Ad Ruth vitae salvatorem

Had it not been for the race problem early thrust upon me and enveloping me, I should have probably been an unquestioning worshipper at the shrine of the established social order into which I was born. But just that part of this order which seemed to most of my fellows nearest perfection seemed to me most inequitable and wrong; and starting from that critique, I gradually, as the years went by, found other things to question in my environment.

—W.E.B. Du Bois, The Autobiography:

A Soliloquy on Viewing My Life from

the Last Decade of Its First Century

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Fifteen years ago, I began the reading, researching, interviewing, and writing that produced in the winter of 1993-94 a biography of fifty-one years in the hfe of Wilham Edward Burghardt Du Bois. The assistance of several hundred people on four continents and the cooperation of a dozen institutions in this country and abroad have enabled me to complete the remaining extraordinary forty-four years from 1919 to 1963. Few twentieth-century Americans' lives were as productive, multiple, controversial, and emblematic as Du Bois's —and almost none as long. Volume one —1868 to 1919 —was rather ambitiously subtitled Biography of a Race. Ultimately, prudence dictated that I not call volume two the biography of a century, although that desire still resonates in the chosen subtitle. Moreover, because of the generosity of many, the insightftilness of some, and the labors of more than a few, this final effort is, in a real sense, a biography by committee. But I have spoken to and corresponded with so many people in so many places over so many years that, inescapably, there will be omissions from the following list of names. My remorse in failing to thank them is as profound as is my gratitude to those who are acknowledged (posthumously in several cases) below.

To one person above all others — except my wife —I owe an incommensurable debt: Herbert Aptheker. Although his views of my subject differ in significant ways from my own, without Professor Aptheker's editions of the selected correspondence, periodical literature. Crisis editorials, newspaper columns, and invaluable introductions to the complete run of the published monographs of W.E.B. Du Bois, any attempt to write a comprehensive life and times would have required richer resources and greater endurance than this biographer cares to contemplate.

Others in the United States to whom a prioritized debt of gratitude is owed are those who read portions of the manuscript, shared their own particularly

Xll • ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

pertinent scholarship, or called attention to significant persons, matters, or sources I might otherwise not have discovered.

At Rutgers University, my colleagues Paul Clemens, William Gillette, and Donald Roden read and critiqued chapters; as did John Hope Franklin at Duke University, Irwin Gellman at Chapman University, Paula Giddings at Duke (who indulged endless therapeutic telephone calls), Robert Hill at UCLA, Kenneth Janken at University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, August Meier (emeritus) Kent State University, Wilson J. Moses at Pennsylvania State University, Arnold Rampersad at Stanford University, and Claudia Tate at Princeton University.

Those who volunteered information and responded to pleas were Rae Alexander-Minter at Rutgers, David Anthony III at UC Santa Cruz, Edward Beliaev at the Harriman Institute (Columbia), Esme Bhan at Howard University, Leonard Bethel at Rutgers, Faith Berry at UC Santa Barbara, John Bracey at University of Massachusetts-Amherst, Marcus Bruce at Bates College, A'Lelia Bundles at NBC, Jack Cargill at Rutgers, Johnnetta Cole at Spelman College, Leslie Collins at Fisk University, Maceo Dailey at University of Texas-El Paso, Martin Duberman at CUNY, Gabrielle Edgecomb (deceased) of Washington, D.C., Vanessa Gamble at University of Wisconsin-Madison, Marvin Gettleman (emeritus) Polytechnic University, Justin Hart at Rutgers, Walter Hill at the National Archives, Allen Howard at Rutgers, Spencer Jourdain at MetaStar, Inc., Kiyofijmi Tsubaki at Tuda College (Japan), Peter Lau at Rutgers, Wilson J. Moses at Pennsylvania State University, Kathy Nicastro at the National Archives, Richard Newman at Harvard, Brenda Gayle Plummer at University of Wisconsin-Madison, Paul Robeson, Jr., of Brooklyn, Barbara Savage at University of Pennsylvania, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. (emeritus), CUNT, Victor Schuster at Einstein College of Medicine, Ann Shockley at Fisk, William Strickland at University of Massachusetts-Amherst, Jerry Thornberry at the Gilman School, Richard Thornell at Howard University Law School, Ernestein Walker (emer-ita), Morgan State University, Carolyn Wedin at University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, Deborah Gray White at Rutgers, Sondra K. Wilson of New York City, Du Bois Williams at Xavier University, C. Vann Woodward (deceased) at Yale.

I wish to thank those who especially facilitated the progress of this biography in Western Europe. Berlin (former German Democratic Republic): Ollie Harrington (deceased); Kay Panke (deceased); and Irene Runge. Brussels: Robin and Simon Hinson-Jones, Victor and Mady Loewenstein. London: Paul Bremen; Cameron Duodu; Heywot (Gretta) and Yawand-Wossen Mangasha. Paris: Barbara Chase-Riboud, Ruth Lazarus.

I extend the same appreciation to those who were of assistance in the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Kiev: Igor Semida. Moscow: Alexei

I

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS • Xlll

Andreyev, Carl Bloice; Lili Golden; Ovid and Alia Bobricheva Gorchakov; Alia and Alexei Greehurkin; Rhobert Ivanov; Elena Kunga; Tatiana Kudriavtseva; Frieda Lurie; Yuri Surovtsev; and Afanasy Vesilitsky. St. Petersburg: Ina Smir-nova. Tashkent: Ulugbek Eshtaev.

In Accra, Ghana, Du Bois's final resting place, the following individuals were exceptionally cooperative: Adu Boahen; Robert (deceased) and Sara Lee; Owusu of Hertz; Efija Sutherland (deceased); J. O. Vanderpuye.

Of my excellent research assistants, Charles Cooney, Kimn Carlton-Smith, Florice Kovan, and Betty Gubert, it could be said that they performed the difficult on the appointed day, then took an extra day to do the impossible. The death of two computers might have spelled the death of the Du Bois biography along with its author, but for the wizardry of Robert De Mariano. For the efficient, timely transcription of some 150 taped interviews, some in poor quality and several in Russian, I thank Carol Grant of Pro-Typist. I thank Robert Arons for his fascinating limousine-service lectures.

In the final phase of preparation, six persons labored indefatigably as a team for three weeks of eight-hour days decoding, checking, and supplementing where necessary an ocean of end notes in order to make it possible for the author to deliver the manuscript in time to appear before the end of the twentieth century. My gratitude to Matthew Guterl, my former graduate student and now fellow author (who provided close reading of several chapters); Khalil Muhammad and William Jelani Cobb, my graduate students and authors to be; David Brighouse, my model honors student now a graduate scholar; and Betty Gubert and Alice Adamczyk, librarians extraordinaire, formerly of the Schom-burg Center for Research in Black Culture, is everlasting.

Edward Gordon arranged a stimulating year at the City University of New York's Graduate Center during the academic year 1994-95 with an obligation to deliver several public lectures, but no teaching. Kenneth Wheeler, former senior vice president for academic affairs, and Richard Foley, former arts and sciences dean of Rutgers, good and true fi-iends, encouraged this project through the years with sage advice, good conversation, and the provision of generous resources. I was extremely fortunate to receive a five-year fellowship fi-om the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation in June 1999. It could not have come at a more propitious moment.

The papers of W.E.B. Du Bois are housed at the W.E.B. Du Bois Library, University of Massachusetts-Amherst. I am profoundly grateful to Linda Seidman, head of special collections, and her predecessor, John Kendall, for their unstinting assistance through the years. The following libraries and repositories were also indispensable for volume two; their staffs were superb: American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters; Special Collections, Robert W. Woodruff Library, Clark Adanta University; Du Sable Museum, Chicago;

XIV • ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Special Collections, Fisk University Library; Houghton Library, Harvard University; Records Management Division, Federal Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Department of Justice; The Lenin Library, Moscow; Manuscript Division, Library of Congress; Marcus Garvey Papers, African Studies Center, UCLA; Moorland-Spingarn Research Center, Howard University; Rare Books and Manuscripts Division, New York Public Library; Rockefeller Archive Center, Pocantico Hills, North Tarrytown, New York; Special Collections and University Archives, Archibald S. Alexander Library, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey; The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, NYPL; Tami-ment Library, New York University; Harry S. Truman Library, Independence, Missouri; Special Collections, Walter P. Reuther Library, Wayne State University; State Historical Society of Wisconsin;

But for the companionship and generosity of friends and acquaintances sensitive to the pressures of writing, the ordeal of completing this biography would have been far greater than it was. Ruth and I offer affectionate thanks to Mary Belfrage and Sophie Lerman, Jean-Claude Boffard and Marie Laure, Lisle Carter and Jane Livingston, Paula Cooper, Pat Ellis, Lois and Alan Fern, Sheila Goldberg-Astori, Francine Du Plessix and Cleve Gray, Amanda and Lawrence Hobart, Jacqueline Hoefer, Dolores Lewis, Joan and Roderick Nordell, Eloise and John Norton, Alida O'Loughlin and Washington Ledesma, Susan and Fred Plum, Morris Polan, Carol Ann Preece, Helen Quigless, Victor Schuster and Sandra Masur, Kaye and Ronald Springwater, Isabel and Donald Stewart, Judy and Gordon Street, Carolyn and Richard Thornell, Lee and Stewart Udall, Ann and Gordon Winchester.

My editor, Jack Macrae, who was there with steady cheer from the beginning, cajoled and excised, suggested and objected, and, until the last chapter, was the soul of patience. Thanks also to Carl Brandt, my agent, the very voice of reason. The other editor of this biography, my wife, Ruth Ann Stewart, has improved W.E.B. Du Bois by endless rereadings and suggestions, and she has also continually improved the biographer. I thank her as well for saving the quality of our lives. Allison, Jason, and Allegra, thank you for the grown-up patience required of you as all of you and this book were growing up.

DAVID LEVERING LEWIS

New York, May 2^, 2000