FIELD Frederic
VANDERBILT
Date of birth : April 13, 1905, New York.
Date of death : February 1, 2000, in Minneapolis.
Story
Member of an eminent family from New York City.
His father was
William Osgood Field, a descendant of Samuel Osgood, the country's
first postmaster general, and Cyrus Field, who was responsible for
laying the first trans-Atlantic cable.
His mother was
Lila Vanderbilt Sloane.
With his brother and his two sisters, they were raised with every
luxury. In his autobiography "From Right to Left", published in 1983,
Field, writing of himself in the third person, said he had grown up
"surrounded by servants who did everything for him but sneeze".
After graduating from the Hotchkiss School in 1923, he entered Harvard where he was a member of Hasty Pudding and an editor of The Crimson. He graduated from Harvard in 1927 and went on to the London School of Economics, where he came under the influence of the socialist Harold Laski.
He first ventured in politics when he offered his services to the
American Democratic Party, after returning to the United States from a
year in London.
He had previously been interested in socialist ideas, and when he
discovered that Democratic Party leaders were not in a great hurry to
change society, he drifted further in socialism's direction. Each
opportunity was good to talk about socialims and he made many
street-corner speeches, although he said later they were not very good.
He first publicly proclaimed his adherence to the socialist cause in 1928, when he announced that he intended to vote for Norman Thomas, the Socialist Party candidate for president.
In the 40's, he was an organizer and executive secretary of the American Peace Mobilization, an organization with ties to the Soviet Union that was dedicated to keeping the United States from entering the war.
In 1941 the group picketed the White House for more than 40 days. The picketing ended suddenly when Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union.
He was cut off without a penny by Frederick Vanderbilt, his great-uncle, who had no children; his fortune was estimated at more than $70 million. His disillusionment moved him further to the left.Formerly, he had been married 3 times : with Elizabeth G.Brown (1929-1935), Edith Chamberlain Hunter
(1938-1949) and Anita Cohen Boyer (wedding in 1949 or 1950)().
Accompanied with his wife, in 1962, he was Marilyn's guide during her trip in Mexico, to buy some furniture for her new house. They visited
The Fields found Marilyn warm, attractive, brilliant and smart, curious about things, people and ideas, and also incredibly complicated.
In June 1962, the Fields stayed a few days in Marilyn's apartment in New York, while she was in California