The American League was formed at the US Congress Against War, a gathering of activists arranged by the CPUSA in 1933.[1]
The American League Against War and Fascism, attempted to attract as broad a following as possible and included members of the Roosevelt administration.[2] By 1937, its Communist Party members boasted that 30 percent of the entire organized labor movement was represented in the League, and labor delegates occupied 413 of the 1416 seats at the national convention. African-Americans were also well represented in both the leadership and rank-and-file delegates.[citation needed]
In 1937 the organization changed its name to the American League for Peace and Democracy. Helen Silvermaster was associated with this group.[3]
At its peak in 1939, the American League claimed over 20,000 dues paying members, and 1,023 affiliated organizations, bringing its combined membership to around 7 million members.[4]
Dissolution
The American League dissolved after the 1939 signing of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, a non-aggression treaty between Josef Stalin's Soviet Union and Adolf Hitler's Nazi Germany that ended the CPUSA's anti-Hitler activity until the 1941 Nazi invasion of the USSR, discouraged its non-communist members.[5] Its communist elements then influenced the founding of the American Peace Mobilization front to lobby against American help for the Allies, particular the United Kingdom under Prime Minister Winston Churchill, in their struggle against Hitler in the opening years of World War II.
The League produced a monthly broadsheet entitled FIGHT Against War and Fascism,[8] published in New York City under the editorship of Liston M. Oak.[9]
^Vials, Chris (2014). Haunted by Hitler: liberals, the left, and the fight against fascism in the United States. Amherst Boston: University of Massachusetts Press. pp. 48–49. ISBN978-1-62534-130-3.
^Ceplair, Larry (1987). Under the shadow of war: fascism, anti-facism and marxists 1918 - 1939. New York: Columbia Univ. Press. ISBN978-0-231-06532-0.
^Harvey Klehr, John Earl Haynes, and Fridrikh Igorevich Firsov, The Secret World of American Communism. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1995, pgs. 10-11