John Herrmann

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John Herrmann
Born John Theodore Herrmann
(1900-11-09)November 9, 1900
Lansing, Michigan
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Mexico
Cause of death Heart attack
Resting place Mt. Hope Cemetery, Lansing, MI
Education George Washington University
University of Michigan
University of Munich
Mexico City College
Occupation Writer
Spouse(s) Josephine Herbst, Ruth Tate
Children John Theodore Ryder Herrmann

John Theodore Herrmann was a writer in the 1920s and 1930s and is alleged to have introduced Whittaker Chambers to Alger Hiss.

Biography

Herrmann was born in Lansing, Michigan in 1900. He lived in Paris in the 1920s, as part of its famous expatriate American writers' circle, when he met his first wife, Josephine Herbst in 1924. Herbst enjoyed more success as a writer than Herrmann; the couple lived a few years in rural Pennsylvania, and were friends with Katherine Anne Porter, Ernest Hemingway, John Dos Passos, William Carlos Williams, and others.

Herrmann's first novel, What Happens, was original published in Paris by Robert McAlmon's Contact Editions press. Copies were seized by U.S. Customs upon their arrival in the United States on the charge of violating the 1922 Tariff Act, which banned the import of obscene materials from foreign countries. Herrmann fought the charge in a jury trial in New York City in October 1927 but ultimately lost. Despite supporters such as Genevieve Taggard, H.L. Mencken, and Katharine Anne Porter, the jury responded with a negative verdict, and the judge ordered the seized copies destroyed.

In 1932, Herrmann's short novel, "The Big Short Trip," tied with Thomas Wolfe for the Scribner's Magazine short novel prize.

In 1934, he went to work with Harold Ware and his organization Farm Research, Inc., which worked with the Agricultural Adjustment Administration. Herrmann soon was a part of the Ware group, a secret apparatus of the CPUSA and Comintern in Washington, D.C., which supplied classified information to Soviet intelligence. From early 1934 until the summer of 1935, Herrmann was a paid courier for the CPUSA, delivering material emanating from the secret cells of sympathetic government employees being cultivated by Hal Ware to New York. Herrmann also was the person who introduced Whittaker Chambers to Alger Hiss.[1][2]

In 1940, Herrmann divorced Herbst and married Ruth Tate. He served in the United States Coast Guard, enlisting in New Orleans, in World War II. The couple fled the country and went to Mexico, when the FBI's Hiss-investigations began. He was placed under surveillance and questioned many times in Mexico by the FBI.

Herrmann applied in March 1949 to Mexico City College (MCC) as a speech and drama major but attended for only the Fall 1950 and Winter 1951 quarters. A photograph in the November 16, 1950, issue of MCC's student paper, the Collegian, shows Earl Sennett speaking to twelve students in his "Studio Stages" drama group; among them are Frank Jeffries, Alice Hartman, and John Herrmann. During his time at MCC, Herrmann was also, according to James W. Grauerholz's 2002 investigation, in an apartment located at 122 Monterrey hours before William Burroughs shot and killed his wife Joan Vollmer Burroughs.

He died near the Pacific Ocean in April 1959, at the Hotel Navidad, in Barra de Navidad, Jalisco, Mexico from a heart attack.

Books by John Herrmann

  • What Happens. Contact Editions, Paris 1926 (reissued 2015 by Hastings College Press, with new introduction by Sara Kosiba)
  • Summer is Ended (1932)
  • The Salesman (1939)

Other Publications by John Herrmann

"The Big Short Trip." Scribner's Magazine August 1932, p. 65-69, 113-128.

Notes

  1. Elinor Langer, "The Secret Drawer," The Nation, May 30, 1994, p. 756
  2. Elinor Langer, Josephine Herbst (Boston: Little, Brown, 1984) ISBN 978-0-446-32853-1

References

  • "Bars Book Experts at Obscenity Trial." New York Times 4 October 1927: 10.
  • "Book About Youth is Found Obscene." New York Times 5 October 1927: 28.
  • "John Herrmann Dies." New York Times 19 May 1959: 33.
  • "Herrmann Rites Set." Lansing State Journal 17 April 1959: 31.
  • Stephen Koch, Double Lives: Spies and Writers in the Secret Soviet War of Ideas Against the West (Free Press; 1994) ISBN 0-02-918730-3
  • The death of Joan Vollmer Burroughs
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