Photograph of Upton Sinclair.
Upton Sinclair

Overview

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Upton Beall Sinclair, Jr. (September 20, 1878November 25, 1968), was a prolific American author and muckraker who wrote over 90 books in many genres and was widely considered to be one of the best investigators advocating socialist views and supporting anarchist causes. He achieved considerable popularity in the first half of the 20th century. He gained particular fame for his 1906 novel The Jungle, which dealt with conditions in the U.S. meat packing industry and caused a public uproar that partly contributed to the passage of the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection Act in 1906.

He was born in Baltimore, Maryland, the son of Upton Beall Sinclair and Priscilla Harden. His father was a liquor salesman whose alcoholism shadowed his son's childhood. In 1888, the Sinclair family moved to New York City.

Sinclair married his first wife, Meta Fuller, in 1900.

An early success was the Civil War novel Manassas, written in 1903 and published a year later. Originally projected as the opening book of a trilogy, the success of The Jungle caused him to drop his plans, although he did revise Manassas decades later by "moderating some of the exuberance of the earlier version". The Jungle brought to light many major issues in America, such as poverty.

Sinclair created a socialist commune, named Helicon Hall Colony, in 1906 with proceeds from his novel The Jungle. One of those who joined was the novelist and playwright Sinclair Lewis, who worked there as a janitor.



Sinclair made several bids for office. His first was in 1906. The Socialist Party of America sponsored his candidacy for Congress in New Jersey. He lost with just over 3% of the votes.

The colony burned down in 1907, apparently from arson. After the famed fire of Helicon Hall, he moved to Arden, Delaware, where many Georgist, Socialist, and Communist "Free Thinkers" lived, including Mother Bloor's son Hamilton "Buzz" Ware. Some say that he worked in a tree house behind his home during these years.

Around 1911, Sinclair's wife ran off with the poet Harry Kemp (later known as the Dunes Poet of Provincetown, Massachusetts). Within a few years, Sinclair moved to Pasadena, California, where he founded the state's chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union in the 1920s. Sinclair went on to run unsuccessfully for Congress twice on the Socialist ticket: in 1920, for the United States House of Representatives, and in 1922, for the Senate.

Sinclair's 1928 book, Boston, created controversy by proclaiming the innocence of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, anarchists who were accused of a murder/robbery in that city. Sinclair faced what he would later call "the most difficult ethical problem of my life," when he was told in confidence by Sacco and Vanzetti's former attorney, Fred Moore, that they were guilty and how their alibis were supposedly arranged. However, in the letter revealing that discussion with Moore, Sinclair also wrote, "I had heard that Moore was using drugs. I knew that he had parted from the defense committee after the bitterest of quarrels... Moore admitted to me that the men themselves, had never admitted their guilt to him." Although the two men were ultimately executed, this episode has been used by some to claim that Sacco and Vanzetti were guilty and that Sinclair knew that when he wrote his novel. However, this account has been disputed by Sinclair biographer Greg Mitchell.

In 1934, Sinclair made his most successful run for office, this time as a Democrat. Sinclair's platform for the California gubernatorial race of 1934, known as EPIC (End Poverty in California), galvanized the support of the Democratic Party, and Sinclair gained its nomination. Conservatives in California were themselves galvanized by this, as they saw it as an attempted communist takeover of their state. They used massive political propaganda portraying Sinclair as a Communist, even as he was being portrayed by American and Soviet communists as a capitalist. Robert A. Heinlein, the science fiction author, was deeply involved in Sinclair's campaign, a point which Heinlein tried to obscure from later biographies, as Heinlein tried to keep his personal politics separate from his public image as an author.

Sinclair was defeated by Frank F. Merriam in the election, and largely abandoned EPIC and politics to return to writing. However, the race of 1934 would become known as the first race to use modern campaign techniques like motion pictures.

Of his gubernatorial bids, Sinclair remarked in 1951: "The American People will take Socialism, but they won't take the label. I certainly proved it in the case of EPIC. Running on the Socialist ticket I got 60,000 votes, and running on the slogan to 'End Poverty in California' I got 879,000. I think we simply have to recognize the fact that our enemies have succeeded in spreading the Big Lie. There is no use attacking it by a front attack, it is much better to out-flank them."



Aside from his political and social writings, Sinclair took an interest in psychic phenomena and experimented with telepathy, writing a book titled "Mental Radio", published in 1930. According to Sinclair, a 34-pound table was once levitated eight feet over his head by a young psychic in a seance.

After Sinclair's first wife left, he married Mary Craig Kimbrough (1883 - 1961), a woman who was later tested for psychic abilities. After her death, Sinclair married a third time, to Mary Elizabeth Willis (1882 - 1967). Late in life, he moved from California to Buckeye, Arizona, and then to Bound Brook, New Jersey. Sinclair died in 1968, and is buried in Rock Creek Cemetery in Washington, DC, next to his third wife, who died a year before him.

The Upton Sinclair House in Monrovia, California, is now a National Historic Landmark. The papers, photographs, and first editions of most of his books are found at the Lilly Library at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana.

Political and social activism

Sinclair believed that the main point of The Jungle was lost on the public, overshadowed by his descriptions of the unhealthy conditions in packing plants. The public health concerns dealt with in The Jungle were not as significant to Sinclair as the human tragedy lived by his main character and other workers in the plants. His main goal for the book was to demonstrate the inhumane conditions of the wage earner under capitalism, not to inspire public health reforms in how the packing was done. Indeed, Sinclair lamented the effect of his book and the public uproar that resulted: "I aimed at the public's heart, and by accident I hit it in the stomach." Still, the fame and fortune he gained from publishing The Jungle enabled him to write books on almost every issue of social injustice in the Twentieth Century. http://www.capitalcentury.com/1906.html

Sinclair is well-known for his principle: "It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it." This quotation by Sinclair has appeared in many political books, essays, articles, and other forms of media.

The Lanny Budd series

Between 1940 and 1953, Sinclair wrote the World's End series of 11 novels about Lanny Budd, the "red" son of an American arms manufacturer who was a socialite, an art expert and an acquaintance of Hermann Göring and Adolf Hitler.

They cover in sequence much of the political history of the Western world (particularly Europe and America), in the first half of the twentieth century. Almost totally forgotten today, they were all bestsellers upon publication and were published in 21 countries. The third book in the series, Dragon's Teeth, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1943.

Long out of print, the World's End or Lanny Budd series, have recently been re-issued by Simon Publications. For technical reasons, each original volume is issued in two parts, forming a 22-volume set. The series was originally published by Viking Press in New York and T. Werner Laurie in London.

Sinclair in culture

In Sinclair Lewis' novel, It Can't Happen Here, Upton Sinclair is depicted as an eccentric and a supporter of fascism out of opportunistic motives, who is rewarded for his support of an American fascist government by being made ambassador to Great Britain.

Sinclair is extensively featured in Harry Turtledove's American Empire trilogy, in which the American Socialist Party succeeds to become a major force in US politics. He wins the 1920 and 1924 presidential elections and becomes the first Socialist President of the United States, his inauguration attended by crowds of jubilant militants waving Red Flags. However, the actual policies which Turtledove attributes to him, once in power, are not particularly radical.

Sinclair is featured as one of the main characters in Chris Bachelder's satirical fictional book, U.S.!: a Novel. Sinclair is the frequently assassinated and resurrected personification of the contemporary failings of the American-left and portrayed as a Quixotic reformer attempting to stir an apathetic American public to implement Socialism in America.

Films

Upton Sinclair was the writer or producer of several films, including his involvement, in 1930-32, with Sergei Eisenstein, for Que Viva Mexico!, which turned into a debacle. Charlie Chaplin got him involved in the project.http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0801737/

His 1937 novel, The Gnomobile, was the basis of a 1967 Disney musical motion picture, The Gnome-Mobile. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0061715/.

His 1927 novel Oil! was the basis of There Will Be Blood (2007), starring Daniel Day-Lewis and Paul Dano. It was screenwritten, produced, and directed by Paul Thomas Anderson. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0469494/

Works

<div style="-moz-column-count:3; column-count:3;"> *Courtmartialed - 1898 *Saved By the Enemy - 1898 *The Fighting Squadron - 1898 *A Prisoner of Morro - 1898 *A Soldier Monk - 1898 *A Gauntlet of Fire - 1899 *Holding the Fort (story) - 1899 *A Soldier's Pledge - 1899 *Wolves of the Navy - 1899 *Springtime and Harvest - 1901 *The Journal of Arthur Stirling - 1903 *Off For West Point - 1903 *From Port to Port - 1903 *On Guard - 1903 *A Strange Cruise - 1903 *The West Point Rivals - 1903 *A West Point Treasure - 1903 *A Cadet's Honor - 1903 *Cliff, the Naval Cadet - 1903 *The Cruise of the Training Ship - 1903 *Prince Hagan - 1903 *Manassas - 1904 *A Captain of Industry - 1906 *The Jungle - 1906 *The Millennium (four-act drama) - 1907 *The Overman - 1907 *The Industrial Republic - 1907 *The Metropolis - 1908 *The Money Changers - 1908 *Samuel The Seeker - 1909 *Good Health and How We Won It - 1909 *The Machine (novel) - 1911 *King Coal - 1917 *The Profits of Religion - 1917 *Jimmie Higgins - 1919 *The Brass Check - 1919 *100% - The Story of a Patriot - 1920 *The Spy - 1920 *They Call Me Carpenter - 1922 *The Goose-step A Study of American Education - 1923 *The Millennium (novel form) - 1924 *The Goslings - 1924 *Mammonart - 1925 *Money Writes! - 1927 *Oil! - 1927 *Boston - 1928 *Mental Radio - 1930 *Roman Holiday - 1931 *The Wet Parade - 1931 *American Outpost - 1932 *Upton Sinclair presents William Fox - 1933 *The Epic Plan for California - 1934 *I, Candidate For Governor: And How I Got Licked - 1935 *Co-op: a Novel of Living Together - 1936 *No Pasaran!: A Novel of the Battle of Madrid - 1937 *The Gnomobile- 1937 *The Flivver King - 1937 *Damaged Goods novel {based on a Eugène Brieux play); basis for 1937 movie from Grand National Pictures *Little Steel - 1938 *Our Lady - 1938 *Letters to a Millionaire - 1939 *World's End - 1940 *Between Two Worlds - 1941 *Dragon's Teeth - 1942 *Wide Is the Gate - 1943 *The Presidential Agent - 1944 *Dragon Harvest - 1945 *A World to Win - 1946 *A Presidential Mission - 1947 *One Clear Call - 1948 *O Shepherd, Speak! - 1949 *Schenk Stefan! - 1951 *The Return of Lanny Budd - 1953 *The Cup of Fury - 1956 *What Didymus Did - UK 1954 / It Happened to Didymus - US 1958 *The Autobiography of Upton Sinclair - 1962 written with the help of Maeve Elizabeth Flynn III </div>
Who is Upton Sinclair connected to?
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This biography says:

...They used massive political propaganda portraying Sinclair as a Communist, even as he was being portrayed by American and Soviet communists as a capitalist. Robert A. Heinlein, the science fiction author, was deeply involved in Sinclair's campaign, a point which Heinlein tried to obscure from later biographies, as Heinlein tried to keep his personal politics separate from his public image as an author...

That biography says:

...He supported himself at several occupations, including real estate and silver mining, but for some years found money in short supply. Heinlein was active in Upton Sinclair's socialist End Poverty in California movement in the early 1930s. When Sinclair gained the Democratic nomination for governor of California in 1934, Heinlein worked actively in the unsuccessful campaign...

That biography says:

...In 1998, he won the Lannan Literary Awardhttp://www.lannan.org/lf/bios/detail/howard-zinn/ for nonfiction and the following year won the Upton Sinclair Award, which honors social activism. In 2003, Zinn was awarded the Prix des Amis du Monde Diplomatiquehttp://www.amis.monde-diplomatique.fr/article.php3?id_article=252 for the French version of his seminal work, Une histoire populaire des Etats-Unis...

That biography says:

...Active in Republican Party politics, Mayer served as the vice chairman of the Republican Party of California from 1931 to 1932 and as its state chairman between 1932 and 1933. He and Thalberg played a role in attacking muckraker and reformist Upton Sinclair's 1934 California gubernatorial bid.

That biography says:

...His pro-labor orientation owes much to his father, a socialist who supported Eugene Debs, the campaign of Upton Sinclair for governor of California in 1934, and became a supporter of President Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal...
How is Upton Sinclair connected to Henry George? Tell the world.

This biography says:

...Sinclair created a socialist commune, named Helicon Hall Colony, in 1906 with proceeds from his novel The Jungle. One of those who joined was the novelist and playwright Sinclair Lewis, who worked there as a janitor....

That biography says:

...He entered Yale in 1903 but did not receive his bachelor's degree until 1908, having taken time off to work at Helicon Hall, Upton Sinclair's cooperative-living colony near Englewood, New Jersey, and to travel to Panama. Lewis's unprepossessing looks, "fresh" country manners, and seemingly self-important loquacity did not make it any easier for him to win and keep friends at Oberlin or Yale than in Sauk Centre...

That biography says:

"Widney, another migrant who came for his health, made explicit the Anglo-Saxon racism implicit in the Southern California Mediterranean vision."(Fine 43) David Fine describes Widney as a "racist ideologue" when he reveals that a central character in Oil! a 1927 novel written by Upton Sinclair is based on Widney: "Founded by a Methodist minister and oil baron (an allusion to the racist ideologue and minister JP Widney), USC is represented as a bastion of reactionary politics."(Fine 61) (This book is being remade as the movie There Will Be Blood, scheduled for release in November 2007.)...

That biography says:

* John H. Martin, Elbert G. Hubbard: Roycroft Arts and Crafts *Upton Sinclair The Brass Check<i> (1919), chapter "The Elbert Hubbard Worm"

That biography says:

...In addition to these allegations, Mencken has been referred to as anti-Semitic and misogynistic. In a letter to Upton Sinclair published in the American Mercury, Mencken described Hitler as "hardly more than a common Ku Kluxer" (which, given his disgust with the Ku Klux Klan, is a rather nasty insult)...

That biography says:

...Mourners crowded Venice Beach, and the commotion sparked days-long media coverage of the event, fueled in part by William Randolph Hearst's Los Angeles Examiner, and even including a poem by Upton Sinclair commemorating the "tragedy." Daily updates appeared in newspapers across the country; parishioners held day-and-night seaside vigils...

That biography says:

...He was an active member of the Democratic Party and ran against the novelist Upton Sinclair for the post of Governor of California....

This biography says:

...Sinclair faced what he would later call "the most difficult ethical problem of my life," when he was told in confidence by Sacco and Vanzetti's former attorney, Fred Moore, that they were guilty and how their alibis were supposedly arranged...

That biography says:

...Their controversial trial attracted enormous international attention, with critics accusing the prosecution and presiding judge of improper conduct, and of allowing anti-Italian, anti-immigrant, and anti-anarchist sentiment to prejudice the jury. Prominent Americans such as Felix Frankfurter and Upton Sinclair publicly sided with citizen-led Sacco and Vanzetti committees in an ultimately unsuccessful opposition to the verdict...

That biography says:

Sunday was a lifelong Republican, and he espoused the mainstream political and social views of his native Midwest: individualism, competitiveness, personal discipline, and opposition to government regulation. Writers such as Upton Sinclair and John Reed attacked Sunday as a tool of big business, and poet Carl Sandburg also crudely accused him of being a money-grubbing charlatan...

That biography says:

...Sausages might incorporate rat droppings, dead rodents, or sawdust, and meat that had spoiled or meat mixed with waste materials was sometimes packed and sold (Swift once bragged that his slaughterhouses had become so sophisticated that they used "everything but the squeal"). Transgressions such as these were first documented in Upton Sinclair's novel The Jungle, the publication of which shocked the nation and led to the passing of the Federal Meat Inspection Act of 1906.

This biography says:

...Sinclair is extensively featured in Harry Turtledove's American Empire trilogy, in which the American Socialist Party succeeds to become a major force in US politics...

That biography says:

...Landis and her husband of over thirty years, Steve, claim to share their eighty-year-old home in Long Beach, California, with the ghost of writer Upton Sinclair.http://www.jillmarielandis.com/notefromjill.htm The childless couple also have a home in Hawaii...

That biography says:

...The article gave his testimony of his wartime activity in the United States. American reaction to this article was negative. As Upton Sinclair comments, “I am one of the hundred and ten million suckers who swallowed the hook of the British official propaganda, conducted by an eminent bourgeois novelist, Gilbert Parker, who was afterwards knighted for what he did to me.”

This biography says:

Upton Sinclair was the writer or producer of several films, including his involvement, in 1930-32, with Sergei Eisenstein, for Que Viva Mexico!, which turned into a debacle. Charlie Chaplin got him involved in the project.http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0801737/...

That biography says:

A last-minute reprieve came from Charlie Chaplin, who arranged for Eisenstein to meet with a sympathetic benefactor in the person of American socialist author Upton Sinclair. Sinclair's works had been accepted by and were widely read in the USSR, and were known to Eisenstein...

That biography says:

...He offered Theodore Roosevelt the presidency of the company. His last book, The People's Corporation was written with Upton Sinclair and later inspired Glen H. Taylor....

That biography says:

...In 1951 he launched a monthly tabloid named Exposé (name later changed to The Independent) designed to publish those stories and articles that others wouldn’t dare publish because they might offend subscribers or advertisers. Contributors included Upton Sinclair, Norman Mailer, George Seldes, Ted O. Thackrey, and John Steinbeck. In 1956, with $8,000 of the money he collected from libel actions against Walter Winchell, Confidential, ABC-TV, and Editor & Publisher, he began his book publishing company, Lyle Stuart Inc (which is now owned by Kensington Books)...

That biography says:

...Hearst's use of "yellow journalism" techniques in his New York Journal to whip up popular support for U.S. military adventurism in Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Philippines in 1898 was also criticized in Upton Sinclair's 1919 book, The Brass Check: A Study of American Journalism. According to Sinclair, Hearst's newspaper employees were "willing by deliberate and shameful lies, made out of whole cloth, to stir nations to enmity and drive them to murderous war." Sinclair also asserted that in the early 20th century Hearst's newspapers lied "remorselessly about radicals," excluded "the word Socialist from their columns" and obeyed "a standing order in all Hearst offices that American Socialism shall never be mentioned favorably." In addition, Sinclair charged that Hearst's "Universal News Bureau" re-wrote the news of the London morning papers in the Hearst office in New York and then fraudulently sent it out to American afternoon newspapers under the by-lines of imaginary names of non-existent "Hearst correspondents" in London, Paris, Venice, Rome, Berlin, etc...
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