Fred Beal
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Fred_Beal an entity of type: Thing
Fred Erwin Beal (1896–1954) was an American labor-union organizer whose critical reflections on his work and travel in the Soviet Union divided left-wing and liberal opinion. In 1929 he had been a cause célèbre when, in Gastonia, North Carolina, he was convicted in an irregular trial of conspiracy in the strike-related killing of a local police chief. But having escaped to the Soviet Union, his decision in 1933 to return and bear witness to the costs of Stalin's collectivist policies, including famine in Ukraine, was disparaged and resisted by many of his erstwhile supporters.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Fred Beal
rdf:langString
Fred Erwin Beal
rdf:langString
Fred Erwin Beal
xsd:integer
69654909
xsd:integer
1122595764
xsd:integer
1896
xsd:integer
1954
rdf:langString
American
rdf:langString
Proletarian Journey: New England, Gastonia, Moscow
rdf:langString
Textile worker, union organiser, party activist
rdf:langString
Industrial Workers of the World, National Textile Workers Union
rdf:langString
Fred Erwin Beal (1896–1954) was an American labor-union organizer whose critical reflections on his work and travel in the Soviet Union divided left-wing and liberal opinion. In 1929 he had been a cause célèbre when, in Gastonia, North Carolina, he was convicted in an irregular trial of conspiracy in the strike-related killing of a local police chief. But having escaped to the Soviet Union, his decision in 1933 to return and bear witness to the costs of Stalin's collectivist policies, including famine in Ukraine, was disparaged and resisted by many of his erstwhile supporters. The New York Times remained committed to what it has since acknowledged was the "tendentious" reporting of Soviet achievements by its Pulitzer Prize-winning Moscow correspondent Walter Duranty. It was left first to Forverts, the Yiddish-language version of a New York socialist daily, and then, nationwide, to the right-wing Hearst Press to publish Beal's accounts. In his later memoirs, Beal's disillusion with communism extended to his experience as a labor organizer with the Communist Party in the United States and with what he concluded had been the party's calculated sacrifice of his, and his co-defendants', interests in their Gastonia trial.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
40817
xsd:gYear
1896
xsd:gYear
1954