216:
deportation. Post, often with the support of
Secretary Wilson, distinguished carefully among those arrested, for example, determining that membership in the Communist Labor Party was not grounds for deportation because it did not meet the legal standard that other organizations with similar names did meet, like the Communist Party of America. By April 10, Post had reviewed a backlog of 1600 cases and dismissed 71% of them. Some had been held for as long as two months for having attended a meeting of a radical group. Post also determined that aliens were entitled to a fair hearing, which was contrary to the position of the
220:, which held that immigrants were not subject to constitutional safeguards. Overall, Post is credited with preventing many deportations and freeing many innocent people. He also declined to take action against those he called "harmless but technically culpable." Some had in good faith resigned from a proscribed organization. Others only became "members" of such an organization when organizations merged, as often happened. On the other hand, he authorized the deportation of anarchists even "of the extreme pacifist type," because he thought the law required that.
280:, a detailed account of the raids, arrests, and deportations of 1919β20. He called the entire effort "a stupendous and cruel fake". He asserted that his actions had been vindicated with the passage of time, that "no substantially erroneous decision of mine has yet been specified. Most certainly and without qualification may this be said of my cancellation decisions, and it was for these alone that my official fidelity was clamorously questioned.... Every attempt to show even one erroneous cancellation decision has utterly failed."
227:(FBI) began compiling a file on Post and his political leanings, but failed to find substantive evidence of radical connections on his part. Nevertheless, the House Committee on Immigration and Naturalization compiled a sensational report of Post's deportation decisions. When it leaked, the press made much of the affair, what Post later called "a newspaper cyclone of misrepresentation," though some coverage supported him. Some Congressmen traded speeches on his culpability, Committee Chairman
42:
906:
272:
later sought Post's dismissal in a letter to
President Wilson on December 31, 1920. The White House responded with a letter quoting Labor Secretary Wilson who endorsed Post's actions, detailed the Constitutional principles that guided him, and praised his adherence to Department policies: "We will
263:
The simple truth is that Louis F. Post deserves the gratitude of every
American for his courageous and determined stand in behalf of our fundamental rights. It is too bad that in making this stand he found himself at cross-purposes with the Attorney General, but Mr. Palmer's complaint lies against
204:, the head of the Justice Department's "Radical Division," soon renamed the General Intelligence Division. In 1919, in response to anarchist terror bombings, Hoover's agents penetrated many violent revolutionary groups and identified their members. In January 1920, Palmer and Hoover oversaw the
215:
of 1918 set the standard for such deportations. It specified that "aliens who are members of or affiliated with any organization that entertains a belief in, teaches, or advocates the overthrow by force or violence of the
Government of the United States or of all forms of law" were subject to
182:. He once called George's political philosophy "my kind of radicalism...which regards the social values of natural resources as in their nature public property." He became an Assistant Secretary of Labor in 1913, a position he held until the end of the Wilson administration in March, 1921.
247:
planned to ask the
President to remove Post instead of impeaching him, so Post requested and was granted a chance to testify. He successfully defended his actions on May 7β8, attacking Attorney General Palmer and others. In a dramatic exchange, Congressman
273:
not deport anyone simply because he has been accused or because he is suspected of being a Red. We have no authority to do so under the law....Mr. Post...I am satisfied ranks among the ablest and best administrative officers in the
Government service."
252:, a Democratic supporter of the anti-radical campaign, praised Post's actions–"I believe you have followed your sense of duty absolutely"–and walked out of the room, leaving it in stunned silence. The Rules Committee took no further action.
151:. His father was a "New York merchant." His mother was a member of the prominent Freeland family. He quit school at fourteen, opting for four years in a newspaper office and then entered law school. By the age of 25, he had a lucrative law practice in
313:
Outlines of Louis F. Post's
Lectures: On the Single Tax, Absolute Free Trade, the Labor Question, Progress and Poverty, the Land Question, the Elements of Political Economy, Socialism, Hard Times: With Illustrative Notes and
139:, where he had responsibility for the Bureau of Immigration. Post considered the process to be a witch hunt and is credited with preventing many deportations and freeing many innocent people.
955:
812:
189:
and the recent resignation of the
Department's Solicitor General made Post the Department's Acting Secretary and the key person responsible for the
950:
970:
578:
866:
Candeloro, Dominic. "From the Narrow Single Tax to Broad
Progressivism: The Intellectual Development of Louis F. Post, 1898β1913."
852:
Candeloro, Dominic. βLouis Post as a
Carpetbagger in South Carolina: Reconstruction as a Forerunner of the Progressive Movement.β
217:
190:
960:
338:
The Single Tax: An Explanation, with Colored Charts and Illustrative Notes, of the Land, Labor, and Fiscal Reform Advocated.
910:
679:
Honorable Treachery: A History of U.S. Intelligence, Espionage, and Covert Action from the American Revolution to the CIA
17:
890:
Guariglia, Matthew. "Wrench in the Deportation Machine: Louis F. Post's Objection to Mechanized Red Scare Bureaucracy."
688:
662:
616:
945:
124:
224:
965:
193:
for two critical months. He directed the review of all deportation cases and often opposed the activities of
228:
528:
The Deportations Delirium of Nineteen-Twenty: A Personal Narrative of an Historic Official Experience.
633:
The Deportations Delirium of Nineteen-twenty: A Personal Narrative of an Historic Official Experience
278:
The Deportations Delirium of Nineteen-Twenty: A Personal Narrative of an Historic Official Experience
916:
434:
Raymond Robins: A Biographical Sketch: With Newspaper Accounts of and Comments on Mr. Robins' Work.
244:
148:
66:
608:
212:
186:
880:
Gengarelly, W. Anthony. "Secretary of Labor William B. Wilson and the Red Scare, 1919-1920."
885:
940:
935:
156:
8:
291:
reported that he had been a lawyer and editor, noted his early advocacy of a single tax.
362:
Ethics of Democracy: A Series of Optimistic Essays on the Natural Laws of Human Society.
975:
197:
167:
From there he followed his interest in social reform and first ran for office in 1882.
160:
94:
552:
The Prophet of San Francisco: Personal Memories & Interpretations of Henry George.
163:. He fell back into the newspaper business, becoming associate and then editor of the
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658:
612:
232:
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An Account of the George-Hewitt Campaign in the New York Municipal Election of 1886.
255:
After the Attorney General had spent 2 days reading a statement in his defense, the
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194:
83:
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Election Reform: Governor Hill's Reasons for Vetoing the Australian Ballot Bill...
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269:
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136:
817:
604:
Red Scare: FBI and the Origins of Anticommunism in the United States, 1919-1943
175:
Post opposed immigration restrictions and forcefully supported free speech and
128:
422:
The Relation of Working Men to Protection and Free Trade in the United States.
929:
249:
208:
designed to arrest those members who were not U.S. citizens and deport them.
152:
920:
520:"The Work of the Department of Labor of the United States during the War,"
205:
176:
132:
859:
Candeloro, Dominic. "Louis F. Post and the Single Tax Movement, 1872β98."
508:
The Basic Facts of Economics: A Common-Sense Primer for Advanced Students.
536:
Lancaster, PA: Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, 1925.
240:
236:
41:
507:
368:
History of Municipal Affairs for the Past Two Years in Cleveland, O.
179:
120:
430:
Cincinnati: Publicity Bureau, Joseph Fels Fund of America, n.d. .
185:
Early in March 1920, the temporary absence of Secretary of Labor
466:
Cincinnati: Publicity Bureau, Joseph Fels Fund of America, 1912.
235:
of Alabama defending him. On April 15, 1920, Kansas Congressman
905:
873:
Candeloro, Dominic. "Louis F. Post and the Red Scare of 1920."
845:
Candelord, D. "The Public of Louis F. Post and Progressivism."
558:
A Non-Ecclesiastical Confession of Religious Faith: An Address.
303:
With Fred C Leubuscher. New York: John W. Lovell Company, 1887.
487:"Administrative Decisions in Connection with Immigration,"
239:
accused Post of having abused his power and called for his
283:
Post died on January 11, 1928, at Homeopathic Hospital in
398:
The Traction Issue in the Municipal Election in Chicago.
119:(November 15, 1849 β January 11, 1928) was a prominent
503:
New York: Joseph Fels International Commission, 1917.
497:
New York: Joseph Fels International Commission, 1917.
470:
Outlines of Lectures on the Taxation of Land Values.
231:
of Washington state attacking Post, and Congressman
676:
428:An Inquiry into the Institutional Causes of Crime.
927:
517:New York: Zionist Organization of America, 1919.
446:Origin and Progress of the Single Tax Movement.
875:Prologue: The Journal of the National Archives
386:How to Get Good Street Car Service in Chicago.
524:vol. 8 no. 4 (April 1919), pp. 331β335.
491:vol. 10 no. 02 (May 1916), pp. 251β261.
27:American government official and pamphleteer
956:United States Department of Labor officials
868:American Journal of Economics and Sociology
861:American Journal of Economics and Sociology
854:American Journal of Economics and Sociology
674:
448:New York: Manhattan Single Tax Club, n.d. .
416:Ethical Principles of Marriage and Divorce.
404:Could a Better System for Graft Be Devised?
583:. International Typographical Union. 1914.
264:the Constitution and not against Mr. Post.
596:
594:
592:
590:
530:Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Co., 1923.
813:"L.F. Post, Friend of Single Tax, Dies;"
951:Woodrow Wilson administration personnel
657:(NY: Columbia University Press, 1963),
600:
515:Land Tenure in the Jewish Commonwealth.
14:
928:
587:
560:New York: Swedenborg Foundation, 1967.
442:Chicago: Public Publishing Co., n.d. .
406:Chicago: Public Publishing Co., n.d. .
352:Chicago: Public Publishing Co., n.d. .
328:Chicago: Public Publishing Co., n.d. .
322:Chicago: Public Publishing Co., n.d. .
971:People from Warren County, New Jersey
418:Chicago: Public Publishing Co., 1906.
412:Chicago: Public Publishing Co., 1906.
394:Chicago: Public Publishing Co., 1905.
364:New York: Moody Publishing Co., 1903.
358:New York: Civic Publishing Co., 1902.
346:Chicago: Public Publishing Co., 1901.
830:Came of a Long Line of Literary Men.
683:(Hardback). Atlantic Monthly Press.
534:A "Carpet Bagger" in South Carolina.
276:In retirement in 1923, he published
460:Cedar Rapids, IA: F. Vierth, n.d. .
334:Chicago: Social Reform Union, 1900.
24:
892:Journal of American Ethnic History
839:
489:American Political Science Review,
464:The Open Shop and the Closed Shop.
436:Chicago : L.S. Dickey, n.d. .
376:Cedar Rapids, IA: F. Vierth, 1903.
340:Cedar Rapids, IA: F. Vierth, 1900.
131:administration, the period of the
25:
987:
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382:Chicago : L.S. Dickey, 1904.
316:New York: Sterling Library, 1894.
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392:Our Advancing Postal Censorship.
125:United States Secretary of Labor
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554:New York: Vanguard Press, 1930.
542:New York: Vanguard Press, 1926.
410:Our Despotic Postal Censorship.
225:Federal Bureau of Investigation
127:during the closing year of the
715:
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655:A. Mitchell Palmer: Politician
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638:
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571:
546:Living a Long Life Over Again.
454:London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1910.
424:London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1908.
223:As early as January 1920, the
13:
1:
564:
380:The Prophet Of San Francisco.
287:, after a brief illness. The
142:
961:Presidency of Woodrow Wilson
458:A Single Tax View of Trusts.
440:Assassination and Anarchism.
332:The Taxation of Land Values.
7:
10:
992:
757:Coben, 233-4; Post, 243-4,
484:Chicago, The Public, 1914.
472:Chicago: The Public, 1912.
344:The Chinese Exclusion Act.
476:Taxation in Philadelphia.
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110:
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675:O'Toole, G.J.A. (1991).
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245:House Committee on Rules
149:Hackettstown, New Jersey
67:Hackettstown, New Jersey
946:Writers from New Jersey
609:Museum Tusculanum Press
540:What is the Single Tax?
259:gave Post the victory:
213:Anarchist Exclusion Act
870:37.3 (1978): 325β336.
863:35.4 (1976): 415β430.
856:34#4 (1975): 423β432.
580:Typographical Journal
482:Trusts, Good and Bad.
350:Landmarks of Liberty.
257:New York Evening Post
218:Bureau of Immigration
191:Bureau of Immigration
966:Georgist politicians
913:at Wikimedia Commons
882:Pennsylvania History
601:Schmidt, R. (2000).
400:Chicago: n.p., 1905.
388:Chicago: n.p., 1904.
370:Chicago: n.p., 1903.
320:A Business Tendency.
309:New York: n.p, 1888.
917:Louis Freeland Post
911:Louis Freeland Post
894:38.1 (2018): 62β77.
522:Scientific Monthly,
511:(2nd edition, 1918)
180:single-tax movement
117:Louis Freeland Post
34:Louis Freeland Post
18:Louis Freeland Post
877:2.1 (1979): 41β55.
849:(1974) 56: 109β25.
821:. January 11, 1928
501:Why We Are at War.
495:Financing the War.
326:Department Stores.
198:A. Mitchell Palmer
123:and the Assistant
106:Elizabeth Freeland
95:Alice Thacher Post
909:Media related to
884:(1980): 310β330.
548:n.c.: n.p., 1927.
478:n.c.: n.p., 1913.
233:George Huddleston
187:William B. Wilson
165:"New York Truth."
147:Post was born in
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64:November 15, 1849
16:(Redirected from
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356:Success in Life.
285:Washington, D.C.
195:Attorney General
155:in an office on
84:Washington, D.C.
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77:January 11, 1928
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49:Personal details
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452:Social Service.
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270:American Legion
202:J. Edgar Hoover
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137:First Red Scare
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177:Henry George's
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104:Eugene J. Post
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823:. Retrieved
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802:Post, 169-70
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766:Post, 238ff.
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739:Post, 226ff.
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159:across from
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133:Palmer Raids
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79:(1928-01-11)
941:1928 deaths
936:1849 births
847:Mid-America
784:Post, 275-7
730:Post, 200-2
703:Post, 154-7
665:, pp. 225-6
374:Look Ahead!
241:impeachment
930:Categories
825:2008-08-14
712:Coben, 232
644:Post,148-9
565:References
237:Homer Hoch
143:Early life
60:1849-11-15
976:Red Scare
793:Post, 158
775:Post, 271
161:City Hall
101:Parent(s)
157:Broadway
135:and the
121:Georgist
314:Charts.
886:online
687:
661:
615:
243:. The
171:Career
129:Wilson
91:Spouse
86:, U.S.
69:, U.S.
295:Works
685:ISBN
659:ISBN
613:ISBN
268:The
211:The
200:and
74:Died
54:Born
919:at
932::
828:.
815:.
611:.
607:.
589:^
693:.
621:.
62:)
58:(
20:)
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