Roger Nash Baldwin and the American Civil Liberties Union
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Publication
2001-02-15 - Columbia University Press
Language
English
Word Count
152,000 words, Guess
Page Count
608 pages
Physical Format
Hardcover
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL10196144M
- ISBN-139780231119726
- ISBN-100231119720
- OCLC Control Number44406342
- OCLC Control Numberrogernashbaldwin0000cott
and 3 more
- Library of Congress Control Number00043129
- LibraryThing8212424
- Goodreads1105146
Classifications
- LCCJC599.U5B353 2000
Description
"Roger Nash Baldwin's thirty-year tenure as director of the ACLU marked the period when the modern understanding of the Bill of Rights came into being. Spearheaded by Baldwin, volunteer attorneys of the caliber of Clarence Darrow, Arthur Garfield Hays, Osmond Fraenkel, and Edward Ennis transformed the constitutional landscape. Company police forces were dismantled. Antievolutionists were discredited (thanks to the Scopes Trial). Censorship of such works as James Joyce's Ulysses was halted. The Scottsboro Boys and Sacco and Vanzetti were defended. The right of free speech for communists and Ku Klux Klansmen alike were upheld, and the foundations were laid for an end to school segregation.". "Robert Cottrell's magnificent book recaptures the accomplishements and contradictions of the complicated man at the center of these events. Driven, vain, frugal, and tempestuous, America's greatest civil libertarian was initially also a staunch defender of Communist Russia, deferred to the U.S. government over the internment of Japanese Americans, and openly admired J. Edgar Hoover and Douglas MacArthur. His personal relationships were equally complex. Spanning a hundred years from the late 1800s through Baldwin's death in 1981, this riveting biography is an eye-opening view of the development of the American left."--BOOK JACKET.
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- Roger Nash Baldwin and the American Civil Liberties Union
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