Proletarian Party of America

The Proletarian Party of America (PPA) was a small communist political party in the United States, originating in 1920 and terminated in 1971. Originally an offshoot of the Communist Party of America, the group maintained an independent existence for over five decades. It is best remembered for carrying forward Charles H. Kerr & Co., the oldest publisher of Marxist books in America.

Proletarian Party of America
FoundedSpring 1920
Dissolved1971
Split fromCommunist Party of America
IdeologyCommunism
Marxism
Political positionLeft-wing

Organizational history

edit

Formation

edit
 
Al Renner was a key figure in the Proletarian Party of America during its formative period.

The Proletarian Party of America (PPA) emerged from the Socialist Party of Michigan, based in Detroit in 1920, but the organization's story dates to a few years prior to this event. The Michigan party, the state affiliate of the Socialist Party of America (SPA), was won over to a unique Left Wing ideology during the years of American participation in World War I.

The key figure in the Michigan organization which later became the PPA was a Scottish born shoe store owner named John Keracher, in association with a tool and die maker named Dennis Batt and radical activists Al Renner and H. M. Wicks.[1] At Keracher's behest, the Socialist Party of Michigan eschewed all participation in electoral politics, instead favoring Marxist theoretical study to prepare the working class for the task of revolutionary leadership. Throughout the years of 1918 and 1919, the party established a network of Marxist study circles called "Proletarian Universities," with the movement particularly strong in Detroit, Chicago, and Rochester, New York.

At the 1919 State Convention of the Socialist Party of Michigan, Keracher was elected head of the state organization and an amendment was adopted by the assembled delegates calling for the expulsion from the Socialist Party of Michigan of anyone who engaged in electoral politics. Keracher, Batt, and other Michiganders were prominent as well in the Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party, a formal faction deeply inspired by the Russian Revolution which was engaged in the attempt to "win the Socialist Party for the Left Wing."

The Left Wing Section organized candidate slates for each of the electoral districts of the SPA and made use of bloc voting by sympathetic branches of the party's language federations to achieve results. The outgoing National Executive Committee of the SPA cried election fraud, however, and refused to tally the results of the 1919 party election or to leave office on July 1, the appointed date. Instead, the outgoing NEC went on the offensive with a series of suspensions of language federations and the expulsion of the Michigan party, ostensibly for violation of the national constitution of the SPA for the anti-political provisions adopted at the 1919 state gathering.

Keracher and the Michigan socialists allied with the suspended language federations in calling for immediate formation of a Communist Party of America, as opposed to the tactics advocated by Alfred Wagenknecht and L.E. Katterfeld of the NEC of continuing the fight to its conclusion at the 1919 Emergency National Convention of the SPA, scheduled for August 30 in Chicago. Wagenknecht, Katterfeld, and their associates wound up bolting the Emergency National Convention to establish the Communist Labor Party of America, while Keracher, Batt, and the federations formed a rival Communist Party of America. Two years of bitter struggle followed between these competing Communist organizations.[2]

 
Proletarian Party leader John Keracher as he appeared in the 1940s.

The idiosyncratic Michiganders were a poor match for the disciplined and highly orthodox Communists of the federations led by Alexander Stoklitsky, Oscar Tyverovsky, and Nicholas Hourwich of the Russian Communist Federation and Joseph Stilson of the Lithuanian Communist Federation. Early in 1920, a split ensued, due in part to the decision of the Michigan group to continue the public operation of the Proletarian Universities and to publish their monthly journal, The Proletarian, outside of the control of the Central Executive Committee. The Communist Party's Executive Secretary, C.E. Ruthenberg, recalled the necessary change of the Communist Party to an underground organization after the Palmer Raids of January 1920 as the root cause of the problem.

The Proletarian group was still part of the Communist Party in January 1920 after the raids. I personally went to Detroit to reorganize the CP and conferred with [Al] Renner, [A.J.] MacGregor, and [John] Keracher. They refused to become part of an underground party. They were dropped out of the CP in February 1920 because they refused to have any part in the reorganization."[3]

The expelled Michigan "Proletarian University" would soon establish themselves as the Proletarian Party of America.

The new party attempted without success to gain affiliation with the Communist International for a few years before eventually abandoning the mission. In 1922, the unified CPUSA attempted to recruit the PPA into its legal arm, the Workers Party of America and the Trade Union Educational League on its own terms, to no avail.

The Proletarian Party and Charles H. Kerr & Co.

edit

Keracher's work with Detroit's Proletarian University had brought him into close contact with Charles H. Kerr, founder of Charles H. Kerr & Co., the largest Marxist publishing house in the United States. Keracher became a member of the Kerr Board of the Directors in 1924 and in 1928 Charles Kerr sold him the bulk of his controlling shares in the firm. Thereafter, the Proletarian Party controlled the operations of Kerr & Co., publishing a number of Keracher's works, including How the Gods Were Made (1929), Producers and Parasites (1935), The Head-Fixing Industry (1935), Crime: It's [sic] Causes and Consequences (1937), and Frederick Engels (1946).[4]

Owing to poor finances, few other new Kerr titles were ever published by the PPA, although the backlist of the company was no doubt invaluable in maintaining the organization's solvency.

H. M. Wicks wound up returning to the Communist Party of America, where he was known as a bitter factionalist. Dennis Batt retired from radical politics after a time, to become a labor journalist and staunch supporter of the American Federation of Labor. The banner of the PPA and Charles H. Kerr & Co. was carried forward by Al Wysocki following Keracher's retirement as National Secretary in 1954.[5]

Publications

edit
 
Proletarian News was the final publication produced by the PPA, terminating in July 1960.

The official organ of the PPA was a monthly magazine called The Proletarian, which originally served a newsheet for the left wing inside the Socialist Party of Michigan. The Proletarian launched in May 1918 and continued to be issued each month until July 1931, when it was superseded by Proletarian News, which was launched in 1932 and terminated in May 1961 (Vol 30 No. 1 Whole 318). Both publications were monthlies.[6] During its final years, Proletarian News was produced via mimeograph owing to the small size of the party membership.

In 1923 the party briefly experimented with a four page weekly Labor Digest: Devoted to the Working Class Struggle for Power. The newspaper last twelve issues from June 2, 1923 to September 22, 1923.[7]

Throughout its history, the group also published an irregular mimeographed internal discussion newsletter called Proletarian Bulletin, as well as a short-lived publication for its youth section, Proletarian Youth.[8]

Electoral politics

edit

The Proletarian Party periodically ran its own candidates for electoral office, particularly in the state of Michigan, where it retained some organizational viability. In 1932 the party ran two candidates in that state, Al Renner for Governor and Anthony Bielekas for Secretary of State.[9]

Decline and demise

edit
 
Proletarian Party dues stamps, circa 1950s. Dues in the PPA cost $1 per month during the 1950s, with these stamps affixed to party cards and cancelled to denote dues having been paid.

The party suffered two known splits in the 1930s. During one in the early 1930s a faction of the party's youth group split off to join with a group of German Left Communists to form the United Workers Party, which soon changed its name to the Council Communists.[10] In 1937 a group disagreeing with its attitude toward the Soviet Union split and formed the Marxist Workers Party.[11]

In 1953, Al Wysocki succeeded John Keracher as National Secretary of the PPA.[12] The organization remained based in Chicago, but showed a steady decline in interest and participation, withering to the point that by 1964 only two locals remained — Chicago and Flint, Michigan.[12]

The Proletarian Party was effectively terminated with the death of National Secretary Wysocki in 1971.

Legacy

edit

The papers of the Proletarian Party of America are housed in the Special Collections department of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. Over 20 linear feet of material is included in the collection, including correspondence files, newspaper clippings, financial documents, publications, and printer's slugs for original artwork.

Prominent members

edit

See also

edit

Footnotes

edit
  1. ^ Allen Ruff, "We Called Each Other Comrade": Charles H. Kerr & Co., Radical Publishers, Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1997, pg. 201.
  2. ^ The best published account of this conflict is in Theodore Draper, The Roots of American Communism. New York: Viking, 1957.
  3. ^ Ruthenburg, C. E. "Comments Regarding the Wicks Memorandum on the Proletarian Party of America" (PDF).
  4. ^ Allen Ruff, "We Called Each Other Comrade": Charles H. Kerr & Co., Radical Publishers, pg. 204.
  5. ^ Allen Ruff, "We Called Each Other Comrade": Charles H. Kerr & Co., Radical Publishers, pg. 201.
  6. ^ Walter Goldwater, Radical Periodicals in America, 1890-1950. New Haven: Yale University Library, 1964; pg. 33.
  7. ^ Goldwater, Radical Periodicals in America, 1890-1950, pg. 20.
  8. ^ Not available on microfilm, these publications may be found by scholars in the Proletarian Party papers at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
  9. ^ "Many Candidates on Ballot for Election," Ironwood [MI] Times, Oct. 21, 1932, pg. 2.
  10. ^ Paul Mattick "New Essays" in Joseph R. Conlin ed. The American radical press Westport, CT; Greenwood Press p. 360. It is clear that
  11. ^ Dale Riepe "Marxian Labor College Bulletin" in Joseph R. Conlin (ed.) The American Radical Press, 1880-1960. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1974; vol. 1, pg. 366.
  12. ^ a b "Proletarian Party of America: Records," Archived 2011-06-06 at the Wayback Machine University of Michigan Special Collections. Retrieved June 7, 2010.
  13. ^ Also known variously as V. Milton Breitmayer or Verne Breitmayer or V. M. Breitmayer or "Breit," Breitmayer served as the PPA's cartoonist.

Publications

edit
  • The Proletarian. Detroit and Chicago. (1918-1931) —Tabloid monthly newspaper in 1918, thereafter monthly magazine.
  • Proletarian News. Chicago. (1931-1961) —Tabloid monthly newspaper, later mimeographed.
  • Labor Digest. Chicago. (June to Sept. 1923) —Short-lived broadsheet propaganda paper.
  • Proletarian Bulletin. San Francisco, CA. —Mimeographed internal discussion bulletin.

Further reading

edit
edit