John Fabian Witt
@johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
2.5K followers 540 following 74 posts
Duffy Prof @YaleLawSch, legal history. Germantown born and bred. Fisherman, orchardist, baseball. Profile photo sitdowners park in Flint. The Radical Fund is out from Simon & Schuster 10/14.
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johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Character 7, Carlo Tresca: Italian anarchist editor, notorious gadfly and bon vivant, lover of Elizabeth Gurley Flynn. Tresca was the Garland Fund beneficiary who connected the Fund to Sacco & Vanzetti. Assassinated by unknown assailants on Fifth Avenue in 1943. @Simonandschuster.bsky.social
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Character countdown 8, Norman Thomas: Presbyterian minister, Socialist Party presidential candidate, bitter anticommunist, and advocate of industrial democracy, Served as Garland Fund director from 1922 to 1941. @Simonandschuster.bsky.social #TheRadicalFund
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Wild stories of the Fund’s core organizations needing to expel subversive CP figures in the 20s and early 30s. And also stories of great grassroots communist contributions. Both at once.
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
The G Fund was like a long popular front, from 1922 for nearly 2 decades. It is the target of anticommunist red hunters. Martin Dies and Elizabeth Dilling chief among them. It’s also the target of CPUSA efforts to bore from within and capture the Fund for the Party and for Soviet-sponsored projects.
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
My new essay describes the CIO, the UAW, and the industrial union as building American democracy out of the ashes 100 yrs ago. Where are the parallels today? @uawarchivist.bsky.social @uaw.org @lizshuler.bsky.social @aflcio.org @seiu.org @lawcha.bsky.social @aft.org www.nytimes.com/2025/10/06/o...
Opinion | How to Save the American Experiment
www.nytimes.com
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Political violence, post-pandemic one-party rule, vast economic inequality, and immigration backlash? The 2020s are the 1920s all over again--and that may show us a way out. Adapted from my book, to be published next week. www.nytimes.com/2025/10/06/o...
Opinion | How to Save the American Experiment
www.nytimes.com
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Character countdown 9, Ossian Sweet: Black physician, Detroit resident and race riot survivor, murder defendant and Clarence Darrow client; his story dramatized the Great Migration, and the Garland Fund quietly financed his defense. @SimonandSchuster.bsky.social #TheRadicalFund
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Character countdown 10, Bester William Steele: Locomotive fireman in all-Black union of railroad workers whose case carried forward the first Garland Fund-connected attack on Jim Crow to reach SCOTUS--not against schools, but against all-white unions. @Simonandschuster.bsky.social #TheRadicalFund
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Character countdown 11, Upton Sinclair: Iconoclastic author of muckraking bestseller The Jungle about the horrors of labor in Chicago's slaughter yards; critic of concentrated control of the press and cofounder of the Garland Fund in 1922. @Simonandschuster.bsky.social #TheRadicalFund
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Character countdown 12, John Scopes: High school science teacher, football coach, and evolution case defendant, whose famous 1925 trial and spectacle in Dayton, Tennessee, was dreamed up by the ACLU and financed by the Garland Fund. @Simonandschuster.bsky.social #TheRadicalFund
Reposted by John Fabian Witt
debpearlstein.bsky.social
Great convos at @plawpu.bsky.social volume 3… Huge thanks to @johnfabianwitt.bsky.social for a fantastic discussion!
kevinmkruse.bsky.social
Had the pleasure of hearing John talk about this forthcoming book today.

Really terrific — check it out!
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Countdown 13, the Scottsboro 9: young Black men convicted of rape in farcical 1931 Alabama trials. The Garland Fund financed campaigns by both sides of the bitter NAACP-Communist Party rivalry, transforming the NAACP-Fund litigation campaign in the process. @simonandschuster.bsky.social
Reposted by John Fabian Witt
kevinmkruse.bsky.social
Had the pleasure of hearing John talk about this forthcoming book today.

Really terrific — check it out!
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Countdown 13, the Scottsboro 9: young Black men convicted of rape in farcical 1931 Alabama trials. The Garland Fund financed campaigns by both sides of the bitter NAACP-Communist Party rivalry, transforming the NAACP-Fund litigation campaign in the process. @simonandschuster.bsky.social
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Wow, did not know! This must have been through one of the late 1930s grants to the United Cannery, Ag, and Packing Workers of America. Big showdown with the Southern Tenant Farmers Union. Which side was she on?!
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Countdown 13, the Scottsboro 9: young Black men convicted of rape in farcical 1931 Alabama trials. The Garland Fund financed campaigns by both sides of the bitter NAACP-Communist Party rivalry, transforming the NAACP-Fund litigation campaign in the process. @simonandschuster.bsky.social
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Character countdown 14, Joseph Schlossberg: Cloakmaker, immigrant, and Yiddish-language editor of socialist and labor publications, longtime treasurer at the Amalgamated Clothing Workers union. Member of Sidney Hillman's Garland Fund-connected world. @SimonandSchuster.bsky.social
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Countdown 15, David Saposs: Labor economist in Sidney Hillman’s braintrust at the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, chief economist at the NLRB, and technocrat of the modern industrial union. @SimonandSchuster.bsky.social #TheRadicalFund
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Countdown 16, Nicola Sacco & Bartolomeo Vanzetti: Italian immigrant anarchists made famous by trial on charges of murder at a Boston-area factory. Garland Fund support for an international defense campaign drew attention to the case until their 1927 executions. @SimonBooks
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Character countdown 17, John D. Rockefeller Jr.: Scion of Standard Oil & foil to the Garland Fund, Rockefeller's PR campaign after massacre of striking coal miners' families in Colorado inspired the Fund as an answer on behalf of working-class Americans. @simonandschuster.bsky.social #TheRadicalFund
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Character 18, Walter Reuther and brothers, Roy & Victor: Early leaders @uaw.org, participants in the world of Brookwood Labor College, and enthusiasts for its industrial democracy projects; organizers of the great sit-down strikes in Flint and Detroit. @simonandschuster.bsky.social #TheRadicalFund
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
character 19, A. Philip Randolph from Jacksonville: young Harlem socialist who rescued the Fund's race efforts by proposing a grant to the fledgling Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, turning the Fund toward organizing Black workers for the mass production economy. @simonandschuster.bsky.social
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Character countdown 20, Walter Nelles: New York lawyer, counsel to the Garland Fund and co-designer of influential project on affirmative legal action for unions in labor disputes; later faculty member at YLS. @simonandschuster.bsky.social #TheRadicalFund
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Character countdown 21, Scott Nearing: Left-wing economist fired by Wharton, internal critic on the Garland Fund board, and counterculture homesteader, not to mention star in Warren Beatty's 1981 film REDS. @simonandschuster.bsky.social #TheRadicalFund
johnfabianwitt.bsky.social
Character countdown 22, Pauli Murray: Lawyer, writer, and storied civil rights activist accomplished in the practice of "confrontation by typewriter”; student at the Garland Fund's Brookwood Labor College. @simonandschuster.bsky.social #TheRadicalFund