One of the historical documents researchers have long wanted to see is the transcript of the Ross libel trial. The court copy disappeared decades ago, and descendants of the main participants do not have copies. The Watchtower Society’s copy went through a phase of: ”was, but is not, but is yet (maybe) to reappear…” Crucially, at the time that Marley Cole wrote up the case in Jehovah’s Witnesses – The New World Society, he never actually saw an original transcript in Bethel (letter from Marley Cole dated February 15, 1989).
For further information
on this background see the article on this blog The Ross Libel Trial posted on
May 20, 2013.
To recap just briefly
on the main points, a Baptist clergyman in Canada, John Jacob Ross, published a
booklet attacking CTR. CTR was advised to sue him for criminal libel. Legally,
in retrospect, this proved to be a mistake as the cutting below from the
Toronto Globe for April 2, 1913, shows:
Essentially, for a charge
of criminal libel to success (as opposed to a civil case) there would need to
be a clear threat of a breach of the peace. Bible Students were not likely to
riot in the streets, let alone even read Ross’s words, so the jury was
instructed to render a verdict of “no bill.” The merits or otherwise of the
case did not come into it. In restrospect, it is a shame this point was not
established by legal minds before proceedings ever started.
Anyhow, emboldened by
the case being dismissed on a technicality, Ross claimed a “victory” and
produced a second booklet where he basically accused CTR of making false claims
on the stand about being a scholar of Biblcal languages. The charge has been
repeated over the years by opposers of CTR - who have also never seen the
transcript.
The hearing was written
up in the local newspapers at the time, but none picked up on this point that
Ross would later labor. However, it is now possible to establish with
reasonable certainty what exactly did happen in this part of the hearing.
Enter stage left, a
certain Philip Sidersky (1870-1938).
Photo from the
Elizabethtown Chronicle for October 19, 1937.
Siderksy was born in
Russia, and some papers suggest he had once thought of training as a rabbi.
Instead, he came to the United States and was reinvented as the “Reverend
Philip Sidersky,” author, editor, and speaker to various denominations on
converting Jews to Christianity. He also became an extremely active critic of
Pastor Russell and the Bible Student movement. He was to become such a public
face of opposition to CTR’s work that he even gets a mention in modern
Watchtower literature (Yearbook 1979, page 95). CTR must have responded at some
point, because Sidersky then tried to sue him in a counter response. From The Washington Post, September 7, 1911:
This came to nothing.
But undaunted, Sidersky produced a whole magazine just to attack CTR and Watch
Tower teaching. It was called Searchlight
on Russellism and ran from late 1915 to at least when CTR died at the very
end of October in 1916. Two issues are known to have survived. The first,
volume one, number one, is in the Harvard Divinity School library.The second,
volume one, number six, is interesting because it contained a letter from
Sidersky to the President of the United States, asking him to clamp down on
CTR’s writings being sent to members of the National Guard. This was to end up in the files of what ultimately became the FBI, as
part of the package of difficulties the Bible Students faced during World War 1.
So what is the
connection with the J J Ross libel trial? Two pages of each issue of Sidersky’s
paper (page 2 and then continued on page 7) contains a transcript of the Ross
hearing. In the absense of the original trial transcript this provides us with
probably all that can now be obtained of the case.
We have to assume that
the transcript is accurate, but there is no way to check. We also have to note
that Sidersky selected what suited his purpose. None of the prosecution
material aimed at Ross appears; rather, it is the defense counsel, Staunton,
grilling CTR, which makes up the surviving selective extracts. However, they do
give us a flavor of the proceedings.
The complete transcript
that survives is in the next article, without any editorial comment. However, I
do recommend reading the following background material first.
It starts off with
Counselor Staunton being somewhat insulting, and CTR being less than willing to
volunteer information. However, it soon settles down, and there is some
interesting verbal sparring between the two individuals, with CTR questioning
Staunton at one point.
The section in
Searchlight volume 1, number 1, covers the intitial stages of the examination.
This includes CTR’s schooling and the key section on languages. We will come
back to that shortly. The second section from Searchlight volume 1, number 6,
covers financial matters. The case of William Hope Hay, a pilgrim who made a financial
donation to the Society, then some time later had a breakdown and had to be
hospitalised. The Society paid the hospital fees. And then the different
corporations used by the Society. Ross had accused CTR of running a
money-making scheme and basically hiding affairs behind various corporations.
It was explained quite clearly by CTR how the Society’s affairs worked, and how
the different linked corporations were simply needed to legally operate in
Pennsylvania, New York, and also the far-flung corners of the British Empire.
No smoking gun there.
But let’s return to the
claim that CTR lied on the stand about his “qualifications.”
What actually was said?
From the Sidersky transcript:
But when Ross wrote his
second booklet, his report said this:
In Ross’s account, the
question was do you know the Greek? However, the “quote” doesn’t actually make
sense. The Greek? The Greek what?
Ross leaves out that crucial
word “alphabet.” CTR had already stated clearly he had no schooling in Latin or
Greek. So he did not “know” Greek. But yes, he knew the alphabet, but might
make a mistake on some of them. (This writer can relate to that).
Losing the word
“alphabet” is a very unfortunate typo in the circumstances. It is either that,
or a deliberate attempt by Ross to mislead. Well, you, the reader, can decide.
So that is the
background. In the next article, we just have the straight transcript without
comment.
5 comments:
Great article Jerome!
It seems that Sidersky’s opposition to Russell has, at last, managed to serve a good purpose!
Excellent article. Finally getting an answer to what has quite often been a perplexing matter.
When one reads the article on Sidersky and his own character, it really makes one wonder about his audacity in continuing his bitter dispute in regard to CTR.
Thanks very much for the research in this and am looking forward to the continuation of this article and the Libel case.
Many thanks for uncovering this libel.
It has been claimed that the Watch Tower Society has the transcript of the Ross libel trial.
It is interesting to note what we do know for sure. First, in the 1950s, two accounts of the trial appeared in print. One by an opposer, Walter Martin, claimed to have seen the transcript in Bethel; although why Bethel would give him of all people access is a big question. However, in the earliest editions of his anti-Watchtower polemic he quotes, not from the transcript, but from J J Ross’s doctored version. That should ring warning bells. The other, was by a witness, Marley Cole, but in correspondence in the 1980s he said he never saw the original, but just some notes on it.
Coming forward to the 2010s, a respected researcher wrote to the Society and asked to see it. He was sent what they had. It turned out to be three pages of typescript, which we now know was the whole of page 2 of Searchlight on Russellism from 1915. This has long been hidden away in the Harvard Divinity School Library. An internet search revealed its existence, and it was freely made available for the article on this blog.
Whether or not any more of the transcript has ever been rediscovered, does it really matter? The key remaining aspects of Ross’s attacks on CTR, were the 1906 separation hearing, and also the recent (at the time) Miracle Wheat trial – Russell vs Brooklyn Eagle. However, full documentation of these legal proceedings has always existed. So while the Ross “re-run” might be interesting, it is not essential to get the story.
Thank you! Truly insightful!
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