Horace B. Davis
Horace Bancroft Davis (August 15, 1898[1]- June 28, 1999) was an American left-wing journalist and academic.[2] Davis was born in 1898 in Newport, Rhode Island and began studied at Harvard University prior to the outbreak of World War I. He refused to serve in the war and obtained conscientious objector status. Instead of fighting, he left Harvard and volunteered with the recently formed American Friends Service Committee. Returning to Harvard, he graduated with a B.A. in 1921 and went to work as a steelworker. Before returning to receive his Ph.D. Davis taught at Southwestern College in Memphis, Tennessee from 1929-1930 and then wrote for the labor news agency Federated Press before returning to school. In 1934, he graduated from Columbia University with a Ph.D.
Leaving Columbia for Brazil, Davis moved to Sao Paulo from 1933-1934 and taught at the Fundação Escola de Sociologia e Política, which later became part of the University of Sao Paulo before returning to the United States. He joined the faculty at Simmons College in Boston from 1936-1941. During World War II, he conducted research on behalf of the Congress of Industrial Organizations. In 1947, Davis was hired as an associate professor of economics at University of Missouri–Kansas City. Six years later in 1953, the anti-communist House Un-American Activities Committee subpoenaed Davis to testify because of suspected membership in Communist Party USA.[3] He refused to testify and cited his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. However, he was then fired by UMKC and blacklisted.[4] From 1955 to 1957, he began teaching at historically-black Benedict College in South Carolina. In 1963, Davis was hired at the newly-founded University of Guyana, where he stayed until 1966 and eventually became a dean.[5] He retired from academia in 1968 but continued publishing work until 1978.
Davis' son, Horace Chandler Davis, was born in 1926 and became a leading mathematician. Like his father, he also refused to testify when called before HUAC and spent six months in prison.[6]
He died shortly before his 101st birthday on June 28, 1999 at Illinois Masonic Medical Center.
Publications[5]
- The Condition of Labor in the American Iron and Steel Industry [i.e., Labor and Steel] (based on the author's Columbia University Ph.D. thesis), International Publishers, 1933.
- Labor and Steel, International Publishers, 1933.
- NRA: Fascismo e communismo, Edicoes Nosso Livro, 1934.
- Shoes: The Workers and the Industry, International Publishers, 1940.
- Nationalism & Socialism: Marxist and Labor Theories of Nationalism to 1917, Monthly Review, 1967.
- (Editor and translator) Rosa Luxemburg, The National Question: Selected Writings, Monthly Review Press, 1976.
- Towards a Marxist Theory of Nationalism, Monthly Review Press, 1978.
References
- Leach, Josiah Granville; Penrose, George Hoffman (1903). History of the Penrose Family of Philadelphia. private circulation. pp. 79–. Retrieved 19 May 2017.
- "Horace B. Davis". Chicago Tribune. July 3, 1999. Retrieved 19 May 2017.
- King, J. E. (2012-01-01). The Elgar Companion to Post Keynesian Economics. Edward Elgar Publishing. pp. 571–. ISBN 9781781002438. Retrieved 19 May 2017.
- Bold, Christine (2006). Writers, Plumbers, and Anarchists: The WPA Writers' Project in Massachusetts. Univ of Massachusetts Press. pp. 91–. ISBN 9781558495395. Retrieved 19 May 2017.
- "Horace B(ancroft) Davis." Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2001. Literature Resource Center, http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?p=LitRC&sw=w&u=maine_orono&v=2.1&id=GALE%7CH1000023636&it=r&asid=3f854f8365888e5cffcde15575b8bbe7. Accessed 18 May 2017.
- Share1163 Hedges, Chris. "The Origin of America’s Intellectual Vacuum" Truth-Out.org November 15, 2010"It wasn't a cinch I would be in the Communist Party, but in fact I was, starting in 1943 and then resigning soon after on instructions from the party because I was in the military service. This was part of the coexistence of the Communist Party with Roosevelt and the military. It would not disrupt things during the war. When I got out of the Navy I rejoined the Communist Party, but that lapsed in June of 1953. I never got back in touch with them. At the time I was subpoenaed I was technically an ex-Communist, but I did not feel I had left the movement and in some sense I never did."