Authors: Bertrand M. Patenaude
he was introduced to Dorothy Schultz: Dorothy Schultz undated statement, TC 24:7 [hereafter: DS].
question him about his name, which did not seem French: HS.
came by the apartment at least a dozen times…he was close to the Trotskyist circle in Paris: DS, HS.
One of the casualties was Mark Zborowski: Sara Weber to Trotsky, July 16, 1940, TEP 5916.
Jacsons bragging tales…Jacson was introduced to Cannon and Dobbs…Jacson bought Natalia a gift of sour cream…dinner at the Hotel Geneva…difficult to pin him down: DS, HS.
that relatively harmless creature: Mosley, 79.
Jacson’s conversations with Dorothy: DS.
his Buick, which he arranged to leave at the house: HS; Hansen, “With Trotsky to the End,” in
Leon Trotsky,
24; Levine, 101–2.
Mercader-Jacson went to New York: FBI, 1:109, 2:46; telegrams sent between Sylvia and Jac, November 1939 to July 1940, TC 24:5.
surprised to with Hilda and Ruth Ageloff,” August 24, 1940, TC 24:2.
he phoned Evelyn…a diamond-cutting syndicate: DS.
he came by the house at 2:40: Levine 104.
She grew impatient, and then desperate: Sylvia to Jac, July 29, 1940, in FBI, 5:42.
very ill in a small town near Puebla: “Memorandum of talk with Hilda and Ruth Ageloff,” August 24, 1940, TC 24:2.
an expensive box of chocolates: Hansen, With Trotsky to the End, in
Leon Trotsky,
24.
“Everything is in order”:
Ocherki,
102.
he had not dropped in on the headquarters of the Socialist Workers Party: Hansen, “With Trotsky to the End,” in
Leon Trotsky,
23.
a separate Workers Party: Cannon and Dobbs to Trotsky, April 13, 1940, TEP 801.
Burnham’s astonishingly candid resignation letter: May 21, 1940, TEP 13826.
a petty-bourgeois fraud: Hansen to Reba Hansen, July 21, 1940, Hansen papers, 19:4.
an event arranged by Professor Hubert Herring: Herring to Trotsky, July 15, 1940, TEP 1977.
Charles Orr: Charles A. Orr, “Trotsky comme je l’ai vu à Mexico,”
Cahiers Léon Trotsky,
No. 51, October 1993.
“The OM ripped into the democracies”: Hansen to Reba Hansen, July 21, 1940, Hansen papers, 19:4.
a formal debate with the guards: Hansen to Reba Hansen, July 24, 1940, Hansen papers, 19:4.
Sylvia Ageloff, who flew in from New York: FBI, 1:114, 117–18.
the discussion centered on the Majority and Minority views: Levine, 112.
he barely said a word: Natalia, 265.
he certainly didnt act like his old dynamic self: Hansen to Dobbs, August 11, 1940, TC 24:13; Hansen to Reba Hansen, August 9, 1940, Hansen papers, 19:4; Hansen, “With Trotsky to the End,” in
Leon Trotsky,
17.
an hourlong siesta after lunch…“It bores him stiff”: Hansen to Reba Hansen, June 24, 1940, Hansen papers, 19:4.
“I will do everything to observe this new ‘deadline’”: Trotsky to Malamuth, March 19, 1940, TEP 8984.
Trotsky accused the monthly
Futuro
…mobilizing Goldman in New York: Hansen to Goldman, June 28, 1940, TC 24:11; Trotsky to Goldman, July 3, 1940, TC 10:70;
Writings,
12:305–15; Trotsky, “The Comintern and the GPU.”
the preliminary hearing on July 2: Robins to Rose Karsner, July 2, 1940, TC 24:10.
“working like a steam engine”: Hansen to Reba Hansen, June 11, 1940, Hansen papers, 19:4.
“It is imperative not to lose a single hour”: Trotsky to Goldman, July 3, 1940, TC, 10:70.
His blood pressure was running extremely high. His lower back was giving him trouble: Hansen to Dobbs, July 31, 1940, TC 24:12.
a deposition asserting that Siqueiros was a Trotskyist: Trotsky, “The Comintern and the GPU” Trotsky to Curtiss, August 2, 1940, TEP 7639.
On August 6 Trotsky held a press conference: Hansen to Dobbs, August 6, 1940, TC 24:13
Writins
12:330.
Another head of the Stalinist hydra: Mosley, 124.
“Indignation, anger, revulsion?”: Trotsky to Angelica Balabanoff, Deutscher III, 295
“We await the new intrigue calmly”: Trotsky, “The Comintern and the GPU.”
The picnic on August 9: Hansen to Reba Hansen, August 9, 1940, Hansen papers, 19:4.
he liked to joke to Natalia: Nataia, How It Happene, in
Leon Trotsy,
35.
“My death…may lighten Seryozha’s situation”…her husband grieving in his study: Natalia to Sara Weber, September 25, 1941, TC 26:32.
a private moment between father and Son, in Leon
Trotsky,
40.
he slid down low in the seat…“we must have two of the best drivers in the car”: Hansen, “With Trotsky to the End,” in
Leon Trotsky,
23.
The guard now numbered seven: Robins to Comrade [Dobbs], July 12, 1940, TC 24:12.
Natalia…was now pushing for a threefold guard: Hansen to Dobbs, July 31, 1940, TC 24:12.
a Sioux Indian known as the Rainman: Dobbs,
Teamster Rebellion,
120, 155;
Teamster Power,
125;
Teamster Politics,
141–43.
“sufficient experience, prestige, and authority”: Dobbs to Hansen, July 26, 1940, TC 24:12; Schultz to Dobbs, July 30, 1940, TC 24:12.
Trotsky doubted the value of the Rainman coming down: Hansen to Dobbs, July 31, 1940, TC 24:12.
Trotsky’s reaction annoyed the comrades: Dobbs to Rainbolt, August 9, 1940, TC 24:13; Dobbs to Hansen, August 13, 1940, TC 24:13.
Trotsky was not always the most cooperative subject to guard…the indignity of a personal search: Hansen, “With Trotsky to the End,” in
Leon Trotsky,
20.
Robins proposed that Trotsky always be accompanied: Robins memoir, TC 30:1.
a bulletproof vest and a siren: Trotsky to Charles Curtiss, August 16, 1940, TEP 7640.
room 113 of the Hotel Montejo: FBI, 1:114; Levine, 115–16.
Sylvia was troubled by the changes she observed in Ramón’s health: Sylvia to Hilda Ageloff, August 16, 1940, TC 24:12.
Jacson’s haggard appearance and nervous twitching: Hansen, “With Trotsky to the End,” in
Leon Trotsky,
20.
Van sent a telegram: Feferman, 195.
his accent was not quite French…infatuated with Jacson: Van, 146–47; Feferman, 192–93; Walta Karsner statement, August 21, 1940, TC 24:4; statement of the secretary of the Belgian Legation, in
Excelsior,
August 28, 1940, copy in TC 24:1.
“It would be really too cruel”: Trotsky to Van, August 2, 1940, TEP 10706.
On August 17 at 4:35 p.m.: Levine, 114–15.
his broad shoulders slightly stooped: Levine, 161.
“his clothes flop on him like a scarecrow”: Sylvia to Hilda Ageloff, August 16, 1940, TC 24:2.
six feet in his shoes: Robins memoir, TC 30:1.
souvenir slugs from the Siqueiros raid: Dugrand, 50; Hansen to Dave Hansen, July 21, 1940, Hansen papers, 17:9; Levine, 124.
The entire visit took only eleven minutes: Levine 114.
“I don’t like him”: Natalia, “How It Happened,” in
Leon Trotsky,
38.
dark clouds gathered in clusters: Levine, 115; Hansen, “With Trotsky to the End,” in
Leon Trotsky,
24.
He told Natalia he felt well: Natalia, “How It Happened,” in
Leon Trotsky,
38.
a telegram from Al Goldman in New York: TEP 1581.
“Disloyalty is always bad”: Trotsky to Goldman, August 17, 1940, TEP 8340.
“a difference in comfort between various cars in a railway train”:
Writings,
12:221.
“civil liberties and other good things in America”: Trotsky to Friends, August 13, 1940, TEP 7570.
an American brand of militarism: Hansen to Dobbs, August 6, 1940, TC 24:13.
“very pretentious, very muddled, and stupid”:
Writings,
12:341, 410–18.
Trotsky’s Mexican attorney: Natalia, “How It Happened,” in
Leon Trotsky,
38.
punctuating the end of each sentence:
“Tochka!”
: Hansen, “With Trotsky to the End,” in
Leon Trotsky,
24.
two congratulatory letters to comrades in Minneapolis: TEP 10971, 10529.
The last letter of the day: Trotsky to Schultz, August 20, 1940, TC 12:9.
Hansen was on the roof near the blockhouse: account of the murder drawn from Hansen, “With Trotsky to the End,” in
Leon Trotsky,
16–26; Natalia, “How It Happened,” in
Leon Trotsky,
35–39; Natalia, 266–70; for French-language original of Natalia’s account: Victor Serge,
Vie et Mort de Trotsky
(Amiot Dumont, 1951); Levine, 111–32; Salazar, 140–42; Hansen, “On the 23rd Anniversary of the Russian Revolution,” undated manuscript, Hansen papers, 40:26.
wet grass made their bellies swell: Salazar, 135.
Caridad Mercader and Leonid Eitingon: Sudoplatov, 78; Levine, 120, 131.
Look, we found a barber: Natalia to Sara Weber, January 8, 1952, IC 26:31.
The doctors trepanned an area of the right parietal bone: Salazar, 103.
The direction of the pickax: Salazar, 135.
The first medical bulletin: medical reports and press releases are in TC 23:13.
the patient’s chances were one in ten:
The New York Times,
August 21, 1940.
She sat beside him, dressed in a white hospital gown:
The New York Times,
August 21, 1940.
She was waiting for him to wake up: Natalia to Sara Weber, September 25, 1941, TC 26:32.
Colonel Salazar arrived to question Mercader: Salazar, 125–37.
the police found a dagger: Salazar, 105.
letter of confession: TC 24:5; Salazar, 128–31.
“It was a veritable maze”: Salazar, 142.
Mercader’s account of the details of his crime:
Excelsior,
August 26, 1940, copy in TC 24:5.
she rushed over to the house: “Declaration of Sylvia Ageloff,”
Excelsior,
August 27, 1940, copy in TC 24:2; Salazar, 143–44.
“Kill him! Kill him!”: Levine, 130–31.
“the flickering life of our Old Man”: TC 24:14.
Van was out taking a walk: Van, 147.
Trotsky’s breathing had become more rapid: Natalia, “How It Happened,” in
Leon Trotsky,
39.
“Gentlemen! Trotsky is dead!”: Salazar, 108.
pressed her face against the soles of her husband’s feet…“Everything is finished”: Natalia to Sara Weber, September 25, 1941, TC 26:32.
Epilogue: Shipwreck
Natalia was increasingly skeptical…the Korean War: Natalia to the Executive Committee of the Fourth International, May 9, 1951, TC 26:13;
The New York Times,
June 8, 1951.
“neo-Trotskyist deviation”:
Time,
April 10, 1964.
Natalia addressed a letter to the Soviet government: TC 26:30.
Soviet intelligence hatched an escape plan for Mercader: Salazar, 216–29; Sudoplatov,
Raznye dni tainoi voiny i diplomatii, 1941 god
(Olma-Press, 2001), 141–42; Kolpakidi, 170–85;
Venona,
279;
Ocherki,
106.
Caridad seems to have lost her bearings: Levine, 215–22.
private Kremlin ceremony on June 17, 1941: Sudoplatov,
Raznye dni,
141–42; Nikandrov, 134.
Ramón’s recognition would have to wait: Sudoplatov,
Raznye dni,
141.
his true identity was discovered in 1950: Salazar, 231–35; Levine, 187–214.
Ramón never forgave her: Nikandrov, 133.
Hero of the Soviet Union, the Order of Lenin, and the Gold Star medal: Kolpakidi, 12.
Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo became ardent supporters of Stalin’s USSR: Herrera, 249, 341–42.
a small bust of Stalin: Van, 160.
Frida’s funeral: Herrera, 436.
Colonel Salazar finally caught up with the fugitive painter: Salazar, 184–201.
At the trial, Siqueiros spoke passionately…moving to Chile: Stein, 121–30.
massive interior mural: Rochfort, 199, 207–11.
National Art Prize…hero’s burial:
The New York Times,
January 7, 1974.
a team of FBI agents and U.S. marshals: Dobbs,
Teamster Bureaucracy,
137, 145, 169–283; Myers,
The Prophet’s Army,
177–88.
Slvia Caldwell:
Venona
Secrets, 359–61.
the law also caught up with Mark Zborowski: Poretsky, 271–74;
Venona,
257–58;
Venona Secrets,
368–74.
Alexander Orlov…surfaced in New York:
Deadly Illusions,
339–48.
The FBI assumed…“Trotskyist invention”:
Deadly Illusions,
290.
Krivitsky…was found dead: Kern,
A Death in Washington.
U.S. Senate’s Internal Security Subcommittee:
Legacy,
15–31.
Zborowski skillfully ducked and weaved:
Scope of Soviet Activity in the United States: Hearing before the Subcommittee to Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act and Other Internal Security Laws of the Committee on the Judiciary of the United States Senate, Eighty-Fourth Congress, Second Session
(United States Government Printing Office, 1956), 77–101, 103–35.
Zborowski appeared in court to testify…Zborowski was convicted:
The New York Times,
November 6, 1956; April 22 and 26, 1958; December 14, 1962.
Van had been out of the Trotskyist movement: Feferman, 215–18.
Max Eastman and Sidney Hook: Wald, 271–74, 290–94.
Max Shachtman: Peter Drucker,
Max Shachtman and His Left: A Socialist’s Odyssey Through the “American Century”
(Humanities Press, 1994), 218–311.
James Burnham…
The Managerial Revolution:
Kelly, 97.
Burnham fell out with Cold War liberals…
National Review:
Kelly, 183–237.
President Reagan famously declared…Presidential Medal of Freedom: http:// www.reagan.utexas.edu/archives/speeches; Kelly, 365.
Trotskyist sects endured: Wald, 295–310.
Columbia University…Yulia Akselrod…Seryozha was shot: Yulia Akselrod, “Why My Grandfather Leon Trotsky Must Be Turning in His Grave,”
Commentary,
April 1989.