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The late John Beecher, though descended from the abolitionist
Beechers, grew up in Birmingham, where his father was a steel
industry executive. Beecher himself was groomed for a similar role,
but when he went into the mills as a young man during the Great
Depression, he rebelled and began to write powerful, radical,
activist poetry. A contemporary of Woody Guthrie and John
Steinbeck, he became a similar chronicler of the massive human
displacement of the economic upheaval of the 1930s. During World
War II, he served as an officer of the interracial crew of the
troop transport Booker T. Washington, and wrote a book about those
experiences. In the McCarthy era, he was blacklisted. And in the
civil rights era, he turned his attention to the evils of
segregation and the Ku Klux Klan. Always, he wrote powerful, spare
verse which in lesser hands might have been ruined by its outrage.
With his artist wife, Barbara, he published several elegant
collections of his poetry on his own hand-set letterpress. His
books included Report to the Stockholders, To Live and Die in
Dixie, In Egypt Land, and a 1974 Macmillan edition of collected
poems. All are out of print.
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