Eastman, Crystal

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[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
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[[Category:Lawyers and Jurists]]
[[Category:Law]]
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[[Category:Politicians and reformers]]
[[Category:Biography]]
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{{epname|Eastman, Crystal}}
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[[Image:CrystalEastman.jpeg|thumb|200px|]]
 
[[Image:CrystalEastman.jpeg|thumb|200px|]]
  
'''Crystal Eastman''' (born June 25, 1881 – died July 8, 1928) was an [[United States|American]] [[law|lawyer]], antimilitarist, [[feminism|feminist]], [[socialism|socialist]], and [[journalism|journalist]]. She was a co-founder of numerous social organizations, including '''American Union Against Militarism''', '''National Woman's Party''', '''Woman’s Peace Party''', and '''American Civil Liberties Union'''.  
+
'''Crystal Eastman''' (June 25, 1881 – July 8, 1928) was an [[United States|American]] [[law|lawyer]], antimilitarist, [[feminism|feminist]], [[socialism|socialist]], and [[journalism|journalist]]. She was a co-founder of numerous social organizations, including American Union Against Militarism, National Woman's Party, Woman’s Peace Party, and the [[American Civil Liberties Union]]. While her ideas were in some cases extreme, her passion for civil liberties for all marks her as an example of those who dedicated their lives to the advancement of human society.
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{{toc}}
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==Life==
  
==Life==
+
'''Crystal Eastman''' was born on June 25, 1881 in Marlborough, [[Massachusetts]], into the family of Samuel Eastman and Annis Ford, who both were church ministers. Her brother was [[Max Eastman]] (1883–1969), a famous [[Socialism|socialist]] writer and one of the leaders of the Harlem Renaissance. Crystal Eastman graduated from Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York in 1903, and received an M.A. in [[sociology]] from [[Columbia University]] in 1904. She was second in the class of 1907 at [[New York University]] Law School.
  
'''Crystal Eastman''' was born in Marlborough, [[Massachusetts]], into a family of Samuel Eastman and Annis Ford, who both were church ministers. Her brother was [[Max Eastman]] (1883–1969), a famous socialist writer and one of the leaders of the Harlem Renaissance. Crystal Eastman graduated from Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, NY in 1903, and received an M.A. in [[sociology]] from [[Columbia University]] in 1904. She was second in the class of 1907 at New York University Law School.
+
In 1907, [[social work]] pioneer and journal editor [[Paul Kellogg]] (1879-1958) offered Eastman her first job, investigating labor conditions for ''The Pittsburgh Survey'', sponsored by the Russell Sage Foundation. This was the first in-depth sociological study of industrial accidents ever undertaken. Her report, ''Work Accidents and the Law'' (1910), became a classic and resulted in the first [[workers' compensation]] law, which she drafted while serving on a New York State commission. Eastman continued to campaign for occupational [[safety]] and health while working as an investigating attorney for the U.S. Commission on Industrial Relations during [[Woodrow Wilson]]'s presidency.
  
In 1907 social work pioneer and journal editor [[Paul Kellogg]] (1879-1958) offered Eastman her first job, investigating labor conditions for ''The Pittsburgh Survey'', sponsored by the Russell Sage Foundation. This was the first in-depth sociological study of industrial accidents ever undertaken. Her report, ''Work Accidents and the Law'' (1910), became a classic and resulted in the first workers' compensation law, which she drafted while serving on a New York State commission. Eastman continued to campaign for occupational safety and health while working as an investigating attorney for the U.S. Commission on Industrial Relations during [[Woodrow Wilson]]'s presidency.
+
In 1911, Eastman married Wallace Benedict and moved to [[Milwaukee]]. The marriage was troubled from the beginning, and after three years resulted in divorce. In 1913, Eastman became investigating attorney for the U.S. Commission on Industrial Relations, in which function she participated in the Seventh Congress of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance in [[Budapest]], [[Hungary]].  
  
In 1911 Eastman married Wallace Benedict and moved to Milwaukee. The marriage was doomed from the beginning, and after three years resulted in divorce.  In 1913 Eastman became investigating attorney for the U.S. Commission on Industrial Relations, in which function she participated in the ''Seventh Congress of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance'' in Budapest, [[Hungary]].  
+
In 1913, after her return to the United States she joined, together with [[Lucy Burns]], Doris Stevens (1892-1963), [[Helen Keller]], [[Dorothy Day]], [[Alice Paul]], and other women activists, to form the Congressional Union for Woman's Suffrage (CUWS). They started to organize demonstrations and the daily picketing of the [[White House]]. Many of the women were jailed for "obstructing traffic." The organization changed its name in 1916 into the National Woman's Party.
  
In 1913, after the return to the United States she joined, together with Lucy Burns (1879-1966), Doris Stevens (1892-1963), [[Helen Keller]], [[Maria Montessori]], [[Dorothy Day]], [[Alice Paul]], and other women activists, to form the '''Congressional Union for Women Suffrage''' (CUWS). They started to organize demonstrations and the daily picketing of the [[White House]]. Many of the women were jailed for "obstructing traffic". The organization changed the name in 1916 into '''National Woman's Party'''.
+
After the outbreak of the [[World War I]] Eastman, [[Jane Addams]], [[Lillian Wald]] (1867–1940), [[Paul Kellogg]] (1879-1958), [[Edith Abbott]], [[Sophonisba Breckinridge]], Oswald Garrison Villard (1872–1949), and other anti-war activists established the Woman’s Peace Party, to lobby against American involvement in the war. Eastman served as the executive director of the organization.  
  
After the outbreak of the [[World War I]] Eastman, [[Jane Addams]], Lillian Wald (1867–1940), [[Paul Kellogg]] (1879-1958), [[Edith Abbott]], [[Sophonisba Breckinridge]], [[Oswald Garrison Villard]] (1872–1949), and other anti-war activists established the '''Woman’s Peace Party''', to lobby against American involvement in the war. Eastman served as the executive director of the organization. In 1916 she married British poet and antiwar activist Walter Fuller, with whom she had two children. In 1917 Eastman helped established the '''National Civil Liberties Bureau''' (NCLB), which in 1920 became '''American Civil Liberties Union''' (ACLU).
+
In 1916, she married British poet and antiwar activist Walter Fuller, with whom she had two children. In 1917, Eastman helped established the National Civil Liberties Bureau (NCLB), which in 1920 became the [[American Civil Liberties Union]] (ACLU).
  
After the war, Eastman organized the First Feminist Congress in 1919, and co-owned and edited a radical journal of politics, art, and literature, ''The Liberator'', with her brother Max. At the same time she commuted between New York and London, where her husband worked.  
+
After the war, Eastman organized the First Feminist Congress in 1919, and co-owned and edited a radical journal of [[politics]], [[art]], and [[literature]], ''The Liberator'', with her brother Max. At the same time she commuted between New York and [[London]], where her husband worked.  
  
Due to her involvement with radical and left-wing organization, during the First Red Scare of 1919-1921, she was blacklisted and thus rendered unemployable. She decided to move to her husband to London, where she worked as a columnist for feminist journals, notably ''Equal Rights'' and ''Time and Tide''. She participated in the campaign to get votes for women on the same terms as men.  
+
Due to her involvement with radical and left-wing organization, during the First Red Scare of 1919-1921, she was blacklisted and thus rendered unemployable. She decided to move to join her husband in London, where she worked as a columnist for [[feminism|feminist]] journals, notably ''Equal Rights'' and ''Time and Tide''. She participated in the campaign to get votes for women on the same terms as men.  
  
After her husband died in 1927, Eastman returned to the [[United States]]. She was already a poor health and within 10 months she passed away of a brain hemorrhage in New York City. She was forty-eight years old.
+
After her husband died in 1927, Eastman returned to the [[United States]]. She was already in poor health and within ten months she died of a brain hemorrhage in [[New York City]]. She was 48-years-old.
  
 
==Work==
 
==Work==
  
Eastman was initiator and co-founder of numerous civil and political organizations. She believed that women should make their voices heard in legislation and therefore should have the right to vote. In 1913 Eastman joined [[Alice Paul]], Lucy Burns (1879-1966), and others in founding the militant '''Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage''', which later became the '''National Woman's Party'''. The goal of the organization was to voice for women’s right to vote on the same terms as men and against employment discrimination. The party also opposed [[World War I]].
+
Crystal Eastman was initiator and co-founder of numerous civil and political organizations. She believed that women should make their voices heard in legislation and therefore should have the right to vote. In 1913, Eastman joined [[Alice Paul]], [[Lucy Burns]], and others in founding the militant Congressional Union for Woman's Suffrage, which later became the National Woman's Party. The goal of the organization was to voice for women’s right to vote on the same terms as men and against employment discrimination. The party also opposed [[World War I]].  
 
 
Eastman helped found the '''Woman's Peace Party''' and was president of the [[New York City|New York]] branch. In 1915 Jane Addams became president of the Woman's Peace Party. Addams found Eastman to be too direct, and opposed her personal lifestyle and a practice of “casual sex”. It was known that Greenwich Village women supported birth control and had lovers, which was definitively against the norms of that time. After divorcing her first husband to marry Walter Fuller, Eastman refused to accept alimony, criticizing the whole concept of alimony as nothing more than an admission of woman’s financial dependency on men. Eastman also worked with [[Emma Goldman]] (1869-1940) on the support of [[birth control]], legalizing [[prostitution]], and [[free speech]] during war times.  
 
  
Woman's Peace Party was renamed the '''Women's International League for Peace and Freedom''' in 1921, it remains the oldest extant women's peace organization. Eastman also carried a duty of executive director of the '''American Union Against Militarism''', which lobbied against America's entrance into the European war and more successfully against war with [[Mexico]] in 1916. It also sought to remove profiteering from arms manufacturing, and campaigned against conscription and American imperialism in [[Latin America]] and the [[Caribbean]].  
+
Eastman helped found the Woman's Peace Party and was president of the [[New York City|New York]] branch. In 1915, [[Jane Addams]] became president of the Woman's Peace Party. Addams found Eastman to be too direct, and opposed her personal lifestyle and a practice of “casual sex.” It was known that Greenwich Village women supported birth control and had lovers, which was against the [[norm]]s of that time. After divorcing her first husband to marry Walter Fuller, Eastman refused to accept [[alimony]], criticizing the whole concept of alimony as nothing more than an admission of woman’s financial dependency on men. Eastman also worked with [[Emma Goldman]] (1869-1940) on the support of [[birth control]], legalizing [[prostitution]], and free speech during [[war]] times.  
  
When in 1917 the [[United States]] entered [[World War I]], Eastman organized with [[Roger Nash Baldwin]] the '''National Civil Liberties Bureau''' to protect conscientious objectors, or in her words: ''To maintain something over here that will be worth coming back to when the weary war is over.'' The NCLB grew into the '''American Civil Liberties Union''' (ACLU), with Baldwin at the head and Eastman functioning as attorney in charge. Eastman is credited as a founding member of the NCLB, but her role as founder may be largely ignored by posterity due to her personal differences with Baldwin.
+
The Woman's Peace Party was renamed the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom in 1921, and remains the oldest extant women's peace organization. Eastman also carried the duty of executive director of the American Union Against Militarism, which [[lobbying|lobbied]] against America's entrance into the European war and more successfully against war with [[Mexico]] in 1916. It also sought to remove profiteering from arms manufacturing, and campaigned against [[conscription]] and American [[imperialism]] in [[Latin America]] and the [[Caribbean]].  
  
In 1919, worried that [[Communism|Communists]] would try to overthrown the American government, the attorney general A. Mitchell Palmer (1872-1936), launched a campaign against all radical and left-wing organizations in the United States. As the result, over 10,000 suspected communists and anarchists were arrested, many of them held in prison for a long period of time without trial. Hundreds were even deported to [[Russia]], and many were put on blacklist, unable to get legal employment. In 1920 Eastman and several other activists, among which were Roger Nash Baldwin (1884-1981), Norman Thomas (1884-1968), [[Jane Addams]], John Haynes Holmes (1879-1964), Freda Kirchwey (1893–1976), [[Florence Kelley]], Lillian Wald (1867–1940), Felix Frankfurter (1882–1965), [[Oswald Garrison Villard]] (1872–1949), , [[Paul Kellogg]] (1879-1958), [[Clarence Darrow]], [[John Dewey]], Charles Beard (1874–1948), Abraham Muste (1885-1967), Elizabeth Gurley Flynn ((1890-1964) and [[Upton Sinclair]], decided to raise voice against government’s persecution of people for their political beliefs. They established the '''American Civil Liberties Union''' (ACLU), which was the extension of the National Civil Liberties Bureau. The organization had the main goal to speak up for civil rights. This included:
+
When in 1917 the [[United States]] entered [[World War I]], Eastman organized with [[Roger Nash Baldwin]] the National Civil Liberties Bureau to protect [[conscientious objector]]s, or in her words: ''To maintain something over here that will be worth coming back to when the weary war is over.''  
  
- protection of the freedom of speech, association and assembly, freedom of the press, and freedom of religion.
+
In 1919, worried that [[Communism|Communists]] would try to overthrow the American government, the attorney general A. Mitchell Palmer (1872-1936), launched a campaign against all radical and left-wing organizations in the United States. As the result, over 10,000 suspected communists and [[anarchy|anarchists]] were arrested, many of them held in [[prison]] for a long period of time without [[trial]]. Hundreds were even [[deportation|deported]] to [[Russia]], and many were put on a blacklist, unable to obtain legal employment. In 1920, Eastman and several other activists, among whom were included notable Americans Roger Nash Baldwin, [[Norman Thomas]], [[Jane Addams]], [[Florence Kelley]], [[Lillian Wald]], [[Felix Frankfurter]], [[Paul Kellogg]], [[Clarence Darrow]], [[John Dewey]], [[Charles Beard]], Abraham Muste (1885-1967), [[Elizabeth Gurley Flynn]], and [[Upton Sinclair]], decided to raise their voice against government persecution of people for their political beliefs. They established the [[American Civil Liberties Union]] (ACLU), which was the extension of the National Civil Liberties Bureau. The organization had as its main goal to speak up for civil rights:
- the right to equal treatment in the eyes of the law, regardless of race, sex, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, age, physical handicap, etc.  
+
* protection of the freedom of speech, association and assembly, freedom of the press, and freedom of religion.
- the right to be treated fairly when facing criminal or other serious charges.  
+
* the right to equal treatment in the eyes of the law, regardless of race, sex, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, age, physical handicap, etc.  
- the right of privacy, which cannot be violated by the government or any other institutions.  
+
* the right to be treated fairly when facing criminal or other serious charges.  
 +
* the right of privacy, which cannot be violated by the government or any other institutions.  
  
After women won the right to vote in 1920, Eastman and three others wrote the ''Equal Rights Amendment'' (ERA) introduced in 1923. The purpose of the amendment was to guarantee equal rights under the law for Americans regardless of sex. The initiative created great opposition, and the amendment never reached the floor of either the Senate or the House of Representatives for a vote. Eastman claimed that one could assess the importance of the ERA by the intensity of the opposition to it, but she felt that “this is a fight worth fighting even if it takes ten years.” The amendment has finally passed the vote in 1972. The opponents of the amandment, which included other suffragist groups and women’s movements, criticised it from the perspective that it would eliminate numerous protective legislation that gave favored treatment to women workers. They claimed that women should not be forced to compete with men and thus any government support is welcomed.
+
After women won the right to vote in 1920, Eastman and three others wrote the [[Equal Rights Amendment]] (ERA) introduced in 1923. The purpose of the amendment was to guarantee equal rights under the law for Americans regardless of gender. The initiative created great opposition, and the amendment never reached the floor of either the Senate or the House of Representatives for a vote. Eastman claimed that one could assess the importance of the ERA by the intensity of the opposition to it, but she felt that “this is a fight worth fighting even if it takes ten years.” The amendment has finally passed in 1972. Opponents of the amendment, which included other [[suffragism|suffragist]] groups and women’s movements, criticized it from the perspective that it would eliminate numerous protective legislation that gave favored treatment to women workers. They claimed that women should not be forced to compete with men and thus any government support is welcomed.
  
 
==Legacy==
 
==Legacy==
  
Eastman has been called one of the United States' most neglected leaders, because, although she wrote pioneering legislation and created long-lasting political organizations, she disappeared from history for fifty years. Her significance however reemerged in 1970s and 1980s with the discussion on the ''Equal Rights Amendment'' in the Congress, and with the rewriting of the history of the feminist movement, free of "Communist" label.  
+
Crystal Eastman has been called one of the [[United States]]' most neglected leaders, because, although she wrote pioneering legislation and created long-lasting political organizations, she disappeared from history for fifty years. Her significance however reemerged in the 1970s and 1980s with the discussion on the [[Equal Rights Amendment]] in the Congress, and with the rewriting of the history of the [[feminism|feminist]] movement, free of the "[[Communism|Communist]]" label.  
  
Eastman fought for peace, equal rights and civil liberties for all, and was a co-founder of numerous civil and political organizations. While working on the New York State's Commission on Employers' Liability, Eastman helped draft the nation's first workers' compensation law, which became model for workers' compensation throughout the nation. Eastman helped established the '''National Civil Liberties Bureau''' (NCLB), which under the name '''American Civil Liberties Union''' (ACLU) still functions today. She was also on the founding committee of the '''Woman's Peace Party''', which changed name in 1921 into '''Women's International League for Peace and Freedom''', which is today the nation's oldest women's peace organization.
+
Eastman fought for peace, equal rights, and civil liberties for all, and was co-founder of numerous civil and political organizations. While working on the New York State's Commission on Employers' Liability, Eastman helped draft the nation's first [[workers' compensation]] law, which became a model for workers' compensation throughout the nation. Eastman helped established the National Civil Liberties Bureau (NCLB), which under the name [[American Civil Liberties Union]] (ACLU) still functions today. She was also on the founding committee of the Woman's Peace Party, which became the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, and is the nation's oldest women's peace organization.
  
 
==Publications==
 
==Publications==
  
* Eastman, Crystal. 1909. ''Employers' liability: A criticism based on facts''. American association for labor legislation
+
* Eastman, Crystal. 1909. ''Employers' liability: A criticism based on facts''. American association for labor legislation.
 
+
* Eastman, Crystal. [1910] 1969. ''Work Accidents & the Law''. Ayer Co Pub. ISBN 0405021186
* Eastman, Crystal. 1969 (original published in 1910). ''Work Accidents & the Law''. Ayer Co Pub. ISBN 0405021186
 
  
 
==Reference==
 
==Reference==
 
+
* Cook, Blanche W. (ed.). 1976. ''Crystal and Max Eastman on Feminism, Antimilitarism, and Revolution''. New York: Garland Pub. ISBN 0824005023
* Cityofelmira.net. ''Crystal Eastman founded the ACLU''. Retrieved on January 5, 2007.  <http://www.cityofelmira.net/history/crystal_eastman.html>
+
* Cook, Blanche W. (ed.). 1978. ''Crystal Eastman on Women and Revolution''. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195024451
* Cook, Blanche W. (Ed.) 1976. ''Crystal and Max Eastman on Feminism, Antimilitarism, and Revolution''. New York: Garland Pub. ISBN 0824005023
+
* Davis Erin F. 2002. [http://www.stanford.edu/group/WLHP/papers/EastmanCrystal.paper.pdf ''Labor’s Love Lost?: Crystal Eastman’s Contribution to Workers’ Compensation Reform.''] Stanford University. Retrieved on January 5, 2007.
* Cook, Blanche W. (Ed.) 1978. ''Crystal Eastman on Women and Revolution''. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195024451
+
* Kerber, Linda K., and Jane S. De Hart. 2003. ''Women's America: Refocusing the Past''. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195159829
* Davis Erin F. 2002. ''Labor’s Love Lost?: Crystal Eastman’s Contribution to Workers’ Compensation Refo''rm. Stanford University. Retrieved on January 5, 2007. <http://www.stanford.edu/group/WLHP/papers/EastmanCrystal.paper.pdf>
 
* Kerber, Linda K. & De Hart, Jane S. 2003. ''Women's America: Refocusing the Past''. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195159829
 
 
* Schoen, June. 1972. ''The New Woman: Feminism in Greenwich Village, 1910-1920''. New York: Quadrangle Books. ISBN 0812902572
 
* Schoen, June. 1972. ''The New Woman: Feminism in Greenwich Village, 1910-1920''. New York: Quadrangle Books. ISBN 0812902572
* Sears, Alan & Osten, Craig. 2005. ''The ACLU vs. America: Exposing the Agenda to Redefine Moral Values''. B&H Publishing Group. ISBN 0805440453
+
* Sears, Alan, and Craig Osten. 2005. ''The ACLU vs. America: Exposing the Agenda to Redefine Moral Values''. B&H Publishing Group. ISBN 0805440453
* Spartacus. ''Crystal Eastman''. Retrieved on January 4, 2007. <http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAWeastman.htm>
+
* [http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAWeastman.htm ''Crystal Eastman''.] Spartacus. Retrieved on January 4, 2007.
 +
* [http://www.cityofelmira.net/history/crystal_eastman.html ''Crystal Eastman founded the ACLU'']. Cityofelmira.net. Retrieved on January 5, 2007.
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
 +
All links retrieved January 11, 2024.
 +
 +
* [https://www.womenofthehall.org/inductee/crystal-eastman/ Crystal Eastman] - National Women's Hall of Fame
 +
* [http://www.aclu.org/womensrights/gen/13148res20020312.html Crystal Eastman] – American Civil Liberties Union
 +
* [https://www.thoughtco.com/crystal-eastman-biography-3530413 Crystal Eastman, Activist ] – ThoughtCo.
 +
* [http://www.jofreeman.com/socialmovements/polorg.htm Political Organization In The Feminist Movement] – by Jo Freeman.
 +
* [http://www.poemhunter.com/quotations/famous.asp?people=Crystal+Eastman Quotations] – Some quotations from Eastman.
 +
  
* [http://www.library.csi.cuny.edu/dept/history/lavender/386/ceastman.html Crystal Eastman: Radical Feminist from Greenwich Village] – Eastman’s biography on the College of Staten Island website
 
* [http://www.greatwomen.org/women.php?action=viewone&id=56 Crystal Eastman (1881 - 1928)] – On Eastman’s work
 
* [http://www.aclu.org/womensrights/gen/13148res20020312.html Crystal Eastman] – Eastman’s work in the American Civil Liberties Union
 
* [http://www.poemhunter.com/quotations/famous.asp?people=Crystal+Eastman Quotations] – Some quotations from Eastman
 
* [http://www.jofreeman.com/socialmovements/polorg.htm Political Organization In The Feminist Movement] – On feminist movement, by Jo Freeman
 
* [http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/women/womensbook.html Internet Women’s History Sourcebook] – Resources on the history of women’s movement
 
* [http://womenshistory.about.com/library/etext/bl_eastman_crystal_1920.htm “Now We Can Begin: What's Next?”] – Eastman’s article in 1920 about the tasks that remain after women won the right to vote in 1920
 
* [http://www.wilpf.org/ Women's International League for Peace and Freedom] – WILPF website
 
* [http://www.aclu.org/ American Civil Liberties Union] – ACLU website
 
* [http://www.stoptheaclu.com/ Stop the ACLU] – Criticism of ACLU
 
* [http://www.msu.edu/course/mc/112/1920s/Palmer/govtandpalmer.html Palmer Raids] – Background on the work of Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer and the “First Red Scare” (1919-1921).
 
  
 
{{Credit1|Crystal_Eastman|91514577|}}
 
{{Credit1|Crystal_Eastman|91514577|}}

Latest revision as of 06:32, 11 January 2024

CrystalEastman.jpeg

Crystal Eastman (June 25, 1881 – July 8, 1928) was an American lawyer, antimilitarist, feminist, socialist, and journalist. She was a co-founder of numerous social organizations, including American Union Against Militarism, National Woman's Party, Woman’s Peace Party, and the American Civil Liberties Union. While her ideas were in some cases extreme, her passion for civil liberties for all marks her as an example of those who dedicated their lives to the advancement of human society.

Life

Crystal Eastman was born on June 25, 1881 in Marlborough, Massachusetts, into the family of Samuel Eastman and Annis Ford, who both were church ministers. Her brother was Max Eastman (1883–1969), a famous socialist writer and one of the leaders of the Harlem Renaissance. Crystal Eastman graduated from Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York in 1903, and received an M.A. in sociology from Columbia University in 1904. She was second in the class of 1907 at New York University Law School.

In 1907, social work pioneer and journal editor Paul Kellogg (1879-1958) offered Eastman her first job, investigating labor conditions for The Pittsburgh Survey, sponsored by the Russell Sage Foundation. This was the first in-depth sociological study of industrial accidents ever undertaken. Her report, Work Accidents and the Law (1910), became a classic and resulted in the first workers' compensation law, which she drafted while serving on a New York State commission. Eastman continued to campaign for occupational safety and health while working as an investigating attorney for the U.S. Commission on Industrial Relations during Woodrow Wilson's presidency.

In 1911, Eastman married Wallace Benedict and moved to Milwaukee. The marriage was troubled from the beginning, and after three years resulted in divorce. In 1913, Eastman became investigating attorney for the U.S. Commission on Industrial Relations, in which function she participated in the Seventh Congress of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance in Budapest, Hungary.

In 1913, after her return to the United States she joined, together with Lucy Burns, Doris Stevens (1892-1963), Helen Keller, Dorothy Day, Alice Paul, and other women activists, to form the Congressional Union for Woman's Suffrage (CUWS). They started to organize demonstrations and the daily picketing of the White House. Many of the women were jailed for "obstructing traffic." The organization changed its name in 1916 into the National Woman's Party.

After the outbreak of the World War I Eastman, Jane Addams, Lillian Wald (1867–1940), Paul Kellogg (1879-1958), Edith Abbott, Sophonisba Breckinridge, Oswald Garrison Villard (1872–1949), and other anti-war activists established the Woman’s Peace Party, to lobby against American involvement in the war. Eastman served as the executive director of the organization.

In 1916, she married British poet and antiwar activist Walter Fuller, with whom she had two children. In 1917, Eastman helped established the National Civil Liberties Bureau (NCLB), which in 1920 became the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

After the war, Eastman organized the First Feminist Congress in 1919, and co-owned and edited a radical journal of politics, art, and literature, The Liberator, with her brother Max. At the same time she commuted between New York and London, where her husband worked.

Due to her involvement with radical and left-wing organization, during the First Red Scare of 1919-1921, she was blacklisted and thus rendered unemployable. She decided to move to join her husband in London, where she worked as a columnist for feminist journals, notably Equal Rights and Time and Tide. She participated in the campaign to get votes for women on the same terms as men.

After her husband died in 1927, Eastman returned to the United States. She was already in poor health and within ten months she died of a brain hemorrhage in New York City. She was 48-years-old.

Work

Crystal Eastman was initiator and co-founder of numerous civil and political organizations. She believed that women should make their voices heard in legislation and therefore should have the right to vote. In 1913, Eastman joined Alice Paul, Lucy Burns, and others in founding the militant Congressional Union for Woman's Suffrage, which later became the National Woman's Party. The goal of the organization was to voice for women’s right to vote on the same terms as men and against employment discrimination. The party also opposed World War I.

Eastman helped found the Woman's Peace Party and was president of the New York branch. In 1915, Jane Addams became president of the Woman's Peace Party. Addams found Eastman to be too direct, and opposed her personal lifestyle and a practice of “casual sex.” It was known that Greenwich Village women supported birth control and had lovers, which was against the norms of that time. After divorcing her first husband to marry Walter Fuller, Eastman refused to accept alimony, criticizing the whole concept of alimony as nothing more than an admission of woman’s financial dependency on men. Eastman also worked with Emma Goldman (1869-1940) on the support of birth control, legalizing prostitution, and free speech during war times.

The Woman's Peace Party was renamed the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom in 1921, and remains the oldest extant women's peace organization. Eastman also carried the duty of executive director of the American Union Against Militarism, which lobbied against America's entrance into the European war and more successfully against war with Mexico in 1916. It also sought to remove profiteering from arms manufacturing, and campaigned against conscription and American imperialism in Latin America and the Caribbean.

When in 1917 the United States entered World War I, Eastman organized with Roger Nash Baldwin the National Civil Liberties Bureau to protect conscientious objectors, or in her words: To maintain something over here that will be worth coming back to when the weary war is over.

In 1919, worried that Communists would try to overthrow the American government, the attorney general A. Mitchell Palmer (1872-1936), launched a campaign against all radical and left-wing organizations in the United States. As the result, over 10,000 suspected communists and anarchists were arrested, many of them held in prison for a long period of time without trial. Hundreds were even deported to Russia, and many were put on a blacklist, unable to obtain legal employment. In 1920, Eastman and several other activists, among whom were included notable Americans Roger Nash Baldwin, Norman Thomas, Jane Addams, Florence Kelley, Lillian Wald, Felix Frankfurter, Paul Kellogg, Clarence Darrow, John Dewey, Charles Beard, Abraham Muste (1885-1967), Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, and Upton Sinclair, decided to raise their voice against government persecution of people for their political beliefs. They established the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which was the extension of the National Civil Liberties Bureau. The organization had as its main goal to speak up for civil rights:

  • protection of the freedom of speech, association and assembly, freedom of the press, and freedom of religion.
  • the right to equal treatment in the eyes of the law, regardless of race, sex, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, age, physical handicap, etc.
  • the right to be treated fairly when facing criminal or other serious charges.
  • the right of privacy, which cannot be violated by the government or any other institutions.

After women won the right to vote in 1920, Eastman and three others wrote the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) introduced in 1923. The purpose of the amendment was to guarantee equal rights under the law for Americans regardless of gender. The initiative created great opposition, and the amendment never reached the floor of either the Senate or the House of Representatives for a vote. Eastman claimed that one could assess the importance of the ERA by the intensity of the opposition to it, but she felt that “this is a fight worth fighting even if it takes ten years.” The amendment has finally passed in 1972. Opponents of the amendment, which included other suffragist groups and women’s movements, criticized it from the perspective that it would eliminate numerous protective legislation that gave favored treatment to women workers. They claimed that women should not be forced to compete with men and thus any government support is welcomed.

Legacy

Crystal Eastman has been called one of the United States' most neglected leaders, because, although she wrote pioneering legislation and created long-lasting political organizations, she disappeared from history for fifty years. Her significance however reemerged in the 1970s and 1980s with the discussion on the Equal Rights Amendment in the Congress, and with the rewriting of the history of the feminist movement, free of the "Communist" label.

Eastman fought for peace, equal rights, and civil liberties for all, and was co-founder of numerous civil and political organizations. While working on the New York State's Commission on Employers' Liability, Eastman helped draft the nation's first workers' compensation law, which became a model for workers' compensation throughout the nation. Eastman helped established the National Civil Liberties Bureau (NCLB), which under the name American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) still functions today. She was also on the founding committee of the Woman's Peace Party, which became the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, and is the nation's oldest women's peace organization.

Publications

  • Eastman, Crystal. 1909. Employers' liability: A criticism based on facts. American association for labor legislation.
  • Eastman, Crystal. [1910] 1969. Work Accidents & the Law. Ayer Co Pub. ISBN 0405021186

Reference

External links

All links retrieved January 11, 2024.


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