Strong, Anna Louise (1885-1970)
Daughter of a Nebraskan missionary and pastor of the Congregational
Church, Strong was a headstrong child earning a PhD in philosophy at
the University of Chicago aged 23. She came to public attention
as an advocate for child welfare, touring an exhibition exposing child
poverty throughout the US and overseas.In 1916, Strong was a journalist for the New York Evening Post reporting on the Everett Massacre, a conflict in which the IWW was involved, and thereafter Strong became a socialist and advocate for labor. She opposed US participation in the First World War as a pacifist. After the October Revolution, Strong became a prominent advocate of the young Soviet government in the liberal press.
In 1921, she traveled to Poland and Russia in a trip aimed at providing relief to famine victims, and she was then appointed as Moscow correspondent of the International News Service, during which time she became a strong supporter of the Soviet Union.
In the late 20’s and into the early 30’s Strong traveled in China and parts of Asia, and throughout the Soviet Union, interviewing ordinary workers and people in the street as well as senior Soviet leaders; she visited Spain in 1937 and accompanied the Red Army into Poland and Berlin in 1945, and visited China during the latter stages of the war of liberation.
After World War Two, Strong was arrested on espionage charges. She returned to the USSR in 1955, but settled in China until her death in 1970, where she was on close terms with Chou En Lai and Mao Tse Tung.
See Anna Louise Strong Archive.
Mao Zedong w/Friends etc.. | ||||||||||
Latest Updated by 2003-12-26 11:00:32 | ||||||||||
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