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GAY WISDOM for Daily Living...
from White Crane
GAY WISDOM for Daily Living...
from White Crane
Exploring Gay Wisdom & Culture
http://www.Gaywisdom.org
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THIS DAY IN GAY HISTORY
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THIS DAY IN GAY HISTORY
JANUARY 2
1857 – CAREY THOMAS,
American educator, born (d: 1935); One of the most prominent
American educators of the early 20th century, M. Carey Thomas shared
her home with another woman while serving as the second president of the women-only
Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania. Martha Carey Thomas was the eldest of ten
children of a Quaker couple in Baltimore, Maryland. Her mother was active in
the Women's Christian Temperance Union and her physician father became a
trustee of Johns Hopkins University.
Few Victorian women pursued
advanced education or careers, but, encouraged by her family to view herself as
the equal of any man, Thomas did so. After obtaining a B.A. in classics from
Cornell University in 1875, she tried to obtain a graduate degree from Johns
Hopkins University. The school would not permit Thomas to attend classes with
men, and she withdrew in frustration.
Leaving the United States for
Europe, Thomas studied in Leipzig, Germany. When professors at Leipzig refused
to examine a woman for the doctorate degree, she transferred to the University
of Zurich in Switzerland. In 1882, she became the first woman and the first
foreigner to obtain that school's doctorate summa cum laude.
Appointed to a post at newly
established Bryn Mawr in Pennsylvania in 1883, Thomas became the first dean of
an American women's college to hold a doctorate. Named president in 1894, she
boosted the scholarly reputation of the school by seeking only the ablest
scholars for the faculty, recruiting Woodrow Wilson among others. She
encouraged non-traditional attitudes among the undergraduates and strongly
supported academic and professional careers for women, famously stating
"our failures only marry."
Education of a Woman,
published in 1900, established Thomas's international reputation as the leading
authority on the higher education of women. Recognizing the importance of
women's roles in Progressive-era social reform, Thomas also found time to
contribute to the establishment of the Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine and the Bryn Mawr Summer School for Women Workers.
While in Europe, Thomas had lived
with Mamie Gwinn, a childhood friend with whom she enjoyed a "romantic
friendship." This arrangement continued at Bryn Mawr, where Gwinn also
taught. The two women openly shared a home on the college campus until Gwinn
married in 1904. (Gertrude Stein immortalized the messy break-up in her story Fernhurst,
probably written in late 1904.)
While involved with Gwinn, Thomas
had pursued a relationship with Mary Garrett (1839-1915), a philanthropist and
heiress to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad fortune. Deeply committed to women's
rights, in 1893 Garrett made a sizable gift in support of the Johns Hopkins
University Medical School, on condition that the new school admit women on an
equal basis. Her philanthropy also benefited the women's suffrage movement.
After Gwinn and Thomas separated,
Garrett and Thomas became a couple, living together at the college until
Garrett's death. Garrett bequeathed the bulk of her estate to Thomas. Thomas
retired in 1922 and succumbed to heart failure on December 2, 1935.
Thomas never publicly discussed
her sexuality, but there is a strong presumption that she was a Lesbian. After
analyzing Thomas's reading, her biographer Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz argued that
the Bryn Mawr president was well aware of the possibilities for physical love
between women and of the medically oriented literature on sexuality that began
to appear in the late nineteenth century.
Thomas is notable for managing to
carve out a large role for women in the world of academia. While her sexual
orientation cannot be proved beyond doubt, her pioneering educational
achievements established the groundwork that made it possible for generations
of other women to pursue lives free from financial and emotional dependence
upon men.
1920 – If you
think the Patriot Act is something new, be advised of THE PALMER
RAIDS which began in the United States, less than
90 years ago. The Palmer Raids
were a series of controversial raids by the U.S. Justice and Immigration
Departments from 1919 to 1921 on suspected radical leftists in the United
States. The raids are named for Alexander Mitchell Palmer, U.S. Attorney
General under Woodrow Wilson.
The crackdown on radical left-wing political
groups had actually begun during WWI. After a series of bomb attacks of court
buildings, police stations, churches and homes attributed to violent immigrant anarchist
groups, the Department of Justice and its small Bureau of Investigation (BOI)
(predecessor to the FBI) had begun to track their activities with the approval
of President Wilson. In 1915, Wilson warned of hyphenated Americans who have
poured the poison of disloyalty into the very arteries of our national life.
Such creatures of passion, disloyalty and anarchy must be crushed out.
Handicapped by the secrecy of these groups
and limited Federal law enforcement capabilities, the Bureau of Investigation
significantly increased its workload on anarchist movements after 1917 when the
Galleanists (followers of Luigi Galleani) and other radical groups
commenced a new series of bomb attacks in several major American cities. The Russian
Revolution of 1917 was also a background factor: many anarchists believed that
the worker's revolution there would quickly spread across Europe and the
United States.
On June 15, 1917, Congress passed the
Espionage Act. The law set punishments for acts of interference in foreign
policy and espionage. The act authorized stiff fines and prison terms of up to
20 years for anyone who obstructed the military draft or encouraged
"disloyalty" against the U.S. government. After two anarchist
radicals, Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman, continued to advocate against conscription,
Goldman's offices at Mother Earth
were thoroughly searched, and volumes of files and detailed subscription lists
from Mother Earth, along with Berkman's journal The Blast, were
seized. As a Justice Department news release reported: A wagon load of
anarchist records and propaganda material was seized, and included in the lot
is what is believed to be a complete registry of anarchy's friends in the
United States. A splendidly kept card index was found, which the Federal agents
believe will greatly simplify their task of identifying persons mentioned in
the various record books and papers. The subscription lists of Mother Earth and
The Blast, which contain 10,000 names, were also seized.
In 1919, J. Edgar Hoover was put in charge of
a new division of the Justice Department's Bureau of Investigation, the General
Intelligence Division. By October 1919, Hoover's division had collected 150,000
names in a rapidly expanding index. Using this information, starting on November 7, 1919, BOI agents, together
with local police, orchestrated a series of well-publicized raids against
suspected radicals and foreigners, using the Espionage Act of 1917 and the Sedition Act of 1918.
Palmer and his agents were accused of using torture and other controversial
methods of obtaining intelligence and collecting evidence on radicals,
including informers and wiretaps.
Victor
L. Berger was sentenced to twenty years in
prison on a charge of sedition, although the Supreme Court of the United
States later
overturned that conviction. The radical anarchist Luigi Galleani and
eight of
his adherents were deported in June 1919, three weeks after the June
2 wave of bombings. Although authorities did not have enough evidence to
arrest
Galleani for the bombings, they could deport him because he was a
resident
alien who had overtly encouraged the violent overthrow of the
government, was a
known associate of Carlo Valdonoci and had authored an explicit how-to
bomb
making manual titled La Salute é in Voi (The Health is Within You), used
by other Galleanists to construct some of their package bombs.
In December 1919, Palmer's agents gathered
249 people of Russian origin, including well-known radical leaders such as Emma
Goldman and Alexander Berkman, and placed them on a ship bound for the Soviet Union (The Buford),
called the Soviet Ark by the press).
In January 1920, another 6,000 were arrested, mostly members of the industrial Workers of the World union.
During one of the raids, more than 4,000 individuals were rounded up in a
single night. All foreign aliens caught were deported, with no requirement that
there be any evidence against them, under the provisions of the Anarchist Act.
All in all, by January 1920, Palmer and Hoover had organized the largest mass
arrests in U.S. history, rounding up at least 10,000 individuals.
Louis F. Post, then Assistant Secretary of
Labor, cancelled more than 2000 of these warrants as being illegal. Of the many
thousands arrested, 550 people were actually deported. For most of 1919 and
early 1920, much of the public sided with Palmer, but this soon changed. Palmer
announced that an attempted Communist revolution was certain to take place in
the U.S. on May 1, 1920 (May Day).
No such revolution took place, leading to widespread derision of Palmer. Once
seen as a likely presidential candidate, he lost the nomination of the
Democratic Party to dark horse candidate James M, Cox.
On September 16, 1920, a violent blast
rocked Wall Street. The Wall Street Bombing killed 38 people and wounded over
400; it was never solved but was widely attributed to radical anarchists.
As
Winston Churchill opined: “America always
does the right thing...after it’s tried everything else.”Of course,
nowadays, Tea Partiers and the Radical rightwing reactionaries can
assert their right to overthrow the government with seeming impunity.
Threats of armed insurrection and "nullification" (one of the main
issues that precipitated the Civil War) are, it seems, commonplace in
the public "discourse." Not sure if this is progress or not..
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