Pittman, John, 1906-1993

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John Pittman (1906-1993), an African-American communist journalist, was born in Atlanta, graduated from Morehouse College, and received an M.A. in Economics (1930) from the University of California at Berkeley, with a thesis titled "Railroads and Negro Labor." After a brief stint at Stanford Law School, and jobs as a waiter on the Southern Pacific Railroad and as secretary to art patron Noel Sullivan, in October, 1931 he founded and served as editor of the San Francisco Spokesman (a weekly newspaper for the Bay Area African American community), which by 1934 had been renamed The Spokesman, reflecting Pittman's broader ambitions and leftward political evolution. During that year's San Francisco general strike, he lent The Spokesman's printing presses to the fledgling Communist Party newspaper, the Western Worker, resulting in their destruction by right-wing vigilantes. Then Pittman went to work for the Western Worker, becoming by 1941 the editor of its successor, the (daily) People's World. In this capacity, he was a frequent guest on radio station KSAN (San Francisco) in 1941-1942. In 1945 he covered the founding conference of the United Nations, and in 1946 received his divorce from his first wife Merle Nance Pittman. In 1947 Pittman traveled to Europe as a correspondent for the Communist Party's newspapers Daily Worker (New York) and People's World, and for the Chicago Defender, a trip made possible by progressive notables including Lena Horne, Paul Jarrico, Albert Maltz, and Dalton Trumbo, whose financial support was coordinated by Los Angeles attorney Leo Gallagher. After his return he married fellow communist Margrit Adler, a German-Jewish antifascist refugee and German-American political activist. They remained in New York until 1955, when they moved to San Francisco with their two children, Carol and John Peter. There Pittman again worked for the People's World. From 1959-1961 the Pittmans were Moscow correspondents for the CPUSA press. In 1968 Pittman came to New York to become the founding co-editor of the Daily World (the result of the merger of the Party's West and East Coast weekly newspapers). In the late 1970s Pittman went to Prague as the Party's representative on the editorial board of the World Marxist Review, returning to New York in 1987. In addition to his newspaper writings, Pittman contributed some two dozen articles to the Party's monthly journal Political Affairs, and wrote Africa Calling, Isolate the Racists: The Liberation Struggle in Southern Africa(1973), and (with Margrit Pittman) Sense and Nonsense About Berlin(1962) and Peaceful Coexistence: Its Theory and Practice in the Soviet Union(1964).
Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn Guide to the Simon W. and Sophie Gerson Papers, 1925-2001 Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives
creatorOf Guide to the John Pittman Papers, circa 1880s-1987 Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives
referencedIn Guide to the Communist Party of the United States of America Oral History Collection, 1962 - 1992 Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives
referencedIn Guide to the James E. Jackson and Esther Cooper Jackson Papers, 1917-2018 Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives
referencedIn Guide to the Daily Worker and Daily World Photographs Collection, 1920-2001 Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives
referencedIn Herbert Aptheker Papers, 1842-1999, (bulk 1934-1994) Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Aptheker, Herbert, 1915-2003 person
associatedWith Bass, Charlotta A., 1880-1969 person
associatedWith Belfrage, Cedric, 1904-1990 person
associatedWith Burns, Ben. person
associatedWith Caroline Bond Day person
associatedWith Childs, Morris, 1902-1991 person
associatedWith Communist Party of the United States of America. corporateBody
associatedWith Communist Party of the United States of America. History Commission. corporateBody
associatedWith Davis, Benjamin J. (Benjamin Jefferson), 1903-1964 person
associatedWith Dennis, Eugene, 1905-1961 person
associatedWith Feuchtwanger, Lion, 1884-1958 person
associatedWith Field, Frederick V. (Frederick Vanderbilt), 1905-2000 person
associatedWith Flory, Ishmael. person
associatedWith Gallagher, Leo. person
associatedWith Gannett, Betty. person
associatedWith Gerson, Simon W. person
associatedWith Hall, Gus person
associatedWith Harrington, Oliver W. (Oliver Wendell), 1912-1995 person
associatedWith Herndon, Angelo, 1913-1997 person
associatedWith Hughes, Langston, 1902-1967 person
associatedWith Jackson, Esther Cooper person
associatedWith Jackson, James person
associatedWith Jackson, James E., 1914-2007 person
associatedWith Jerome, V. J. (Victor Jeremy), 1896-1965 person
associatedWith KSAN (Radio station : San Francisco, Calif.). corporateBody
associatedWith Licht, Mary person
associatedWith Lochard, Metz T. B., 1896-1984 person
associatedWith Mays, Benjamin E. (Benjamin Elijah), 1894-1984 person
associatedWith Morehouse College (Atlanta, Ga.). corporateBody
associatedWith Patterson, William L. (William Lorenzo), 1890-1980 person
Pittman, Margrit person
associatedWith Randolph, A. Philip (Asa Philip), 1889-1979 person
associatedWith Richmond, Al, 1913-1987 person
associatedWith Shields, Art, 1888- person
associatedWith Smith, Jessica, 1895- person
associatedWith Sullivan, Noel. person
associatedWith Wilkerson, Doxey Alphonso, 1905-1993 person
associatedWith Wilkins, Roy, 1901-1981 person
associatedWith Winston, Henry, 1911-1986 person
associatedWith Yergan, Max, 1892-1975 person
Place Name Admin Code Country
San Francisco CA US
Atlanta GA US
Subject
African American communists
African American press
African Americans
Journalism, Communist
Press, Communist
Occupation
African American journalists
Journalists
Activity

Person

Birth 1906

Death 1993

Male

Americans

Information

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