486:
1866:. University of Illinois Press. pp. 5-9 (family), 43-46 (Columbia), 48-52 (Norfolk), 53 (manifesto), 54-66 (Amalgamated), 67 (teacher), 68-71 (Markey), 84 (CPUSA, Fosterite), 85-86 (Nearing), 86-88 (Gastonia, Vienna), 92 (PhD), 93-97 (Wheaton), 94-96 (1st trip USSR), 98 (Southern Cotton Mills), 99 (Dunne bro.s), 100 (John Reed Club), 101 (journalist, full-time Party), 101-102 (LRA), 102 (Darden), 103 (New Pioneer), 105 (Smedley), 109 (pen name), 110 (Mike Gold, Colorblind), 111-118 (Gathering Storm), 119-120 (Beal), 119-137 (2nd trip USSR), 120 (Browder), 121 (Harold Ware), 123-124 (horrors), 125-127 (Soviet Main Street, Podolsk), 135-136 (underground), 140-141 (return US 11/1933), 141 (Soviet Russia Today), 144 (daughter's birth), 145 (League of American Writers), 146 (book contract), 146-147 (Malraux), 147-155 (Commonwealth College), 155 (TWU, Flanagan), 155-156 (Highlander), 157 (Aline Bernstein), 180-186 (McCarthyism), 186-187 (disillusion).
655:
434:
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crazy and I refused." During the summer of 1933, the
Soviets also had her husband deliver money to Hamburg "for the underground" on his way home to America. (Apparently, the Soviets intended to have them make separate journeys home.) "When I said goodbye to John, I didn't know whether I would ever see him again... We did what we felt we had to do, and that included risking our lives." (The immediate risk Page is referring to was probably the 1933 Nazi takeover of Germany and immediate liquidation of the German Communist Party and its members, specifically the
133:
1032:
767:
356:
1103:
1132:
Page emphasized this last point by stating further, "I was never forced to do anything." She recounts a request while in Moscow for her to take money to China when traveling home, but she declined. The
Soviets also asked her to stay in Moscow to help make a movie about America, but "the idea seemed
1297:
I could be freer in what I wrote without a name that would be immediately identified with my parents... Another reason for the pen name was that I couldn't very well teach sociology in a university and write radical journalism and fiction at the same time... I could teach as
Dorothy Gary and write
1090:
of the
National Textile Workers Union returning to Soviet exile after an undercover visit to the United States where, in 1929, he had been convicted in Gastonia for conspiracy in the strike related death of a policeman. Beal was later to write disaparagingly of those westerners who, like Page, were
1219:
I'm resentful that people think we listened only to Moscow and that when Stalin was exposed by
Khruschev we lost our idol and therefore quit the Path. Stalin was not the reason we left. He was part of our disillusionment, but he wan't the reason we got out. Party members were not so attached to
1127:
While we were in the Soviet Union, John and I worked with the worldwide underground movement against the fascists. We worked for whoever made contact with us that we trusted, in Moscow or outside the Soviet Union. Contacts in Moscow usually asked me to do a job, and if I wanted to do it I did
1210:
I left the Party in 1953, having lost faith that it could do the job it was supposed to do. My disillusionment was gradual... Gradually, we just plain lost confidence in the party. Ever since the
Amalgamated convention in Chicago in the early twenties... the Party seemed too quarrelsome and
529:, to help to unionize its biggest garment sweatshop, Curlee's. During a slump in 1923, she took a secretarial job and then returned home to Newport News for a few months. In the spring of 1924, she returned to the New York area and got a job as a schoolteacher of American History in
1176:, but they dismissed him as a salaried newspaperman. "We didn't know about the horrors of collectivization because we chose not to know. Fischer was right, but we didn't believe him." She had not known about "the matter of the purges because the Soviets were covering up the facts.
839:
was another contributor. Markey also helped "organize automotive and transportation workers. It was good experience... but organizing was not his forté. He was already best at academic teaching and research.") As "John
Barnett," John Markey also contributed articles to
711:
in organizing strikers on behalf of the
Communist Party controlled National Textile Workers Union. In fall 1929, her husband joined Wheaton College as head of her Sociology Department. In October 1929, Page was one of scores of founding members of the
1339:
In her posthumously published 1996 memoir, Page describes her anger at racial discrimination in her childhood, manifested by the treatment she witnessed of her Black friends and expressed in her first published piece, "Colorblind" in
627:, and Rachel Ragozin. In July–September, 1926, she attended first an International Teachers' Union conference in Vienna, Austria, several related teachers' union conferences in Paris, France, and then, with Nearing, a British
1306:, where her name appears as "Dorothy Myra Page." (By the 1930, husband John Markey also adopted a pen name as "John Barnett": "the Party advised him to use a pseudonym so he could resume a regular teaching career.")
1065:
By the fall of 1930, after they had let their contracts to teach expire at
Wheaton College, her husband "John and I began to work full-time for the movement," i.e., for the Party. In 1931, she became editor for the
1114:
In the same memoir, she states that they both worked in the Soviet underground, starting from their days in Russia (1932). She states that husband John Markey worked in agriculture and so came to meet and know
1220:
the Soviet Union that the
Khruschev revelations made them change their whole lives. That wasn't the way we saw the world; we saw the world mainly from the U.S. point of view because that was our experience.
485:
595:
and John Jonstone. Also in June 1926, she took a class (Page and Nearing called it the Labor Research Study Group) under Nearing that sought a "law of social revolution" (though, according to
1252:
did interview her; they failed to connect "John Barnett" with John Markey, however. Friends of theirs who were subpoenaed to testify include: }. Friends who refused to testify include
525:; she attended an ACW-led strike. Page became a pants seamstress–good enough that the ACW sent her to New York City for training in making button holes. The ACW sent her with others to
860:
Upon their return to the States around November 1933, when the US recognized the USSR diplomatically, Page and her husband lived in Brooklyn, NY. Page joined the editorial board of
2729:
781:
At the end of the 1929–1930 academic year, Page and her husband left Wheaton College. During the 1930s, Page was a political journalist and writer. She wrote for
1160:
During their second visit 1931–1933, Page claims to have not realized how privileged a life they led, living at the Lux Hotel and buying scarce good easily with
1857:
1532:
1324:
1908:
You Factory Folks Who Sing This Song Will Surely Understand: Culture, Ideology, and Action in the Gastonia Novels of Myra Page, Grace Lumpkin, and Olive Dargin
1094:
Page stayed through mid-year 1933, by which time Beal in Kharkov, but not she in Moscow, witnessed the famine produced by Stalin's collectivisation policies.
1279:
643:, she returned to Minneapolis by late September to reunite with her husband. They immediately set about a "central trade union committee" of the Minnesota
386:(the last Marxian but not a communist). Both Boas and Herskovitz "challenged the prevailing theories about racial hierarchies." She also took a class under
804:. She recruited her brother Barham and sister Bert to contribute stories. In May 1931, she traveled with William Z. Foster to hear him advocate that the
1050:. She does not state when, but from her description it seems they joined in 1928 during the height of factionalism within the Party between followers of
379:
2764:
336:. Her father Benjamin Roscoe Gary was a doctor, her mother Willie Alberta Barham an artist, and her home "affluent," "middle-class and progressive."
1062:(described at some length in the memoir of Whittaker Chambers). Page states that she and her husband supported Foster because "he was a union man."
2779:
2206:
2180:
1427:
411:
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2290:
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Page recounts only mild bitterness over fallings-out with some friends and does little scandal-mongering (e.g., the affairs of Party leader
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Page and her husband first traveled to Moscow in the summer of 1928 (crossing Europe on foot), where they joined a group of visitors led by
2719:
1149:
707:(also known as the "Gastonia Strike") broke out and lasted into August; Sophie Melvin (future wife of Simon Gerson) traveled there to join
153:
2804:
2774:
2809:
654:
403:
599:, "an infiltration of Communists... really ran the class, steered the discussions," and tried to "make the law of social revolution a
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1000:
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438:
423:
430:, she "developed an antiracist consciousness and chafed against the restrictions imposed upon her as a southern white woman."
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2110:
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847:
Page spent two years in Moscow, whence she wrote for American socialist journals as well as the Soviet communist publication
468:. In 1921, she returned to New York from Norfolk and studied further under Nearing at Rand; at that time, she first read the
391:
359:
819:(LRA), for which he contributed writings under the pseudonym "John Barnett" for "several years." LRA's directors included:
1360:
By the late 1920s, as a radical, pro-worker, communist writer, Page became one of scores of American writers who embraced "
992:
2789:
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1123:
which Whittaker Chambers took over upon Ware's death in 1935). Page is clear about joining the Soviet underground:
988:
603:
law.") Nearing focused on the Soviet Union; Page wrote about India and the English Revolution of 1642. According to
510:
433:
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chronicles an unemployed American autoworker who emigrates to the Soviet Union for work. "I did not see the novel as
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2046:
1997:
1960:
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and quickly became one of its leaders. (By "Local," Page is clearly referring to Local 5 AFT, AKA the New York City
2784:
1393:," she said of it. Instead, she included it among a group of works on Gastonia, particularly by women. She calls
470:
1950:
1249:
931:
677:
569:
534:
181:
2136:
Pilgrims' Progress: Southern Social Activists' Journey from Christianity to Communism during the 1920s and 1930s
406:. In 1920, she obtained a masters with a thesis that analyzed the effect of New York newspaper coverage on the
1259:
In her 1996 memoir (by which time most of her generation had died), she names scores of people she had known.
1701:
1419:
equal to her own because they both "wrote from the same orientation" as Southern women who had seen poverty.
1110:
on February 27, 1933, which endangered the mission of Page's husband John Markey to Germany later that summer
453:
2323:
1286:
coal country. She had two children, daughter Dorothy May Markey Kanfer ("May," born April 21, 1935, wife of
445:
Upon completing her master's degree in 1920, Page became a YWCA "industrial secretary" at a silk factory in
2739:
809:
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588:
2700:
A Social History of Women Teachers in America - Author's Annotated Introduction to Manuscript Collections
2134:
739:
658:
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980:
876:
816:
685:
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By the "late 1920s," she chose the pen name "Myra Page" (after a cousin with the same name) because:
672:
In June 1928, Page earned her PhD in sociology with double minor in Economics and Psychology from the
587:
In June 1926, as a member of the American Federal of Teachers union, she attended a convention of the
1327:(August 18, 1939 – January 13, 2013) wrote a 210-page memoir from interviews and papers called
1091:
made comfortable in Moscow by the party-state bureaucracy he identified as a "new exploiting class".
1018:
In the 1950s and 1960s, she wrote biographies for juveniles under her married name "Dorothy Markey."
729:
612:
2412:
2236:
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as Myra Page. Only later during the McCarthy period did I begin to write again under my real name.
1004:
884:
689:
407:
343:
In 1918, she received a bachelor's degree in English and history from Westhampton College (now the
1385:(1932) is significant as both proletariat novel and focal point on the "black-belt thesis," while
1302:"Myra Page" may first appear in print in 1926. The transformation continued in the first issue of
967:
961:
812:. Page quarreled with Foster over his position but did cover the strike in the July 1931 issue.
721:
684:. In 1926, the YWCA had helped fund her research on working conditions among garment workers in
673:
545:
81:
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was a friend of her brother Barham Gary: in her memoir, Page refers to him as "Clukey Darden."
880:
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344:
325:
69:
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and Olive Dargin and three others) began novels about the Gastonia Strike: Page's novel was
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Starting in August 1935, Page's husband spent a year (again as "John Barnett") as dean of
8:
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During the early 1950s McCarthy Era, she notes "my work as a writer was interrupted."
604:
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557:
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367:
2142:(MA). North Carolina State University. pp. 1-2 (Social Gospel), 31 (Page @ YYCA).
979:
During the 1930s, Page also taught school at the Writer's School, underwritten by the
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1086:. They went again in September 1931 by ship in the company of Gastonia strike leader
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that started October 28–29, 1929, Page had just started working as a journalist for
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1426:(1950) was in fact drafted during the 1930s after transcribing an oral history by
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1987:
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692:, North Carolina, and in 1929 again funded her to rewrite her doctoral thesis as
640:
635:. After passing through New York City, in part to publish her book with Nearing,
624:
553:
502:
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Against her family's wishes, she took a factory job in Philadelphia and became a
490:
449:, near her home town of Newport News and organized education for women workers.
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1107:
935:
828:
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538:
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426:(YWCA), which at that time championed reform in race relations. Influenced by
337:
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Page never testified before any congressional or other committees during the
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In fall 1924, she got a teaching fellowship in the History Department of the
514:
465:
427:
399:
2100:
1317:
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has archived Page's papers.
2160:. New York: Random House. pp. 213 (Nearing classmates), 536 (Mandel).
1946:
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1245:
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924:
900:
888:
792:
138:
46:
2703:
2352:
The Novel and the American Left: Critical Essays on Depression-Era Fiction
1989:
Americans Experience Russia: Encountering the Enigma, 1917 to the Present
1753:
1191:
and book agents Mavis Macintosh and Elizabeth Otis (who also represented
1116:
987:. In 1937, husband John Markey got a job as educational director of the
896:
869:
849:
628:
620:
608:
577:
573:
565:
355:
313:
278:
1422:
During the 1940s, Page published no more fiction books; her last novel,
1070:
monthly magazine for Communist children (1931–1938), published by
1046:, Page states that both she and her husband were members of the nascent
800:
monthly magazine for Communist children (1931–1938), published by
773:
monthly magazine for Communist children (1931–1938), published by
766:
1706:
1635:
1573:
1523:
1390:
1370:
1361:
1342:
1120:
1083:
1038:(undated), whom Page supported amidst Party factional struggles in 1929
996:
387:
375:
234:
2102:
Tales for Little Rebels: A Collection of Radical Children's Literature
696:(1929): "Many lines and quotes... appear later in my Gastonia novel,
572:
union there. They both encouraged garment workers to unionize in the
564:
leader, was a professor there. She married fellow teacher and fellow
2511:. Co-operative publishing society of foreign workers in the U.S.S.R.
1696:
1375:
1145:
1087:
734:
708:
561:
522:
506:
475:
309:
149:
2291:"This Crusading Socialist Taught America's Workers to Fight—in 1929"
1430:, whom Page had known while they both were organizers in Arkansas.
1401:(1929) as more reportage than novel. She considers the account of
1475:
Daughter of the Hills: A Woman's Part in the Coal Miners' Struggle
1102:
521:
department store. Then the ACW helped her get work in a clothing
2181:"Ben Davidson, 90, a Co-Founder Of the Liberal Party in New York"
1173:
600:
2620:
2594:
2568:
2542:
2516:
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2454:
2426:
2165:
1481:
and Paul Lauter, afterword by Deborah S. Rosenfelt (1950, 1986)
939:
938:, while Page taught English writing and literature. Page met
1015:
In the 1940s, she continued to teach at the Writer's School.
328:. Her father's ancestors, the Garys, came from Wales to the
1985:
1952:
American Night: The Literary Left in the Era of the Cold War
1664:
In a Generous Spirit: A First-Person Biography of Myra Page
1329:
In a Generous Spirit: A First-Person Biography of Myra Page
1863:
In a Generous Spirit: A First-Person Biography of Myra Page
676:. In the fall of 1928, she accepted a teaching position at
607:(but not Page), their classmates included: Page, Chambers,
362:
buildings on 120th Street, NYC, where Page attended classes
332:
in the 1720. Her mother's ancestors, the Barhams, came to
304:(born Dorothy Page Gary, 1897–1993), known by the pen name
1587:"The Developing Study of Culture" (as "Dorothy P. Gary"),
915:. Members were largely either Communist Party members or
680:, while her husband had started another a year earlier at
724:, Dorothy Douglas, Ben Appel, Sophie Appel (and probably
2687:
Wisconsin Historical Society: undated photo of Myra Page
1346:
magazine, published while she was studying at Columbia (
1278:
In 1924 she met and later married fellow teacher/fellow
1364:" (which, after Stalin came to full power, emerged as "
999:. In the summers of 1938 and 1939, Page taught at the
324:
Page was born Dorothy Page Gary on October 1, 1897, in
1458:
with photography by Abram Pogovsky (Soyuzphoto) (1933)
1144:
Most foreigners joined the Soviet underground via the
2615:. Feminist Press at the City University of New York.
2348:
1224:(Note that Page dates her departure not to the 1956 "
2730:
Columbia Graduate School of Arts and Sciences alumni
1756:. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 2004
422:While a graduate student, she became active in the
2706:at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
2275:Proletarian journey: New England, Gastonia, Moscow
533:. There, "I joined the New York City Local of the
513:(ACW). She chose amalgamated for its emphasis on
1409:well written though romanticized. She considers
728:who also knew most of these people). During the
2711:
2640:. New Pioneer Publishing Company. pp. 90–95
2251:"The Communist: Contents by Issue (1927 – 1944)"
2041:. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 543–544.
1955:. UNC Press. pp. 103 (dates), 108 (Party).
1911:. Routledge. pp. 19 (novels), 20–36 (bio).
1594:"Bourgeois Apologists and the South" (reviews),
750:magazines. Some time in 1929, Page (along with
2034:
1206:Page documents her departure from the Party:
983:(itself established by the Party) and based in
2633:
2355:. University of Iowa Press. p. 58 (fn8).
1331:(Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1996).
1155:
16:American writer, union activist, and communist
2098:
1986:Choi Chatterjee; Beth Holmgren, eds. (2013).
1256:(who "died a member of the Communist party")
2278:. New York: Hillman-Curl. pp. xiii–xiv.
2071:Encyclopedia of Literature and Politics: H-R
1981:
1979:
1405:(writing under pen name "Fielding Burke"),
975:(1932-1962), where Page taught in the 1930s
756:Gathering Storm: A Story of the Black Belt
370:. In 1919, she started graduate studies at
2483:Gathering storm: a story of the black belt
2099:Mickenberg, Julia L.; Nel, Philip (2008).
1900:
1898:
1896:
1894:
1892:
1890:
1622:"Hallie Flanagan," (publication unknown) (
1530:"Pickets and Slippery Sticks", chapter in
1450:Gathering Storm: A Story of the Black Belt
1282:(July 27, 1898 – May 14, 1991) from
1273:
1164:("American-style paper money") instead of
879:(1935–1943), whose members included
661:'s magazine depicts 16 prisoners from the
394:and attended courses given by theologians
2765:20th-century American short story writers
1976:
1852:
1848:
1846:
1844:
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1215:She also added nuance to her decision:
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2026:
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2020:
2018:
2016:
1904:
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1726:
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1722:
1106:Firefighters struggle to extinguish the
1101:
1030:
966:
765:
653:
484:
432:
354:
2780:20th-century American women journalists
2204:
2178:
2146:
2038:Encyclopedia of Literature and Politics
1887:
1152:" or "OMS" (Russian-language acronym).
517:and education. Her first job was at a
2712:
2692:Marxists.org, Women Authors, Myra Page
2288:
2068:
1941:
1939:
1937:
1935:
815:Page's husband John Markey joined the
796:. In 1931, she became editor for the
647:and commenced "workers' education" in
2094:
2092:
2090:
2013:
1767:
1719:
864:, a Soviet-backed magazine edited by
2607:
2581:
2555:
2529:
2503:
2477:
2449:
2271:
2126:
1945:
1290:) and adopted son John Ross Markey.
945:when she came to visit the college.
452:Giddings had introduced Page to the
366:Later in 1918, she taught school in
58:October 1993 (aged 95–96)
2720:20th-century American women writers
2680:
2349:Janet Galligani Casey, ed. (2004).
2179:Lambert, Bruce (22 December 1991).
2132:
1932:
1097:
1026:
665:, about which Page wrote the novel
424:Young Women's Christian Association
13:
2805:People from Newport News, Virginia
2775:American women short story writers
2265:
2087:
1666:with Christina Looper Baker (1996)
1488:Short stories, chapters, articles:
1183:canceled publication of her novel
511:Amalgamated Clothing Workers Union
410:. She also studied writing under
14:
2821:
2810:20th-century American journalists
1547:The Little Giant of Schenectady:
927:) often hosted them at her home.
374:. She studied anthropology under
2800:American people of Welsh descent
2664:. Harper. 1929. pp. 172–220
2563:. University of Illinois Press.
2208:The Communists & the Schools
1649:"Farm Saga" (review) Myra Page,
1199:published it under a new title,
1187:, despite the support of editor
1172:discussed the current famine in
1150:International Liaison Department
875:On May 1, 1935, Page joined the
497:store (1917), where Page worked
471:Manifesto of the Communist Party
180:M. Burton (when writing for the
131:
2760:20th-century American novelists
2652:
2627:
2601:
2575:
2549:
2523:
2497:
2471:
2456:Southern Cotton Mills and Labor
2443:
2419:
2386:. H.W. Wilson Company. 1997: 96
2376:
2342:
2316:
2307:
2282:
2243:
2198:
2172:
1452:(as "Dorothy Myra Page") (1932)
1440:Southern Cotton Mills and Labor
1239:
1232:but to 1953, the height of the
948:In March 1937, she interviewed
694:Southern Cotton Mills and Labor
678:Wheaton College (Massachusetts)
570:American Federation of Teachers
568:, and together they joined the
535:American Federation of Teachers
2073:. Greenwood Publishing Group.
2062:
1905:Mantooth, Wes (25 July 2006).
1632:"Cardenas Speaks for Mexico",
835:, and Charlotte Todes Stern.
308:, was a 20th-century American
1:
2795:University of Richmond alumni
2133:Lee, Elisabeth Grace (2017).
2035:M. Keith Booker, ed. (2005).
1754:"Myra Page Papers, 1910-1990"
1712:
1702:Marguerite Young (journalist)
1623:
1578:
1347:
1010:
454:Rand School of Social Science
319:
2750:American socialist feminists
2661:Trends in American Sociology
2634:Martha Campion, ed. (1935).
2485:. International Publishers.
2459:. Workers Library Publishers
2428:The Law of Social Revolution
1589:Trends in American Sociology
1195:among others). Eventually,
1021:
989:Transportation Workers Union
853:. She also wrote her novel
637:The Law of Social Revolution
589:Trade Union Education League
441:(1919), which Page supported
7:
2704:Myra Page Papers, 1910-1990
2431:. Library of Congress. 1926
2205:Iversen, Robert W. (1959).
1670:
1561:(1964) (as Dorothy Markey)
1514:"The Girl Who Was Afraid,"
1368:"), advocated in the US by
1270:and eventual wife Raissa.)
777:, for which Page was editor
659:International Labor Defense
611:, Eve Dorf and her husband
414:in the English department.
10:
2826:
2253:. Marxist Internet Archive
1642:"Cornish Miners (review),
1552:(1956) (as Dorothy Markey)
1493:"American Working Women,"
1072:Young Communist League USA
1048:Communist Party of the USA
981:League of American Writers
877:League of American Writers
817:Labor Research Association
802:Young Communist League USA
789:, and the CPUSA newspaper
775:Young Communist League USA
716:. Her "group" included:
404:Union Theological Seminary
2790:Journalists from Virginia
2735:American feminist writers
2272:Beal, Fred Erwin (1937).
2069:Booker, M. Keith (2005).
1992:. Routledge. p. 97.
1424:With the Sun in Our Blood
1357:, who became her friend.
1312:
1077:
808:union split off from the
730:Wall Street Crash of 1929
350:
295:
276:
271:
248:
240:
230:
222:
214:
206:
199:
195:
187:
176:
168:
160:
144:
126:
119:
111:
91:
62:
54:
28:
21:
2770:American women novelists
2324:"Christina Looper Baker"
1608:"The Cropper Prepares",
1500:"Leave Them Meters Be,"
1334:
1005:Grundy County, Tennessee
885:International Publishers
761:
591:. Participants included
417:
2785:Novelists from Virginia
2313:Beal (1937) pp. 283-305
2289:Disler, Mathew (2018).
1858:Baker, Christina Looper
1527:(as "Myra Page") (1935)
1274:Personal life and death
1141:of February 28, 1933.)
962:Federal Theatre Project
934:, a workers' school in
722:Katharine DuPre Lumpkin
703:On March 30, 1929, the
674:University of Minnesota
546:University of Minnesota
82:University of Minnesota
2637:New Pioneer Story Book
2537:. G.P. Putnam's sons.
2407:Cite journal requires
1601:"Grey-Wash" (review),
1533:New Pioneer Story Book
1325:Christina Looper Baker
1300:
1222:
1213:
1130:
1111:
1039:
1001:Highlander Folk School
976:
973:Highlander Folk School
971:Historical Marker for
881:Alexander Trachtenberg
778:
669:
556:, former secretary to
498:
442:
363:
345:University of Richmond
326:Newport News, Virginia
70:University of Richmond
2613:With sun in our blood
2587:With sun in our blood
1584:) (as "Dorothy Gary")
1541:Juvenile Biographies:
1468:With Sun in Our Blood
1295:
1217:
1208:
1201:With Sun in Our Blood
1139:Reichstag Fire Decree
1125:
1105:
1034:
970:
952:for his views on the
769:
758:, published in 1932.
657:
488:
436:
396:Harry Emerson Fosdick
358:
2698:Those Good Gertrudes
2384:"Book Review Digist"
1615:"Malraux on Spain",
1479:Alice Kessler-Harris
1403:Olive Tilford Dargan
1044:In a Generous Spirit
932:Commonwealth College
456:, where she had met
408:Spanish–American War
312:writer, journalist,
2740:American communists
2154:Chambers, Whittaker
1949:(15 October 2012).
1646:(November 18, 1941)
1612:(February 11, 1936)
1566:Articles, Chapters:
1556:Explorer of Sound:
1407:Call Home the Heart
1321:University of Maine
1309:Page died in 1993.
1280:John Fordyce Markey
862:Soviet Russia Today
844:, 1933–1935.
806:United Mine Workers
682:Connecticut College
531:Teaneck, New Jersey
527:St. Louis, Missouri
372:Columbia University
334:Jamestown, Virginia
145:Service branch
115:John Fordyce Markey
76:Columbia University
2509:Soviet Main street
2185:The New York Times
1692:Whittaker Chambers
1456:Soviet Main Street
1323:English professor
1112:
1040:
977:
779:
670:
631:Conference in the
605:Whittaker Chambers
597:Whittaker Chambers
558:Alexander Kerensky
505:for the (then pro-
499:
458:Anna Louise Strong
443:
368:Richmond, Virginia
364:
161:Service years
121:Espionage activity
2745:Marxist feminists
2589:. Citadel Press.
2330:. 18 January 2013
2328:Bangor Daily News
2112:978-0-8147-5720-8
2080:978-0-313-32940-1
1639:(August 30, 1938)
1549:Charles Steinmetz
1521:"Men in Chains,"
1395:Mary Heaton Vorse
1366:Socialist Realism
1230:Nikita Khrushchev
1211:sectarian for me.
1156:"Disillusionment"
1060:William Z. Foster
1036:William Z. Foster
995:member headed by
954:Spanish Civil War
943:Eleanor Roosevelt
705:Loray Mill strike
663:Loray Mill strike
593:William Z. Foster
489:Grand Court with
462:Mary Heaton Vorse
447:Norfolk, Virginia
392:Teacher's College
384:Franklin Giddings
380:Melvin Herskovitz
360:Teacher's College
299:
298:
241:Literary movement
164:1933–1940s?
33:Dorothy Page Gary
2817:
2694:(includes photo)
2681:External sources
2674:
2673:
2671:
2669:
2656:
2650:
2649:
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2233:|newspaper=
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1628:
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1598:(September 1930)
1583:
1580:
1477:, introduced by
1442:, introduced by
1416:To Make My Bread
1374:editor-in-chief
1352:
1349:
1119:(founder of the
1098:Soviet espionage
1027:Party membership
917:fellow travelers
913:Dashiell Hammett
893:Louis Untermeyer
783:Southern Workman
617:Alfred J. Brooks
550:F. Stuart Chapin
493:at South End in
480:Friedrich Engels
330:Tidewater region
291:
288:
286:
284:
282:
280:
191:Couriers (money)
137:
135:
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42:
40:
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18:
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2115:
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2097:
2088:
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2067:
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2053:
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2033:
2014:
2004:
2002:
2000:
1984:
1977:
1967:
1965:
1963:
1944:
1933:
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1720:
1715:
1673:
1653:(March 3, 1942)
1626:
1619:(March 7, 1937)
1581:
1516:Southern Worker
1383:Gathering Storm
1355:W. E. B. DuBois
1350:
1337:
1315:
1304:Gathering Storm
1276:
1254:W. E. B. DuBois
1242:
1185:Daughter of Man
1158:
1100:
1080:
1056:James P. Cannon
1029:
1024:
1013:
958:Hallie Flanagan
921:Aline Bernstein
909:Lillian Hellman
837:Edward Dahlberg
764:
714:John Reed Clubs
698:Gathering Storm
667:Gathering Storm
641:Federated Press
625:Benjamin Mandel
554:Pitirim Sorokin
503:union organizer
420:
353:
322:
316:, and teacher.
277:
267:
256:Gathering Storm
132:
130:
107:
87:
50:
44:
43:October 1, 1897
38:
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12:
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2418:
2409:|journal=
2375:
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2264:
2242:
2197:
2171:
2145:
2125:
2111:
2086:
2079:
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2012:
1998:
1975:
1961:
1931:
1917:
1886:
1872:
1766:
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1699:
1694:
1689:
1687:Esther Shemitz
1684:
1679:
1672:
1669:
1668:
1667:
1658:Autobiography:
1655:
1654:
1651:The New Masses
1647:
1644:The New Masses
1640:
1630:
1620:
1613:
1610:The New Masses
1606:
1599:
1592:
1585:
1571:"Colorblind",
1563:
1562:
1553:
1538:
1537:
1528:
1519:
1512:
1505:
1498:
1485:
1484:
1483:
1482:
1465:
1459:
1453:
1447:
1381:Of her works,
1336:
1333:
1314:
1311:
1275:
1272:
1241:
1238:
1193:John Steinbeck
1166:Soviet roubles
1157:
1154:
1137:and resulting
1135:Reichstag Fire
1108:Reichstag Fire
1099:
1096:
1079:
1076:
1042:In her memoir
1028:
1025:
1023:
1020:
1012:
1009:
936:Mena, Arkansas
857:(1935) there.
829:Grace Hutchins
821:Anna Rochester
763:
760:
748:Southern Woman
744:Labor Defender
539:Teachers Union
419:
416:
390:at Columbia's
352:
349:
338:Colgate Darden
321:
318:
314:union activist
302:Dorothy Markey
297:
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201:Writing career
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101:union activist
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51:
49:, Virginia, US
45:
32:
30:
26:
25:
23:Dorothy Markey
22:
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6:
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2:
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2578:
2570:
2566:
2562:
2561:Moscow Yankee
2558:
2552:
2544:
2540:
2536:
2535:Moscow Yankee
2532:
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2510:
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2458:
2457:
2452:
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2414:
2401:
2385:
2379:
2364:
2362:9781587294754
2358:
2354:
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2329:
2325:
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2210:
2209:
2201:
2186:
2182:
2175:
2167:
2163:
2159:
2155:
2149:
2138:
2137:
2129:
2114:
2108:
2105:. NYU Press.
2104:
2103:
2095:
2093:
2091:
2082:
2076:
2072:
2065:
2050:
2048:9780313329401
2044:
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2029:
2027:
2025:
2023:
2021:
2019:
2017:
2001:
1999:9780415893411
1995:
1991:
1990:
1982:
1980:
1964:
1962:9780807837344
1958:
1954:
1953:
1948:
1947:Wald, Alan M.
1942:
1940:
1938:
1936:
1920:
1918:9781135515393
1914:
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1873:9780252065439
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1698:
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1693:
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1682:Grace Lumpkin
1680:
1678:
1677:Stefan Kanfer
1675:
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1662:
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1604:
1603:The Communist
1600:
1597:
1596:The Communist
1593:
1590:
1586:
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1570:
1569:
1568:
1567:
1560:
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1558:Michael Pupin
1554:
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1509:Workers' News
1506:
1503:
1502:Workers' News
1499:
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1495:Workers' News
1492:
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1466:
1463:
1462:Moscow Yankee
1460:
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1454:
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1428:Dolly Hawkins
1425:
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1412:
1411:Grace Lumpkin
1408:
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1396:
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1387:Moscow Yankee
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1289:
1288:Stefan Kanfer
1285:
1284:West Virginia
1281:
1271:
1269:
1265:
1260:
1257:
1255:
1251:
1248:, though the
1247:
1237:
1235:
1231:
1227:
1226:Secret Speech
1221:
1216:
1212:
1207:
1204:
1202:
1198:
1197:Citadel Press
1194:
1190:
1189:Pascal Covici
1186:
1182:
1177:
1175:
1171:
1170:Louis Fischer
1167:
1163:
1153:
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1049:
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1033:
1019:
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986:
985:New York City
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959:
955:
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950:Andre Malraux
946:
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923:(mistress of
922:
918:
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910:
906:
905:Arthur Miller
902:
898:
895:, Bromfelds,
894:
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886:
882:
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873:
871:
867:
866:Jessica Smith
863:
858:
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855:Moscow Yankee
852:
851:
845:
843:
842:The Communist
838:
834:
833:Carl Haessler
830:
826:
822:
818:
813:
811:
807:
803:
799:
795:
794:
788:
787:Working Woman
784:
776:
772:
768:
759:
757:
753:
752:Grace Lumpkin
749:
745:
741:
737:
736:
731:
727:
726:Agnes Smedley
723:
719:
718:Grace Lumpkin
715:
710:
706:
701:
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687:
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679:
675:
668:
664:
660:
656:
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638:
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630:
626:
622:
618:
615:, as well as
614:
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571:
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563:
559:
555:
551:
548:, chaired by
547:
542:
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536:
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524:
520:
516:
515:Progressivism
512:
508:
504:
496:
492:
487:
483:
481:
477:
473:
472:
467:
466:Scott Nearing
463:
459:
455:
450:
448:
440:
435:
431:
429:
428:Social Gospel
425:
415:
413:
409:
405:
401:
400:Henry F. Ward
397:
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263:
262:Moscow Yankee
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261:
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139:Soviet Union
120:
47:Newport News
2755:1993 deaths
2725:1897 births
2295:Narratively
1627: 1937
1582: 1920
1511:(Fall 1934)
1504:(Fall 1934)
1497:(Fall 1934)
1397:'s account
1351: 1920
1117:Harold Ware
1068:New Pioneer
897:I. F. Stone
870:Harold Ware
850:Moscow News
798:New Pioneer
771:New Pioneer
629:trade union
621:Dale Zysman
609:Sam Krieger
578:Minneapolis
574:Twin Cities
566:John Markey
519:Wanamaker's
495:Wanamaker's
437:Poster for
92:Occupations
2714:Categories
2609:Page, Myra
2583:Page, Myra
2557:Page, Myra
2531:Page, Myra
2505:Page, Myra
2479:Page, Myra
2451:Page, Myra
2300:2022-01-02
2257:17 January
1854:Page, Myra
1760:2017-11-19
1713:References
1707:Proletkult
1636:New Masses
1605:(May 1931)
1577:magazine (
1574:The Crisis
1524:The Nation
1473:Reissue:
1444:Bill Dunne
1391:propaganda
1371:New Masses
1362:Proletkult
1343:The Crisis
1121:Ware Group
1084:John Dewey
1011:Later life
997:Mike Quill
960:about the
868:, wife of
825:Bill Dunne
686:Greenville
639:, via the
388:John Dewey
376:Franz Boas
320:Background
235:Proletkult
188:Operations
127:Allegiance
39:1897-10-01
2235:ignored (
2225:cite book
1697:Wanda Gag
1507:"Water,"
1376:Mike Gold
1146:Comintern
1088:Fred Beal
1022:Communism
991:(TWU), a
735:Labor Age
709:Fred Beal
562:Menshevik
523:sweatshop
507:communist
476:Karl Marx
310:communist
306:Myra Page
244:Communist
226:1918–1964
210:Myra Page
150:Comintern
148:probably
63:Education
2668:5 August
2644:4 August
2621:50010931
2611:(1950).
2595:50010931
2585:(1950).
2569:95002992
2559:(1995).
2543:35004723
2533:(1935).
2517:34013943
2507:(1933).
2491:32033994
2481:(1932).
2463:3 August
2453:(1929).
2390:3 August
2368:3 August
2334:3 August
2166:52005149
2156:(1952).
2118:4 August
2054:4 August
2005:4 August
1968:4 August
1924:4 August
1879:4 August
1860:(1996).
1671:See also
1413:'s book
1399:Gastonia
690:Gastonia
582:St. Paul
215:Language
207:Pen name
177:Codename
2435:5 March
2215:7 April
2190:7 April
2158:Witness
1470:(1950)
1434:Novels:
1174:Ukraine
1162:valudas
601:Marxian
272:Website
218:English
172:Unknown
104:teacher
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1591:(1929)
1536:(1935)
1518:(1934)
1446:(1929)
1313:Legacy
1078:Moscow
1058:, and
940:FLOTUS
911:, and
746:, and
738:, the
649:Duluth
576:area (
464:, and
382:, and
351:Career
287:/05143
264:(1935)
258:(1932)
223:Period
136:
112:Spouse
98:Writer
2140:(PDF)
1353:) by
1335:Works
1266:with
1228:" by
762:1930s
491:Organ
418:1920s
231:Genre
84:(PhD)
2670:2018
2646:2018
2617:LCCN
2591:LCCN
2565:LCCN
2539:LCCN
2513:LCCN
2487:LCCN
2465:2018
2437:2016
2413:help
2392:2018
2370:2018
2357:ISBN
2336:2018
2259:2019
2237:help
2217:2013
2192:2013
2162:LCCN
2120:2018
2107:ISBN
2075:ISBN
2056:2018
2043:ISBN
2007:2018
1994:ISBN
1970:2018
1957:ISBN
1926:2018
1913:ISBN
1881:2018
1868:ISBN
1634:The
1148:'s "
956:and
791:The
688:and
580:and
560:and
478:and
439:YWCA
398:and
285:.edu
283:.unc
281:.lib
169:Rank
152:'s "
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72:(BA)
55:Died
29:Born
1250:FBI
1236:.)
1168:.
1128:it.
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