Chapter 8
120
BROADWAY, NEW YORK CITY
William B. Thompson, who was in Petrograd from July until November last, has made a personal contribution of $1,000,000 to the Bolsheviki for the purpose of spreading their doctrine in Germany and Austria ....
Washington Post, February 2, 1918
While collecting material for this book a single location and address in the Wall Street area came to the fore — 120 Broadway, New York City. Conceivably, this book could have been written incorporating only persons, firms, and organizations located at 120 Broadway in the year 1917. Although this research method would have been forced and unnatural, it would have excluded only a relatively small segment of the story.
The original building at 120 Broadway was destroyed
by fire before World War I. Subsequently the site was sold to the Equitable
Office Building Corporation, organized by General T. Coleman du Pont, president
of du Pont de Nemours Powder Company.1 A new building was completed in 1915 and
the Equitable Life Assurance Company moved back to its old site.2 In passing we should note an interesting
interlock in Equitable history. In 1916 the cashier of the Berlin Equitable
Life office was William Schacht, the father of Hjalmar Horace Greeley Schacht —
later to become Hitler's banker, and financial genie. William Schacht was an
American citizen, worked thirty years for Equitable in Germany, and owned a
Berlin house known as "Equitable Villa." Before joining Hitler, young
Hjalmar Schacht served as a member of the Workers and Soldiers Council (a
soviet) of Zehlendoff; this he left in 1918 to join the board of the Nationalbank
fur Deutschland. His codirector at DONAT was Emil Wittenberg, who, with Max May
of Guaranty Trust Company of New York, was a director of the first Soviet
international bank, Ruskombank.
In any event, the building at 120 Broadway was in
1917 known as the Equitable Life Building. A large building, although by no
means the largest office building in New York City, it occupies a one-block
area at Broadway and Pine, and has thirty-four floors. The Bankers Club was
located on the thirty-fourth floor. The tenant list in 1917 in effect reflected
American involvement in the Bolshevik Revolution and its aftermath. For
example, the headquarters of the No. 2 District of the Federal Reserve System —
the New York area — by far the most important of the Federal Reserve districts,
was located at 120 Broadway. The offices of several individual directors of the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York and, most important, the American
International Corporation were also at 120 Broadway. By way of contrast, Ludwig
Martens, appointed by the Soviets as the first Bolshevik "ambassador"
to the United States and head of the Soviet Bureau, was in 1917 the vice
president of Weinberg & Posner — and also had offices at 120 Broadway.*
Is this concentration an accident? Does the
geographical contiguity have any significance? Before attempting to suggest an
answer, we have to switch our frame of reference and abandon the left-right
spectrum of political analysis.
With an almost unanimous lack of perception the
academic world has described and analyzed international political relations in
the context of an unrelenting conflict between capitalism and communism, and
rigid adherence to this Marxian formula has distorted modern history. Tossed
out from time to time are odd remarks to the effect that the polarity is indeed
spurious, but these are quickly dispatched to limbo. For example, Carroll
Quigley, professor of international relations at Georgetown University, made
the following comment on the House of Morgan:
More than fifty years ago the Morgan firm decided to
infiltrate the Left-wing political movements in the United States. This was
relatively easy to do, since these groups were starved for funds and eager for
a voice to reach the people. Wall Street supplied both. The purpose was not to
destroy, dominate or take over...3
Professor Quigley's comment, apparently based on
confidential documentation, has all the ingredients of an historical bombshell
if it can be supported. We suggest that the Morgan firm infiltrated not only
the domestic left, as noted by Quigley, but also the foreign left — that is,
the Bolshevik movement and the Third International. Even further, through
friends in the U.S. State Department, Morgan and allied financial interests,
particularly the Rockefeller family, have exerted a powerful influence on
U.S.-Russian relations from World War I to the present. The evidence presented
in this chapter will suggest that two of the operational vehicles for
infiltrating or influencing foreign revolutionary movements were located at 120
Broadway: the first, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, heavily laced with
Morgan appointees; the second, the Morgan-controlled American International
Corporation. Further, there was an important interlock between the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York and the American International Corporation — C. A.
Stone, the president of American International, was also a director of the
Federal Reserve Bank.
The tentative hypothesis then is that this unusual
concentration at a single address was a reflection of purposeful actions by
specific firms and persons and that these actions and events cannot be analyzed
within the usual spectrum of left-right political antagonism.
The American International Corporation (AIC) was
organized in New York on November 22, 1915, by the J.P. Morgan interests, with
major participation by Stillman's National City Bank and the Rockefeller
interests. The general office of AIC was at 120 Broadway. The company's charter
authorized it to engage in any kind of business, except banking and public
utilities, in any country in the world. The stated purpose of the corporation
was to develop domestic and foreign enterprises, to extend American activities
abroad, and to promote the interests of American and foreign bankers, business
and engineering.
Frank A. Vanderlip has described in his memoirs how
American International was formed and the excitement created on Wall Street
over its business potential.4 The original idea was generated by a
discussion between Stone & Webster — the international railroad contractors
who "were convinced there was not much more railroad building to be done
in the United States" — and Jim Perkins and Frank A. Vanderlip of National
City Bank (NCB).5 The original capital authorization was
$50 million and the board of directors represented the leading lights of the
New York financial world. Vanderlip records that he wrote as follows to NCB
president Stillman, enthusing over the enormous potential for American
International Corporation:
James A. Farrell and Albert Wiggin have been invited
[to be on the board] but had to consult their committees before accepting. I
also have in mind asking Henry Walters and Myron T. Herrick. Mr. Herrick is
objected to by Mr. Rockefeller quite strongly but Mr. Stone wants him and I
feel strongly that he would be particularly desirable in France. The whole
thing has gone along with a smoothness that has been gratifying and the
reception of it has been marked by an enthusiasm which has been surprising to
me even though I was so strongly convinced we were on the right track.
I saw James J. Hill today, for example. He said at
first that he could not possibly think of extending his responsibilities, but
after I had finished telling him what we expected to do, he said he would be
glad to go on the board, would take a large amount of stock and particularly
wanted a substantial interest in the City Bank and commissioned me to buy him
the stock at the market.
I talked with Ogden Armour about the matter today for
the first time. He sat in perfect silence while I went through the story, and,
without asking a single question, he said he would go on the board and wanted
$500,000 stock.
Mr. Coffin [of General Electric] is another man who
is retiring from everything, but has 'become so enthusiastic over this that he
was willing to go on the board, and offers the most active cooperation.
I felt very good over getting Sabin. The Guaranty
Trust is altogether the most active competitor we have in the field and it is
of great value to get them into the fold in this way. They have been
particularly enthusiastic at Kuhn, Loeb's. They want to take up to $2,500,000.
There was really quite a little competition to see who should get on the board,
but as I had happened to talk with Kahn and had invited him first, it was
decided he should go on. He is perhaps the most enthusiastic of any one. They
want half a million stock for Sir Ernest Castle** to whom they have cabled the plan and they
have back from him approval of it.
I explained the whole matter to the Board [of the
City Bank] Tuesday and got nothing but favorable comments.6
Everybody coveted the AIC stock. Joe Grace (of W. R.
Grace & Co.) wanted $600,000 in addition to his interest in National City
Bank. Ambrose Monell wanted $500,000. George Baker wanted $250,000. And
"William Rockefeller tried, vainly, to get me to put him down for
$5,000,000 of the common."7
By 1916 AIC investments overseas amounted to more
than $23 million and in 1917 to more than $27 million. The company established
representation in London, Paris, Buenos Aires, and Peking as well as in
Petrograd, Russia. Less than two years after its formation AIC was operating on
a substantial scale in Australia, Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, Colombia, Brazil,
Chile, China, Japan, India, Ceylon, Italy, Switzerland, France, Spain, Cuba,
Mexico, and other countries in Central America.
American International owned several subsidiary
companies outright, had substantial interests in yet other companies, and
operated still other firms in the United States and abroad. The Allied
Machinery Company of America was founded in February 1916 and the entire share
capital taken up by American International Corporation. The vice president of
American International Corporation was Frederick Holbrook, an engineer and
formerly head of the Holbrook Cabot & Rollins Corporation. In January 1917
the Grace Russian Company was formed, the joint owners being W. R. Grace &
Co. and the San Galli Trading Company of Petrograd. American International
Corporation had a substantial investment in the Grace Russian Company and
through Holbrook an interlocking directorship.
AIC also invested in United Fruit Company, which was
involved in Central American revolutions in the 1920s. The American International
Shipbuilding Corporation was wholly owned by AIC and signed substantial
contracts for war vessels with the Emergency Fleet Corporation: one contract
called for fifty vessels, followed by another contract for forty vessels,
followed by yet another contract for sixty cargo vessels. American
International Shipbuilding was the largest single recipient of contracts
awarded by the U.S. government Emergency Fleet Corporation. Another company
operated by AIC was G. Amsinck & Co., Inc. of New York; control of the
company was acquired in November 1917. Amsinck was the source of financing for
German espionage in the United States (see page 66). In November 1917 the
American International Corporation formed and wholly owned the Symington Forge
Corporation, a major government contractor for shell forgings. Consequently,
American International Corporation had significant interest in war contracts
within the United States and overseas. It had, in a word, a vested interest in
the continuance of World War I.
The directors of American International and some of
their associations were (in 1917):
J. OGDEN ARMOUR Meatpacker, of Armour & Company,
Chicago; director of the National City Bank of New York; and mentioned by A. A.
Heller in connection with the Soviet Bureau (see p. 119).
GEORGE JOHNSON BALDWIN Of Stone & Webster, 120
Broadway. During World War I Baldwin was chairman of the board of American
International Shipbuilding, senior vice president of American International
Corporation, director of G. Amsinck (Von Pavenstedt of Amsinck was a German
espionage paymaster in the U.S., see page 65), and a trustee of the Carnegie
Foundation, which financed the Marburg Plan for international socialism to be
controlled behind the scenes by world finance (see page 174-6).
C. A. COFFIN Chairman of General Electric (executive
office: 120 Broadway), chairman of cooperation committee of the American Red
Cross.
W. E. COREY (14 Wall Street) Director of American
Bank Note Company, Mechanics and Metals Bank, Midvale Steel and Ordnance, and
International Nickel Company; later director of National City Bank.
ROBERT DOLLAR San Francisco shipping magnate, who
attempted in behalf of the Soviets to import tsarist gold rubles into U.S. in
1920, in contravention of U.S. regulations.
PIERRE S. DU PONT Of the du Pont family.
PHILIP A. S. FRANKLIN Director of National City Bank.
J.P. GRACE Director of National City Bank.
R. F. HERRICK Director, New York Life Insurance;
former president of the American Bankers Association; trustee of Carnegie
Foundation.
OTTO H. KAHN Partner in Kuhn, Loeb. Kahn's father
came to America in 1948, "having taken part in the unsuccessful German
revolution of that year." According to J. H. Thomas (British socialist,
financed by the Soviets), "Otto Kahn's face is towards the light."
H. W. PRITCHETT Trustee of Carnegie Foundation.
PERCY A. ROCKEFELLER Son of John D. Rockefeller;
married to Isabel, daughter of J. A. Stillman of National City Bank.
JOHN D. RYAN Director of copper-mining companies,
National City Bank, and Mechanics and Metals Bank. (See frontispiece to this
book.)
W. L. SAUNDERS Director the Federal Reserve Bank of
New York, 120 Broadway, and chairman of Ingersoll-Rand. According to the National Cyclopaedia (26:81):
"Throughout the war he was one of the President's most trusted
advisers." See page 15 for his views on the Soviets.
J. A. STILLMAN President of National City Bank, after
his father (J. Stillman, chairman of NCB) died in March 1918.
C. A. STONE Director (1920-22) of Federal Reserve
Bank of New York, 120 Broadway; chairman of Stone & Webster, 120 Broadway;
president (1916-23) of American International Corporation, 120 Broadway.
T. N. VAIL President of National City Bank of Troy,
New York
F. A. VANDERLIP President of National City Bank.
E. S. WEBSTER Of Stone & Webster, 120 Broadway.
A. H. WIGGIN Director of Federal Reserve Bank of New
York in the early 1930s.
BECKMAN WINTHROPE Director of National City Bank.
WILLIAM WOODWARD Director of Federal Reserve Bank of
New York, 120 Broadway, and Hanover National Bank.
The interlock of the twenty-two directors of American
International Corporation with other institutions is significant. The National
City Bank had no fewer than ten directors on the board of AIC; Stillman of NCB
was at that time an intermediary between the Rockefeller and Morgan interests,
and both the Morgan and the Rockefeller interests were represented directly on
AIC. Kuhn, Loeb and the du Ponts each had one director. Stone & Webster had
three directors. No fewer than four directors of AIC (Saunders, Stone, Wiggin,
Woodward) either were directors of or were later to join the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York. We have noted in an earlier chapter that William Boyce
Thompson, who contributed funds and his considerable prestige to the Bolshevik
Revolution, was also a director of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York — the
directorate of the FRB of New York comprised only nine members.
Having identified the directors of AIC we now have to
identify their revolutionary influence.
As the Bolshevik Revolution took hold in central
Russia, Secretary of State Robert Lansing requested the views of American
International Corporation on the policy to be pursued towards the Soviet
regime. On January 16, 1918 — barely two months after the takeover in Petrograd
and Moscow, and before a fraction of Russia had come under Bolshevik control —
William Franklin Sands, executive secretary of American International
Corporation, submitted the requested memorandum on the Russian political
situation to Secretary Lansing. Sands covering letter, headed 120 Broadway,
began:
To the
Honourable
January 16, 1918
Secretary of State
Washington D.C.
Secretary of State
Washington D.C.
Sir
I have the honor to enclose herewith the memorandum
which you requested me to make for you on my view of the political situation in
Russia.
I have separated it into three parts; an explanation
of the historical causes of the Revolution, told as briefly as possible; a
suggestion as to policy and a recital of the various branches of American
activity at work now in Russia ....8
Although the Bolsheviks had only precarious control
in Russia — and indeed were to come near to losing even this in the spring of
1918 — Sands wrote that already (January 1918) the United States had delayed
too long in recognizing "Trotzky." He added, "Whatever ground
may have been lost, should be regained now, even at the cost of a slight
personal triumph for Trotzky."9
Firms
located at, or near, 120 Broadway:
American International Corp 120 Broadway
National City Bank 55 Wall Street
Bankers Trust Co Bldg 14 Wall Street
New York Stock Exchange 13 Wall Street/12 Broad
Morgan Building corner Wall & Broad
Federal Reserve Bank of NY 120 Broadway
Equitable Building 120 Broadway
Bankers Club 120 Broadway
Simpson, Thather & Bartlett 62 Cedar St
William Boyce Thompson 14 Wall Street
Hazen, Whipple & Fuller 42nd Street Building
Chase National Bank 57 Broadway
McCann Co 61 Broadway
Stetson, Jennings & Russell 15 Broad Street
Guggenheim Exploration 120 Broadway
Weinberg & Posner 120 Broadway
Soviet Bureau 110 West 40th Street
John MacGregor Grant Co 120 Broadway
Stone & Webster 120 Broadway
General Electric Co 120 Broadway
Morris Plan of NY 120 Broadway
Sinclair Gulf Corp 120 Broadway
Guaranty Securities 120 Broadway
Guaranty Trust 140 Broadway
National City Bank 55 Wall Street
Bankers Trust Co Bldg 14 Wall Street
New York Stock Exchange 13 Wall Street/12 Broad
Morgan Building corner Wall & Broad
Federal Reserve Bank of NY 120 Broadway
Equitable Building 120 Broadway
Bankers Club 120 Broadway
Simpson, Thather & Bartlett 62 Cedar St
William Boyce Thompson 14 Wall Street
Hazen, Whipple & Fuller 42nd Street Building
Chase National Bank 57 Broadway
McCann Co 61 Broadway
Stetson, Jennings & Russell 15 Broad Street
Guggenheim Exploration 120 Broadway
Weinberg & Posner 120 Broadway
Soviet Bureau 110 West 40th Street
John MacGregor Grant Co 120 Broadway
Stone & Webster 120 Broadway
General Electric Co 120 Broadway
Morris Plan of NY 120 Broadway
Sinclair Gulf Corp 120 Broadway
Guaranty Securities 120 Broadway
Guaranty Trust 140 Broadway
Map of Wall Street Area Showing Office Locations
Sands then
elaborates the manner in which the U.S. could make up for lost time, parallels
the Bolshevik Revolution to "our own revolution," and concludes:
"I have every reason to believe that the Administration plans for Russia
will receive all possible support from Congress, and the hearty endorsement of
public opinion in the United States."
In brief,
Sands, as executive secretary of a corporation whose directors were the most
prestigious on Wall Street, provided an emphatic endorsement of the Bolsheviks
and the Bolshevik Revolution, and within a matter of weeks after the revolution
started. And as a director of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Sands had
just contributed $1 million to the Bolsheviks — such endorsement of the
Bolsheviks by banking interests is at least consistent.
Moreover,
William Sands of American International was a man with truly uncommon
connections and influence in the State Department.
Sands'
career had alternated between the State Department and Wall Street, In the late
nineteenth and early twentieth century he held various U.S. diplomatic posts.
In 1910 he left the department to join the banking firm of James Speyer to
negotiate an Ecuadorian loan, and for the next two years represented the
Central Aguirre Sugar Company in Puerto Rico. In 1916 he was in Russia on
"Red Cross work" — actually a two-man "Special Mission"
with Basil Miles — and returned to join the American International Corporation
in New York.10
In early
1918 Sands became the known and intended recipient of certain Russian
"secret treaties." If the State Department files are to be believed,
it appears that Sands was also a courier, and that he had some prior access to
official documents — prior, that is, to U.S. government officials. On January
14, 1918, just two days before Sands wrote his memo on policy towards the
Bolsheviks, Secretary Lansing caused the following cable to be sent in Green
Cipher to the American legation in Stockholm: "Important official papers
for Sands to bring here were left at Legation. Have you forwarded them?
Lansing." The reply of January 16 from Morris in Stockholm reads:
"Your 460 January 14, 5 pm. Said documents forwarded Department in pouch
number 34 on December 28th." To these documents is attached another memo,
signed "BM" (Basil Miles, an associate of Sands): "Mr. Phillips.
They failed to give Sands 1st installment of secret treaties wh. [which] he
brought from Petrograd to Stockholm."11
Putting
aside the question why a private citizen would be carrying Russian secret
treaties and the question of the content of such secret treaties (probably an
early version of the so-called Sisson Documents), we can at least deduce that
the AIC executive secretary traveled from Petrograd to Stockholm in late 1917
and must indeed have been a privileged and influential citizen to have access
to secret treaties.12
A few
months later, on July 1, 1918, Sands wrote to Treasury Secretary McAdoo
suggesting a commission for "economic assistance to Russia." He urged
that since it would be difficult for a government commission to "provide
the machinery" for any such assistance, "it seems, therefore,
necessary to call in the financial, commercial and manufacturing interest of
the United States to provide such machinery under the control of the Chief
Commissioner or whatever official is selected by the President for this
purpose."13 In other words, Sands obviously intended
that any commercial exploitation of Bolshevik Russia was going to include 120
Broadway.
The
certification of incorporation of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York was
filed May 18, 1914. It provided for three Class A directors representing member
banks in the district, three Class B directors representing commerce,
agriculture, and industry, and three Class C directors representing the Federal
Reserve Board. The original directors were elected in 1914; they proceeded to
generate an energetic program. In the first year of organization the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York held no fewer than 50 meetings.
From our
viewpoint what is interesting is the association between, on the one hand, the
directors of the Federal Reserve Bank (in the New York district) and of
American International Corporation, and, on the other, the emerging Soviet
Russia.
In 1917
the three Class A directors were Franklin D. Locke, William Woodward, and
Robert H. Treman. William Woodward was a director of American International
Corporation (120 Broadway) and of the Rockefeller-controlled Hanover National
Bank. Neither Locke nor Treman enters our story. The three Class B directors in
1917 were William Boyce Thompson, Henry R. Towne, and Leslie R. Palmer. We have
already noted William B. Thompson's substantial cash contribution to the Bolshevik
cause. Henry R. Towne was chairman of the board of directors of the Morris Plan
of New York, located at 120 Broadway; his seat was later taken by Charles A.
Stone of American International Corporation (120 Broadway) and of Stone &
Webster (120 Broadway). Leslie R. Palmer does not come into our story. The
three Class C directors were Pierre Jay, W. L. Saunders, and George Foster
Peabody. Nothing is known about Pierre Jay, except that his office was at 120
Broadway and he appeared to be significant only as the owner of Brearley
School, Ltd. William Lawrence Saunders was also a director of American
International Corporation; he openly avowed, as we have seen, pro-Bolshevik
sympathies, disclosing them in a letter to President Woodrow Wilson (see page 15).
George Foster Peabody was an active socialist (see page 99-100).
In brief,
of the nine directors of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, four were
physically located at 120 Broadway and two were then connected with American
International Corporation. And at least four members of AIC's board were at one
time or another directors of the FRB of New York. We could term all of this
significant, but regard it not necessarily as a dominant interest.
William
Franklin Sands' proposal for an economic commission to Russia was not adopted.
Instead, a private vehicle was put together to exploit Russian markets and the
earlier support given the Bolsheviks. A group of industrialists from 120
Broadway formed the American-Russian Industrial Syndicate Inc. to develop and
foster these opportunities. The financial backing for the new firm came from
the Guggenheim Brothers, 120 Broadway, previously associated with William Boyce
Thompson (Guggenheim controlled American Smelting and Refining, and the
Kennecott and Utah copper companies); from Harry F. Sinclair, president of
Sinclair Gulf Corp., also 120 Broadway; and from James G. White of J. G. White
Engineering Corp. of 43 Exchange Place — the address of the American-Russian
Industrial Syndicate.
In the
fall of 1919 the U.S. embassy in London cabled Washington about Messrs.
Lubovitch and Rossi "representing American-Russian Industrial Syndicate
Incorporated What is the reputation and the attitude of the Department toward
the syndicate and the individuals?"14
To this
cable State Department officer Basil Miles, a former associate of Sands,
replied:
. . .
Gentlemen mentioned together with their corporation are of good standing being
backed financially by the White, Sinclair and Guggenheim interests for the
purpose of opening up business relations with Russia.15
So we may
conclude that Wall Street interests had quite definite ideas of the manner in
which the new Russian market was to be exploited. The assistance and advice
proffered in behalf of the Bolsheviks by interested parties in Washington and
elsewhere were not to remain unrewarded.
Quite
apart from American International's influence in the State Department is its
intimate relationship — which AIC itself called "control" — with a
known Bolshevik: John Reed. Reed was a prolific, widely read author of the
World War I era who contributed to the Bolshevik-oriented Masses.16 and to the Morgan-controlled journal Metropolitan. Reed's book on the
Bolshevik Revolution, Ten Days That Shook
the World, sports an introduction by Nikolai Lenin, and became Reed's
best-known and most widely read literary effort. Today the book reads like a
superficial commentary on current events, is interspersed with Bolshevik
proclamations and decrees, and is permeated with that mystic fervor the
Bolsheviks know will arouse foreign sympathizers. After the revolution Reed
became an American member of the executive committee of the Third
International. He died of typhus in Russia in 1920.
The crucial
issue that presents itself here is not Reed's known pro-Bolshevik tenor and
activities, but how Reed who had the entire confidence of Lenin ("Here is
a book I should like to see published in millions of copies and translated into
all languages," commented Lenin in Ten
Days), who was a member of the
Third International, and who possessed a Military Revolutionary Committee pass
(No. 955, issued November 16, 1917) giving him entry into the Smolny Institute
(the revolutionary headquarters) at any time as the representative of the
"American Socialist press," was also — despite these things — a
puppet under the "control" of the Morgan financial interests through
the American International Corporation. Documentary evidence exists for this seeming
conflict (see below and Appendix 3).
Let's fill
in the background. Articles for the Metropolitan
and the Masses gave John Reed a
wide audience for reporting the Mexican and the Russian Bolshevik revolutions.
Reed's biographer Granville Hicks has suggested, in John Reed, that "he was . . . the spokesman of the Bolsheviks
in the United States." On the other hand, Reed's financial support from
1913 to 1918 came heavily from the Metropolitan
— owned by Harry Payne Whitney, a
director of the Guaranty Trust, an institution cited in every chapter of this
book — and also' from the New York private banker and merchant Eugene
Boissevain, who channeled funds to Reed both directly and through the
pro-Bolshevik Masses. In other words,
John Reed's financial support came from two supposedly competing elements in
the political spectrum. These funds were for writing and may be classified as:
payments from Metropolitan from 1913
onwards for articles; payments from Masses
from 1913 onwards, which income at least in part originated with Eugene
Boissevain. A third category should be mentioned: Reed received some minor and
apparently unconnected payments from Red Cross commissioner Raymond Robins in
Petrograd. Presumably he also received smaller sums for articles written for
other journals, and book royalties; but no evidence has been found giving the
amounts of such payments.
The Metropolitan supported contemporary
establishment causes including, for example, war preparedness. The magazine was
owned by Harry Payne Whitney (1872-1930), who founded the Navy League and was
partner in the J.P. Morgan firm. In the late 1890s Whitney became a director of
American Smelting and Refining and of Guggenheim Exploration. Upon his father's
death in 1908, he became a director of numerous other companies, including
Guaranty Trust Company. Reed began writing for Whitney's Metropolitan in July 1913 and contributed a half-dozen articles on
the Mexican revolutions: "With Villa in Mexico," "The Causes
Behind/Mexico's Revolution," "If We Enter Mexico," "With
Villa on the March," etc. Reed's sympathies were with revolutionist Pancho
Villa. You will recall the link (see page 65) between Guaranty Trust and
Villa's ammunition supplies.
In any
event, Metropolitan was Reed's main
source of income. In the words of biographer Granville Hicks, "Money meant
primarily work for the Metropolitan and
incidentally articles and stories for other paying magazines." But
employment by Metropolitan did not
inhibit Reed from writing articles critical of the Morgan and Rockefeller
interests. One such piece, "At the
Throat of the Republic" (Masses, July
1916), traced the relationship between munitions industries, the national
security-preparedness lobby, the interlocking directorates of the Morgan-Rockefeller
interest, "and showed that they dominated both the preparedness societies
and the newly formed American International Corporation, organized for the
exploitation of backward countries."17
In 1915
John Reed was arrested in Russia by tsarist authorities, and the Metropolitan intervened with the State
Department in Reed's behalf. On June 21, 1915, H. J. Whigham wrote Secretary of
State Robert Lansing informing him that John Reed and Boardman Robinson (also
arrested and also a contributor to the Masses)
were in Russia "with commission from the Metropolitan magazine to write articles and to make illustrations
in the Eastern field of the War." Whigham pointed out that neither had
"any desire or authority from us to interfere with the operations of any
belligerent powers that be." Whigham's letter continues:
If Mr.
Reed carried letters of introduction from Bucharest to people in Galicia of an
anti-Russian frame of mind I am sure that it was done innocently with the
simple intention of meeting as many people as possible ....
Whigham
points out to Secretary Lansing that John Reed was known at the White House and
had given "some assistance" to the administration on Mexican affairs;
he concludes: "We have the
highest regard for Reed's great qualities as a writer and thinker and we are
very anxious as regards his safety."18 The Whigham letter is not, let it be noted,
from an establishment journal in support of a Bolshevik writer; it is from an
establishment journal in support of a Bolshevik writer for the Masses and similar revolutionary sheets,
a writer who was also the author of trenchant attacks ("The Involuntary
Ethics of Big Business: A Fable for Pessimists," for example) on the same
Morgan interests that owned Metropolitan.
The
evidence of finance by the private banker Boissevain is incontrovertible. On
February 23, 1918, the American legation at Christiania, Norway, sent a cable
to Washington in behalf of John Reed for delivery to Socialist Party leader
Morris Hillquit. The cable stated in part: "Tell Boissevain must draw on
him but carefully." A cryptic note by Basil Miles in the State Department
files, dated April 3, 1918, states, "If Reed is coming home he might as
well have money. I understand alternatives are ejection by Norway or polite
return. If this so latter seems preferable." This protective note is
followed by a cable dated April 1, 1918, and again from the American legation
at Christiania: "John Reed urgently request Eugene Boissevain, 29 Williams
Street, New York, telegraph care legation $300.00."19 This cable was relayed to Eugene
Boissevain by the State Department on April 3, 1918.
Reed
apparently received his funds and arrived safely back in the United States. The
next document in the State Department files is a letter to William Franklin
Sands from John Reed, dated June 4, 1918, and written from Crotonon-Hudson, New
York. In the letter Reed asserts that he has drawn up a memorandum for the
State Department, and appeals to Sands to use his influence to get release of
the boxes of papers brought back from Russia. Reed concludes, "Forgive me
for bothering you, but I don't know where else to turn, and I can't afford
another trip to Washington." Subsequently, Frank Polk, acting secretary of
state, received a letter from Sands regarding the release of John Reed's
papers. Sands' letter, dated June 5, 1918, from 120 Broadway, is here
reproduced in full; it makes quite explicit statements about control of Reed:
120 BROADWAY NEW YORK
June fifth, 1918
My dear
Mr. Polk:
I take the
liberty of enclosing to you an appeal from John ("Jack") Reed to help
him, if possible, to secure the release of the papers which he brought into the
country with him from Russia.
I had a
conversation with Mr. Reed when he first arrived, in which he sketched certain
attempts by the Soviet Government to initiate constructive development, and
expressed the desire to place whatever observations he had made or information
he had obtained through his connection with Leon Trotzky, at the disposal of
our Government. I suggested that he write a memorandum on this subject for you,
and promised to telephone to Washington to ask you to give him an interview for
this purpose. He brought home with him a mass of papers which were taken from
him for examination, and on this subject also he wished to speak to someone in
authority, in order to voluntarily offer an>, information they might contain
to the Government, and to ask for the release of those which he needed for his
newspaper and magazine work.
I do not
believe that Mr. Reed is either a "Bolshevik" or a "dangerous anarchist,"
as I have heard him described. He is a sensational journalist, without doubt,
but that is all. He is not trying to embarrass our Government, and for this
reason refused the "protection" which I understand was offered to him
by Trotzky, when he returned to New York to face the indictment against him in
the "Masses" trial. He is liked by the Petrograd Bolsheviki, however,
and, therefore, anything which our police may do which looks like
"persecution" will be resented in Petrograd, which I believe to be
undesirable because unnecessary. He can be handled and controlled much better
by other means than through the police.
I have not
seen the memorandum he gave to Mr. Bullitt — I wanted him to let me see it first and perhaps to edit it, but he
had not the opportunity to do so.
I hope
that you will not consider me to be intrusive in this matter or meddling with
matters which do not concern me. I believe it to be wise not to offend the
Bolshevik leaders unless and until it may
become necessary to do so — if it should become necessary — and it is
unwise to look on every one as a suspicious or even dangerous character, who
has had friendly relations with the Bolsheviki in Russia. I think it better policy to attempt to use such people for our own
purposes in developing our policy toward Russia, if it is possible to do so. The
lecture which Reed was prevented by the police from delivering in Philadelphia
(he lost his head, came into conflict with the police and was arrested) is the
only lecture on Russia which I would have paid to hear, if I had not already
seen his notes on the subject. It covered a subject which we might quite
possibly find to be a point of contact with the Soviet Government, from which
to begin constructive work!
Can we not use him, instead of embittering him and
making him an enemy? He is not well balanced, but he is, unless I am very much
mistaken, susceptible to discreet guidance and might be quite useful.
Sincerely
yours,
William Franklin Sands
William Franklin Sands
The Honourable
Frank Lyon Polk
Counselor for the Department of State
Washington, D.C.
Frank Lyon Polk
Counselor for the Department of State
Washington, D.C.
WFS:AO
Enclosure20
Enclosure20
The significance of this document is the hard revelation of direct intervention by an officer (executive secretary) of American International Corporation in behalf of a known Bolshevik. Ponder a few of Sands' statements about Reed: "He can be handled and controlled much better by other means than through the police"; and, "Can we not use him, instead of embittering him and making him an enemy? . . . he is, unless I am very much mistaken, susceptible to discreet guidance and might be quite useful." Quite obviously, the American International Corporation viewed John Reed as an agent or a potential agent who could be, and probably had already been, brought under its control. The fact that Sands was in a position to request editing a memorandum by Reed (for Bullitt) suggests some degree of control had already been established.
Then note Sands' potentially hostile attitude towards
— and barely veiled intent to provoke — the Bolsheviks: "I believe it to
be wise not to offend the Bolshevik leaders unless and until it may become
necessary to do so — if it should become necessary . . ." (italics added).
This is an extraordinary letter in behalf of a Soviet
agent from a private U.S. citizen whose counsel the State Department had
sought, and continued to seek.
A later memorandum, March 19, 1920, in the State
files reported the arrest of John Reed by the Finnish authorities at Abo, and
Reed's possession of English, American and German passports. Reed, traveling
under the alias of Casgormlich, carried diamonds, a large sum of money, Soviet
propaganda literature, and film. On April 21, 1920, the American legation at
Helsingfors cabled the State Department:
Am forwarding by the next pouch certified copies of
letters from Emma Goldman, Trotsky, Lenin and Sirola found in Reed's
possession. Foreign Office has promised to furnish complete record of the Court
proceedings.
Once again Sands intervened: "I knew Mr. Reed
personally."21 And, as in 1915, Metropolitan magazine
also came to Reed's aid. H. J. Whigham wrote on April 15, 1920, to Bainbridge
Colby in the State Department: "Have heard John Reed in danger of being
executed in Finland. Hope the State Dept. can take immediate steps to see that
he gets proper trial. Urgently request prompt action."22 This was in addition to an April 13,
1920 telegram from Harry Hopkins, who was destined for fame under President
Roosevelt:
Understand State Dept. has information Jack Reed
arrested Finland, will be executed. As one of his friends and yours and on his
wife's behalf urge you take prompt action prevent execution and secure release.
Feel sure can rely your immediate and effective intervention.23
John Reed was subsequently released by the Finnish
authorities.
This paradoxical account on intervention in behalf of
a Soviet agent can have several explanations. One hypothesis that fits other
evidence concerning Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution is that John Reed
was in effect an agent of the Morgan interests — perhaps only half aware of his
double role — that his anticapitalist writing maintained the valuable myth that
all capitalists are in perpetual warfare with all socialist revolutionaries.
Carroll Quigley, as we have already noted, reported that the Morgan interests
financially supported domestic revolutionary organizations and anticapitalist
writings.24 And we have presented in this chapter
irrefutable documentary evidence that the Morgan interests were also effecting
control of a Soviet agent, interceding on his behalf and, more important,
generally intervening in behalf of Soviet interests with the U.S. government.
These activities centered at a single address: 120 Broadway, New York City.
Footnotes:
1By a quirk the papers of incorporation for the
Equitable Office Building were drawn up by Dwight W. Morrow, later a Morgan
partner, but then a member of the law firm of Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett.
The Thacher firm contributed two members to the 1917 American Red Cross Mission
to Russia (see chapter five).
3Carroll Quigley, Tragedy and Hope (New York:
Macmillan, 1966), p. 938. Quigley was writing in 1965, so this places the start
of the infiltration at about 1915, a date consistent with the evidence here
presented.
4Frank A. Vanderlip, From Farm Boy to Financier (New
York: A. Appleton-Century, 1935).
5Ibid., p. 267.
6Ibid., pp. 268-69. It should be noted that several
names mentioned by Vanderlip turn up elsewhere in this book: Rockefeller,
Armour, Guaranty Trust, and (Otto) Kahn all had some connection more or less
with the Bolshevik Revolution and its aftermath.
7Ibid., p. 269.
8U.S. Stale Dept. Decimal File, 861.00/961.
9Sands memorandum to Lansing, p. 9.
10William Franklin Sands wrote several books, including
Undiplomatic Memoirs (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1930), a biography covering the
years to 1904. Later he wrote Our .Jungle Diplomacy (Chapel Hill: University of
North Carolina Press, 1941), an unremarkable treatise on imperialism in Latin
America. The latter work is notable only for a minor point on page 102: the
willingness to blame a particularly unsavory imperialistic adventure on Adolf
Stahl, a New York banker, while pointing oust quite unnecessarily that Stahl
was of "German-Jewish origin." In August 1918 he published an
article, "Salvaging Russia," in Asia, to explain support of the
Bolshevik regime.
11All the above in U.S. State Dept. Decimal File,
861.00/969.
12The author cannot forbear comparing the treatment of
academic researchers. In 1973, for example, the writer was still denied access
to some State Department files dated 1919.
13U.S. State Dept. Decimal File, 861.51/333.
14U.S. State Dept. Decimal File, 861.516 84, September
2, 1919.
15Ibid.
16Other contributors to the Masses mentioned in this
book were journalist Robert Minor, chairman of the, U.S. Public Info, marion
Committee; George Creel; Carl Sandburg, poet-historian; and Boardman Robinson,
an artist.
17Granville Hicks, John Reed, 1887-1920 (New York:
Macmillan, 1936), p. 215.
18U.S. State Dept. Decimal File, 860d.1121 R 25/4.
19Ibid., 360d.1121/R25/18. According to Granville Hicks
in John Reed, "Masses could not pay his [Reed's] expenses. Finally,
friends of the magazine, notably Eugene Boissevain, raised the money" (p.
249).
20U.S. State Dept. Decimal File, 360. D.
II21.R/20/221/2, /R25 (John Reed). The letter was transferred by Mr. Polk to
the State Department archives on May 2, 1935. All italics added.
21Ibid., 360d.1121 R 25/72.
22Ibid.
23This was addressed to Bainbridge Colby, ibid.,
360d.1121 R 25/30. Another letter, dated April 14, 1920, and addressed to the
secretary of state from 100 Broadway, New York, was from W. Bourke Cochrane; it
also pleaded for the release of John Reed.
24Quigley, op. cit.
*The John
MacGregor Grant Co., agent for the Russo-Asiatic Bank (involved in financing
the Bolsheviks), was at 120 Broadway — and financed by Guaranty Trust Company.
**Sir Ernest
Cassel, prominent British financier.
No comments:
Post a Comment