Early years
Herbert Aptheker was born July 31, 1915 in Brooklyn, New York, the last child of a wealthy Jewish family. In 1932, when he was 16, he accompanied his father on a business trip to Alabama. There he learned first-hand about the oppression of African Americans under Jim Crow Laws in the South, and was appalled by what he saw. On his return to Brooklyn, he wrote a column for his school newspaper on the "Dark Side of The South."
Aptheker attended Columbia University in New York City, from which he obtained a Bachelor's degree in 1936. Aptheker also earned his Master's degree in 1937 and a Ph.D. in 1943 from the same institution.
Aptheker later went back to the South and became an educational worker for the Food and Tobacco Workers Union. Shortly afterwards, he served as secretary of the Abolish Peonage Committee. "Peons", the vast majority of whom were African American, were tied to plantations by the debt they owed to the plantation owners. This practice effectively maintained slavery beyond the Civil War in all but name.
In 1939, Aptheker joined the Communist Party USA, which, he believed, was the U.S. political party that took the strongest position on full economic, social, and political equality for African Americans. During World War II, he joined the Army, taking part in Operation Overlord; by 1945 had reached the rank of Major in the artillery, which commission he lost in December 1950 after failing to respond to the U.S. Army’s letter of inquiry about his Communist political activity.
Research in African American history
Aptheker's master's thesis, a study of the 1831 Nat Turner slave revolt in Virginia, laid the groundwork for his future work on the history of American slave revolts. Aptheker uncovered Turner's heroism, demonstrating how his rebellion was rooted in the exploitative conditions of the Southern slave system. NEGRO SLAVE REVOLTS IN THE UNITED STATES 1526-1860, published in 1939 by International Publishers, New York, includes a table of documented slave revolts by year and state. His doctoral dissertation, American Negro Slave Revolts, was published in 1943. Traversing Southern libraries and archives, he uncovered 250 similar episodes through exhaustive research. It remains a landmark and a classic work in the study of Southern history and slavery.
Aptheker challenged racist writings, most notably those of Georgia-born historian Ulrich Bonnell Phillips, who cast African Americans as child-like, inferior, and uncivilized; argued that slavery was a benign institution; and defended the preservation of the Southern plantation system. Such works were the consensus in the field until Aptheker's scholarship tore them apart.
Aptheker considered himself a protégé of W. E. B. Du Bois, and long emphasized his mentor's social science scholarship and life-long struggle for equality as an African American.
Post-war activism
In the 1950s, Aptheker was blacklisted because of his membership in the Communist Party, and was unable to obtain appointment as a university lecturer throughout the decade. Aptheker served on the National Committee of the CPUSA from 1957 to 1991; for several years in the 1960s and 1970s, he was executive director of the American Institute For Marxist Studies.
A fervent opponent of the Vietnam War, Aptheker lectured on the subject on college campuses nationwide. He saw U.S. conduct in Vietnam as a war of aggression against an exploited peasantry determined to win their independence and control of their land. He saw many parallels between African American slaves and sharecroppers in the South, and the Vietnamese working class and peasantry, from which the guerrilla fighters of the National Liberation Front (known in the U.S. as the "Viet Cong") drew most of their ranks.
From 1969 to 1973, Aptheker taught a full-year course annually in Afro-American History at Bryn Mawr College.
Death and legacy
Aptheker died on March 17, 2003, at the age of 87.
Accusations of sexual molestation
Aptheker's wife, Fay, was also a union organizer. Their daughter, Bettina, was raised as a "red diaper baby". Bettina Aptheker is now a professor of feminist studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz. In her 2006 memoir, Intimate Politics, she claims that she was sexually molested by her father from the age of 4 to the age of 13. However, her charges are based on recovered memory and dissociation and so have been called into doubt. For example, Mark Rosenzweig writes "the truth about Herbert and Bettina is inaccessible to us." She also tells about their highly emotional reconciliation several years before his death. In addition, she claims that her father's celebrations of black resistance were attempts "to compensate for his deep shame about the way, he believed, the Jews had acted during the Holocaust" (which has been criticized as "possibly antisemitic").