Cyfeirgôd(au): GB 0217 SWCC:MND/71
Lleoliad:
Teitl: Emma Goldman and James Colton papers
Teitl byr: Emma Goldman and James Colton papers
Dyddiad(au) creu: 1916-1955
Lefel disgrifio: fonds
Maint a chyfrwng: 2 files, 1 volume and 1 item
Enw'r crewr/crewyr: Various
Hanes bywgraffyddol/gweinyddol: Emma Goldman was born on the 27th June 1869 in Lithuania. She
emigrated to the United States in 1885 and worked in a clothing factory in
Rochester before moving to New York in 1889.
Emma Goldman was an anarchist. Influenced by the libertarian writings
of Johann Most, and working closely with Alexander Berkman, she became active
in the trade union movement. She was imprisoned when she was accused of urging
the unemployed to steal the food they needed. After she was released from
prison, Goldman became involved in the campaign for women's suffrage and birth
control information. In 1901, when Leon Czolgosz assassinated President William
McKinley, he claimed he had been influenced by the speeches of Goldman. As an
opponent of America's involvement in the First World War, she was again
imprisoned for two years for obstructing conscription.
In 1919, Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman were deported to Russia
along with 236 other people, after Alexander M. Palmer, the attorney general
and his special assistant, John Edgar Hoover, organized a plan to deport a
large number of left-wing figures. They chose Emma Goldman, as they knew that a
high profile case would help their campaign. Palmer particularly objected to
her views on birth control, free love and religion and claimed that her
speeches had inspired anarchists to commit acts of violence in the United
States.
As an anarchist, Goldman was repelled by the Bolshevik dictatorship
and so she came to Britain, where she married James Colton in 1925. James
Colton was at the time in his mid-sixties and a widower. He was self educated
and had thought his way to a libertarian position. Known in the collieries as
'no respecter of persons', he married Emma as both a defiance to the
establishment and as a gesture of friendship to Emma (they had first meet in
the 1890s). Emma Goldman was now a legal British subject. Writing articles for
newspapers and giving lectures all over Britain, she moved to France.
In September 1936, Emma Goldman visited Spain to observe the Spanish
Civil War. She opened a FAI-CNT propaganda office in London after meeting
leading figures in the National Confederation of Trabajo and Federacin
Anarquista Ibrica, She also joined with Rebecca West, Sybil Thorndyke, Fenner
Brockway and C. E. M. Joad to establish the Committee to Aid Homeless Spanish
Women and Children. She visited Spain again in September 1937 and in the autumn
in 1938, and died on 14th May 1940 in Toronto.
Along with Alexander Berkman, Emma Goldman edited and published the
journal, Mother Earth (1906-1917). She also wrote Anarchism and Other Essays (1910), The Social Significance of the Modern
Drama (1914), Disillusionment in Russia (1923), and My Further Disillusionment in Russia (1924). The later two books are thought to have helped to turn a large
number of socialists against the Bolshevik government. Her autobiography, Living My Life , was published in 1931.
For more information on Emma Goldman, see the Berkeley Library project The Emma Goldman Papers http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/Goldman/
Natur a chynnwys: Contains letters written by Emma Goldman to James Colton and various
miscellaneous items belonging to James Colton.
Trefniant: Divided into 2 subfonds; letters from Emma Goldman to James Colton,
and miscellaneous items belonging to James Colton.
Amodau gweld: Access unrestricted unless stated otherwise.
Amodau copïo: A photocopying service is available, contact repository for details.
No publication without written permission from the Archivist.
Rhestri cymorth: A paper finding aid is available.
Catalog manwl
Nodiadau: Finding aid encoded by Julie Anderson April 2003 with reference to Rebel in paradise : a biography of Emma
Goldman by Richard Drinnon (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1961)
and the Spartacus Educational website.
Rheolau catalogio: Created following ISAD(G) and Archives Hub Data Creation Guidelines
Dyddiad(au )cwblhau'r catalog: Prior to 16-11-2004