Whittaker Chambers born
Jay Vivian
Chambers and also known as
David
Whittaker (April 1, 1901 – July 9, 1961), was an American
writer and editor.
A Communist
Party USA member and Soviet
spy, he
later renounced communism and became an outspoken opponent.
He is best known for his testimony about the
perjury and
espionage of
Alger Hiss.
Youth and education
He was
born as Jay Vivian Chambers in Philadelphia
, Pennsylvania
and spent his infancy in Brooklyn
, before his
family moved to Lynbrook
on Long
Island
, New
York
, in 1904, where he grew up and attended
school. He often returned to Lynbrook as an adult. His
parents were Laha Whittaker and James Chambers, an illustrator and
part of the New York-based "Decorative Designers" group, largely
students of
Howard Pyle. He grew up in a
household which he himself described as troubled by parental
separation and the long-term presence of a mentally ill
grandmother. Chambers' father had deserted the family and sent them
an allowance of $8 a week. Chambers' brother killed himself by
drinking a quart of whisky and putting his head inside an
oven.
After
graduating from South Side
High School in neighboring Rockville
Centre
in 1919, he worked at a variety of jobs before
briefly matriculating at Williams
College in 1920, then enrolling as a day student at Columbia University as a member of the
class of 1924. At Columbia his fellow students included the
poet
Louis Zukofsky,
Lionel Trilling (who later fictionalized him
as a main character in his novel
The Middle of the
Journey),
Meyer Schapiro, and
Guy Endore. In the intellectual
environment of Columbia he gained friends and respect. His
professors and fellow students found him a talented writer and
believed he might become a major poet or novelist.Historian Kathryn
Olmsted has described him as being, at this time in his life,
"brilliant, disturbed, idealistic, dysfunctional."Early in his
sophomore year, Chambers wrote a play entitled "A Play for Puppets"
for Columbia's literary magazine
The Morningside, which he
edited. The work was deemed
blasphemous by
many students and administrators, and the controversy spread to New
York City newspapers. Disheartened over the furor, Chambers decided
to leave the college in 1925.(From Columbia, Chambers also knew
Isaiah Oggins, who went into the
Soviet underground a few years earler; Chambers' wife Esther
Shemitz Chambers knew Oggins' wife Nerma Berman Oggins from the
Rand School of Social
Science, the
ILGWU, and
The World
Tomorrow.)
Personal life
In 1930 or 1931, Chambers married the young artist
Esther
Shemitz (1900-1986).
Shemitz, who had studied at the Art Students League and integrated
herself into New York
City
's intellectual circles, met Chambers at the
Passaic,
NJ
textile strike, where she had been working as a
reporter. They then underwent a stormy courtship that faced
resistance from their comrades, with Chambers having to climb
through her window at five o'clock in the morning to propose. As
well, Shemitz identified as a
pacifist and
not as a revolutionary.
The couple had a son in 1936, named John. The communist leadership
had demanded that the family
abort the
first pregnancy, but Chambers secretly refused. His decision marked
a key point in his gradual disillusionment with communism. As well,
Chambers felt conscious of his wife's Jewish ancestry given what he
saw as the leaderships'
anti-semitism. The family later had a
daughter, Ellen, which Chambers referred to as "the most miraculous
thing that had ever happened in my life."
In a letter to
J. Edgar Hoover, Chambers stated that he had
numerous
homosexual liaisons during the
1930s, starting in 1933.
He said that his frequent traveling gave him
an opportunity for 'cruising',
especially in New York
City
and Washington D.C.
He insisted that he kept these activities
secret from everyone, including his communist handlers and his
comrades given their negative attitudes towards homosexuality.
However, the spy lifestyle was what gave him the opportunities in
the first place. At the same time as this, he said that he, like
everyone in the movement, had numerous passing affairs with
women.
Chambers told the FBI that he gave these practices up in 1938 at
the same time he left the communist underground. He attributed this
change of heart to his newfound Christianity. Chambers' admissions,
given the strong social attitudes against homosexuals in 1949, led
to a hostile response.
Communism and espionage
In 1924, Chambers read
Lenin's
Soviets at
Work and was deeply affected by it. He now saw the
dysfunctional nature of his family, he would write, as "in
miniature the whole crisis of the middle class"; a malaise from
which Communism promised liberation. Chambers's biographer
Sam Tanenhaus wrote that Lenin's
authoritarianism was "precisely what attracts Chambers... He had at
last found his church." That is, he became a
Marxist. In 1925, Chambers joined the
Communist Party of the United States
(CPUSA) (then known as the
Workers Party of America) and wrote
and edited for Communist publications, including
The Daily Worker newspaper and
The New Masses magazine.
Chambers combined his literary talents with his devotion to
Communism, writing four short stories in 1931 about
proletarian hardship and revolt. One of these
was
Can You Make Out Their Voices?, described by critics
as some of the best fiction from the American Communist
movement.
Hallie Flanagan co-adapted
and produced it as a play entitled
Can You Hear Their
Voices? (see Writings by Chambers, below), staged across
America and in many other countries. Chambers also worked as a
translator during this period; among his works was the English
version of
Felix Salten's 1923 novel
Bambi, A Life in the
Woods.
Harold Ware
In 1932, Chambers was recruited to join the "Communist underground"
and began his career as a spy, working for a
GRU
apparatus headed by
Alexander
Ulanovsky (aka Ulrich). Later, his main controller in the
underground was
Josef Peters (whom CPUSA
General Secretary Earl Browder later replaced with
Rudy Baker). Chambers claimed Peters introduced
him to
Harold Ware (although he later
denied he had ever been introduced to Ware), and that he was head
of a Communist underground cell in Washington that reportedly
included:
- Henry Collins, employed
at the National
Recovery Administration and later the Agricultural Adjustment
Administration (AAA).
- Lee Pressman, assistant general counsel of the AAA.
- Alger Hiss, attorney for the AAA and
the Nye Committee; he moved to the
Department of State in 1936, where he became an increasingly
prominent figure.
- John Abt, chief of Litigation for the
AAA from 1933 to 1935, assistant general counsel of the Works Progress Administration
in 1935, chief counsel on Senator Robert La Follette, Jr.'s
LaFollette Committee from 1936
to 1937 and special assistant to the United States Attorney
General, 1937 and 1938.
- Charles Kramer,
employed at the Department of Labor
National
Labor Relations Board (NLRB).
- Nathan Witt, employed at the AAA;
later moved to the NLRB.
- George Silverman, employed at
the Railroad Retirement
Board; later worked with the Federal Coordinator of Transport,
the United States Tariff Commission and the Labor Advisory Board of
the National Recovery
Administration.
- Marion Bachrach, sister of John
Abt; office manager to Representative John Bernard of the Minnesota
Farmer-Labor Party.
- John Herrmann, author; assistant
to Harold Ware; employed at the AAA; courier and document
photographer for the Ware group; introduced Chambers to Hiss.
- Nathaniel Weyl, author; would
later defect from Communism himself and give evidence against party
members.
- Donald Hiss, brother to Alger Hiss;
employed at the Department of State.
- Victor Perlo, chief of the Aviation
Section of the War Production
Board, later joined the Office of Price Administration
Department of Commerce and the Division of Monetary Research at the
Department of Treasury.
Apart from Marion Bachrach, these people were all members of
Franklin D. Roosevelt's
New
Deal administration. Chambers worked in Washington as an
organizer among Communists in the city and as a courier between New
York and Washington for stolen documents which were delivered to
Boris Bykov, the
GRU
Illegal Rezident.
Other covert sources
Using the codename "Karl" or "Carl," Chambers served during the
mid-1930s as a courier between various covert sources and Soviet
intelligence. In addition to the Ware group mentioned above, other
sources that Chambers dealt with allegedly included:
Defection
Chambers carried on his espionage activities from 1932 until 1937
or 1938, but his faith in Communism was waning. He became
increasingly disturbed by
Joseph
Stalin's
Great Purge, which began
about 1936. He was also fearful for his own life, having noted the
murder in Switzerland of
Ignatz Reiss,
a high-ranking Soviet spy who had broken with Stalin, and the
disappearance of his friend and fellow spy
Juliet Poyntz in the United States. Poyntz had
vanished in 1937, shortly after she had visited Moscow and returned
disillusioned with the Communist cause due to the Stalinist
Purges.
In his last years as a spy for the Soviets, Chambers ignored
several orders that he travel to Moscow, worried that he might be
"purged." He also started holding back some of the documents he
collected from his sources. He planned to use these, along with
several rolls of microfilm photographs of documents, as a "life
preserver" that would convince the Soviets that they could not
afford to kill him.
In 1938, Chambers broke with Communism and took his family into
hiding, storing the "life preserver" at the home of his nephew and
his parents. Initially he had no plans for giving information on
his espionage activities to the U.S. government. His espionage
contacts were his friends, and he had no desire to inform on
them.
Early revelations
Although he broke with the Communist party in 1937 or 1938 (his
later accounts would vary) the 1939 Hitler-Stalin
non-aggression pact was reportedly
the final straw in turning Chambers against the Soviet Union. He
saw the pact as a betrayal of Communist values, and was also afraid
that the information he had been supplying to the Soviets would be
made available to Nazi Germany.
In September 1939, at the urging of anti-Communist, Russian-born
journalist,
Isaac Don Levine,
Chambers and Levine met with Assistant Secretary of State
Adolf Berle at Berle's home. Chambers was afraid
that he would be found out by Soviet agents who had penetrated the
government if he were to meet at the State Department. Levine had
told Chambers that
Walter Krivitsky
had begun informing to American and British authorities concerning
Soviet agents who held posts in both governments. Chambers agreed
to reveal what he knew on the condition of immunity from
prosecution.At the meeting, Chambers named eighteen current and
former government employees as spies or Communist sympathizers.
Many of the names he mentioned held relatively minor posts or were
already widely suspected of being Communists. Other names were more
significant and surprising, however: Alger Hiss, Donald Hiss and
Laurence Duggan, all respected midlevel officials in the State
Department;
Lauchlin Currie, a
special assistant to
Franklin
Roosevelt.
Another member of the ring was said to be
working on a top secret bombsight project at the Aberdeen
Proving Grounds
.
There was little immediate result to Chambers's confession. He
chose not to produce his envelope of evidence at this time, and
Berle thought his information was tentative, unclear and
uncorroborated. Berle took the information to the White House, but
the President dismissed it, apparently with little objection from
Berle.
Berle
notified the FBI
of
Chambers's information in March 1940. In February 1941 the
Soviet defector
Walter Krivitsky
was found dead in his hotel room. The death was ruled a suicide,
but it was widely speculated that Krivitsky had been killed by
Soviet intelligence.
Worried that the Soviets might try to kill
Chambers too, Berle again told the FBI about his interview with
Chambers, but the FBI took no immediate action in line with the
political orientation of the USA
which viewed
the potential threat from the USSR
paltry, as
compared to Nazi Germany.
Although Chambers was interviewed by the FBI in May 1942 and June
1945, it wasn't until November 1945, when
Elizabeth Bentley defected and
corroborated much of Chambers's story, that the FBI began to take
him seriously.
TIME Magazine
Meanwhile, after living in hiding for a year, Chambers had joined
the staff of
TIME Magazine in
1939. He started at the back of the magazine, reviewing books and
film with
James Agee and then
Calvin Fixx. When Fixx died in October 1942,
Wilder Hobson succeeded him as
Chambers' assistant editor in Arts & Entertainment. Other
writers working for Chambers in that section included: novelist
Nigel Dennis, future New York Times
Book Review editor
Harvey Breit, and
poets
Howard Moss and
Weldon Kees. During this time, a struggle arose
between Soviet-sympathizing and
anti-Communist staffers at
TIME.
Chambers and
Willi Schlamm led the
anti-Communist camp (and both later joined the founding editorial
board of
William F. Buckley, Jr.'s
National Review).
Theodore H. White and
Richard Lauterbach led the pro-Soviet
camp.
TIME founder
Henry R.
Luce came to support the
anti-Communist camp before the end of World War II in 1945. With
Luce's blessing, Chambers received a promotion to senior editor in
September 1943 and was made a member of
TIME's "Senior
Group", which determined editorial policy, in December.
By early 1948, Chambers had become one of the best known
writer-editors at
TIME.
First had come his scathing commentary
"The Ghosts on the Roof" (March 5, 1945) on the Yalta
Conference
(where Hiss was a major participant).
Subsequent cover-story essays profiled
Marian Anderson,
Arnold J. Toynbee,
Rebecca
West, and
Reinhold Niebuhr. The
cover story on Marion Anderson (December 30, 1946) proved so
popular that the magazine broke its rule of non-attribution in
response to readers' letters: "Most TIME cover stories are written
and edited by the regular staffs of the section in which they
appear. Certain cover stories, that present special difficulties or
call for a special literary skill, are written by Senior Editor
Whittaker Chambers." Chambers was at the height of his career when
the Hiss case broke later that year.
It was during this period after his defection that Chambers and his
family became members of Pipe Creek Meeting of the
Religious Society of Friends,
or Quakers, about twelve miles (19 km) from his Maryland
farm.
The Hiss case
On August 3, 1948, Chambers was called to testify before the
House Un-American
Activities Committee (HUAC). Here he gave the names of
individuals he said were part of the underground "Ware group" in
the late 1930s, including
Alger Hiss. He
thus once again named Hiss as a member of the Communist Party, but
did not yet make any accusations of espionage. In subsequent HUAC
sessions, Hiss testified and initially denied that he knew anyone
by the name of Chambers, but on seeing him in person (and after it
became clear that Chambers knew details about Hiss's life), said
that he had known Chambers under the name "George Crosley".
Chambers had published previously using the pseudonym George
Crosley. Hiss denied that he had ever been a Communist, however.
Since Chambers still presented no evidence, the committee had
initially been inclined to take the word of Hiss on the matter.
However, committee member
Richard
Nixon received secret information from the FBI which had led
him to pursue the issue. When it issued its report, HUAC described
Hiss's testimony as "vague and evasive."
"Red Herring"
The country quickly became divided over the Hiss-Chambers issue.
President
Truman, not pleased with
the allegation that the man who had presided over the
United Nations Charter Conference was a
Communist, dismissed the case as a "
red herring."In the atmosphere
of increasing anti-communism that would later be termed
McCarthyism, many conservatives viewed the Hiss
case as emblematic of what they saw as Democrats' laxity towards
the danger of communist infiltration and influence in the State
Department. Many liberals, in turn, saw the Hiss case as part of
the desperation of the Republican party to regain the office of
president, having been out of power for 16 years. Truman also
enacted
Executive Order 9835,
which initiated a program of loyalty reviews for federal employees
in 1947.
"Pumpkin Papers"
Hiss filed a $75,000 libel suit against Chambers on October 8,
1948. Under pressure from Hiss's lawyers, Chambers finally
retrieved his envelope of evidence and presented it to the HUAC
after they subpoenaed them. It contained four notes in Alger Hiss's
handwriting, sixty-five typewritten copies of State Department
documents and five strips of microfilm, some of which contained
photographs of State Department documents. The press came to call
these the "Pumpkin Papers" referring to the fact that Chambers had
briefly hidden the microfilm in a hollowed out pumpkin. These
documents indicated that Hiss knew Chambers long after mid 1936,
when Hiss said he had last seen "Crosley," and also that Hiss had
engaged in espionage with Chambers. Chambers explained his delay in
producing this evidence as an effort to spare an old friend from
more trouble than necessary. Until October, 1948, Chambers had
repeatedly stated that Hiss had
not engaged in espionage,
even when he testified under oath. Chambers was forced to testify
at the Hiss trials that he had committed perjury several times,
which tended to impugn Chambers's credibility.
In 1975, the Justice Department released the contents of the
"Pumpkin Papers," which showed that of the five rolls of microfilm
that Nixon had described as evidence of the "most serious series of
treasonable activities ... in the history of America,"two rolls are
photographs of State Department documents which were introduced as
evidence at the two Hiss trials in 1949 and 1950,one roll was blank
due to overexposure and the information on two other rolls
contained faintly legible copies of Navy Dept. documents relating
to such subjects as life rafts, parachutes and fire extinguishers,
information which was obtainable at the time from the open shelves
at the Bureau of Standards.
Perjury
Hiss could not be tried for espionage at this time, because the
evidence indicated the offense had occurred more than ten years
prior to that time, and the
statute of limitations for espionage
was five years. Instead, Hiss was indicted for two counts of
perjury relating to testimony he had given
before a
federal grand jury the previous
December. There he had denied giving any documents to Whittaker
Chambers, and testified he hadn't seen Chambers after mid
1936.
Hiss was tried twice for perjury. The first trial, in June 1949,
ended with the jury deadlocked eight to four for conviction. In
addition to Chambers's testimony, a government expert testified
that other papers typed on a typewriter belonging to the Hiss
family matched the secret papers produced by Chambers. An
impressive array of character witnesses appeared on behalf of Hiss:
two U. S. Supreme Court justices,
Felix Frankfurter and
Stanley Reed, former Democratic
presidential nominee
John W. Davis and future Democratic presidential
nominee
Adlai Stevenson. Chambers,
on the other hand, was attacked by Hiss's attorneys as "an enemy of
the Republic, a blasphemer of Christ, a disbeliever in God, with no
respect for matrimony or motherhood."In the second trial, Hiss's
defense produced a psychiatrist who characterized Chambers as a
"psychopathic personality" and "a pathological liar."
The second trial ended in January 1950 with Hiss found guilty on
both counts of perjury. He was sentenced to five years in
prison.
After the Hiss case
Chambers had resigned from
TIME in December 1948. In 1955,
William F. Buckley, Jr. initiated the magazine
National Review and
Chambers briefly worked there as senior editor (perhaps most
famously writing a scathing review of
Ayn
Rand's
Atlas
Shrugged).He also wrote for
Fortune and
Life magazines.
In 1952, Chambers's book
Witness was published to
widespread acclaim. The book was a combination of autobiography, an
account of his role in the Hiss case and a warning about the
dangers of Communism and liberalism.
Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. called it
one of the greatest of all American autobiographies, and
Ronald Reagan credited the book as the
inspiration behind his conversion from a New Deal Democrat to a
conservative Republican.
Witness was a bestseller for more
than a year and helped pay off Chambers' legal debts.
Death
Chambers
died of a heart attack on July 9, 1961
at his farm in Westminster, Maryland
. He had suffered from
angina since the age of thirty-eight and had
had several heart attacks previously.
His second book,
Cold Friday, was published posthumously
in 1964 with the help of Duncan Norton Taylor.
The book predicted that the fall of
Communism would start in the satellite states surrounding the Soviet Union
in Eastern
Europe.
Recent evidence
At Chambers's first testimony before HUAC, he implicated
Harry Dexter White as well as Alger Hiss
as a covert member of the Communist Party. White died shortly
thereafter, so the case did not receive the attention that the
charges against Hiss did. Transcripts of coded Soviet messages
decrypted through the
Venona project,
revealed in 1995, have added evidence regarding White's covert
involvement with Communists and Soviet intelligence. Venona
evidence regarding Alger Hiss is less conclusive, though it was
sufficient for a bipartisan
Commission on Government
Secrecy, headed by Senator
Daniel Patrick Moynihan to conclude
"The complicity of Alger Hiss of the State Department seems
settled. As does that of Harry Dexter White of the Treasury
Department."
Legacy
Chambers's book
Witness is on the reading lists of the
Heritage Foundation,
The Weekly Standard,
The Leadership Institute, and the
Russell Kirk Center. He is regularly
cited by
conservative writers
such as Heritage's president
Edwin
Feulner.
In 1984, President
Ronald Reagan
posthumously awarded Chambers the
Presidential Medal of Freedom,
for his contribution to "the century's epic struggle between
freedom and totalitarianism." In 1988, Interior Secretary
Donald P. Hodel
granted national landmark status to the Pipe Creek
Farm
. In 2001, members of the
George W. Bush
Administration held a private ceremony to commemorate the hundredth
anniversary of Chambers's birth. Speakers included William F.
Buckley Jr.
In 2007, John Chambers revealed that a library containing his
father's papers should open in 2008 on the Chambers farm in
Maryland. He indicated that the facility will be available to all
scholars and that a separate library, rather than one within an
established university, is needed to guarantee open access.
See also
Notes
- He assumed his mother's maiden name, "Whittaker", in the
1920s.
- Sam Tanenhaus, Whittaker Chambers, 1997
- Whittaker Chambers, Witness, 1952.
- Vinciguerra, Thomas. "Ghosts Rest at Whittaker Chambers Home ",
The New York Times, March 30, 1997.
Accessed September 18, 2008. "But thanks to Sam Tanenhaus's
Whittaker Chambers: A Biography (Random House), the
controversial anti-Communist crusader has been recalled as a native
son of Long Island -- Lynbrook, to be precise, -- where he grew up
and to which he returned while working as the embattled foreign
news editor of Time magazine."
- Staff. "Two Men", Time , December 20, 1948. Accessed
September 23, 2008.
- Chambers, Witness. Also Tanenhaus, Whittaker
Chambers.
- Staff. "A Sad, Solemn Sweetness", Time , November
17, 1975. Accessed September 24, 2008. "Trilling's first and only
novel, published in 1947, made his name known in an unexpected
circle—the FBI. Titled The Middle of the Journey, the book
described the intellectual torture of a Communist in the process of
quitting the party. Reviews which praised its "assurance, literacy
and intelligence" aroused the interest of FBI agents investigating
Whittaker Chambers' allegations of spying by State Department
Official Alger Hiss. Indeed Trilling had shared a class with
Chambers when both were Columbia students, and he frankly admitted
fictionalizing Chambers' story in his novel."
- The New York Times uses the year
1930 while Time and The
Milwaukee Sentinel uses the year 1931.
- Kimmage, Michael. P.88
-
[http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/hiss/chambersletter.html
"Letter to My Children" By Whittaker Chambers. From the Foreward to
Witness (Random House, 1952).
References