Frances May Witherspoon was born in 1886, in Meridian, Mississippi, the daughter of law professor and Congressman Samuel Andrew Witherspoon, and his wife, Susan E. May.[1] She graduated from Bryn Mawr College in 1909. After some years as a suffrage and labor organizer in Pennsylvania, she and Mygatt moved to New York City in 1913.[2]
Career and activism
In New York City Witherspoon and Mygatt joined the Woman's Peace Party, and together edited their publication, Four Lights.[3][4] They also organized the Socialist Suffrage Brigade, and edited an issue of The Call about suffrage.[5]
During the first World War, Witherspoon worked with various peace organizations, and lobbied in Washington against U. S. involvement in the war.[6] She was a founding officer of the Anti-Enlistment League in 1915.[7] In 1917, she co-founded the New York Bureau of Legal Advice with attorney Charles Recht, to assist conscientious objectors, draft resisters, and war protesters.[8][9] She was anonymous author of a pamphlet, Who Are the Conscientious Objectors? published in 1919.[10]
Witherspoon and Mygatt continued with peace work after the war, as members of the Women's Peace Union, and as founders of the War Resisters League in 1923.[11] They were charter members of the Episcopal Pacifist Fellowship when it was founded in 1939. In 1961 they were recognized jointly with the WRL Peace Award.
Witherspoon and Mygatt co-wrote two Biblical novels, The Glorious Company (1928) and Armor of Light (1930), and a play about Vincent van Gogh, Stranger Upon Earth, among other literary collaborations.[12][13]
In her eighties, Frances Witherspoon organized a campaign among Bryn Mawr alumnae against the Vietnam War.[14]
Personal life and legacy
Witherspoon lived and worked with Tracy D. Mygatt for over sixty years, in New York City, and later in Brewster, New York and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[15] The pair were active in the Episcopal Church.[16] They died within a month of each other, in late 1973, in Philadelphia; Witherspoon was 87 years old.[17] The couple's papers were donated to the Swarthmore College Peace Collection.[18]
^Erika Kuhlman, "'Women's Ways in War': The Feminist Pacifism of the New York City Woman's Peace Party," Frontiers 18(1)(1997): 80-100.
^Mark Van Wienen, "'Women's Ways in War': The Poetry and Politics of the Woman's Peace Party, 1915-1917," Modern Fiction Studies 38(3)(Fall 1992): 687-714.