This collection houses articles by Jack Belden, reviews of his three books, typescripts (with corrections) of his poetry, and biographical information. Much of Belden’s poetry relates to his wartime experiences and impressions. With the exception of the poetry, the majority of the documents in this collection are photocopies.
Identification:
MSS-197
Language:
Material in English with some Chinese
Repository:
Arizona State University Library. Rare Books and Manuscripts
P.O. Box 871006
Tempe, AZ 85287-1006
Phone: (480) 965-4932
E-Mail: archives@asu.edu Questions? Ask An Archivist!
Biographical Note
Alfred Goodwin "Jack" Belden was born to Alfred Goodwin (1878-1950) and Mabel Kathleen (Sweezey) Belden Howland (1885-) in New York on February 3, 1910. He had one sister, Kathleen Jewel (Belden) Groves (1908-1991). His father left the family when Belden was a small child and he remembered little of him beyond occasional formal Sunday lunches.
Jack Belden graduated from Adelphi Academy in Summit, N.J. (1926) and from Colgate University (1931). During his college vacations, he shipped all over the world as a seaman. He jumped ship in Hong Kong in 1931 and embarked on a precarious existence, sleeping at the Salvation Army and either begging on the streets or gambling with sailors for money. He eventually moved to Beijing, where he learned the Chinese language, house-sat for a Chinese general, and taught English at a night school.
Belden's first newspaper job was with the English-language Evening Post & Mercury in Shanghai. When the Sino-Japanese War began in 1937, Belden became a correspondent for the United Press and traveled to the Nationalists' capital in Nanjing. Belden retreated to Hankow with the Army in December of 1937, venturing into the countryside were conditions were more difficult, confirming rumors that the Japanese were using gas in combat, and researching Shanghai's underground. He relocated to Chungking (the new capital of Free China) in 1940. His colleagues at the Chungking Press Hostel knew him as alternately suspicious and fun-loving, intense, and familiar with the seamy side of China.
After leaving the UP, Belden joined the International News Service and later Time-Life. In 1942, he went to Burma with General Stilwell. He published a book about this experience entitled Retreat with Stilwell in 1943. Following the retreat, Belden covered the Flying Tigers' campaign against the Japanese and then relocated to Cairo to replace a Time reporter injured in a plane accident. In North Africa, he flew with American bombers over Tunisia, traveled to Malta immediately after the siege ended, accompanied British forces fighting General Erwin Rommel along the Mareth Line, and made two amphibious landings. After landing with the advance reconnaissance forces south of Salerno, Italy in September of 1943, Belden was shot twice in the leg and evacuated to a military hospital in Oran, Algeria. He wrote two articles about the experience and completed another book, Still Time To Die (1944), while convalescing in New York.
Once he had recovered from his wounds, Time-Life sent Belden to the London bureau in time for D-Day. Belden believed, however, that he had been wronged – he thought that his editors had promised him a top reporting position and was angry when it did not materialize. Time-Life fired him in January of 1945. Harper's issued him credentials, but never paid him or used any of his materials.
After the war ended, Belden married a Frenchwoman and attempted (unsuccessfully) to work as a freelance journalist in Paris. The couple had one son and divorced in 1954, at which time Belden returned to China to cover the civil war in progress. After returning to the United States, he published a book about the conflict entitled China Shakes the World (1949). Because of the anti-Communist climate, however, the book was not successful. Belden, bitter and depressed, left journalism. He remarried, had a second son, and divorced again. Belden supported himself driving a taxi and a school bus, selling aluminum siding, and working for the Post Office. He also wrote sonnets, for which there unfortunately proved to be no market.
In 1969, Belden returned to France and visited the United States only once more to celebrate his mother's 100th birthday in 1985. He eked out a meager existence in Paris until dying of lung cancer on June 3, 1989.
Scope and Content Note
This collection houses articles by Jack Belden, reviews of his three books, typescripts (with corrections) of his poetry, and biographical information. Much of Belden’s poetry relates to his wartime experiences and impressions. With the exception of the poetry, the majority of the documents in this collection are photocopies.
To view this collection, make an appointment at least five business days prior to your visit by contacting Ask an Archivist or calling (480) 965-4932. Appointments in the Wurzburger Reading Room at Hayden Library (rm. 138) on the Tempe campus are available Monday through Friday. Check the ASU Library Hours page for current availability.
Copyright
Arizona State University does not own the copyright to this collection. We recognize that it is incumbent upon the researcher to procure permission to publish information from this collection from the owner of the copyright.
[Identification of item], Jack Belden Papers, MSS-197, Arizona State University Library.
Provenance
Mrs. Angie Tucher, the Center for Asian Studies, and Beatrice Weber donated these papers to Special Collections in 1995 and December of 2001 via Professor Stephen MacKinnon (Accession #2003-02770).
Processing Note
Original newspapers were photocopied in color when the collection was reprocessed in 2013.
Container List
Box
Folder
1
1
"Hot Noodles Delight Jack Belden After Cold [Missing]" in the Shanghai [Missing], 1938 December 20
1
2
"How the British in Burma Escaped a Jap Trap" in Life Magazine, 1942 May 18 (Photocopy)
1
3
"Hey Soldier, I'm Wounded" in Life Magazine, 1943 September 27 (Photocopy)
1
4
"Sequel to Salerno" in Life Magazine, 1944 March 20 (Photocopy)
1
5
Reviews of Retreat with Stilwell, 1943 (Photocopies)
1
6
Reviews of Still Time to Die, 1944 (Photocopies)
1
7
Reviews of China Shakes the World, 1949 (Photocopies)
1
8
"Jack Belden's China Shakes the World: Art and Advocacy" by Charles W. Hayford, Presented at the Conference on War Reporting: China in the 1940s, 1982 November 19-20 (Typescript with Belden's Handwritten Notes)
1
9
Depression Canto II, Homo Canto III, and Homo Canto IV, Undated
1
10
Flight in Sea Canto V, Undated
Box
Folder
2
1
"Poet to Publisher and Critic" Feedback, 1979 May 1
2
2
"Poet to Scientist" Feedback, 1978 October 16
2
3
"Renew Thy Rainbow God", Undated (Photocopy)
Box
Folder
1
11
"Send Down Thy Visible Spirits", Undated
Box
Folder
2
4
"Send Down Thy Visible Spirits", Undated (Photocopy)
Box
Folder
1
12
Sonnets, Undated
1
13
Letters from Jack Belden to Mrs. J. M. Howland, 1944-1945 (3 Items; Photocopies)
1
14
Letter Probably Written to Beatrice Weber, Undated (Photocopy)
Box
Folder
2
5
Correspondence with Peter [?], circa
1978-1979
Box
Folder
1
15
Photograph of Jack Belden in Burma, 1942
1
16
Photographs of Jack Belden in China, 1971 (7 Items)
1
17
Photograph of Brooks Atkinson of the New York Times, 1943 December
1
18
Press Card Issued by Chiang Kai-Shek's Government, 1947
1
19
Biographical Information, 1943-1989 (Photocopies)
Box
Folder
2
6
Biographical Information Regarding Jack Belden, 1974, 1979
Box
Folder
1
20
"Jack Belden, When Last Seen" by Laurence Kent Sweeney, 1972 (Photocopy)
1
21
"Sequel to the Razz-Berry of Jack Belden, Foreign Correspondent, 1910-1989" by Beatrice Weber, Undated