Mary Kenney O'Sullivan was an unsung American heroine whose astounding life was a quest for female equality. Born in Hannibal Missouri in 1864, she was the youngest daughter of Irish immigrants. Following her father's demise, she became the caretaker of her widowed mother and moved to Chicago Illinois after the infamous Haymarket Massacre. This was at the height of the industrial revolution, when American workers were little more than slaves and females were the most oppressed and exploited of all workers. It was a time ...
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Mary Kenney O'Sullivan was an unsung American heroine whose astounding life was a quest for female equality. Born in Hannibal Missouri in 1864, she was the youngest daughter of Irish immigrants. Following her father's demise, she became the caretaker of her widowed mother and moved to Chicago Illinois after the infamous Haymarket Massacre. This was at the height of the industrial revolution, when American workers were little more than slaves and females were the most oppressed and exploited of all workers. It was a time when workers' unions were demonized and the owners of industry were lionized, while engaged in untold acts of brutality, bloodshed, mayhem and murder. It was the "Gilded Age" when American history was written with the ink of lies. In Chicago, Mary would begin to organize working women and girls into trade unions and soon gained the attention of Samuel Gompers, The President of the American Federation of Labor. He would make her the first female labor organizer in America. She would soon become an admirer and ally of Mother Jones, Jane Addams, Eugene Debs and Clarence Darrow. She would meet her match in John O'Sullivan, a strikingly handsome man from Boston who had traveled the world as an able bodied seaman and become a labor columnist for the Boston Globe. She would marry John O'Sullivan and move to Boston where she would continue to engage in the organization of women workers, helping to form the Women's Trade Union League. After her husband's untimely passing, she became the sole support of her three children and suffered through the worst of times only to be resurrected by her faith. Thereafter, she would help to organize the historic textile workers strike in the mill town of Fall River, Massachusetts and the infamous "Bread and Roses Strike" in the City of Lawrence. During the Great Depression she would become an energetic supporter of Boston's Mayor, James Michael Curley. After Franklin D. Roosevelt's election as President of the United States, Mrs. Roosevelt sought her advice and counsel in helping formulate and enact legislation that fostered the equality of women, the elimination of child labor and the protection of the lives and safety of men and women in the workplace. Mary Kenney O'Sullivan, the Angel from the Dust, was simply the best, because she was the first, a pioneer. Never has her story and the story of America during her lifetime been more timely.
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This is a used book in good condition and may show some signs of use or wear. This is a used book in good condition and may show some signs of use or wear.