Bev I didn’t mean to imply that Wilson sent the American Socialists secretly to Russia. Sorry for the mixed signals.
The two American socialists in Russia were Mr. Alexander Gumberg who was attached to The American Red Cross Commission, and Mr. Arthur Bullard, Head of The Committee on Public Information.
MR. ALEXANDER GUMBERG
Gumberg was secretary and general aide to Mr. Russell Robins, Head of the American Red Cross Commission, Petrograd. Alexander Gumberg had been born in Russia and had immigrated to NYC as a boy. He moved in Russian-Socialist circles in NYC and became the managing editor of the Russian-Socialist newspaper, Novy Mir from 1914-1915. He became acquainted with Trotsky through the pieces Trotsky published in the Novy Mir. In the winter of 1917 (January 13-March 27) Trotsky lived on 162nd St. on the Upper eastside, in what he called “the working-class-district” NYC. It was during these winter months, when Trotsky worked in the editorial offices of the Novy Mir that the two men became friends. Just for the historically curious the offices of the newspaper were near Union Square.
Alexander Gumberg was already in Russia when Wilson’s American Red Cross Commission arrived in Petrograd on August 7, 1917. Having returned to Russia with his brother right after February Revolution, on his arrival, Gumberg obtained a Russian passport and consider himself to have duel citizenship. Alexander's brother became a Bolshevik official, who adopted the current Communist craze for pseudonyms, re-christening himself, Comrade Zorin.
Renewing his friendship with Trotsky, Alexander Gumberg immediately established intimate ties with Radek, Peters, and other high Bolshevik officials. At the same time Gumberg worked as an aide for both the Root Commission and the American Advisory Commission of Railroad Experts, before his appointment as secretary and aide the Head of the American Red Cross Commission.
MR. ARTHUR BULLARD
Bullard, Head of The Committee on Public Information, Petrograd, was a self avowed socialist who had traveled widely and had become a well known novelist, journalist and free lance writer. Bullard was a warm sympathizer with the Russian revolutionary movement and had gone to Russia in 1905 to observe the revolt. He followed the subsequent history of Russia closely. In the years just preceding the Great War, Bullard became Secretary of the American Friends of Russian Freedom; a private organization that had been formed in the early 1890’s by George Kennan (the elder), Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain), William Lloyd Garrison and whose purpose it was to bring aid to the victims of Tsarist oppression. Kennan had been in Russia in the 1860’s and 1880’s and identified the cause of the American Friends of Russian Freedom with the pre- Marxist Social Revolutionary movement. As a result, “In the period just before the Revolution, their sympathy and aid were addressed mainly to the Social-Revolutionaries who, comprising a socialist but not a Marxist party, appeared to them as the spiritual heirs to the earlier populist tendencies in the Russian Revolutionary movement. They had little idea of the implications of the latter-day Marxist domination of Russian revolutionary thought.”