Leonora barry biography robinson
Beginning with Leonora Barry of the Knights of Labor, women in the labor movement have envisioned class action as a means of overcoming sexual....
Leonora Barry
Irish-American labor activist
Leonora M.
Kearney Barry (née Kearney; after first marriage, Barry; after second marriage, Lake; 13 August 1849 – 18 July 1923) was an Irish-American labor activist. As the only woman to hold national office within the Knights of Labor, she brought attention to the conditions of working women through her involvement in the labor reform movement.
She also furthered the progress of women's rights during the period following the American Civil War and Reconstruction.[1]
Early life
Leonora M. Kearney was born in County Cork, Ireland, to John and Honor Granger Kearney.
Despite being dismissed as a “lady tramp,” Leonora Barry, a member of the Knights of Labor, rose through the ranks to become a master workwoman in charge of.
Leonora's father was an Irish farmer who relocated his family to the rural community of Pierrepont, New York, in 1852 to escape the Great Famine.[2]
In 1864, Leonora's young mother died. Upon her father's remarriage to a woman five years older than her, Leonora decided to attend teaching school.
After moving out of the house to escape the tension