Aaronson was born on 24 December 1894 at 34 Great Pearl Street,
Spitalfields in the
East End of London to poor
Orthodox Jewish parents who had immigrated from
Vilna in the
Pale of Settlement in Eastern Europe. His father was Louis Aaronson, a bootmaker, and his mother was Sarah Aaronson,
née Kowalski. He attended Whitechapel City Boys' School and later received a scholarship to attend
Hackney Downs Grammar School. Others in the group who, like Aaronson, later achieved distinction included
John Rodker,
Isaac Rosenberg,
Joseph Leftwich,
Stephen Winsten,
Clara Birnberg,
David Bomberg, and the brothers
Abraham Fineberg and
Joseph Fineberg. Aaronson was also involved in the
Young Socialist League, where he and other Whitechapel Boys helped organise educational meetings on modern art and radical politics. Aaronson remained a committed
socialist throughout adulthood. Having been diagnosed with
tuberculosis and
diabetes, Aaronson did not serve in the military during the
First World War. Between 1913 and 1915, and again between 1926 and 1928, he studied economics with a special focus on public administration at the
London School of Economics, but never completed his degree. Aaronson was married three times. His first wife was the actress
Lydia Sherwood (1906–1989), whom he was married to between 1924 and 1931. He filed for divorce on grounds of her adultery with the theatre producer
Theodore Komisarjevsky, and the much publicised suit was undefended. His second marriage, which took place on 9 July 1938, to Dorothy Beatrice Lewer (1915–2005), also ended in divorce. On 14 January 1950, Aaronson married Margaret Olive Ireson (1920–1981), with whom he had one son, David, who was born in 1953. Aaronson was also close to the economist
Graham Hutton, who in 1952 made a radio programme about him for the BBC. Around 1934, he began working as a lecturer in economics at the
City of London College. Upon his retirement from the university in 1958, Aaronson was made a Member of the
Order of the British Empire in the
1959 New Year Honours, in recognition of more than twenty-five years of service. The same year he moved with his family from London to
Harpenden in Hertfordshire, where he later died from
coronary heart disease and heart failure on 9 December 1966, at the age of 71. He was buried in the Westfield Road Cemetery in Harpenden. His wife and young son survived him. ==Poetry==