Early years Dennis Elihu Batt was born May 2, 1886, in
Tekonsha, Michigan, the son of a street car conductor. Batt attended high school in
Detroit for two years before enlisting in the
U.S. Cavalry, in which he served from 1907 to 1910. An emergency convention was held by the Michigan group, which determined to lend their support to the establishment of a new political organization. In June 1919, Batt was among five delegates from the Socialist Party of Michigan who attended the
National Conference of the Left Wing in
New York City. This gathering of adherents of the
Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party was deeply divided as to whether they should continue to fight for control of the Socialist Party against a well-entrenched and hostile party leadership. Batt, Keracher, and the other Michigan delegates sided with the seven suspended
foreign language federations of the SPA in arguing for the immediate establishment of a new communist party. The majority of the conference rejected this appeal, however, and as a result September 1919 saw the formation of two rival organizations, the
Communist Party of America — supported by the Michigan group — and the
Communist Labor Party of America, launched by
Alfred Wagenknecht,
L.E. Katterfeld, and
John Reed when the attempt to win control of the
1919 Emergency National Convention of the SPA failed. Batt was named National Secretary of the Organizing Committee for the new Communist Party of America (CPA) and the editor of
The Communist, the weekly publication of that committee. Early in 1920, the Michigan group headed by Keracher and Batt broke with the Communist Party over the group's decision to go "underground" in the face of the mass arrests known to history as the
Palmer Raids. The Michigan group established their own political organization, the
Proletarian Party of America, with Batt named the group's first National Secretary and editor of its monthly publication, a magazine called
The Proletarian. Later years Batt's position in the Detroit Federation of Labor brought him into conflict with Keracher and the Proletarian Party, and he was expelled from the organization in the first half of the 1920s.
Death and legacy Batt died on January 20, 1941, after a series of heart attacks complicated by pneumonia. ==Footnotes==