John Herrmann

John Theodore Herrmann
Born January 1, 1900(1900-01-01)
Lansing, Michigan
Died April 1, 1959(1959-04-01) (aged 59)
Mexico
Spouse Josephine Herbst

John Theodore Herrmann was the person who introduced Whittaker Chambers to Alger Hiss.

Contents

Biography

He 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. They divorced and in the same year, 1934, he went to work for the New Deal administration of Franklin Roosevelt. Based at 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]

Herrmann remarried, to Ruth Tate, and served in the United States Coast Guard at New Orleans in World War II. The couple fled the country and went to Mexico, when the FBI's Hiss-investigations began. Herrmann applied in March 1949 to Mexico City College as a speech and drama major, but attended for only the Fall 1950 and Winter 1951 quarters. A photograph in the Nov. 16, 1950 issue of M.C.C.'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.

The Ware group's activities were investigated in the late 1940s by the House Un-American Activities Committee, and Herrmann was placed under surveillance and questioned many times in Mexico by the FBI. He died near the Pacific Ocean in April 1959, at the Hotel Navidad, in Barra de Navidad, Jalisco, Mexico from chronic alcoholism.

Books by John Herrmann

Notes

  1. ^ Elinor Langer, "The Secret Drawer," The Nation, May 30, 1994, p. 756
  2. ^ Elinor Langer, Josephine Herbst (Boston: Little, Brown, 1984) ISBN 978-0446328531

References