Ralph Roeder

Ralph Edmund LeClercq Roeder (April 7, 1890 – October 22, 1969) was an American writer. He wrote the first major work in English on Mexican President, Benito Juárez.[1]

Ralph Edmund LeClercq Roeder

Biography

Ralph Edmund LeClercq Roeder was born in New York City, a son of German immigrant George Roeder and Ida Carolina LeClercq of Charleston, South Carolina. His maternal grandmother was the American composer Marie Regina Siegling LeClercq.[2][3] He was educated at Harvard University and at Columbia University. In the 1920s he was Rome correspondent for the Chicago Daily News. He contributed articles to The Arts and to Theater Arts Monthly and had a brief career as an actor on Broadway, playing among other roles, Orestes in Sophocles's "Electra".[4][5] On December 3, 1929, he married Russian Empire born Fania Esiah Mindell of New York, a theater set and costume designer, artist, and feminist who, together with Margaret Sanger and her sister Ethel Byrne, had been a co-defendant in the Brownsville Clinic Trials of 1917.[6][7][8]

Well before meeting Fania, Roeder had shown interest in leftist causes. As a freshly minted college graduate Roeder had traveled to Mexico during the Revolution which began in 1910. He had sided with Pancho Villa as a volunteer, and at one point was captured "by Mexican counter-revolutionaries and was stood against a wall to be shot. For some reason the order to fire was not given and he survived."[9] During the 1930s Roeder researched and wrote three books on Italian history, but by the late 1940s he again turned his interest to Mexico. During the 1950s with McCarthyism on the rise at home, the Roeders moved to Mexico City. Here "Ralph continued work he had begun in New York for the Exiled Writers Committee"[9]

Roeder spent much of his later life in Mexico City as an expatriate where he wrote and translated works of a mostly historical nature.[10] In addition to Italian, he spoke German and French fluently, and authored books in Spanish.[11]

His biography of Benito Juárez was reviewed in scholarly journals in the U.S. In Hispanic American Historical Review historian Walter V. Scholes praises Roeder's book for bringing a major biography of Juárez to an English-language readership, but faults it for its complete lack of scholarly citations, the hallmark of verifiability of information. Scholes also finds Roeder's lack of in-depth coverage of key problems in Mexico during the nineteenth-century and uneven coverage of Juárez's life.[12] A review in The Catholic Historical Review by Robert J. Welch likewise faults Roeder for his lack of citations. "It is almost inconceivable that a full-length treatment, posing as a dependable history of a controversial figure and period, would have completely ignored so fundamental a requirement."[13]

In 1965, Roeder was given Mexico's highest literary award, the Orden del Águila Azteca.[4] He died in Mexico City in 1969 of a gunshot wound to the head in an apparent suicide, and is buried at the city's Panteón de Dolores.[14]

Works

  • Savanarola: A Study in Conscience, Brentano's, New York 1930.
  • The Man of the Renaissance: Four Lawgivers, Savonarola, Machiavelli, Castiglione, Aretino, The Viking Press, 1933.
  • Catherine de Medici and the Lost Revolution, The Viking Press, 1937.
  • Juárez and His México, a Biographical History – Complete in Two Volumes, The Viking Press, 1947.
  • Hacia el México moderno: Porfirio Diaz, 1973.

References

  1. ^ Ralph Roeder, Juárez and His México, a Biographical History – Complete in Two Volumes, The Viking Press, 1947.
  2. ^ Siegling, Marie Regina. (1908). Memoirs of a Dowager. (Siegling Family Papers.)
  3. ^ Archivegrid, Memoirs of a Dowager : 1908 Dec. 20 / Mary Regina Siegling LeClercq
  4. ^ a b "Ralph Roeder" New York Times Obituary: February 21, 1970.
  5. ^ "Electra | IBDB: The official source for Broadway Information". ibdb.com. Archived from the original on November 4, 2012.
  6. ^ New York City, Marriage Indexes 1866–1937
  7. ^ New York Times: January 9, 1917.
  8. ^ The Washington Post: February 7, 1917.
  9. ^ a b Folsom, Franklin. Days of Anger, Days of Hope A Memoir of the League of American Writers, 1937–1942. Niwot, Colo: University Press of Colorado, 1994. pp 255–259
  10. ^ Anhalt, Diana. (2001). A Gathering of Fugitives: American Political Expatriates in Mexico, 1948–1965. Santa Maria, CA: Archer Books.
  11. ^ García, Ariadna (March 31, 2002). "Noticia de un exilio". El Universal (in Spanish). México.
  12. ^ Walter V. Scholes, "Review of Juarez and His Mexico by Ralph Roeder. Hispanic American Historical Review vol. 28. No. 2 (May 1948), pp. 229–230.
  13. ^ Robert J. Welch, "Review of Juárez and His Mexico by Ralph Roeder. The Catholic Historical Review, vol 34, no. 3 (Oct. 1948), p. 351.
  14. ^ Reports of Deaths of American Citizens Abroad, 1835–1974. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), Washington, D.C.; General Records of the Department of State; Record Group: RG59-Entry 5166; Box Number: 75; Box Description: 1969 RA – SCHR.

Sources

  • Introduction of the book, Ralph Roeder Juárez y Su México, second edition.

External links

  • Martín Quirarte, RALPH ROEDER Y SU OBRA PÓSTUMA. [1] (A Spanish language biography of Roeder).
  • Street in Mexico City named for him: Calle: RALPH ROEDER Colonia: IZTACCIHUATL. Delegación/Municipio: BENITO JUAREZ: Código Postal: 3520: Ciudad: MEXICO, D.F.
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