Voltairine de Cleyre
November 17, 2012
On this date in 1866, freethinker and anarchist Voltairine de Cleyre
was born in Leslie, Mich., the dainty baby daughter of French immigrant
Hector De Claire and Harriet Billings. Her father, a struggling tailor
and admirer of Voltaire,
coined her name. By four, bright "Voltai" had taught herself to read.
Her father, after undergoing a change in personality, enrolled Voltai in
a convent in Ontario, where "I suffered hell a thousand times while I
was wondering where it was located. . . " she later wrote ("The Making
of an Anarchist"). By 19, Voltairine declared herself a freethinker,
marking the moment with a poem and pledging to "consecrate my service to
the world!" In 1886, she became editor of The Progressive Age,
in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and changed the spelling of her last name.
The following year she launched a lecture tour before freethought
groups. Tall, slim, with arresting features, blue eyes and curly brown
hair, she must have made an impression in her version of a Greek toga. Emma Goldman,
in a short book written in 1932 after Voltairine's death, remembered
"her pale face lit up with the inner fire of her ideal," praising her
speeches as "richly studded with original thought."
The execution of four innocent anarchists in 1887 for the Haymarket
bombing was the turning point of Voltairine's life. Although she
dedicated herself to anarchism, every speech and article, whether on
politics or feminism, contained her freethought views. She set off on a
lecture tour in Kansas for the Woman's National Liberal Union. She
founded a related league in Philadelphia, lectured on such topics as
"Sex Slavery," advocated a day to recognize Mary Wollstonecraft as freethinkers had done for Thomas Paine,
and lived meagerly, teaching immigrants and translating. In 1902, a
deranged former pupil shot her at close range with 4 bullets. Expected
to die, she not only survived but was back on the lecture circuit 3
months later. Voltairine even raised defense funds for the perpetrator,
whom she called "the product of a diseased brain." In an eloquent essay,
she decried punishment and imprisonment for its own sake, holding
Christianity accountable for a "new class of imbruted men." ("Crime and
Punishment," 1903). She was one of a number of prominent individuals,
including Eugene V. Debs, Clarence Darrow, and Jack London,
to speak at a free speech rally in 1909. Plagued by sinus problems,
which had led to much suffering and many hospitalizations, she fell ill
again in April 1912. Two brutal operations were performed, she suffered
for 9 weeks and finally died on June 20, 1912. She was buried in the
Waldheim Cemetery next to the graves of the Haymarket anarchists as
2,000 people gathered. Although known for her freethought poetry, her
passionate, uncompromising essays are still timely, still provocative. D. 1912.
“The question of souls is old—we demand our bodies, now. We are tired of promises, god is deaf, and his church is our worst enemy.”
— Voltairine de Cleyre, "Sex Slavery" (essay), 1890. For more about Voltairine, see Woman Without Superstition.
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor - www.ffrf.org
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