Everything about Charles Edward Russell totally explained
Charles Edward Russell (
25 September 1860 –
23 April 1941) was an
American journalist, author, and activist. He was born in
Davenport, Iowa, and died in
Washington, DC.
His father was a newspaper editor at the Davenport Gazette, and a noted abolitionist. He attended St. Johnsbury academy, Vermont, for his high school education.
He wrote a number of books of biography and social comment. In 1928 he won the
Pulitzer Prize in biography for
The American Orchestra and Theodore Thomas.
He wrote for the
Minneapolis Journal, the
Detroit Tribune, the
New York World,
William Randolph Hearst's
Cosmopolitan, and the
New York Herald. He was a newspaper editor from 1894-1902 in New York and Chicago.
Work as a journalist
In his memoirs,
Bare Hands and Stone Walls, Russell stated that "transforming the world...to a place where can can know some peace...some joy of living, some sense of the inexhaustible beauties of the universe in which he's been placed", was the purpose that inspired his work and his life. He was one of a group of journalists at the turn of the century who were called
muckrakers. They investigated and reported--not with cold detachment--but with feeling and rage about the horrors of capitalism. In
Soldier for the Common Good, an unpublished dissertation on Russell's life, author Donald Bragaw writes: "
Historian Louis Filler has called Russell the leader of the muckrakers for contributing 'important studies in almost every field in which they ventured.' Most of Russell's work was of a 'pioneering nature: beef trusts...railroads...tenements...and the farm problem....[H]is real topic was injustice, wherever it was to be found."
Russell's reports on the corrupt practices and inhuman conditions at
Chicago stock yards were the inspiration for
Upton Sinclair's powerful novel
The Jungle, which caused a national uproar that led to inspection reforms.
Politics
Russell was a cofounder of the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in 1909.
He was a member of the
Socialist Party before
World War I, operating the party's
speakers bureau. He was twice a candidate for
Governor of the State of New York on the Socialist ticket, and he also ran for
Mayor of New York City. In 1915 he unexpectedly came out in support President
Woodrow Wilson's war "preparedness campaign". The majority of the party remained strongly
anti-war, leading to calls for Russell's expulsion.
Socialist leader Eugene Debs believed that Russell's decision to support Wilson probably cost him the party's presidential nomination in 1916.
Aligning himself with Upton Sinclair, among others on the
right-wing of the party, Russell continued to agitate for "responsible...Marxian" positions inside the Socialist Party through 1917.
. After the
February Revolution, he joined a United States
goodwill mission led by
Elihu Root intended to keep the
Russian Provisional Government in the war. The mission report recommended that
George Creel's
Committee on Public Information conduct pro-war
propaganda efforts in
Russia. Russell personally lobbied Wilson to use the relatively new medium of film to influence the Russian public.
Wilson was receptive and the CPI subsequently developed film and distribution networks in Russia over the next few months.
Russell appears as himself in the 1917 film
The Fall of the Romanoffs, directed by
Herbert Brenon, which may have been a product of these efforts. He left the Socialist Party to join the
Social Democratic League of America, which joined with the
AFL to found the patriotic
American Alliance for Labor and Democracy.
Russell subsequently became an editorial writer for
left-liberal magazine
The New Leader.
Works published
Books
- Such Stuff as Dreams (1902, poetry)
- Thomas Chatterton: The Marvelous Boy (1908, biography)
-
- The Uprising of the Many (1907)
- Lawless Wealth (1908) ((expose of the tobacco trust)
- Why I Am a Socialist (1910)
- These Shifting Scenes (1914)
- Unchained Russia (1918, nonfiction)
- After the Whirlwind (1919, nonfiction)
- Bolshevism and the United States (1919, nonfiction)
- The Story of the Non-partisan League (1920, nonfiction)
- The Outlook for the Philippines (1922, nonfiction)
- Julia Marlowe: Her Life and Art (1926, biography)
- The American Orchestra and Theodore Thomas (1927, biography)
- A-Rafting on the Mississip(1928, nonfiction)
- Bare Hands and Stone Walls: Some Recollections of a Sideline Reformer (1933, memoir)
Selected articles
Further Information
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