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Andrew Rothstein
Andrew Rothstein (26 September 1898 – 22 September 1994) was a longtime member of the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB), and one of the public faces of the British Communist movement. He served in the CPGB's political apparatus, worked as the London correspondent for the TASS news agency, and wrote numerous books and pamphlets in support of the Soviet Union.
Andrew Rothstein was born in London in 1898 to Russian Jewish political emigrants. His life was always tinged by the identity of his father, Soviet diplomat Theodore Rothstein (1871–1953), who had been forced to flee Tsarist Russia for political reasons. Theodore settled in England in 1890 and remained there for the next 30 years, before moving back to the Soviet Union.
Andrew grew up in an ardently communist household, visited by Lenin during his pre-revolution stays in London, such as in 1905. After winning a London County Council scholarship, Andrew studied history at Balliol College, Oxford. In World War I he served in the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry and Hampshire Yeomanry. He was a corporal in 1919 when he learned his unit was being sent to Archangel to aid the Allied intervention against the new Soviet government. Rothstein led a mutiny that refused to go to Archangel. It was the first of many British Army rebellions and mutinies—involving up to 30,000 troops at its height—in opposition to the intervention, the history of which Rothstein wrote about in Soldiers' Strikes of 1919.
He returned to Balliol and completed his history degree in 1921. The previous year he had been a founding member of the CPGB, and was actively recruiting others to the Party, including Tom Wintringham. When Rothstein applied for postgraduate research at Oxford, he was denied an Army grant and thus could not afford to continue his studies:
A stern letter from the Master and Fellows at Balliol announced that he must leave immediately. Twenty years later...a former junior dean from those days...told him that the Foreign Secretary Lord Curzon had personally intervened in his case. Rothstein recalled: "He told me a letter was read out from Curzon, which said that I was a very dangerous Communist and must not be allowed to stay."
Lord Curzon, who was Chancellor of Oxford University at the time, was reportedly angry that Rothstein had taken other undergraduates on a trip to Soviet Russia.
In 1921, Rothstein became the London correspondent of ROSTA (later TASS), the state-owned Soviet news agency. He remained in that post until 1945. He sometimes used the political pseudonym "C. M. Roebuck", both as an author, and in his role on the CPGB's National Executive Committee. From 1929 to 1931, Rothstein was deputy head of the Anglo-American Bureau of the Moscow-based Red International of Labour Unions. In the late 1920s he was on the first Executive Committee of the Society for Cultural Relations Between the Peoples of the British Commonwealth and the USSR.
Rothstein wrote frequently on the economy, history, institutions, and foreign relations of the Soviet Union. His works included The Soviet Constitution (1923), Soviet Peace Policy: A Barrier to War (1935), Workers in the Soviet Union (1942), and Man and Plan in the Soviet Economy (1948). From 1943 to 1950, he was president of the Foreign Press Association. After World War II, he was London correspondent of the Czechoslovak trade union paper, Práce, a position he held until 1970.
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Andrew Rothstein
Andrew Rothstein (26 September 1898 – 22 September 1994) was a longtime member of the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB), and one of the public faces of the British Communist movement. He served in the CPGB's political apparatus, worked as the London correspondent for the TASS news agency, and wrote numerous books and pamphlets in support of the Soviet Union.
Andrew Rothstein was born in London in 1898 to Russian Jewish political emigrants. His life was always tinged by the identity of his father, Soviet diplomat Theodore Rothstein (1871–1953), who had been forced to flee Tsarist Russia for political reasons. Theodore settled in England in 1890 and remained there for the next 30 years, before moving back to the Soviet Union.
Andrew grew up in an ardently communist household, visited by Lenin during his pre-revolution stays in London, such as in 1905. After winning a London County Council scholarship, Andrew studied history at Balliol College, Oxford. In World War I he served in the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry and Hampshire Yeomanry. He was a corporal in 1919 when he learned his unit was being sent to Archangel to aid the Allied intervention against the new Soviet government. Rothstein led a mutiny that refused to go to Archangel. It was the first of many British Army rebellions and mutinies—involving up to 30,000 troops at its height—in opposition to the intervention, the history of which Rothstein wrote about in Soldiers' Strikes of 1919.
He returned to Balliol and completed his history degree in 1921. The previous year he had been a founding member of the CPGB, and was actively recruiting others to the Party, including Tom Wintringham. When Rothstein applied for postgraduate research at Oxford, he was denied an Army grant and thus could not afford to continue his studies:
A stern letter from the Master and Fellows at Balliol announced that he must leave immediately. Twenty years later...a former junior dean from those days...told him that the Foreign Secretary Lord Curzon had personally intervened in his case. Rothstein recalled: "He told me a letter was read out from Curzon, which said that I was a very dangerous Communist and must not be allowed to stay."
Lord Curzon, who was Chancellor of Oxford University at the time, was reportedly angry that Rothstein had taken other undergraduates on a trip to Soviet Russia.
In 1921, Rothstein became the London correspondent of ROSTA (later TASS), the state-owned Soviet news agency. He remained in that post until 1945. He sometimes used the political pseudonym "C. M. Roebuck", both as an author, and in his role on the CPGB's National Executive Committee. From 1929 to 1931, Rothstein was deputy head of the Anglo-American Bureau of the Moscow-based Red International of Labour Unions. In the late 1920s he was on the first Executive Committee of the Society for Cultural Relations Between the Peoples of the British Commonwealth and the USSR.
Rothstein wrote frequently on the economy, history, institutions, and foreign relations of the Soviet Union. His works included The Soviet Constitution (1923), Soviet Peace Policy: A Barrier to War (1935), Workers in the Soviet Union (1942), and Man and Plan in the Soviet Economy (1948). From 1943 to 1950, he was president of the Foreign Press Association. After World War II, he was London correspondent of the Czechoslovak trade union paper, Práce, a position he held until 1970.