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Dakota Datebook
January 12, 2004
"Red Kate"
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Today marks the anniversary of the death of Kate Richards,
who died in 1948 at the age of 71. Also known as Red Kate, her brush with
North Dakota made history.
She was born in 1876 to Kansas farmers who were forced
off their farm after an economic depression and then a drought in 1887.
The family moved to a poor section of Kansas City, where they barely managed
to survive.
In 1894, while Kate was working as a machinist, she met
Mother Jones, who introduced her to socialism. The devastation her family
had experienced in losing their farm made her ripe for the picking, and
Kate became active in the movement. A year later, she met Eugene V. Debs,
another noted socialist, and within five years, Kate and her father co-founded
the Socialist Labor Party.
Kate also founded the Socialist Party of America and
married Frank O'Hare, a St. Louis socialist. The couple lectured on socialism
around the country and organized as they went. Despite the birth of four
children, Kate kept touring, often for whole summers at a time. Her popularity
was second only to Eugene Debs, and she twice ran for political office,
even though women couldnt even vote yet.
At the onset of World War I, Woodrow Wilson called for
500 thousand volunteers, but he received only a couple thousand. Under
the infamous Red Scare, Congress created bills giving the
government increased power while also suppressing the rights of American
citizens. The 1917 Espionage Act prohibited, among other things, interfering
with efforts to recruit army volunteers.
In 1918, they also passed the Sedition Act, which made
it a federal crime to criticize the government or Constitution. Even writing
personal letters to a friend or relative was illegal if ones opinion
was critical of the government. Attorney General Palmer, and his assistant
J. Edgar Hoover, used both acts to their advantage as they mounted campaigns
against liberals and so-called radicals.
Meanwhile, Kate Richards O'Hare was firmly against World
War I and was touring the country to say so. On July 17th, 1917, she was
in Bowman, North Dakota, giving her speech for the 76th time, when she
was arrested under the Espionage Act for hindering army recruitment. She
was put on trial in Bismarck, found guilty, and sentenced to five years
in prison.
In May, 1920, she was set free when her sentence was
commuted. In response to her experience, she went to Washington to loudly
protest the treatment of those opposed to the war and to call on the government
to honor peoples constitutional rights.
The following year, both the Espionage Act and the Sedition
Acts were repealed as unconstitutional, and Red Kate turned her attention
elsewhere. She became active in prison reform... bringing to mind her
experience, one day in 1917, in Bowman, North Dakota.

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