Hellraisers Journal: The Women Delegates of the Socialist Party of America to the International Conference at Copenhagen

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Quote May Wood Simons, SPA Convention Chicago, May 10, 1908———-

Hellraisers Journal – Thursday September 1, 1910
Copenhagen – American Socialist Women Attend International

May Wood Simons, Luella Twining, and Lena Morrow Lewis are delegates at the International Socialist Congress, now in progress at Copenhagen. They also took part in the Second International Socialist Women’s Conference which proceeded it. 

From The Progressive Woman of August 1910:

Our Women Delegates to the International

May Wood Simons.

May Wood Simons, Prg Wmn p10, Aug 1910

Have you ever asked yourself who have entered into the modern opportunities for women most fully? I have, and my thought always turns to our Comrade May.

She has enjoyed the best the schools could give her, having done the work not only for a first degree, but for a doctor of philosophy at Chicago university. That she has kept in the scholarly habit was proven last year by the remarkable feat of winning the Harrison prize for an essay in economics over many men competitors and judged by the heads of the department of economics in five great western universities.

But many women have done admirable work in scholarship. Mrs. Simons has been able to use hers steadily in practical service in the greatest cause of the age. She has worked for Socialism as teacher, lecturer or writer constantly, for the past twelve years or more. At present and since the establishment of the Daily Socialist she has been associate editor of that paper. Her husband, A. M. Simons is editor-in-chief. Already her activities and influence are world-wide and after this summer her place in the international movement will be still more pronounced and effective.

But no women, or normal man, for that matter, is content with world service alone. Fortunately indeed, is one for whom home life and life work are inextricably blended. It is interesting to note that the woman who seems to me to have reaped the fullest harvest from the new ideals and possibilities of our time both in public and private life happens also to be the most devoted mother of my acquaintance.

The genuine good of old standards need never be lost in gaining the genuine good of new freedom and opportunity. It is a satisfaction to have this demonstrated in the self-effaced beautiful little woman who will help to represent American Socialists in the greatest organization the world has known.

MILA TUPPER MAYNARD.

—————

Luella Twining.

Luella Twining, Prg Wmn p10, Aug 1910

Comrade Luella Twining was barely old enough to join the party when she and her mother became standbys in the Denver local. For nearly two years she studied under, my husband and I and later worked hard in other forms of training.

In preparation for what? She did not know then. She only knew the movement needed the best that was in each one and she worked as faithfully as if her life depended upon her knowledge and her ability to express her thought.

Singularly free from personal ambition or pleasure in the glare of footlights, she might have remained a Jennie Higgins to the end of time, had not the imprisonment of the Western Federation of Miners’ officials brought the occasion for far-reaching service. Even then, other conditions took her East, but filled as she was with horror at the fate which would meet those men if aid was not forthcoming, she quickly found herself in the thick of the fight. The work she did is well known. The Federation officials, finding her services so valuable, insisted that she work for them directly. Through her efforts an enormous amount was raised to fight the battle. It was through her also, largely, that the phenomenal May Day Protest meetings were held in 1906-demonstrations most effective in informing the public that,

“If Moyer and Haywood die,
Twenty million working men
Will know the reason why.”

Comrade Luella’s later work has been less dramatic but no less important. In the Mexican Refugee work, the Warren case and in the Philadelphia strike, she has given invaluable service.

Wherever the fight of the workers is thickest, wherever the cause of freedom can best be served there you will find this ardent worker for one common cause.

MILA TUPPER MAYNARD.

—————

Lena Morrow Lewis.

Lena Morrow Lewis, Prg Wmn p10, Aug 1910

During my acquaintance with Lena Morrow Lewis, I have learned a few personal things about her: That she is the daughter of a minister—of a whole line of ministers, I believe that she began her public life in the sort of work that women can do in the church organization; that she developed early into a temperance worker, taking the platform for the national movement; that from that she evolved into the suffrage movement, and became one of the national speakers of that organization; that she was sent into the unions to speak on suffrage for women, and thus became interested in the industrial phase of modern society. Gradually, feeling her way step by step, she came into our ranks, a full-fledged Socialist.

Some where, prior to all this, Comrade Lewis had a good college education. That is, good, as college educations go. I believe she doesn’t bank much on that today.

What she does bank on, is the knowledge gained through long and close contact with the people, the working classes the producing and disinherited folk, and the scientific and Socialist literature of the age. For Lena Morrow Lewis knows the life of the miners and lumbermen of the western coast; she knows the shriveled existence of the southern “cracker,” and the pinched poverty of the eastern mill hand.

From actual life to book life is not an easy transition for some people, and many never attempt to correlate the two. But Comrade Lewis keeps at hand always her books on biology, on sociology, on political science, on Socialism, and she constantly applies what she finds in them, to common every-day life, the life of the lumberman, the miner, the cracker, the mill hand, the millionaire.

And also to the woman in her relation to man and society, and to man’s relation to woman and to society. For Comrade Lewis believes that men and women are the most important factors in the universe, and that the study of men and women, in their various social relations is absolutely essential to human progress.

Whatever Lena Morrow Lewis does, is done with a conscientious thoroughness which is bound to spell success for any man or woman. She is one of the best sellers of literature in the Socialist movement because she has made a study of the work. She is one of the most convincing and polished among our speakers, because she has sought carefully for the right thought and the right words with which to express it. She serves well on the national executive committee—and she is the first woman to serve in that capacity-because she has at her finger’s ends knowledge of the party’s affairs sufficient to render her a good servant in that capacity. She is a national organizer because she is painstaking, efficient and careful as to details and results.

In short, Lena Morrow Lewis is a worker. She has hammered herself into shape for competent service in the Socialist movement, and she is giving it. The comrades in thirty out of forty-four states who voted for her as one of the eight delegates to represent them at the International Congress believed in her efficiency—and they will not be disappointed.

A COMRADE.

—————

[Emphasis added.]

Note: the eight delegates elected by the Socialist Party to attend the International Congress were: Victor Berger, Big Bill Haywood, Robert Hunter, Morris Hillquit, Lena Morrow Lewis, John Spargo, May Wood Simons, and Luella Twining.

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SOURCES & IMAGES

Quote May Wood Simons, SPA Convention Chicago, May 10, 1908
https://weneverforget.org/hellraisers-journal-speech-by-may-wood-simons-at-socialist-party-convention-brings-delegates-to-tears/

The Progressive Woman
(Girard, Kansas)
-Mar 1909 to May 1911
(note: some issues missing)
https://books.google.com/books?id=Zo1EAQAAIAAJ
Aug 1910
https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=Zo1EAQAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover&pg=GBS.PA16-IA225
“Our Women Delegates to the International”
https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=Zo1EAQAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover&pg=GBS.RA17-PA10

Miner’s Magazine
Western Federation of Miners, 1909-10
(search: lewis simons twining)
https://books.google.com/books?id=hT8tAQAAMAAJ

See also:

Mila Tupper Maynard
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mila_Tupper_Maynard

International Socialist Women’s Conferences
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Socialist_Women%27s_Conferences

The Second International Socialist Women’s Conference
Copenhagen, August 26–27, 1910
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Socialist_Women%27s_Conferences#Copenhagen_1910

International Socialist Congress, Copenhagen 1910
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Socialist_Congress,_Copenhagen_1910

International Socialist Congress of 1910
by International Socialist Congress, 1910
https://archive.org/details/InternationalSocialistCongress1910SecondInternationalConferenceOf/mode/2up
& Second International Conference of Socialist Women
https://archive.org/details/InternationalSocialistCongress1910SecondInternationalConferenceOf/page/n15/mode/2up

Report of the Socialist Women of Greater New York
to the International Socialist Congress,
Copenhagen, Denmark, August 28th–September 4th, 1910
-by Anna B. Touroff, Delegate
https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/100577508

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The Internationale, sung in 56 languages in alphabetical order.