Bill Bailey (Spanish Civil War veteran)


William James Bailey was an Irish-American Communist Party labor activist who fought in the Republican forces of the International Brigades during the Spanish Civil War.

Career

As a merchant seaman, Bailey stole the swastika flag that flew from the bow of the German ship Bremen docked in Manhattan in 1935. The Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels issued an angry statement, so New York's mayor, Fiorello La Guardia, sent ten detectives to the German consulate. These were all Jewish detectives - with names the like of Goldfarb and Ginsburg. Goebbels thought this was the biggest insult. He said, "We don't want these inferior bastards to guard any of our people."
Bailey, who was a Communist Party member from the working-class neighborhoods of Hoboken and Hell's Kitchen, went on to fight fascism during the Spanish Civil War. He joined the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, the American contingent of the International Brigades.
During World War II, he served as a business agent for the Marine Firemen, Oilers and Watertenders Union, before he himself joined the war effort during the invasion of the Philippines. He was expelled from the MFOW during the McCarthy era, and briefly edited The Black Gang News before moving to longshore work.
Bailey later lived in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Personal and death

On February 27, 1995, he died of a long-lasting pulmonary condition caused by asbestos exposure during his work as a seaman.

Works

His autobiography, The Kid from Hoboken, was written with Lynn Damme and published in San Francisco by Circus Lithographic Prepress in 1993. Its full text is available online.
Bill Bailey was featured in the film documentaries Seeing Red and The Good Fight: The Abraham Lincoln Brigade in the Spanish Civil War.
Bailey's story is told in "The Agitator: William Bailey and the First American Uprising against Nazism" by Peter Duffy.