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1920-1949
Profession:
Political Scientist
Educator
Student
1939-40
1940-41
1941 Summer Work Camp
1941-42 Fall Quarter (until February 1942)
Graduation
1942 Politics
Examiner, Stringfellow
Barr, President, St. John’s College
See
also Sue Spayth Riley Wolpert
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Jerry Wolpert was born in New York City and lived in
West Orange, New Jersey where he attended high school. He possibly heard
about Black Mountain through Louis Adamic’s article, "Education on
a Mountain," which was published in both Harper’s and Reader’s
Digest. His former wife, Sue Spayth Riley, also a Black Mountain
student, recalls, "He, as many of us, was looking for a progressive,
more open and creative college education."
Jerry Wolpert is remembered by his fellow students
as one of Black Mountains true "intellectuals." Sue Riley
recalls, "Jerry was a voracious reader – politics, philosophy,
history, but also literature – he loved music, classical." At Black
Mountain, Wolpert took classes in history, psychology, classics, writing,
drama, economics, psychology, philosophy, political theory, Nineteenth
Century English Essay, political theory and institutions, philosophy of
history, history of science, political institutions, and law and politics
– among others. Along with Fred Stone, Tommy Brooks, Lucian Marquis and
others, he was a member of the "Gashouse Gang," a group of
students who reveled in being noisy and spoofing the overly serious
idealism that often permeated the college atmosphere. Sue Riley writes of
Wolpert’s time at Black Mountain, "Jerry participated in the
community-wide discussions, and was very outspoken. In his last year
(after I left) I believe he was the student representative to the
governing council.... Jerry was very moral, very ethical.... (perhaps the
sign of the age I was, too). He often came across as a ‘tough guy,’
but was really very sensitive, soft and sort of spiritual inside."
In June, after graduation, Wolpert married a former
Black Mountain student, Sue Spayth, and in September 1942 he was drafted
into the army. During the war he was stationed in Kansas, Oklahoma, and
Texas. In 1945 he received a medical discharge and enrolled at Columbia
University on the G.I. Bill for his Master’s degree in Political
Science.
After graduation Wolpert moved with his wife and
small son to Buffalo, New York where he had a teaching position in
sociology at the University of Buffalo. In 1949, he was struck with bulbar
polio and died within days. His death marked the end of a promising
career. His article "The Myth of Revolution," had been published
in the July 1948 issues of Ethics. At the time of his death his first son
Thomas was eleven months old. His son Jeremiah was born three months after
his death.
His widow moved to New Jersey where both of their
parents lived.
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 Jerry
Wolpert at Black Mountain College. Courtesy North Carolina State Archives, Black Mountain College Papers, 226.1.
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