Ralph Roeder

Ralph Edmund LeClercq Roeder (April 7, 1890 – October 22, 1969) was an American author.

Ralph Edmund LeClercq Roeder

Biography

Ralph Edmund LeClercq Roeder was born in New York, 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.[1][2] He was educated at Harvard 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”.[3][4] On December 3, 1929 he married Russian 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.[5][6][7]

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." [8]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"[8]

Roeder spent much of his later life in Mexico City as an expatriate where he wrote and translated works of a mostly historical nature.[9] In addition to Italian, he spoke German and French fluently, and authored books in Spanish.[10] His biography of Benito Juárez won acclaim in the United States, and in 1965, earned him Mexico's highest literary award, the Orden del Águila Azteca.[3] 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.[11][12]

References

  1. Siegling, Marie Regina. (1908). Memoirs of a Dowager. (Siegling Family Papers.)
  2. Archivegrid, Memoirs of a Dowager : 1908 Dec. 20 / Mary Regina Siegling LeClercq
  3. 1 2 "Ralph Roeder" New York Times Obituary: 21 Feb 1970.
  4. http://ibdb.com/production.php?id=10509
  5. New York, New York, Marriage Indexes 1866-1937
  6. New York Times: 9 Jan 1917.
  7. The Washington Post: 7 Feb 1917.
  8. 1 2 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
  9. Anhalt, Diana. (2001). A Gathering of Fugitives: American Political Expatriates in Mexico, 1948-1965. Santa Maria, CA: Archer Books.
  10. García, Ariadna (31 March 2002). "Noticia de un exilio". El Universal (in Spanish). México.
  11. Ralph Edmund LeClercq Roeder, American Writer at Find a Grave
  12. Reports of Deaths of American Citizens Abroad, 1835-1974

Books

Sources

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