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Joseph Anthony Dallet Jr. (February 18, 1907 – October 13, 1937) was an American industrial worker, labor and communist organizer. From a wealthy family, Dallet was involved in the American labor movement early on, taking industrial jobs such as docker or steel mill worker.
- October 13, 1937 (aged 30), Aragon Front, Spain
Puening returned to England to recuperate. Before she could depart for Spain, the news arrived that Dallet had been killed in action on October 17, 1937. His letters to her were published as Letters from Spain by Joe Dallet, American Volunteer, to his Wife (1938).
- Katherine Vissering Puening, August 8, 1910, Recklinghausen, German Empire
- Ashes scattered at sea off Carval Rock, near Saint John, U.S. Virgin Islands
- October 27, 1972 (aged 62), Panama City, Panama
22. Juli 2023 · Christopher Nolan's "Oppenheimer" is a meticulously accurate biopic of the theoretical physicist who ran the Manhattan Project. The film depicts his background, personality, and politics, but glosses over or omits some details from his life. Learn how Nolan and the book "American Prometheus" got everything right and wrong about Oppenheimer's true story.
Die politische Bindung stammte aus ihrer ersten Ehe mit einem KP-Funktionär namens Joe Dallet, der in Spanien von den Nationalisten gefangengenommen und erschossen worden war. Auch Oppenheimers...
Kitty was married a total of three times before she met Oppenheimer, the second marriage being to a young Communist named Joe Dallet in 1934. The couple moved to France, and Dallet joined the Communist forces fighting in the Spanish Civil War.
Letters from Spain: Joe Dallet, the Mac Paps, and Canadian Identity in the Spanish Civil War . KAARINA MIKALSON . Letters from Spain (1938) is a brief collection of letters from Joe Dallet to his wife, Kitty (Peunig) Dallet. It was published as a pamphlet shortly after Joe Dallet died fighting in Spain.
1. Mai 1981 · A Guy Named Joe. May 1981. In a tribute written long after his death, a writer for The Dartmouth called Joseph Anthony Dallet '27 "the first Dartmouth man killed in World War II." He died October 17, 1937, near Sargossa, Spain an officer of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade leading an attack across open ground in the face of fascist gunfire.