S. J. Rutgers

Sebald Justin Rutgers (1879–1961) was a Dutch Marxist theoretician and journalist who played an important role in the Left Wing section of the Socialist Party of America. He was also a construction engineer who was active in building industry in the Soviet Union.

Biography

Early years

S. J. Rutgers was born in Leiden, Netherlands on January 25, 1879. He studied from 1896 to the Polytechnical School of Delft, where he came into contact with socialism. In 1900 he graduated as a civil engineer and took a job for the municipality of Rotterdam, where he worked on the expansion of the port. At the same time, he was active from 1899 in the SDAP. From 1911 to 1915 he was director of public works in Medan, and then buyer for Indonesian companies in the United States.

Political activities

A plaque on the 1922–1925 home of Rutgers in Kemerovo, noting him as an engineer and founder of the Kuzbass Autonomous Industrial Colony

During World War I, Rutgers was a frequent contributor to the Left Wing socialist press in America. His influential articles in The International Socialist Review and other publications supported the antimilitarist Zimmerwald Left movement and helped publicize the ideas of revolutionary socialism to an American audience. Rutgers was the financial force behind the establishment of a group called the Socialist Propaganda League of America in 1915, a revolutionary socialist forerunner of the Communist Party of America.[1]

Rutgers was subsequently regarded as one of the leading theoreticians of the Left Wing of the Socialist Party of America, a tendency which emerged as the Communist Party of America after 1919.

After the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, Rutgers made his way to Soviet Russia. From 1922-1926, he lead the construction of an international workers cooperative, the Kuzbass Autonomous Industrial Colony in the Kuzbas area of Siberia. From 1926-1938 he lived alternately in the Netherlands, Vienna, and Moscow. In 1938, Rutgers left the Soviet Union.

Back in the Netherlands, Rutgers lived out his life as a respected, but non-influential member of the Communist Party of the Netherlands.

Death and legacy

Sebald Rutgers died in Amersfoort, Netherlands on June 14, 1961.

A small collection of Rutgers' papers resides at the International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam.[2]

Footnotes

  1. Maria Van Enckevort, st_martin_studies_2006.1-2.htm#_Toc155903776 "Otto Huiswoud: Political Praxis and Anti-Imperialism," Philipsburg, St. Maarten: St. Martin Studies, no. 1-2, 2006. Unpaginated in html format, see footnote 1.
  2. "Archief Sebald Justinus Rutgers finding aid," Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiendenis, Amsterdam.

Works

Further reading

External links

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