Harry Gould (editor)
Llewellyn Harry Gould, generally known as Harry Gould, was a prominent Australian communist, best known as editor of the Tribune, the official organ of the Communist Party of Australia.
History
Gould, who may have been of Jewish descent, was educated at Dublin University.He joined the Communist Party in 1934.
By 1937 he was in Sydney working as a Workers' Educational Association lecturer.
Gould was editor of the Workers' Weekly and its successor Tribune.
In July 1941 Gould was jailed for 40 days on the basis of WEA material found on a table at the Bondi School of Arts.
He was appointed manager of Forward which acknowledged its communist affiliation in 1942, when it became a partial replacement for the Tribune.
In preparation for the CPA being declared illegal, he bought a printing press, which was brought into operation as Tribune's press in 1942.
He was jailed for three months for membership of the CPA, and despite increasing disillusionment with the party in Moscow, retained his membership to the end. He began writing a book about his disappointment, but was killed in a car accident before it was completed.
Publications
- .
- A Marxist Glossary
- The Sharkey Writings
- Art, Science & Communism