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  Hughan, Jessie Wallace
CANDIDATE DETAILS
AffiliationSocialist  
  1898-01-01  
 
NameJessie Wallace Hughan
Address
New York, New York , United States
EmailNone
WebsiteNone
Born December 25, 1875
DiedApril 10, 1955 (79 years)
ContributorThomas Walker
Last ModifedJuan Croniqueur
Apr 03, 2024 05:45pm
Tags
InfoJessie Wallace Hughan
12-25-1875 to 4-10-1955

"Jessie had no malice; she had all charity."
--Stella Perry 1955


The second of three daughters, third of four children, Jessie was born in Brooklyn, New York to Margaret and Samuel Hughan. Her father was born in England to a Scottish family and came to New York in 1863. Her mother's English, Scottish, and French heritage family had come to the United States in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

Jessie, attended grammar school on Staten Island and then went on to Northfield Seminary in Massachusetts. She enrolled in Barnard College in 1894 and with three fellow students in 1898 founded the nationwide sorority Alpha Omicron Pi, whose mascot is the Panda bear, color is cardinal, flower is the Jacquiminot Rose, and gem is the ruby.

Jessie earned her A.B. in 1898 with the thesis "Recent Theories of Profits", a forerunner of her 1932 poetry collection "The Challenge of Mars and Other Verses". Her study of economics continued at Columbia University where she pursued the family interest in the single tax theory, and wrote a thesis entitled "The Place of Henry George in Economics" (1899) For her doctoral thesis she chose the subject of socialism and in 1907 became a socialist "by conviction and not merely by emotion". In 1910 she received her Ph.D. for the dissertation "The Present Status of Socialism in America". Jessie began a teaching career at schools in Naugatuck, Connecticut and White Plains, New York. She went on to teach in Brooklyn, and a series of public high schools throughout New York. In the 1920's she chaired the English Department at Textile High School and was then in charge of the Cooperative Annex.

Jessie tried running for public office several times starting in 1915 when she became candidate for Alderman in New York on the Socialist ticket. In 1918, she ran for Secretary of State. In 1920 she ran for Lieutenant Governor and in 1924 for United States Senator. None of her campaigns were successful, but her belief was that the Socialist vote was not a waste because it placed pressure on the winning party to grant some Socialist reforms.

After the beginning of World War I, Jessie along with three other women founded the "Anti-Enlistment League". The object was to have people declare themselves opposed to war and military service in support of the war. The group felt there was a need for pacifist organizations to counter balance the American leanings toward entering the war. She became a charter member of the FOR (Fellowship of Reconciliation), a Christian pacifist organization in 1915. Although she was warned in 1917 that her antiwar feelings might result in her dismissal from the school system, Jessie stood firm. The "Lusk Certificate of Character and Loyalty" had been denied to her for years because she had ADDED to her teachers oath of loyalty "This obedience being qualified always by dictates of conscience."

After the war, she held on to pacifist convictions and formed, in 1922, a "Committee for Enrollment Against War". In 1923, she managed to get the people of FOR, the Women's Peace Union, and the Women's Peace Society together to form the War Resisters League. She became secretary until 1945. Through the 20's and 30's, Jessie promoted socialism and pacifism and encouraged participation in "No More War" parades. In 1938 she helped found the United Pacifist Committee, a group that coordinated peace education and conscientious objectors. In 1940 she founded the Pacifist Teachers League. She was one of the first to take a stand against the government when Civilian Public Service Camps were established, where the objectors were forced to work without pay. Greatly bothered by rumors of Nazi plans for the destruction of Germany's Jews during WWII, she pushed for immediate armistice and predicted that, without it, millions would be killed.

Retiring from teaching in 1945, Jessie remained active in the WRL and served on the executive committee until she died at her Manhatten home in 1955. That December (probably on her birthday) there was a memorial meeting held for her at which the "Jessie Wallace Hughan Memorial Fund" was begun for publishing works to promote the cause of peace.




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EVENTS
Start Date End Date Type Title Contributor

NEWS
Date Category Headline Article Contributor

DISCUSSION
Importance? 7.00000 Average

FAMILY
Father Samuel Hughan 1837-1896
Sister Evelyn West Hughan 1871-1947

INFORMATION LINKS
RACES
  11/08/1938 NY Assembly - New York 06 Lost 1.55% (-52.77%)
  11/03/1936 NY Assembly - New York 06 Lost 2.63% (-59.60%)
  11/06/1934 NY District 15 Lost 2.01% (-78.20%)
  11/07/1933 NY Assembly - New York 10 Lost 3.86% (-53.57%)
  11/08/1932 NY Assembly - New York 10 Lost 3.36% (-33.89%)
  11/03/1931 NY Assembly - New York 03 Lost 3.84% (-75.97%)
  11/04/1930 NY Assembly - New York 03 Lost 3.15% (-75.91%)
  11/04/1929 NY Assembly - New York 10 Lost 3.71% (-51.16%)
  11/06/1928 NY District 15 Lost 1.60% (-75.94%)
  11/08/1927 NY Assembly - New York 10 Lost 2.04% (-48.94%)
  11/02/1926 NY US Senate Lost 2.58% (-43.90%)
  11/04/1924 NY District 17 Lost 2.23% (-54.81%)
  11/07/1922 NY District 16 Lost 4.54% (-65.42%)
  11/02/1920 NY Lieutenant Governor Lost 6.79% (-47.42%)
  11/05/1918 NY Secretary of State Lost 6.49% (-42.04%)
  11/06/1917 NY Assembly - Kings 17 Lost 9.90% (-37.26%)
  11/07/1916 NY Assembly - Kings 17 Lost 3.16% (-55.06%)
  11/03/1914 NY Assembly - Kings 11 Lost 1.64% (-48.58%)
ENDORSEMENTS