Matthew Wallace
This page has been superseded and is obsolete or decanonized, and it is retained primarily for historical interest or will be reworked to fit the current canon. |
Matthew Wallace | |
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Photograph of Wallace in 1915 | |
2nd Secretary General of the World Continental Congress | |
In office September 21st, 1920 – December 18th, 1936 | |
Preceded by | Philip Martin Gates |
Succeeded by | Jason Ronson |
1st Vice Secretary General of the World Continental Congress | |
In office August 4th, 1912 – September 20th, 1920 | |
Preceded by | Position established |
Succeeded by | Jason Ronson |
Personal details | |
Born |
December 18th, 1889 Miami, United Commonwealth |
Died |
September 22nd, 1938 Terra Alta, Catalonia, Second Spanish Republic (aged 38) |
Nationality | Sierran (after 1917) |
Political party | Communist Party of Sierra |
Spouse(s) | Emily Lain (w. 1938) |
Children | 3 |
Military service | |
Allegiance | Spanish Republic |
Years of service | 1936-1938 |
Rank | Major |
Commands | XV International Brigade |
Battles/wars |
Matthew James Wallace (December 18th, 1889-September 22nd, 1938) was a Commonwealth-born Sierran political activist who became the first Vice Secretary General and later the second Secretary General of the World Continental Congress. Born into a working class family, Matthew Wallace became a notable communist activist at a young age and his support for Marxist causes persisted throughout his entire life. He became a supporter of Continentalism in his youth and would become responsible for the creation of Communist Continentalism as a result. After the World Continental Congress was created in August of 1912, Wallace traveled to Juno, Plumas in the Kingdom of Sierra to attend the conference.
There, he organized socialist, communist and marxist continentalists into the Socialist Bloc and was chosen as Vice Secretary General by Philip Martin Gates, the founder of the congress, in a coalition government. This coalition was fragile and the two were bitter political rivals by 1918. In 1919, Wallace staged and lead continentalist labor strikes and used that to remove Gates from power and was sworn in on September 21st, 1920 as the new Secretary General. As head of the congress, Wallace pushed his agenda hard and was a heavy advocate for continentalist ideals. He held the office of Secretary General until December 18th, 1936 where he resigned to enlist in the International Brigades to fight in the Spanish Civil War to support the left-leaning Second Spanish Republic.
He was succeeded by Jason Ronson, a life-long friend and political partner of Wallace, and he used the war to promote his cause world wide. He became a political commissar in the XV International Brigade in 1937 and fought in many battles until his death on September 22nd, 1938 during the Battle of the Ebro. He was mourned after his death and surviving followers that volunteered in the war came home and were welcomed as heroes by the congress. His legacy is complicated as many praise his efforts to promote continentalism and gain support from common people in the working class, but many claim Wallace was a power-hungry individual who used continentalism to gain a large following to push his communist agenda and only used working-class grievances to remove his opponents from power.