Baldwin, Roger N. (Roger Nash), 1884-1981
Variant namesBiographical notes:
Political reformer.
From the description of Reminiscences of Roger Nash Baldwin : oral history, 1975. (Columbia University In the City of New York). WorldCat record id: 309721453
From the description of Reminiscences of Roger Nash Baldwin : oral history, 1974. (Columbia University In the City of New York). WorldCat record id: 309721472
From the description of Reminiscences of Roger Nash Baldwin : oral history, 1965. (Columbia University In the City of New York). WorldCat record id: 309721485
From the description of Reminiscences of Roger Nash Baldwin : oral history, 1954. (Columbia University In the City of New York). WorldCat record id: 309728511
From the description of Reminiscences of Roger Nash Baldwin : oral history, 1963. (Columbia University In the City of New York). WorldCat record id: 309721502
From the description of Reminiscences of Roger Nash Baldwin : oral history, 1961. (Columbia University In the City of New York). WorldCat record id: 122586717
Social reformer Baldwin was a founder of the American Civil Liberties Union. He married Madeleine Zabriskie Doty in 1919; they were divorced in 1935.
From the description of Reminiscences, 1978. (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 232007515
Baldwin was a founder of the American Civil Liberties Union. Prior to this, he worked for the National Civil Liberties Bureau, an arm of the American Union Against Militarism. In 1918, he was tried and convicted for refusing military service, and spent a year in jail.
During the 1920s and 1930s, he was involved with various political groups, such as the Women's International League for Peace, and corresponded with many prominent leftists, including Emma Goldman. In 1927 he visited the Soviet Union. He broke with the communists in 1939, after the Nazi-Soviet Pact. Following World War II, he served as an advisor to the U.S. Army and the United Nations in Germany, Austria, Japan, and Korea, and was for many years chair of the International League for the Rights of Man. He was also active in the study and protection of civil liberties in Puerto Rico.
From the description of Roger N. Baldwin papers, 1885-1991 (bulk 1911-1981) (Princeton University Library). WorldCat record id: 175776526
Roger Nash Baldwin was born in Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts, on January 21, 1884 into a prominent Boston family. His parents were Frank Fenno Baldwin and Lucy Cushing (Nash) Baldwin, and he was the first of six children, three boys and three girls. His parents were Unitarians with strong liberal connections; W. E. B. Dubois was a Baldwin family friend and a frequent guest at the house. Baldwin's upbringing in this atmosphere in Wellesley, where he attended public school, instilled in him a life-long sympathy for the underdog. He attended Harvard, graduating in 1905 with an A.B. and an A.M. (received after a summer course in sociology).
On the advice of his father's friend and lawyer, Louis D. Brandeis, he decided to become a social worker. From 1906 to 1917 he lived and worked in St. Louis, determined to make his own way rather than depend on the family connections that would have helped him in Boston. While there he worked in the neighborhood settlements, served as chief officer of the St. Louis Juvenile Court and voluntary secretary of the National Probation Association, and founded the sociology department at Washington University, where he taught from 1906 to 1910. While in St. Louis he wrote (with Bernard Flexner) Juvenile Courts and Probation, which remained a standard in the field for many years. Ironically, in the 1960s the ACLU challenged the standards promulgated in the book, citing the need to guarantee juveniles due process.
In St. Louis Baldwin became attracted to the radical political and social movements that greatly affected his politics until the 1930s. He was a close friend of the anarchist Emma Goldman and he moved in left-wing circles. During the 1920s he joined the I.W.W., and in 1927 he visited the Soviet Union, producing from his trip a book entitled Liberty Under the Soviets, published in 1928. He broke with the Communists and other radicals only in 1939, after having been horrified by the Nazi-Soviet Pact.
Baldwin left St. Louis in 1917, when the United States entered World War I, in order to become involved with the pacifist movement. He was a member of the American Union Against Militarism (AUAM), an organization which lobbied first against U.S. entrance into the war and later for a negotiated peace. He also worked with the National Civil Liberties Bureau (NCLB), an arm of the AUAM founded to defend conscientious objectors but which quickly broadened its scope to include in its mission defense of the freedoms of speech, press, and conscience. In 1918 Baldwin was called up for military service, but as a conscientious objector he refused to go. His arrest, trial, and conviction made headlines, and he spent a year in jail, calling it “my vacation on the government.”
After his release, Baldwin spent four months in the Midwest working as an industrial laborer in several factories, but he was soon persuaded by his war-time NCLB colleagues to return to New York.
The end of the war had not meant an end to civil liberties violations, which were being fanned by the post-war “Red Scare,” and in 1920 the NCLB was transformed into the American Civil Liberties Union. Baldwin became its executive director.
Baldwin remained in this position until 1950. As executive director, he was intimately associated with two of the biggest cases with which the ACLU was involved in these years, the Scopes trial and the Sacco-Vanzetti case. In 1950 Baldwin resigned as executive director to become the ACLU's international adviser and to devote himself more fully to his work with the International League for the Rights of Man, where he served as chair for fifteen years. In that position he traveled extensively; his ports of call included the Middle East, Cuba, Venezuela, Costa Rica, Peru, Nigeria, many Western European countries, Poland, and the Soviet Union.
Baldwin became involved with international affairs in 1947, when the War Department invited him to go to Japan and South Korea to assist in developing civil liberties agencies in the infant democracies. He founded the Japan Civil Liberties Union, and the Japanese government awarded him the Order of the Rising Sun in recognition of his service to Japanese democracy. In 1948 General Lucius Clay invited Baldwin to Germany and Austria to perform a similar service in those two countries; he returned to Germany several times in subsequent years.
Baldwin was also extremely active in the study and protection of civil liberties in Puerto Rico, setting up a commission to deal with the issue in the 1960s. A close friend of Puerto Rico's Governor Luis Muñoz Marín, Baldwin traveled to Puerto Rico frequently in his later years. He often taught a seminar on constitutional rights at the University of Puerto Rico law school.
Baldwin was connected to various educational institutions throughout his life. In addition to his stint at Washington University and his recurrent seminar course at the University of Puerto Rico, he taught several courses at the New School for Social Research in New York. He served for many years on the Overseers' Visiting Committee to the Harvard Economics Department. He also received numerous honorary degrees, including ones from Brandeis, Columbia, Haverford, Washington University, and Yale. His other honors included the Presidential Medal of Freedom, awarded in 1981.
Baldwin remained active right until the end of his long life; in a series of memoranda on old age, he attributed his longevity to his constant activity. He was an avid outdoorsman who loved canoeing and bird-watching. He was a director and vice-president of the National Audubon Society and donated some of his land in New Jersey to the Audubon Society as a bird sanctuary. While in St. Louis, Baldwin adopted two boys who had come to the attention of the Juvenile Court, Oral James and Otto Stolz. James followed his adoptive father to prison as a conscientious objector during World War I, while Stolz served in the army in France. Stolz committed suicide in 1930.
After being released from prison in 1919, Baldwin married Madeleine Zabriskie Doty, a journalist and feminist who never took Baldwin's name. They divorced in 1936, although they had not lived together for over a decade, and in 1936 Baldwin married Evelyn Preston. Evie had been married before and had two small boys, Carl and Roger, who chose to take Baldwin's name long before their mother, a feminist, did. Roger and Evie had one daughter, Helen. Evie died in 1962 at the age of 64 from cancer. Helen died in 1979 at the age of 41 from cancer. Baldwin himself died of heart failure on August 26, 1981, at the age of 97.
From the guide to the Roger Nash Baldwin Papers, 1885-1981, 1911-1981, (Princeton University. Library. Dept. of Rare Books and Special Collections)
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Subjects:
- American history/20th century
- American history/Gilded Age, Populism, Progressivism
- American politics and government
- Civil rights
- Civil rights
- Civil rights
- Civil rights
- Civil rights
- Civil rights workers
- Communism
- Communism
- Communism
- Feminists
- Government consultants
- Government consultants
- Legal history
- Pacifism
- Pacifists
- Political prisoners
- Prison reformers
- Puerto Rico
- Reformers
- Sacco
- Social problems
- Social reformers
- World War, 1914-1918
- World War, 1914-1918
- World War, 1939-1945
- World War I
- Civil rights
- Civil rights
- Civil rights
- Civil rights
- Communism
- Communism
- Government consultants
- World War, 1914-1918
Occupations:
- Executive
Places:
- United States (as recorded)
- Japan (as recorded)
- United States (as recorded)
- Soviet Union (as recorded)
- Soviet Union (as recorded)
- United States (as recorded)
- United States (as recorded)
- Puerto Rico (as recorded)
- United States (as recorded)
- United States (as recorded)
- United States (as recorded)
- United States (as recorded)
- Japan (as recorded)
- 00, JP
- ,
- NJ, US
- 00, PR
- MO, US
- MA, US