Fieldites

Fieldites

The Fieldites were a small leftist sect that split from the Communist League of America in 1934 and known officially as the Organizing Committee for a Revolutionary Workers Party and then the League for a Revolutionary Workers Party. The name comes from the name of its leader B.J.Field.

Contents

History

Born Max Gould in 1903, B.J. Field had been a successful Columbia educated petroleum analyst on Wall Street before the crash of 1929. Afterwords he became a Trotskyist and led informal discussion groups at his home with the other members. When the New York branch of the CLA first expelled him for not putting these under the direction of the party, he traveled to Constantinople to get permission from Trotsky himself.[1]

The immediate causes of the split were rooted in the New York Hotel strike of January 1934, led by Field on behalf of the CLA. Though the strike was successful in gaining some concessions, Field was expelled in February for not accepting CLA discipline and not getting adequate safeguards for former strikers against discrimination. One of Fields most important collaborators in this strike was a young Greek-American, Aristodimos Kaldis, who would later have a career as a landscape artist.[2] During the strike the CLA elements worked closely with a group of dissident Lovestoneites led by Benjamin Gitlow called the Workers Communist League. After being expelled the group around Field and Kaldis joined Gitlows group, which now became the Organizing Committee for a Revolutionary Workers Party [3] Though the membership of the group was small in the United States, it was more successful in Canada, taking the whole Montreal section and some of the Toronto branch members from the CLA in April of that year.[4] Under the leadership of William Krehm they overshadowed the official Trotskist movement in Canada by 1937.[5]

The Gitlow group didn't stay long and by October 1934 had decided to enter the Socialist Party of America [6] This left the Fieldites with few experienced Communist or labor leaders. The group then began negotiations for unity with a variety of other sectiods, including the Communist League of Struggle, the Revolutionary Workers League and a small group of Italian-American Bordigists. None of these was successful. In May 1936 the majority of the New York branch voted to rejoin the Trotskyites, but a minority stayed with Field in a reduced organization.[7] According to one report, from a hostile source, when two members of the New York local F. L Demby and S. Stanley summited a statement favoring dissociation from the LRWP during a meeting of the New York local Field had the door locked and he and his supporters physically attacked them. In any event a reported eight out of the groups twelve members left.[8]

Among the associates of the league was a group of Columbia university students which included future philosopher Morton White, who was drawn to the group because it was harsher on the Soviet Union than the Trotskyites. They had come to the conclusion that capitalism had already been restored in Stalinist Russia, and was no longer a degenerated workers state.[9]

The exact date of the groups extinction is uncertain. In April 1940 they published a special bulletin addressed to the convention of the Socialist Workers Party (United States), urging it to adopt its perspective on the USSR, which the Fieldites regarded as totalitarian rather than state capitalist. They believed "Russian question" was the most important issue facing the working class movement.[10] They seem to have finally disbanded sometime later in 1940.[11]

Periodicals

The Fieldites published The workers' voice [1] in Canada, Labor Front [2] in the United States, Workers anti war bulletin [3] and Revolutionary Youth, by the partys' youth section. Bibliographer Walter Goldwater lists Labor Front as #128 in his index and gives its duration as Vol. I #1 June 1934 to Vol. VI #1 February 1939.[12] The group also published an irregular "international" publication New International Bulletin: Documents of the New International which lasted from Vol. I #1 October 1935 - Vol. II #1 March 1937. Apparently this ceased publication when the majority of the New York group went back to the Trotskyists.[13]

Prominent members & associates

References

  1. ^ Wald, Alan M. The New York intellectuals: the rise and decline of the anti-Stalinist left from the 1930s to the 1980s Chapel Hill, NC; UNC Press 1987 p.107
  2. ^ Wald, Alan M. The New York intellectuals: the rise and decline of the anti-Stalinist left from the 1930s to the 1980s Chapel Hill, NC; UNC Press 1987 p.107
  3. ^ Max Shactman "New Group forms for New Party" in The Militant vol. VII #21 p. 3
  4. ^ The Trotskyist Movement in Canada, 1929-1939 (1976)
  5. ^ Wald, Alan M. The New York intellectuals: the rise and decline of the anti-Stalinist left from the 1930s to the 1980s Chapel Hill, NC; UNC Press 1987
  6. ^ SOCIALISTS REBUFF REDS' OFFER TO JOIN New York Times (1857-Current file); Oct 30, 1934; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851 - 2006) pg. 10
  7. ^ Max Shachtman "Footnote for Historians" The New International Vol.4 No.12, December 1938, pp.377-379
  8. ^ "Anti-Trotsky cliques fold up" in New militant Vol. 2 #22 June 6, 1936 p.2
  9. ^ White, Morton Gabriel A Philosopher's Story Philadelphia: Penn State Press, 2004pp.36-7
  10. ^ "The LRWP enlightens the Trotskyites" in Bulletin of the Leninist League (US) Vol. III #4 April–May 1940
  11. ^ Arthur Burk "The exit of a pseudo-Marxist Group" in Bulletin of the Leninist League Vol. III #6 Sept-Nov 1940
  12. ^ Goldwater, Walter Radical periodicals in America 1890-1950 New Haven, Yale University Library 1964 p.20
  13. ^ Goldwater, Walter Radical periodicals in America 1890-1950 New Haven, Yale University Library 1964 p.27

Pamphlets


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