Alonzo Watson

Alonzo Watson (1891 –1937) was an American anti-Fascist, historically famous as one of the first American anti-Fascist volunteers –as well as the first African American –to fall on the field of battle during the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939).

Biographical sketch
Alonzo Watson was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1891. A veteran of World War I and painter, Watson had moved to New York City –joining the Communist Party upon finding common cause with its Harlem activism in the 1930s. He left New York City for Spain on the day after Christmas in 1936 on the SS Normandie –one of the first group of volunteers to see service in the American outfit known as the Abraham Lincoln Brigade. Staffed mostly by Americans who supported the democratically elected Second Spanish Republic against the fascist military uprising led by General Francisco Franco, the Lincoln Brigadists composed the first completely integrated American fighting force.

Alonzo Watson died in February 1937 at the Battle of Jarama. Fellow veteran John Tisa recalls that Watson died in hand-to-hand combat.

His name occurs briefly as a historical character in Captain Blackman (1972), a novel written by African American writer John Alfred Williams and Bruce Palmer's They Shall Not Pass: A Novel of the Spanish Civil War (1971).