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ALFNews No. 67, Summer 1998
Gertrude B. Kelly
A Forgotten Feminist
by Wendy McElroy
This article originally appeared in slightly different form in
the October 1998 issue of The Freeman, 30 South Broadway,
Irvington-on-Hudson, NY 10533. c. 1998 The Foundation for Economic
Education.
Contemporary feminism's preoccupation with its socialist and liberal
past has served to silence the voices of early individualist women,
such as Gertrude B. Kelly (1862-1934), whose contributions to womens
rights remain buried and unexplored within the pages of 19th
century radical individualist periodicals. Like most early
individualist feminists, Kelly insisted that individual autonomy
and responsibility constituted the building blocks of social order
and cooperation, both of which would evolve naturally under the
conditions of freedom. Whenever a group of people a government or
a labor union used force to impose their goals upon individuals,
social order and cooperation ceased. Then, the only method by which
true society could be reconstructed was to return power to the
individual.
A labor radical who was deeply skeptical of unions, a
staunch anti-statist who broke with the most prominent
individualist anarchists of her day, an ardent feminist
who denied that there were womens rights as distinct from
human rights -- who was Gertrude B. Kelly, and what
specifically did she fight for?
In the opinion of Benjamin Tucker, editor of the pivotal individualist
periodical Liberty, "Gertrude B. Kelly, ... by her articles
in Liberty, has placed herself at a single bound among the finest
writers of this or any other country." From her first
article in Liberty (September 1885) to her bitter split
with that same periodical over its debate on egoism versus
natural rights (August 1887), Gertrude Kelly was one of
Tuckers most dynamic writers and, certainly, its most
frequent female contributor and a strong champion of Natural
Law.
In particular, her articles brought a unique perspective
on labor and women for she was one of the few feminists of
her time who believed "there is, properly speaking, no woman
question, as apart from the question of human right and
human liberty." She looked forward to a society comprised
of individuals, in which such secondary characteristics as
sex or race had no impact upon the equal rights enjoyed by
each person. As Kelly phrased it,
"The woman's cause is man's -- they rise or sink
Together, -- dwarfed or god-like -- bond or free."
The general cause shared by woman and
man was the drive for "universal liberty, equality of rights,
individual responsibility" as "the moving principles of
societary progress." The specific social injustice upon
which Kelly focused her considerable energy and insight
was what she called "the plight of the working-class".
Concern with Working Women
As a medical doctor who worked in the
tenements and as the Secretary of the Newark Liberal League, Kelly
displayed a special concern for the debilitating effect of poverty
upon the laboring woman. Indeed, her first article in Liberty,
entitled "The Root of Prostitution," argued that the inability of
women to make an adequate living through respectable forms of labor
was the cause of this profession. She wrote: "We find all sorts
of schemes for making men moral and women religious, but no scheme
which proposes to give woman the fruits of her labor."
The condemnation aired in this article expressed two themes
that were common to most of Kellys analyses of poverty and
of women.
First, women had been oppressed by cultural
stereotypes created primarily by men. She declared, "Men
... have always denied to women the opportunity to think;
and, if some women have had courage enough to dare public
opinion, and insist upon thinking for themselves, they have
been so beaten by that most powerful weapon in society's
arsenal, ridicule, that it has effectively prevented the
great majority from making any attempt to come out of
slavery." She leveled this charge equally at the supposedly
enlightened men in her own political circle, whom, she
claimed, would "immediately change not only the serious
topics of conversation, but change the very tones of their
voice" when wives or sisters entered the room.
Second, charitable organizations created by the rich were hypocritical
in their attitudes and behavior toward the poor, who needed
to become self-sufficient and not to be further victimized
by misguided benevolence. She particularly ridiculed the
philanthropic groups so popular in her day in which working
"girls are given lessons in embroidery, art, science, etc.,
and are incidentally told of the evils of trade-unions,
the immorality of strikes, and of the necessity of being
satisfied with the condition to which it has pleased God
to call them."
Like most radical individualists of 19th
century America, Kelly viewed capitalism as the major cause
of poverty and social injustice. This conviction sprang
from two other beliefs. First, she accepted a particular
version of the labor theory of value that was espoused by
the path-breaking individualist Josiah Warren: this version
is commonly expressed in terms of "Cost is the Limit of
Price." Second, she shared the popular radical belief that
capitalism was an alliance between business and government,
in which the latter guaranteed legal privileges to the
rich. In essence, Kelly considered all forms of capitalism
to be what contemporary individualism calls "state capitalism."
The Free Market as Cure
Accordingly, she believed that interest,
profit, and rent were usuries through which capitalists exploited
laborers by usurping the product of their labor. Although it sounds
ironic to modern ears, Kelly -- along with many other early
individualist theorists -- considered the free market to be a cure
for capitalism. She considered voluntary cooperation, unregulated
by anything but the laws of economics and the desires of individuals,
to be the solution to this social injustice.
For example, in her article "The Unconscious Evolution of
Mutual Banking," Kelly suggested a remedy for the state
monopoly of money which caused the usury of "interest":
her remedy was the establishment of privately controlled
currency (or currencies). She exuded, "...the free monetary
system with its destruction of interest and profit, looms
up before us! The exchange of product against product is
inaugurated! The social revolution accomplishes itself!"
In other words, to sever the alliance between government
and business that constituted capitalism, it was necessary
to deny government any power over the economic arrangements
of individuals, for "all the laws have no other object than
to perpetrate injustice, to support at any price the
monopolists in their plunder." In her opinion, a free
market in which individual contracts -- and not government
-- set prices would eliminate practices such as charging
interest.
But what if she were proven wrong? What if
interest and other forms of usury continued to exist within
the framework of a free market? Contributors to Liberty
were clear and consistent on at least one point. Individuals
had the absolute right to enter into agreements which
Liberty contributors considered to be foolish and
self-destructive. Any interference into such voluntary
contracts constituted the use of force, which was the more
primary evil. As Kelly commented, "...we realize the labor
question can never be solved by force.... You cannot shoot
down or blow up an economic system, but you can destroy it
by ceasing to support it, as soon as you understand where
its evils lie." But if a free individual could not be
persuaded away from paying interest, then that individual
would have to live with the folly of his or her own actions.
It is important to understand Kelly's history in order to
fully appreciate her opposition to usuries such as rent
and interest. As an immigrant from Ireland, Gertrude Kelly's
introduction to individualistic philosophy was probably
through the columns of "Honorius" in Irish World -- an
organ of the Irish No Rent movement. Honorius was, in
fact, a pseudonym for the American natural-rights advocate
Henry Appleton who contributed frequently to the early
issues of Liberty, both under his own name and under the
pen name of "X."
Kelly could not have been indifferent to
the absentee British landlords whose claims to most of
Irelands fertile soil came from conquest and legal privilege.
The exorbitant rent and interest they charged the Irish
for use of land and money were a major cause of that country's
poverty. On coming to America, Kelly did not seem to think
that the differing histories of the two nations required
differing economic and political analysis. She applied
the same general principles to both -- principles she had
derived partly from reading English classical liberals such
as Herbert Spencer and John Stuart Mill, both of whom her
articles often quoted.
In articles that displayed a deep
breadth of reading that ranged from Proudhon and Godwin to
Malthus, Kelly also displayed a level of common sense
uncommon among political visionaries. She advised the
fellow individualists who wanted to pursue dubious reforms
to ease the immediate problems of female labor and to
educate themselves, instead, by listening to the voices of
working women. Reformers with grand schemes should take
"lessons from Miss Corson on how to make a neck of beef
last a family of six persons for three weeks." Only by
understanding the daily realities faced by working women
with hungry children could radicals address the needs of
this class of labor.
In short, Kelly infused the 19th
century individualist dialogue with a refreshing though
harsh dose of women's reality, both in her discussion of
issues and of events.
The Haymarket Incident
Kelly's insistence upon principle linked to
common sense helped to anchor radical individualism to the goal of
nonviolence, especially when the movement was pressured to respond
to violent events of its day. Her influence may be judged by her
response to one particular event which history calls "the Haymarket
Incident." In the wake of this event most radicals -- including
other prominent feminists and some individualists -- cried out for
blind vengeance against the State. Kelly offered a voice of reason.
On May 4th, 1886, a large crowd of laborers assembled in
the Haymarket Square of Chicago to protest against recent
police brutality. As the meeting began to break up peacefully
due to rain, the police hurried the process along. From
the sidelines, someone threw a bomb toward the police, who
opened fire at the laborers. The shots were returned. In
the final count, seven policemen and an unknown number of
protesters died.
The police rounded up labor leaders, with
no regard to whether they had been involved in the violence
or not. Eventually, seven men were tried for murder in a
court case that has been generally accepted as a wholesale
travesty of justice. For example, the jury was not chosen
in the normal manner: a bailiff was instructed to go out
into the street and select whomever he wished from the
passers-by.
Most feminists responded with shock, outrage,
and bitter pain. For example, upon reading a newspaper
headline stating that the Haymarket protesters (communist
anarchists and labor radicals) had thrown a bomb into an
assembled crowd, the teenaged individualist-feminist
Voltairine de Cleyre had exclaimed aloud, "They ought to
be hanged!" She keenly and instantly regretted the words,
and assumed the opposite position with equal vehemence.
Fourteen years later, de Cleyre remained sorely haunted by
her words, "For that ignorant, outrageous, blood-thirsty
sentence I shall never forgive myself..."
Against this backdrop of passionate and profound reaction among feminists,
Kelly called for a calm and measured response. She refused
to consider retaliation in kind against the State because
force could never be an appropriate means by which to
achieve social ends. In an appeal for restraint, she wrote,
"Oh my brothers! let no blind feelings of revenge against
the state and its tools lead you to play into its hands by
attempting to meet force with force.... Remember that the
employment of force leads to the redevelopment of the
military spirit, which is totally opposed to the spirit
that must exist in the people before anything that we wish
for can be brought about."
Over and over again, Kelly
stressed education. Enlightenment and persuasion had to
be the paths employed by individualists because ignorance
was their main opponent. Although the content of the
education was an essential factor in the process of educating
people, the method was equally important. It not only had
to be nonviolent, but also privately funded since taxation
and the public funding that sprang from taxes were the sort
of violence against property known as theft.
The Private Funding of Education On June 1, 1887, Kelly delivered
a remarkable speech entitled "State Aid to Science" before the
Alumnae Association of the Womens Medical College of the New York
Infirmary for Women and Children, at which she had studied. It
was remarkable because -- at a time when feminists called out for
various forms of state assistance to educate women -- Kelly addressed
the destructive consequences of governmental attempts to promote
knowledge. It was remarkable because Gertrude Kelly was a medical
doctor and, as such, she was expected to tolerate, if not to revere
outright the institutions that conferred social status upon her
profession.
Published as an article in Liberty, this speech presented
two themes: "first, that progress in science is lessened,
and ultimately destroyed, by state interference; and,
secondly, that even if, through state aid, progress in
science could be promoted, the promotion would be at too
great an expense of the best interests of the race."
Kelly argued for the impossibility of government promoting
knowledge by pointing out: "It seems to be generally
forgotten by those who favor state aid to science that aid
so given is not and cannot be aid to Science, but to
particular doctrines or dogmas, and that, where this aid
is given, it requires almost a revolution to introduce a
new idea." Such an arrangement of government patronage
creates "a great many big idle queens at the expense of
the workers."
But, even granting for the sake of argument
that state aid could promote knowledge, Kelly contended
that the cost of this promotion would enormously outweigh
any advantage. The cost would be the violation of property
rights through the taxation that would be necessary to
support the governments program. If ordinary people
sufficiently valued the service being funded by the State,
then public funding wouldnt be necessary. If they didnt
value it, then the government had no right to take money
from the worker to finance officially desirable knowledge.
"I maintain," Kelly insisted, "that you have no right to
decide what is happiness or knowledge for him, any more
than you have to decide what religion he must give adherence
to. You have no right to take away a single cent of his
property without his consent. Woe to the nation that would
strive to increase knowledge or happiness at the expense
of justice. It will end by not having morality, or happiness,
or knowledge."
On the state funding of education, as in
all issues, Gertrude B. Kelly demanded "no compromise" with
the principles of individual autonomy and individual
responsibility -- in short, with the doctrine of individual
rights. Indeed, it was her devotion to Natural Law that
led her to depart from Liberty when it became become a
forum for Stirnerite egoism. Kelly contributed, instead,
to the brief journal entitled Nemesis, then began to write
for the periodical Alarm under the editorship of Dyer D.
Lum. Her departure from Liberty robbed that periodical of
an able defender of natural-rights theory and robbed it of
its most forceful voice for women. In a similar manner,
Gertrude B. Kelly's absence from the pages of feminist
history impoverishes that movement. Disillusioned with
the "philosophical individualism" of Liberty, Kelly went
on to express her principles through action and became the
director of a clinic for the poor in the Chelsea district
of New York City. As an outlet for writing and theory,
she turned to the cause of womens suffrage and of Irish
independence, becoming a prominent member of the Irish
Womens Council. Two years after her death in 1934, Mayor
Fiorello La Guardia honored her work with poor children by
dedicating the "Dr. Gertrude B. Kelly Playground" on 21st
Street.
Letter to the Editor
When Barbara Wilder-Smith, teacher and researcher, made
tee-shirts saying "Boys are Good," she met fierce resistance
from those who believe maleness is inherently bad. Such
attitudes, if internalized by boys, will produce crippled
men -- just as earlier anti-female attitudes crippled so
many girls and womyn, the grandsons will be punished for
the sins of their grandparents.
If, as Hallmark Cards
teaches us, "Men are scum," then logically we need way
FEWER men -- just enough to provide healthy and intelligent
semen donations. Abort two-thirds of all male fetuses?
What would Emma Goldman say today?
Tortuga Bi Liberty
San Francisco,A
Update
4>
Rebecca Shipman, a past National Coordinator of ALF, was, on
September 2, a guest on "Gender Talk," a weekly radio show heard
in the Boston area on MIT radio, discussing pornography in a
45-minute interview. The host of the show is Nancy Nangeroni, who
is the executive director of the International Foundation for Gender
Education. The program is billed as "the leading transgendered
program in the country." It was a wonderful group of people to
talk to, says Rebecca, "because just in order to live every day
they have to think deeply about gender issues."
Joan Kennedy Taylor spoke to a meeting of the Libertarian Party of
Queens County in New York City on October 10 about the controversy
over Mayor Giulianis NYC zoning ordinance limiting and relocating
"adult businesses." She had testified at City Hall against the
ordinance in 1994 and 1995.
Point of Ares, ALF member Karen Michalsons progressive rock band,
will be performing at a Halloween Weekend Rock Party on Friday
October 30 at The Roadhouse, 1795 Middle County Road, Centereach,
NY (516) 467-9722, and on Sunday, November 1 and Sunday, November
8 at the Lizard Lounge, 1667 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA
(617) 547-0759. The Lizard Lounge performances are billed as "a
night of poets, minstrels and mythic rock!" The bands second
release, "The Sorrows of Young Apollo," is due out from Arula
Records before the end of the year.
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