Rucker, James Bernard, 1912-1992
James Bernard (Bunny) Rucker was born in Roanoke, Virginia, on April 11, 1912 to James Oscar Rucker and Nancy Gabrella Garrett. He was the third child of a family of twelve siblings. Both of his parents attended classes at black colleges, his mother at Tuskegee in Alabama and his father at Harpur in Georgia. In order to escape the virulent racism of the South, the family moved to Columbus, Ohio where Rucker's father found work in a steel mill and served as a minister in the Christian Socialist movement. Upon graduation from high school Rucker joined the Civilian Conservation Corps - one of the New Deal programs of the 1930s -- and traveled to California and Washington State working on forest conservation and road construction projects.
With the outbreak of war in Spain, Rucker joined the Abraham Lincoln Brigade (ALB) and sailed for Spain via France on the President Rooseveltin February 1937. Rucker was one of 83 known African-American volunteers who fought in the integrated International Brigades during the Spanish Civil War. He served in the conflict as a driver, transporting supplies behind enemy lines. While in Spain, Rucker met and formed a friendship with Langston Hughes, who was there as a journalist-observer. Following the withdrawal of the International Brigades, Rucker left Spain, crossing the Pyrenees into France and returning to the United States late in 1938.
Upon his return to Columbus, Rucker became a founding member of the Vanguard League, an organization dedicated to the integration of movie theaters, community swimming pools, and other public spaces. Reared in a politically engaged family, Rucker was no stranger to activism. During World War I, the senior Rucker was jailed as a conscientious objector. Late in the 1930s, Rucker's brother Oscar ran on the Communist Party ticket in Ohio for Lieutenant Governor and Rucker became an active member in the Party, assisting his brother in his bid for office.
He moved to New York, and in February 1942, was induced into the United States Army along with five of his brothers. He was assigned to the segregated 92nd Infantry Division and during his early tour of duty was stationed in the United States at Fort Bragg, NC and later Fort Huachuca, AZ. In May 1943 Rucker wed Helen Mulnick, a German-American who shared his commitment to progressive goals; civil rights leader and Harlem congressman Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. presided over the ceremony.
Rucker was stationed in Louisiana until July 1944 when he embarked for Italy on the S.S. Algonquin. He initially served in the medical division and later as part of an infantry unit at the Front. He fought in the Rome-Arno, the Northern Apennines, and the Po Valley campaigns. He was wounded in action in April 1945, sustaining serious injuries when shrapnel shattered his thigh leaving bone fragments in his abdomen. He was hospitalized overseas until August of 1945 before being transferred to Halloran Hospital, a V.A. unit on Staten Island, where he remained for an additional two years receiving treatment for his wounds. Rucker was honorably discharged from the Army in August 1947, and awarded three bronze stars and a purple heart.
By 1948 he was at work in New York City as an organizer for Henry Wallace, the Progressive Party candidate for president. In 1949 Rucker ran for City Council from the 23rd District on Vito Marcantonio's American Labor Party ticket; also sharing the ticket were Benjamin J. Davis and ALB veteran, Ralph Fasanella. Rucker took advantage of the GI bill and was admitted to Columbia University in 1952 were he gained a BA and a Master's degree in Library Science. He and his wife had one child, Naomi Gabrella, and the family moved to New Jersey where Rucker served as chief librarian for the East Orange Public Library for over 20 years. Rucker died of cancer in a V.A. hospital in East Orange, New Jersey on February 22, 1992. He was 80 years old.
Citations
BiogHist
Fascism and Jim Crow
August 12, 2017history lasts a long time
HPhoto of James Bernard Ruckerere is James Bernard “Bunny” Rucker (1912-1992), born in Roanoke, Virginia, raised in Columbus, Ohio, veteran of the Civilian Conservation Corps, the Spanish Civil War (as a volunteer with the Abraham Lincoln Brigade), and World War II (three bronze stars and a purple heart), one-time Communist Party member, later an organizer with the Progressive Party, a graduate of Columbia University thanks to the GI Bill, and then, for 20 years, the chief librarian of the East Orange Public Library in East Orange, New Jersey. Rucker made an appearance in the final pages of my college thesis, which was about African-Americans and antifascism in the 1930s. During a snowy week in January of my senior year, as the Iraq War raged on, I remember taking the train to Manhattan and making my way to the Village so that I could read Rucker’s World War II letters to his wife in NYU’s Tamiment Library, along with other materials from the Abraham Lincoln Brigade — the 2,800 or so American volunteers who traveled to Spain to fight Franco.
I suddenly remembered Rucker today because, during the violent white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, amidst tweets displaying photographs of men at the event waving Confederate and Nazi flags, I kept seeing tweets in response about how “the United States defeated Nazis in 1945 and would do it again” and so forth. Rucker played a part in that victory but his letters offered poignant reflections on the fact that the United States that defeated Nazi Germany remained itself in the thrall of its own brand of white supremacy.
I conducted my thesis research back in 2004-05 when it was not quite as easy as it is now to google people and find obscure news articles about them. All I knew about Rucker then was what I had read in his files at the archive. Perhaps other researchers know more or could find out more about him now. Certainly I cannot really vouch, at this belated date, for whatever research methods 22-year-old me was using, so maybe I missed part of the story. Nevertheless, in case his words are of any interest today, I thought I would reproduce the following paragraphs from my senior thesis in which he appeared:
During World War II the slogan of “ Double-V”—victory against fascism abroad and racism at home—became a popular expression of African-American hopes about the war’s outcome. [3] This widespread opposition to fascism, however, was not a direct descendant of 1930s antifascism. The notion of a double victory, implying a double war, is telling in this respect: in contrast, the Communist antifascism of the 1930s had constructed the struggles against European fascism and racism as part of a single struggle against “fascism,” broadly defined to include all instances of imperialist, capitalist, reactionary injustice.
However, what both the left-wing African-American antifascists of the 1930s and the mainstream African-American antifascists of the 1940s shared was a frustration with the perceived hypocrisy of the United States, fighting evils abroad while tolerating similar evils at home. The wartime letters of James Bernard Rucker illustrate the tensions between antifascism, nationalism, and racial identity. Rucker was one of the African-Americans who fought with the Abraham Lincoln Brigade in Spain, and one of the many who went on to enlist in the United States Army during World War II. He always saw the struggle for African-American freedom as inextricable from the fight against fascism. As he wrote to his wife in July 1943: “The fight for the end of Jim Crow, for Negro equality is as vital, as important, as primary to the interests of democracy as is the freedom of the Polish, French, Belgian or any other European peoples. It is one fight all over the world for the national liberation of all peoples and not just an ‘incidental’ fact that Negroes will attain freedom too.” [4]
A white American who drove ambulances in Spain with “Bunny,” as he was known, recalled years later that even then, “One always felt his bitterness toward the oppression of blacks in American society. He told us that we were all prejudiced against black people, even though we wouldn’t admit it.” [5] During World War II his general bitterness had been compounded by specific frustration …. In March 1943, Rucker, who had made application for officer training at his supervisors’ encouragement, was instead transferred to a non-combat unit stationed at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, doing maintenance and beautification work. No doubt Rucker’s race played a part in limiting his career in a still-segregated army, but his history of Communist activity, including his participation in Spain, were also likely strikes against him. [6]
From Fort Bragg Rucker wrote long and detailed letters to his wife, covering the jauntily-illustrated army-issue stationery in ink with his careful hand. He described his new duties: “I’m in charge of a truck and a crew that collects trash and garbage from the officers and Non-Com’s residential section. The mules are hell. That detail salvages tin cans, wire and scrap iron which they collect. Other trucks haul ashes. […] Another detail mows lawns. And another is for Post beautification, planting and trimming shrubbery. I’ve been on all of them except the furnace firing and the mule wagons.” [7]
This was not what Rucker had had in mind when he enlisted. He had wanted to fight fascism in Germany and Japan, the way that he had in Spain. In fact, by 1944 he had been transferred to an infantry unit and fought in Italy, where he earned three bronze stars and a purple heart. [8] But in 1943 he was still collecting trash and planting flowers. “I took personal pride in that I acted on the basis of my hatred against Hitlerism at all times and I had personal hopes that I’d be given by my own country even a limited opportunity to express that hatred through some measure of participation in our armed forces,” he confided to Helen. “This has been effectively denied me […] I’m going to try very hard in the next few days to see everything in its true perspective, but I am going to fight somehow, if only against the limitations which prevent my entering fully into the fight against the main enemy. Although that will consume a lot of energy which could be put to better use.” [9]
[3] See Plummer, Rising Wind, 85; on African-Americans and World War II generally, see Plummer, Rising Wind, Ch. 3.
[4] James Bernard Rucker to wife, July 3, 1943, in ALBA 212, Box 1, Folder 2.
[5] James Benét to Christopher Brooks, July 18, 1993. Response to survey of Veterans of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade for Brooks’ graduate thesis, in ALBA 27, Folder: “ Summaries of Survey responses: VALB, Mac-Pap, IBA; Index to African-American Volunteers,” at Tamiment Library, New York University.
[6] Rucker detailed the circumstances in a letter to his wife, April 6, 1943, ALBA 212, Box 1, Folder 2.
[7] Rucker to wife, April 6, 1943, ALBA 212, Box 1, Folder 2.
[8] Biographical information on Rucker from the Tamiment Library’s “Guide to the Papers of James Bernard Rucker, 1941-1959.”
[9] James Bernard Rucker to wife, March 12, 1943, in ALBA 212, Box 1, Folder 2.
Citations
Rucker, James Bernard. (“Bunny”); b. April 11 (12), 1912, Roanoke, Virginia; African American; High School education; CCC; Single; Driver (unemployed); CP 1935, Section lit agent; Received Passport# 366607 on February 11, 1937 which listed his address as 1617 Columbus, Ohio; Sailed February 17, 1937 aboard the President Harding; Arrived in Spain on March 17, 1937; Served with the 1st Regiment de Tren; Rank Cabo; Returned to the US on October 9, 1938 aboard the President Roosevelt; WWII US Army, 92nd Infantry Division, ETO, WIA; d. February 22, 1992.
Sources: Sail; Scope of Soviet Activity; Cadre; RGASPI Fond 545, Opis 6, Delo 567, ll. 11 (fiche); Opis 6, Delo 977, ll. 23-24; ALBA 212 James Bernard Rucker Papers; Michael Nash, “Tamiment Library Acquires Bunny Rucker Papers,” The Volunteer, Volume 26, No. 1, March 2004, pp. 10-11; L-W Tree Ancestry.977 Code A
Biography: James Bernard Rucker was born in Roanoke, Virginia, on April 11, 1912 to James Oscar Rucker and Nancy Gabrella Garrett. He was the third child of a family of twelve siblings. Both of his parents attended classes at black colleges, his mother at Tuskegee in Alabama and his father at Harpur in Georgia. In order to escape the virulent racism of the South, the family moved to Columbus, Ohio where Rucker's father found work in a steel mill and served as a minister in the Christian Socialist movement. Upon graduation from high school Rucker joined the Civilian Conservation Corps - one of the New Deal programs of the 1930s -- and traveled to California and Washington State working on forest conservation and road construction projects. With the outbreak of war in Spain, Rucker joined the Abraham Lincoln Brigade (ALB) and sailed for Spain via France on the President Roosevelt in February 1937. Rucker was one of 83 known African-American volunteers who fought in the integrated International Brigades during the Spanish Civil War. He served in the conflict as a driver, transporting supplies behind enemy lines. While in Spain, Rucker met and formed a friendship with Langston Hughes, who was there as a journalist-observer. Following the withdrawal of the International Brigades, Rucker left Spain, crossing the Pyrenees into France and returning to the United States late in 1938. Upon his return to Columbus, Rucker became a founding member of the Vanguard League, an organization dedicated to the integration of movie theaters, community swimming pools, and other public spaces. Reared in a politically engaged family, Rucker was no stranger to activism. During World War I, the senior Rucker was jailed as a conscientious objector. Late in the 1930s, Rucker's brother Oscar ran on the Communist Party ticket in Ohio for Lieutenant Governor and Rucker became an active member in the Party, assisting his brother in his bid for office. He moved to New York, and in February 1942, was induced into the United States Army along with five of his brothers. He was assigned to the segregated 92nd Infantry Division and during his early tour of duty was stationed in the United States at Fort Bragg, NC and later Fort Huachuca, AZ. In May 1943 Rucker wed Helen Mulnick, a German-American who shared his commitment to progressive goals; civil rights leader and Harlem congressman Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. presided over the ceremony. Rucker was stationed in Louisiana until July 1944 when he embarked for Italy on the Algonquin. He initially served in the medical division and later as part of an infantry unit at the Front. He fought in the Rome-Arno, the Northern Apennines, and the Po Valley campaigns. He was wounded in action in April 1945, sustaining serious injuries when shrapnel shattered his thigh leaving bone fragments in his abdomen. He was hospitalized overseas until August of 1945 before being transferred to Halloran Hospital, a V.A. unit on Staten Island, where he remained for an additional two years receiving treatment for his wounds. Rucker was honorably discharged from the Army in August 1947, and awarded three bronze stars and a purple heart. By 1948 he was at work in New York City as an organizer for Henry Wallace, the Progressive Party candidate for president. In 1949 Rucker ran for City Council from the 23rd District on Vito Marcantonio's American Labor Party ticket; also sharing the ticket were Benjamin J. Davis and ALB veteran, Ralph Fasanella. Rucker took advantage of the GI bill and was admitted to Columbia University in 1952 were he gained a BA and a Master's degree in Library Science. He and his wife had one child, Naomi Gabrella, and the family moved to New Jersey where Rucker served as chief librarian for the East Orange Public Library for over 20 years. Rucker died of cancer in a V.A. hospital in East Orange, New Jersey on February 22, 1992. He was 80 years old. - Courtesy of Tamiment Library, NYU.
Photograph: James “Bunny” Rucker in the 1950s. Photograph courtesy Rucker family.
Citations
Date: 1912-04-11 (Birth) - 1992-02-22 (Death)
Occupation: African American librarians
Occupation: African American soldiers
Occupation: Civil rights activists
Relation: memberOf Civilian Conservation Corps (U.S.)
Relation: associatedWith Davis, Benjamin J. (Benjamin Jefferson), 1903-1964
Relation: employeeOf East Orange, Free Public Library.
Relation: associatedWith Fasanella, Ralph
Relation: memberOf United States. Army. Infantry Division, 92nd
Relation: memberOf Vanguard League (Columbus, Ohio)
Relation: associatedWith Wallace, Henry A. (Henry Agard), 1888-1965
Place: Louisiana
Place: Fort Huachuca
Place: Repubblica Italiana
Place: Staten Island
Place: East Orange
Place: Fort Bragg
Place: New York City
Place: Columbus
Place: Roanoke
Place: Kingdom of Spain
Subject: African American political activists
Subject: United States. Army
Subject: Purple Heart
Unknown Source
Citations
Name Entry: Rucker, James Bernard, 1912-1992
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