Irwin, Inez Haynes, 1873-1970
Name Entries
person
Irwin, Inez Haynes, 1873-1970
Name Components
Name :
Irwin, Inez Haynes, 1873-1970
eng
Latn
authorizedForm
rda
Gillmore, Inez Hayes, 1873-1970.
Name Components
Name :
Gillmore, Inez Hayes, 1873-1970.
Gilmore, Inez Haynes, 1873-1970.
Name Components
Name :
Gilmore, Inez Haynes, 1873-1970.
Gillmore, Inez Haynes, 1873-1970
Name Components
Surname :
Gillmore
Forename :
Inez Haynes
Date :
1873-1970
eng
Latn
alternativeForm
rda
Haynes, Inez, 1873-1970
Name Components
Surname :
Haynes
Forename :
Inez
Date :
1873-1970
eng
Latn
alternativeForm
rda
Irwin, Inez Haynes, 1873-1970
Name Components
Surname :
Irwin
Forename :
Inez Haynes
Date :
1873-1970
eng
Latn
authorizedForm
rda
Genders
Female
Exist Dates
Biographical History
Inez Haynes Gillmore was a suffragist, activist and writer, and the wife of Will Irwin.
Irwin was a close friend of the American feminist writer Mary MacLane, who included a colorful personality portrait of Irwin in her newspaper articles in Butte, Montana, in 1910.
Inez Haynes was born on March 2, 1873, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to Gideon Haynes and Emma Jane Hopkins Haynes. Her parents were from Boston in the United States, but were staying in Brazil because of her father's business problems. Her mother, her father's second wife, was 24 years younger than him, and had to raise a family of 17 children (10 of whom were her own). The family returned to Boston where Inez Haynes grew up. She attended four public schools, and then Radcliffe College between 1897 and 1900. At the time Radcliffe was a "center of suffragist sentiment", and Inez Haynes and Maud Wood Park founded the College Equal Suffrage League, which later became the National College Equal Suffrage League.
In August 1897, Inez Haynes married Rufus H. Gillmore, a newspaper editor, and assumed the name Inez Haynes Gillmore. The Gillmores visited pre-War Europe where she met Russian revolutionaries and French impressionist painters. While her husband supported her feminism, they later divorced. She published her first novel, June Jeopardy in 1908 and soon after became fiction editor of The Masses, a left-wing monthly magazine. In January 1916, she married writer William Henry Irwin, and her name changed to Inez Haynes Irwin, although she continued publishing under her former name, Inez Haynes Gillmore. The Irwins summered in Scituate, Massachusetts, during the early 1900s. During World War I the Irwins lived in Europe where she worked as a war correspondent in England, France and Italy. Inez Haynes estimated that between 500,000 and 750,000 women were killed in the war. William Henry died in 1948 and she moved to Scituate, Massachusetts, where she remained until her death at the age of 97 on September 25, 1970.
Inez Haynes was a feminist leader and a political activist. She was a member of the National Advisory Council of the National Women's Party, and wrote the Party's biography, The Story of the Woman's Party, in 1921. She also wrote a history of American women, Angels and Amazons: A Hundred Years of American Women (1933).
Apart from the non-fiction works noted above, she published over 30 novels, including Angel Island (1914), a "radical feminist Swiftian fantasy" about a group of men stranded on an island occupied by winged women. Angel Island was republished in 1988 as a "classic of early feminist literature" with an introduction by science fiction and fantasy author Ursula K. Le Guin. Her fiction often addressed feminist issues and the plight of women, including divorce, single parenthood and problems in the workplace.
Her 15-book "Maida" series of children's books was written over a period of 45 years, and tells the story of a school girl whose mother has died and whose father is very wealthy.
She also wrote short stories for magazines, one of which, "The Spring Flight," won her the O. Henry Memorial Prize in 1924.
eng
Latn
External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/45765635
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n85372376
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n85372376
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q6028696
https://viaf.org/viaf/203495804
Other Entity IDs (Same As)
Sources
Loading ...
Resource Relations
Loading ...
Internal CPF Relations
Loading ...
Languages Used
eng
Latn
Subjects
American literature
Artists
Christmas cards
Feminists
Greeting cards
Labor and laboring classes
Voyages and travels
World War, 1914-1918
Women
Nationalities
Americans
Activities
Occupations
War correspondents
Authors
Journalist
Suffragists
Writer
Legal Statuses
Places
Rio de Janeiro
AssociatedPlace
Birth
Scituate
AssociatedPlace
Death
California
AssociatedPlace
San Francisco (Calif.)
AssociatedPlace
England
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Boston
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Republic of France
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>