Authors: Martin Duberman
Ultimately those conclusions must undergo the scrutiny of other scholars, and soon will, when the Robeson Family Archives has been opened to general use. To facilitate that evaluation, I have made my notes
unusually full, using them to cite gaps or contradictions in the evidence, to point to relevant secondary sources as well as manuscript materialsâand in general to do all that I could to alert other scholars to the possibility of variant interpretations. I do so in recognition that Robeson's history has previously been uncharted and is an emblematic story of black achievement and struggle. As such, it belongs to future generations, and awaits their evolving verdict.
Rich though the Robeson Family Archives is, it has one serious drawback: the materials represent Essie Robeson far more than Paul. Herself a voluminous letter-writer and diarist, Essie tended to save, even to hoard, every scrap. Paul was the temperamental opposite. He had no instinct for “collecting” and scant interest in recording his own thoughts and feelings. To a remarkableâand, for a biographer, dishearteningâdegree, he avoided putting pen to paper. Except for some brief shorthand notes made at a few points in his life, he kept no diary. And he disliked writing letters; indeed, his avoidance of correspondence became something of a joke (and occasionally a source of recrimination) to his friends. The Archives contains hundreds and hundreds of pages of Robeson's musical notations, his markings on film and theater scripts, and, for the period of the mid-thirties, some lengthy, valuable discursive ruminations on Africa. But of more private matters there is almost nothing, no substantial enough record of his personal response to individuals (or even to such critical public events as Khrushchev's revelations to the Twentieth Party Congress) to allow a scholar to track his emotional life with retrospective confidence.
His antipathy to keeping a personal record has been the chief stumbling block to this biography, and especially to any effort at probing his inner life. Time and again, the material in the Robeson Archives consists of Essie's, rather than Paul's, jottings and musings. Since they were very different people, often at odds emotionally and politically, her account can hardly be taken as an accurate reflection of his. Yet, in the absence of other material, I have sometimes had to use Essie's letters and diary (especially for the period of the twenties) as the chief sources for a given event. In doing so, I've tried to remain alert to the danger of equating her attitude with hisâand have periodically alerted the reader as well (see, for example, note 43, page 601; note 38, page 624; note 41, pages 644â45). Robeson's refusal to leave behind a detailed record of his own is consonant with his temperament. Accurately described by one of his close friends as “a man with a thousand pockets,” he disliked the notion of anyone's being able to rummage through them all, to pierce the secretiveness he came to regard as necessary protection.
Since the Robeson Archives is heavily weighted with material Essie Robeson herself accumulated or wrote, I've attempted to leaven that bias by interviewing some 135 friends and associates of Robeson's and by reading widely in other manuscript collections. Finally, nothing can substitute
for Robeson's own voice (nor can any amount of scholarly diligence invent one), but the interviews have thickened the number of perspectives on him, and the supplementary manuscript sources have yielded much additional material about him (and even a few supplementary letters by him)âas well as enriching the general contextual background. Below is a full listing of interviewees, followed by the manuscript sources consulted other than the Robeson Family Archives itself.
People Interviewed
James Aronson
Peggy Ashcroft
Etta Moten Barnett
Cedric Belfrage
Mirel Bercovici
Rada Bercovici
Eubie Blake
Charles L. Blockson
Leonard Boudin
Anne Braden
Geri Branton
Fredda Brilliant
Oscar Brown, Jr.
Oscar Brown, Sr.
Margaret Burroughs
Alan Bush
Angus Cameron
Lee Cayton
Revels Cayton
Frances Quiett Challenger
Si-lan Chen
Alice Childress
Herbert E. Cohen
Gertrude Cunningham
Peggy Dennis
Freda Diamond
Earl Dickerson
Hazel Ericson Dodge
Bess Eitingon
Inger McCabe Elliot
Emma Epps
Howard Fast
Andrew Faulds
Max Fink
Ishmael Flory
Moe Foner
Harry Francis
Milton Friedman
Indira Gandhi
John Gates
Nina Goodman (Mrs. Ben Davis, Jr.)
Sally Gorton (Mrs. Rockwell Kent)
Joseph Gould
Victor Grossman
Bonnie Bird Gundlach
Uta Hagen
John Hammond
Ollie Harrington
Dorothy Healey
Jean Herskovits
Lena Horne
Micki Hurwitt
Jean Blackwell Hutson
C. L. R. James
Ruth Jett
Howard Eugene (“Stretch”) Johnson
Barney Josephson
Alfred Katzenstein
Ursula Katzenstein
Larry Kerson
Ari Kiev
Bernard Koten
Joseph Lederer
Harold Leventhal
Elma Lewis
Jay Leyda
Marian Liggins
Diana Loesser
Sanford Meisner
Herbert Marshall
Josephine Martin
Carl Marzani
Jan Mason
Ivor Montagu
Chuck Moseley
H. A. Murray
William Mutch
Richard Nachtigall
Kay (Mrs. Aubrey) Pankey
Sam Parks
Graham Payn
Theodora Peck
Thelma Dale Perkins
Morris Perlmutter
Rose Perry
William Pickens III
Sidney Poitier
Martin Popper
Louis Rawls
Edward Rettenberg
Milton Rettenberg
Jim Richards
Alan Rinzler
Marilyn Robeson
Paul Robeson, Jr.
Earl Robinson
Robert Robinson
Flora Robson
Clara Rockmore
Ted Rolfs
Helen Rosen
Norman Roth
Rose Rubin
Annette Rubinstein
S. A. Russell
Bayard Rustin
Homer Sadler
Antonio Salemmé
G. Foster Sanford, Jr.
Junius Scales
Sylvia Schwartz
Pete Seeger
Jean Seroity
Marie Seton
Sadie Davenport Shelton
Robert Sherman
Frederick Shields
Julius Silverman
Ruby Silverstone
Abbott Simon
Anita Sterner
Michael Straight
Alexander Taylor
Studs Terkel
Edith Tiger
Chatman Wailes
Ruth Walker
Fredi Washington (Bell)
Elizabeth Welch
Aaron Wells
Rebecca West
Monroe Wheeler
Mrs. Harry White
Henry Wilcoxon
Doxey Wilkerson
Aminda Badeau (Mrs. Roy) Wilkins
Addie Wyatt
Asa Zatz
In addition, I have had access to Paul Robeson, Jr.'s interviews with: Peter Blackman, Bruno Raikin, and Marie Seton; and to Anita Sterner's interviews (done for a 1978 BBC program on Robeson) with: Tommy Adlam, George Baker, Frank Barnes, Alfie Bass, Alan Booth, Dave Bowman, Lord Brockway, J. Douglas Brown, May Chinn, George C. Crockett, Jr., Ossie
Davis, Ruby Dee, Leonard de Paur, Dai Francis, John Gerstadt, Leo Hurwitz, Emlyn Jenkins, Roderick Jones, Armina Marshall, James Monk, Mrs. Northcote, Will Paynter, “Princeton Old People,” Philip Stein, Phillip Thomas, Rachel Thomas, André Van Gyseghem, Otto Wallen, Charles Wright, Ellsworth Wright, Coleman Young.
Manuscript Sources
(other than the Robeson Family Archives)
AKADEMIE DER KÃNSTE DER DDR, PAUL ROBESON ARCHIV
: assorted manuscript letters, first-person reminiscences of Robeson, extensive newspaper and photo collection.
AMISTAD RESEARCH CENTER:
Fredi Washington Papers; Countee Cullen Papers
CHICAGO HISTORICAL SOCIETY:
Claude A. Barnett Papers
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY:
Robert Minor Papers; Oral History Research Office (some two dozen pertinent interviews including especially those done with: Charles Ascher, Eric Barnouw, A. Philip Randolph, William Jay Schieffelin, Carl Van Vechten, Roy Wilkins, and Henry Agard Wallace); Paul Robeson Law School Records
COUNTWAY MEDICAL LIBRARY, HARVARD:
Louis Wright Papers
DUSABLE MUSEUM, CHICAGO:
Metz Lorchard Papers; Margaret Burroughs Papers
FDR LIBRARY, HYDE PARK:
Eleanor Roosevelt Papers
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL HISTORY, AMSTERDAM
: Emma Goldman Papers
KURT WEILL FOUNDATION FOR MUSIC:
Weill/Eslanda Robeson Correspondence
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS:
Nannie H. Burroughs Papers; NAACP Papers; Mary Church Terrell Papers; Margaret Webster Papers
MOORLAND-SPINGARN RESEARCH CENTER, HOWARD UNIVERSITY
: Bustill-Bowen-Asbury Collection; E. Franklin Frazier Papers; George Murphy Papers; William L. Patterson Papers; Jessica Smith Papers; Jacob C. White Collection
NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY, MANUSCRIPT DIVISION:
Paul Kester Papers; Vito Marcantonio Papers; Joel E. Spingarn Papers; Carl Van Vechten Papers
NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY, SCHOMBURG COLLECTION:
Lawrence Brown Papers; Civil Rights Congress Papers; Melville J. Herskovits Papers; Alberta Hunter Papers; National Negro Congress Papers; Papers of the Black Academy of Arts and Letters; Pettis Perry Papers; William Pickens Papers; Paul Robeson Collection; Arthur Schomburg Papers
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY, WAGNER ARCHIVES
: Actors' Equity Association Records
NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY LIBRARY:
Melville J. Herskovits Papers; Ira Aldridge Collection
PRESBYTERIAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY:
Records of New Brunswick Presbytery
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY:
Sylvia Beach Collection; Otto Kahn Papers
RUTGERS UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES:
assorted Paul Robeson-related material
SCHLESINGER LIBRARY, RADCLIFFE:
Charlotte Hawkins Brown Papers; Margaret Cardozo Holmes interview
SMITH COLLEGE, SOPHIA SMITH COLLECTION, WOMEN'S HISTORY ARCHIVE
: Ella Reeve Bloor (“Mother Bloor”) Papers
SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY, CARBONDALE, SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
: Herbert Marshall Papers
STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY, WISCONSIN
: Eugene and Peggy Dennis Papers Syracuse university: Earl Browder Papers
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES, SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
: R. Golding Bright Papers; Oral History interviews with Edwin Lester and Ed Biberman; Ralph Bunche Papers; George Johnson Film Collection
UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS, AMHERST:
W. E. B. Du Bois Papers
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY, BANCROFT LIBRARY
: Noel Sullivan Papers
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN, LABADIE COLLECTION:
Maurice Brown/Ellen Van Volkenburg Papers
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS, RANSOM HUMANITIES CENTER:
Maxwell Anderson Papers; Frank Harris Papers; Alfred and Blanche Knopf Papers
YALE UNIVERSITY:
James Weldon Johnson Memorial Collection of Negro Arts and Letters; Laurence Langner Papers; Eugene O'Neill Correspondence; Gertrude Stein Correspondence; Theater Guild Papers; Carl Van Vechten Papers
Additionally, a number of people have given me access to privately held manuscript material:
Peggy Ashcroft (ms. memoir)
Cedric Belfrage (Belfrage-Peggy Middleton correspondence)
Maimie Neale Bledsoe (ms. memoir and speeches)
Leonard Boudin (files on Robeson passport case)
A'Lelia P. Bundles (ms. letter)
Revels Cayton (ms. letter, biographicar materials)
Tim Couzzens (Robeson materials in William Ballinger and Winifred Holtby Papers)
Gertrude Cunningham (Nathan F. Mossell papers)
Lloyd L. Davies (ms. letters, reminiscences)
Freda Diamond (ms. letters)
Paulina Forsythe (ms. letters to Robeson during the dozen years, 1965â76, when he lived with her and her mother, Marian Forsythe, in Philadelphia)
Milton Friedman (court briefs)
Walter Goldwater (ms. letters)
Nina Goodman [Mrs. Ben Davis, Jr.] (ms. letters)
Rupert Hart-Davis (ms. letters)
Marie Jones (ms. letters)
Corliss Lamont (ms. letter)
H. A. Murray (ms. letters)
Kay [Mrs. Aubrey] Pankey (ms. letters)
Juliet [Mrs. Malcolm] Pitt (ms. letters)
Paul Robeson, Jr. (hospital records; book manuscripts (“With Malice Toward One,” “Gideon's Journey”); Washington, D.C., FBI files)
Clara Rockmore (Rockmore-Robeson correspondence)
Helen Rosen (Rosen-Robeson correspondence)
Junius Scales (ms. memoir)
Marie Seton (ms. letters, book ms.)
Louis Shaeffer (interview notes)
Anita Sterner (tapes and transcripts of three dozen interviews for 1978 BBC program on Robeson)
Leonora [Pat] Gregory [Stitt] (ms. memoir and draft of book started with Robeson)
Studs Terkel (tape of others reminiscing about Robeson)
Nancy Wills (ms. memoir)
A number of people I corresponded with added further to the stock of primary materials through their anecdotes and personal recollections of Robeson (as well as by providing leads to others with firsthand accounts). In this regard, I owe special thanks to Kathryn Cavan Avery, Paul Avrich, Edward Biberman, Charles L. Blockson, George Breitman, Harry Bridges, Bob Cohen, Malcolm Cowley, Millia Davenport, Michael H. Ebner, Veit Erlmann, Kim Fellner, Bernard Forer, Joseph Gould, James Frederick Green, Judith Green, John Devereux Kernan, Ralph Kessler, David Randall Luce, Luretta Bagby Martin, Ruth C. McCreary, Jim Murray, Paul G. Partington, Robert Richter, Naomi Rogers, Irene Runge, Stanley Schear, Athene Seyler, Harry Slochower, George Spector, C. A. Tripp, Jules Tygiel, Mrs. William A. P. White, Nancy Wills, and Jane Wright.