Dreier, Mary E. (Mary Elisabeth), 1875-1963
Variant namesMary Elisabeth Dreier was born in New York city New York, on September 26, 1875. Her parents, Theodor Dreier, a successful businessman, and Dorthea Dreier, were both immigrants from Germany. Her mother's maiden name was Dreier and her parents were cousins from Bremen, Germany, where their ancestors were civic leaders and merchants. Theodor came to the United States in 1849 and became partner at the New York branch of the English iron firm of Naylor, Benson and Company. He married Dorthea in 1864 during a visit to Bremen and brought her back with him to the United States, and they lived in a brownstone house in Brooklyn Heights, New York.
Mary had a brother and three sisters; her sister Margaret was also a labor reformer, while her sisters Dorothea and Katherine were painters.
Mary was educated by private tutors for the early part of her life, and later took courses at the New York School of Philanthropy. Her initial financial support came in the form of a trust fund left by her father. She and her sister Margaret worked hand-in-hand throughout her career.
She never married, but shared a home with fellow reformer Frances Kellor from 1905 until the latter's death in 1952. She lived alone for the rest of her life until dying of a pulmonary embolism on August 15, 1963, at her summer home in Bar Harbor, Maine, she and her partner Frances Kellor are buried together at Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York. Mary Elisabeth Dreier represents the involved philanthropist of the early twentieth century. From a financially secure family, she constantly contributed time, funds, and organizing talents to a variety of feminist causes, most notably women workers and the suffrage movement. Her social prominence and social commitments led to her service on local and regional boards and commissions, particularly those dealing with labor and with penal reform.
It was her strong religious background that motivated Dreier to take up religious reform. She focused on working women, women suffrage, and social and civic improvement.
In 1899, she met Leonora O’Reilly, who was a former garment worker and head of a local settlement house at the time. Leonora was the one to connect Mary and her sister Margaret with the settlement house. They joined the New York Women's Trade Union League (NYWTUL), a coalition of female workers and middle- and upper-class women reformers founded in 1903 to organize working women and educate the public about urban labor conditions. Dreier served as president of the NYWTUL from 1906 to 1914, as acting president in 1935, and remained active until it disbanded in 1950. During a 1909 strike of shirtwaist-makers, she was arrested during a demonstration. However, after that she became a leading spokeswoman for labor reform for women workers. During her presidency, the New York group was particularly active among garment workers, supporting their organization in the International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union and assisting them in strike activities.
From 1911 to 1915, she served on the New York State Factory Investigating Commission, which provided evidence for the passage of factory reform legislation. She also wrote articles for the WTUL’S journal, Life and Labor, to encourage unionization. In 1915, Mayor John Mitchell appointed her to the New York City Board of Education, but she resigned all posts in 1915 in order to participate completely in the final drive to achieve the vote for women.
In 1917, Dreier became chairwoman of the New York State Committee on Women in Industry of the Advisory Commission of the Council of National Defense. After the war she was a member of the executive committee of the New York Council for Limitation of Armaments (1921-1927) and headed the Committee for the Outlawry of War of the WTUL.
Dreier became an ardent supporter of suffrage and women's rights and chaired New York City's Woman Suffrage Party due to the negative attitude of the male trade unionists towards women workers. On the national level she often supported Progressive Party nominees, including Robert M. La Follette and Henry A. Wallace, and she later became an enthusiastic backer of Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal.
Dreier served on several government and private committees concerned with labor and women. Later in her career, she devoted more of her attention to international issues and American foreign policy. Between the world wars she supported Soviet-American friendship and was an outspoken opponent of the regime in Nazi Germany. Following World War II she opposed nuclear proliferation. In the 1950s the FBI investigated her politics.
In 1914 she wrote Barbara Richards, a novel about working women that remained unpublished. In 1950 she published a biography of her sister, Margaret Dreier Robins: Her Life, Letters and Work.
Role | Title | Holding Repository | |
---|---|---|---|
referencedIn | Elizabeth Robins Papers, 1803-1963 | Fales Library & Special Collections | |
referencedIn | O'Reilly, Leonora, 1870-1927. Papers, 1886-1927 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | American Association for Labor Legislation. Series 1, Subseries 2, part a. Correspondence (A-G) 1910-1915. [microform]. | Cornell University Library | |
creatorOf | Papers of Mary E. (Mary Elisabeth) Dreier, 1797-1968 (inclusive), 1897-1968 (bulk) | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Dorothea A. Dreier papers | Archives of American Art | |
creatorOf | Dreier, Mary E. Letters, 1954, to Lewis Mumford. | University of Pennsylvania Libraries, Van Pelt Library | |
referencedIn | Papers of Frieda S. Miller, 1909-1973 (inclusive), 1929-1967 (bulk) | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Guide to the Elizabeth Gurley Flynn Papers, 1896-1964 | Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives | |
referencedIn | National Women’s Trade Union League of America Records, 1903-1950 | Library of Congress. Manuscript Division | |
referencedIn | Bureau of Vocational Information (New York, N.Y.). Records, 1908-1932 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Kunitz, Joshua, 1896-. Joshua Kunitz papers, [ca. 1930]-1976. | Columbia University in the City of New York, Columbia University Libraries | |
referencedIn | Albums, ca., 1861-1962 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Newman, Pauline, ca. 1890-1986. Papers, 1900-1980 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Price, George Moses, 1864-1942. George Moses Price files and scrapbook, 1883-1952, bulk 1912-1942. | Cornell University Library | |
referencedIn | Guide to the Elizabeth Gurley Flynn Papers, 1896-1964 | Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives | |
referencedIn | Whitehouse, Vira Boarman, 1875-1957. Papers, 1889-1957 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Papers of the Dreyer family, 1778-1928 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
creatorOf | Papers of Mary E. (Mary Elisabeth) Dreier, 1797-1968 (inclusive), 1897-1968 (bulk) | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Beard, Mary Ritter, 1876-1958. Papers, 1935-1958 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Papers, 1918-1960 (inclusive) | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Bureau of Vocational Information. Records, 1908-1932 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Robins, Raymond, 1873-1954. Papers, 1878-1956. | Wisconsin Historical Society, Newspaper Project | |
referencedIn | National Women's Trade Union League of America Records on Microfilm, 1903-1950 | Cornell University Library | |
referencedIn | American Association for Labor Legislation. Series 1, Subseries 1, part a. Correspondence (A-H), 1905-1910. [microform] | Cornell University Library | |
referencedIn | John Adams Kingsbury papers, 1841-1966, (bulk 1906-1939) | Library of Congress. Manuscript Division | |
referencedIn | American Association for Labor Legislation. Series 1, Subseries 6. Correspondence, 1930-1935 [microform]. | Cornell University Library | |
referencedIn | Papers, 1889-1957, n.d. | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Papers of Frieda S. Miller, 1909-1973 (inclusive), 1929-1967 (bulk) | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | George Moses Price files and scrapbook, 1883-1952 [bulk 1912-1942]. | Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives | |
creatorOf | Dorothea A. Dreier papers | Archives of American Art | |
referencedIn | John Adams Kingsbury papers, 1841-1966, (bulk 1906-1939) | Library of Congress. Manuscript Division | |
referencedIn | Albums of Molly Dewson, 1861-1962 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Newman, Pauline. Papers, 1903-1982 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America |
Role | Title | Holding Repository |
---|
Filters:
Place Name | Admin Code | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
New York City | NY | US |
Subject |
---|
Artists |
Disarmament |
Family records |
Labor laws and legislation |
Labor unions |
Pacifism |
Spiritualism |
Strikes and lockouts |
Sweatshops |
Textile workers |
Women |
Women's rights |
Working class |
Occupation |
---|
Artists |
Social reformers |
Activity |
---|
Person
Birth 1875
Birth 1875-09-26
Death 1963-08-15
Female
Americans
English,
German