
McDowell, Arthur: Correspondence, 1940-1941, inclusive
Minutes: National Action Committee, National Executive Committee; Miscellaneous Papers and Correspondence, 1940-1941, inclusive
National Convention Records (folder 1), 1940, inclusive
National Convention Records (folder 2), 1940, inclusive
News clippings: Newsclippings and newspapers concerning the Socialists and the war from The Socialist Call1941, The Tribune(England) 1940, The New Leader1941., 1940-1941, inclusive
Positions (pro, anti) on World War II; SP, including the text of Norman Thomas' speech at Madison Square Garden, May 24, 1941; Letters and statements of prominent socialists against the SP's anti war position, particularly Alfred Baker Lewis, Paul Porter, Arthur McDowell, Jack Altman., 1940-1941, inclusive
Subseries IV:K: The Socialist Party: 1942 present
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
This section includes a variety of materials: National Convention Papers and election propaganda from the 1940's; bulletins issued by "left wing" tendencies within the party; Hammer and Tongs, 1940-1946 (incomplete); literature of the Conference of American Progressives, 1946, the National Educational Committee for a New Party, 1946-1947, and the North Dakota Non Partisan League; minutes of the National Executive Committee, 1943-1945, and of the National Action Committee, 1943-1946; and SP statements on the war and the Marshall Plan. A few files are devoted to articles and notes on Norman Thomas.
North Dakota Non-Partisan League, 1956, inclusive
Socialist Party Papers Contents include: Appeal to the President of Mexico on behalf of left wing refugees, 1942; Statements of the "Committee on Socialist Perspectives", 1943, together with Perspectives, bulletin of the "Committee on Socialist Perspectives", 1943; Miscellaneous National Convention Papers, 1942; Report of the New York State S.P. Convention, June, 1942; Newark, New Jersey, S.P. branch statement on the war, 1942; Miscellaneous National Convention Papers, 1944; Election material, 1944; Miscellaneous National Convention Papers, 1946; Report of Norman Thomas' statement on war, 1945; S.P. statement on the San Francisco conference and on the Marshall Plan; "Toward a Revolutionary Organization" by Jim Dinsmoor, 1945 ?; "To the Left" by Harry Kantor, a discussion of intra party politics; Letters and statements concerning third party efforts 1944 1947, particularly the Conference of American Progressives, April 1946, and National Education Committee for a New Party, 1946 1947, 1942-1947, inclusive
Minutes: National Action Committee, 1943-1946, inclusive
Minutes: National Executive Committee, 1943-1945, inclusive
Socialist Party Papers & Clippings, 1940s-1950s, inclusive
Thomas, Norman: Articles and Notes, undated, inclusive
Subseries IV:L: International Socialism
Language of Materials
Scope and Contents note
Articles, clippings and publications concerning Social Democratic Parties and Social Democratic influence in the labor movement since World War II. Some background information on the first and second Internationals, and the roots of socialism in England and France. The emphasis is on Europe, particularly England, France, Germany and Austria, but there is also information on Asia, Africa and the Middle East.
Bandung: Nationalities, Nationalism, 1956-1957, inclusive
British Labor: World War II, Ideology, 1941-1943, inclusive
CIO: Formal Ideology, 1956-1957, inclusive
European Socialism: Socialist International, post-WWII, 1953-1956, inclusive
Labor, 1935 , 1952-1956, inclusive
Nasser: Suez Adventure / Middle East, 1956, inclusive
New Zealand Labour Party, 1955, inclusive
Political Socialism / Radicalism - French Socialist Party, 1952, inclusive
Politics, Europe - Italian Socialism, 1952, inclusive
Radicalism, Socialist Parties, Socialist International Revival, post-WWII, 1951-1954, inclusive
Radicalism/Social Movements: The First International; History of the Internationals, 1954, inclusive
Social Movements. Post-War: Austrian SP - Changes in Party Structure, 1954, inclusive
Social Movements. Post-War: German SP - Changing Ideology, undated, inclusive
Socialism, Europe: French Socialist Party, Pre WWI, 1947, inclusive
Socialism, Europe: New Roads (Documents), 1952, inclusive
Socialist International, Third Congress: Asia, Colonialism, etc., 1953, inclusive
Social Movements - Ideology - Asia and the West, 1953, inclusive
Socialist Parties, Asia, 1954, inclusive
Socialist Party, Austria - Civil War, 1934, inclusive
Socialist Parties, France, 1955-1958, inclusive
Socialist Parties, Great Britain, 1954, inclusive
Socialist Parties, Great Britain: Fabianism, Dilemmas of Power, 1949-1955, inclusive
Socialist Parties, India - Factionalism, 1916 , 1954-1958, inclusive
Socialist Theory, Revisions: Fabianism (Great Britain), 1952, inclusive
Series V: Princeton Conference on Socialism and American Life
Language of Materials
Scope and Content Note
Daniel Bell was one of the participants in the Conference on Socialism and American Life held at Princeton University, 1946-1947. His contribution to the Conference, "The Background and Development of Marxian Socialism in the United States," was published in Socialism and American Lifeedited by Donald D. Egbert and Stow Persons (Princeton University Press, 1952). This section of the collection contains the conference guide and the manuscript of Marxian Socialism..." along with relevant notes and articles.
Conference guide for the Conference on Socialism and American Life held at Princeton University, 1946 1947 (Includes typescripts of papers delivered), undated, inclusive
Daniel Bell: "The Background and Development of Marxian Socialism in the United States." MS, later published in Donald D. Egbert and Stow Persons (eds.) Socialism and American Life, Princeton University Press, 1952., undated, inclusive
Marxian Socialism: Correspondence and Clippings, undated, inclusive
Marxian Socialism: Chapter III, undated, inclusive
Marxian Socialism: Chapter IV, undated, inclusive
Marxian Socialism: Chapter VIII, undated, inclusive
Marxian Socialism: Chapter VI, undated, inclusive
Marxian Socialism: Chapter VI: Research materials, undated, inclusive
Series VI: Communist Party and its Relations with the American Labor Movement
Language of Materials
Scope and Contents note
The material in this part of the collection is primarily concerned with Communist Party activity in the labor movement during the 1920s and 1930s. There are several historical essays on CP development; a short study of the left wing in American trade unions, 1921-1925; and a history of the Party in the Food Workers Industrial Union. These studies in manuscript are supplemented by articles from communist and labor journals concerning CP labor policies and factional disputes and, in some cases, lengthy interviews with leading figures. Extensive reading notes on the political left and on communist influence in labor, particularly in the needle trades and in coal, and notes on CP minutes complete the section. The minutes are from the Political Committee, 1925-1928; the Trade Union Educational League and the Trade Union Unity League; the Trade Union Committee of the Central Executive Committee, 1923-1927; and a Party Conference, 1930.
Volume I, undated, inclusive
Volume II, undated, inclusive
Volume III, undated, inclusive
Volume IV, undated, inclusive
Volume V, undated, inclusive
Volume VI, undated, inclusive
Volume VII, undated, inclusive
Volume VIII, undated, inclusive
Carpenters Union, undated, inclusive
Chicago, Role of as Radical Center, undated, inclusive
Coal Mining Industry: Trade Union Committee of TUC (includes Foster reports), 1927, inclusive
Communist International. 2nd Congress : Syndicalist Issue, undated, inclusive
Communist International. 3rd Congress : Discussion of Union Question (in German), 1921, inclusive
CPUSA Agitprop Dept. Instructions [from Browder file], 1929, inclusive
CPUSA 8th Convention. Documents and Correspondence, 1934, inclusive
Draft of Economic Article/Attack on Lovestone [from Browder file], 1929, inclusive
IWW Role within/Communications with PROFINTERN [from Browder file], 1922-1923, inclusive
National Training School. Jan-Mar 1934, Report on, 1934, inclusive
Needle Trader[from Browder file], 1929, inclusive
Political Committee Secretariat Minutes (source: Gitlow copies). Includes Letters to/from Communist International on organization, 1925-1928, inclusive
Red Aid, Other CP/CI Material; "Rationalisation in the U.S.", 1930, inclusive
TUEL/TUUL Minutes, Reports, etc., 1924-1927, inclusive
Steel/Packinghouse Campaign of 1919 (ts.), undated, inclusive
Youth Work, Emphasis on [Draft Thesis for the NEC Plenum], 1930, inclusive
American Labor Party; Brookwood Labor College; Conference for Progressive Labor Action - articles on, undated, inclusive
Brookwood Labor College : Conflict at, 1933, inclusive
Comintern History [published articles], undated, inclusive
Needle Trades, 1920s: notes on, undated, inclusive
Open Letter, 1933 - Transformation of CP, 1933, inclusive
Radicalism and Musteites; Founding of AWP [clippings], 1930s, inclusive
A Short History of the CPUSA [ts, 66 pp], undated, inclusive
TUEL Central Executive Committee - notes on, undated, inclusive
TUEL Minutes, 1923-27 - notes on, undated, inclusive
TUEL National Committee, 1923-24 - notes on, undated, inclusive
TUEL - Programs, Reports, etc., undated , 1927, inclusive
TUEL - "Resolution on the Broadening of…", undated, inclusive
Browder, Earl: Autobiography [notes on], undated, inclusive
Browder, Earl: "The Left-Wing in the American Trade Unions, 1921-1925" [ts, 16 pp], undated, inclusive
Browder, Earl: "Strategy and Tactics of World Communism." [U.S. Senate Internal Security Act testimony], Oct 6, 1955
CP Attitude toward Labor, 1919-21 [notes on], undated, inclusive
CP Organizational Conference of 1930 [notes on], undated, inclusive
CP Political Committee Minutes, 1926-27 [notes on, undated, inclusive
Foster, William Z. "From Bryan to Stalin." [notes on], undated, inclusive
Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America, undated, inclusive
Amalgamated Metal Workers, undated, inclusive
American Negro Labor Congress, undated, inclusive
Bittelman, Alex, undated, inclusive
Changing Character of Labor Leadership, undated, inclusive
Communist Party of America, undated, inclusive
Communist Labor Party, undated, inclusive
Communist International, undated, inclusive
Communist Control of Labor Unions (Theory), undated, inclusive
The Communist: List of articles on Negroes & Trade Unions, undated, inclusive
The Coal Digger, Oct 1928
Dubinsky, David - Clippings, undated, inclusive
Empire in Wood: A History of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters [PhD abstract], May 1905, inclusive
Farmer Labor Party (Chicago, General), undated, inclusive
Farmer Labor Communist Party ( New Republicarticle), Jul 1924
Foster, William Z. The Great Steel Strike and its Lessons[excerpts], undated, inclusive
Foster, William Z. Leaves from a Workers Life, undated, inclusive
Frey, John - Interviews by William Goldsmith (ts, 63 pp), Nov 10, 1955
International Fur & Leather Workers Union, undated, inclusive
Labor Age(Brophy), Nov 1922
Labor Herald (re Coal), Dec 1922
Labor in Politics (MA thesis abstract), 1949, inclusive
Labor Unity ; Labor Unity (topic), 1926-1927, inclusive
Left Wing Unions, undated, inclusive
Lusk Committee Reports, 1920, inclusive
Manley, Joseph, undated, inclusive
Men and Coal(Coleman) excerpts, undated, inclusive
National Miners Union, undated, inclusive
National Save the Miners Union Committee, undated, inclusive
Quill, Michael, undated, inclusive
Red International of Labor Unions, undated, inclusive
Rochester, Anna: Labor and Coal, 1931, inclusive
Ruthenberg, C.E., Oct 1925
San Francisco General Strike, undated, inclusive
Saposs, David: Readings in Trade Unionism, undated, inclusive
Socialist Party - Left Wing of, undated, inclusive
Transport Workers Union of America, undated, inclusive
TUEL (Practice), undated, inclusive
United Mine Workers Journal, Sep 1928
United Rubber Workers of America, undated, inclusive
Workers (Communist) Party, undated, inclusive
Zimmerman, Sascha, undated, inclusive
Bill Haywood's Book- Notes, undated, inclusive
Brophy, John - Interview Notes, undated, inclusive
Browder, Earl - Correspondence re Interview, 1955, inclusive
Browder, Earl - What the Left Wing Has Accomplished, undated, inclusive
Browder, Earl - Interview Notes, undated, inclusive
Cannon, James P., undated, inclusive
Communism and U.S. Social Structure: Differentiated Vulnerability, undated, inclusive
Corker, Charles E.: Some Observations on Study of the Communist Problem (ts., 39 pp), 1954, inclusive
CPUSA: Early Years, Views of J.P. Cannon, undated, inclusive
Fund for the Republic Project: Karsh, Garman tss, undated, inclusive
Fund for the Republic Project: Political Economy, TUEL, undated, inclusive
Fund for the Republic Project: Replies to Outlines, 1955, inclusive
Gitlow, Ben, undated, inclusive
Hapgood, Powers, undated, inclusive
Howat, Alexander, undated, inclusive
Institute of Pacific Relations Hearings (1952): Baldwin Letter to William Z. Foster, 1922, inclusive
Labor Herald, undated, inclusive
Lewis, John L., undated, inclusive
Ralph Chaplin, Wobbly: The Rough and Tumble Story of an American Radical, 1948, inclusive
Rosenbaum, Arthur (Barbers & Beauty Culturists of America): Interview re NYC CIO Council, undated, inclusive
Widick, B.J.: Memo to DB re CP in the Automobile Industry, 1956, inclusive
Bell, Daniel: Correspondence, Fund for the Republic Project, 1956-1957, inclusive
Bell, Daniel: Labor Outline, Bibliography, Correspondence (FFR), 1955, inclusive
Browder, Earl: American Communist Parties Under Attack, undated, inclusive
Browder, Earl: Interviews with Dan Bell and Bill Goldsmith - Notes and Excerpts [thick file], 1955-1956, inclusive
Browder, Earl: Relations between the Communist Party and the Communist International(ts, 40 pp - memo for Theodore Draper), Nov 11, 1955
The Caligari World of Underground Communism, undated, inclusive
Communism and Government (ts.), undated, inclusive
Communist Party, 1919-1924, undated, inclusive
Donnelly, Ignatius, undated, inclusive
Fund for the Republic Bibliography(work plan, memos, etc.), 1956, inclusive
Intelligentsia and Communism; Review of Whitaker Chambers' Witness, undated, inclusive
IWW [thick file], undated, inclusive
Labor Movement, US - History, Theory, Jewish Labor, undated, inclusive
Melancholy Intermezzo (re 1919), undated, inclusive
Miscellaneous notes, undated, inclusive
Needle Trades Bibliography, undated, inclusive
Pullman Strike, Eugene Debs, undated, inclusive
Radical Mentality - Jack London's The Iron Heel, undated, inclusive
The Schooling of Abraham Cahan, 1954, inclusive
Sinclair, Upton - Memoirs (Institute of Social Studies Bulletin, Rand School), 1952, inclusive
Socialist Party, 1919-24, undated, inclusive
Syndicalism, undated, inclusive
Trotskyism, US - History, undated, inclusive
Biographical Sketches Compiled from American Labor Who's Who, undated, inclusive
Darcy, Sam: Interview Notes, undated, inclusive
Dodd, Bella: School of Darkness[ts of published book], 1954, inclusive
Labor Herald: Notes on 1920s Articles, undated, inclusive
Miscellaneous Notes (Mine Workers, other), undated, inclusive
Notes from the Stenotype of a CP Conference Mar 31-Apr 4, 1930, undated, inclusive
Notes on the Minutes of the National Committee, TUEL, 1923-1928, inclusive
Notes on the Minutes of the Trade Union Committee of the Central Executive Committee, 1925-1927, inclusive
Notes on the Minutes of the Political Committee of the C.P., 1926-1927, inclusive
Workers Monthly: List of Articles, 1924-1927, inclusive
Bell, Daniel: The Inner World of American Socialism, undated, inclusive
Bell, Daniel: Letter to Max Shachtman re [attached] article in the New International, 1955, inclusive
Bellamy, Edward, undated, inclusive
Class Consciousness / Syndicalism, undated, inclusive
De Leon, Daniel / Socialist Labor Party, undated, inclusive
Gompers, Samuel, undated, inclusive
Introduction - General, undated, inclusive
Miscellaneous Notes and Clippings, undated, inclusive
The New International: Issues with articles on the history of American Communism/Socialism, 1955-1956, inclusive
Origins of the Communist Party / Split in the Socialist Party, undated, inclusive
Populism, undated, inclusive
The Proletarian Party, undated, inclusive
Socialist Party, 1900-1912, undated, inclusive
Socialist Party. Convention, Apr 1917 - Documents, 1917, inclusive
Socialist Party - War Position (WWI), undated, inclusive
Reference Queries Correspondence, 1946-1947, inclusive
Socialist Party: Daniel Bell Correspondence with, 1947, inclusive
Series VII: Addendum
Scope and Content Note
The 1982 Addendum to the Daniel Bell Research Files on U.S. Communism, Socialism, and the Labor Movement contains material dating from 1900 to 1962, with the bulk of the items falling between 1925 and 1958. The addendum are arranged in a single continuous alphabetical series by folder heading. Folder titles are of two types: (1) subject headings retained from those used by Daniel Bell, and (2) names, derived from the author or interviewee whose material constitutes the folder's contents. A small quantity of miscellaneous publications have been filed with the collection. Most correspondence is filed together with the working documentation to which it relates, but all loose correspondence has been gathered under a folder with that heading. Correspondence of note filed within other files includes communications from Earl Browder (box 51, folder 2), Norman Thomas (box 54, folder 4), and B.J. Widdick (box 54, folder 14). Listed under Daniel Bell are drafts for his various writings. These include chapters from his study, Marxian Socialism in the United States(Princeton, 1967). Also present are extensive manuscript notes by Bell, retained together with printed material relating to them. These materials document Bell's creative process, showing how his writing evolved. Another significant strength of the addendum is the collection of interviews with prominent labor and left political figures. The Congress of Industrial Organizations is the subject of several of the interviews, and of early documentation concerning both it and constituent unions. In addition a series of "discs" have been separated from the collection. (Most of the discs contain notes sent by Bell from Paris in 1957 to the New York based study of the American Left done by The Fund for the Republic, Inc., and transcripts are present.)