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Richard Schneirov | The Odyssey of William English Walling: Revisionism, Social Democracy, and Evolutionary Pragmatism | Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, 2.4 | The History Cooperative
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Spring, 2003
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The Odyssey of William English Walling:
Revisionism, Social Democracy, and Evolutionary Pragmatism

Richard Schneirov
Indiana State University



When all is said, [William English] Walling is perhaps the only American Socialist of standing who keeps inquiry alive, the only one who doesn't rewrite the same book every year or two. And if honest inquiry happens to produce results very damaging to the existing pretensions of the Socialist movement, that is nothing against the inquirer.
—Walter Lippmann1
 

     In the history of American socialism William English Walling occupies a special place.2 Born into a wealthy Midwestern family, Walling was educated at the University of Chicago and Harvard, but soon found a calling as a social reform activist when he learned first hand about the conditions of working people as an Illinois factory inspector and a habitué of turn-of-the-century social settlement houses and the Jewish ghetto scene. From that point forward Walling was a major influence wherever he directed his fertile mind and instinct for provoking controversy and precipitating new movements. In 1903, Walling helped found the National Women's Trade Union League and became president of its New York chapter. Six years later he cobbled together a group of anti-racist socialists to found the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People—then invited W.E.B. DuBois to become editor of its journal, The Crisis.

1

     Always more than an activist, Walling became an influential interpreter of social movements and social trends after he visited Russia along with Anna Strunsky—a Jewish socialist soon to become his wife—during the abortive 1905 revolution. Three years later, he burst onto the national scene with his book Russia's Message to the World, which depicted the Russian peasantry as the harbinger of socialism and democracy. Meanwhile, in two thoroughly researched articles in the Annals of the American Academy of the Political and Social Science Walling identified hopeful and progressive organizational trends among the craft unions of the American Federation of Labor (AFL).3

2
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