Posted May 3, 200817 yr Emma Goldman. This ragtime radical was nearly forgotten until the New Left and feminism of the late 1960s led to the renewed study of US political radicalism and the new field of woman’s history. As an anarchist and a strong female voice in politics Goldman was of interest to both feminist and left-oriented scholars, resulting in a flood of writing on her life and work. Her life embodied certain stereotypes of the romantic, revolutionary; idealistic but not ascetic, somewhat tragic, and always resilient. Then there was the high drama of political conflict (often violent). In short, Goldman led a colorful life, so she became a lefty pop culture figure outside academia. Goldman was a traveling agitator, moving about the country giving speeches. Often she was prevented from speaking by local authorities, occasionally even being arrested. This restriction of political speech (not just Goldman but other radicals, too) eventually led to the creation of the ACLU. It was an early free speech group that brought Goldman to Dayton the first time. The tiny (five members) Dayton branch of the “Free Speech League of American” rented Mallory’s Hall “…an amusement place for colored people” and brought Goldman to Dayton on 28 January 1911. She stayed at the Algonquin Hotel, today’s Doubletree (heh..yeah..'Emma Goldman Slept Here'), where she was interviewed by the Dayton Daily News reporter for this front page story: Apparently “The Queen of the Revolutionists” was an early celebrity, as the DDN article tone assumes readers have some familiarity with the subject. The article is written in a light, chatty style, not too negative. Also note that the final passage quotes the mayor saying the city won’t be interfering or watching her oration. This was quite different from her reception in some of the other cities on her lecture tour (map from the American Experience PBS website on an Emma Goldman documentary: click here for the interactive version). 1911 lecture site then and now (Mallory’s Hall is the large building in the center). As sort of an early comment on feminism here is this exchange between the reporter on Goldman on the police interest in her speeches: The reporter writes about Goldman’s problems being chased by the law elsewhere: “Miss Goldman is still in the little game of tag and so far has managed to outwit the sleuths. Not that they ‘want her’, but just that they don’t want her to talk.” Tto which Goldman replies: “Its perfectly natural that a man shouldn’t want a woman to talk so I don’t mind.” And another news report, this time from the Dayton Herald. Goldman returned to Dayton on February 19 1912 for a double engagement at the Jewel Theatre, formerly Beckels’ Opera House, on Jefferson Street. There are no good images of the Jewel, so here is a Sanborn showing the site and a pix of what’;s there now. The first half was a Sunday afternoon debate with a local socialist who was on the outs with his party, which led to the Dayton socialists telling their members not to attend. The second half was very poorly attended Sunday evening talk on ‘Motherhood’, which sounds like it might have been the “Why The Poor Must Not Have Children” lecture. …the image was from a different lecture site (Butte, Montana), but note the central figure in the mustache. This was Ben Rietman, an associate and sometime lover of Goldman, who acted as a sort of advance man for her lecture tours. He might have been the one who set up the 1912 Dayton gig. Press reports were ill tempered this time, with the DDN report being quite a contrast with the 1911 article. Dayton Herald had this to say: And the Dayton Journal had the event on the front page, with a pretty nice pix of Goldman (which unfortunately did not reproduce well), but a headline saying she was “All but Ignored by Dayton”, giving attendance figures of 200 for the afternoon debate and 33 for the evening lecture The paper also mentions that $22 ($ 400 in todays’ money) was raised for the “Lawrence textile strike”. This was the well-know (to labor historians) Bread and Roses Strike, organized by the IWW and a bit of a national cause célèbre at the time. Anarchism never took hold in Dayton, nor anywhere else for that matter (except for Spain, where the Catalonian anarchists were featured in George Orwell’s writing). Emma Goldman was deported in 1919 along with hundreds of other radicals, and died an exile. She did return in death and is buried in Chicago’s Waldheim Cemetery, near her former beau Ben Reitman and other radicals of the past, in the so-called “Communist plot”. The political/lefty pop culture resurrection of Goldman was more in the 1970s and 1980s, so I don’t know if it has lasted into modern times or if she has slipped back into obscurity again. Yet an interesting study on early political celebrity, of an early version of a figure like, say, Abbie Hoffman or Al Sharpton, who had no real political power but achieved a certain degree of fame.
May 3, 200817 yr Fascinating. Thanks. "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
May 12, 200817 yr Thanks for sharing. I like the other newspaper articles "Free treatment for deafness" and "They need people in California."
May 13, 200817 yr ^ lol..yeah, when I scanned those articles in I left some of the stuff around it for context! I got a kick out of the California ad too.
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