Whittington families » Jessica Lucy FREEMAN-MITFORD(ROMILLY) (TREUHAFT) (1917-1996)

Persoonlijke gegevens Jessica Lucy FREEMAN-MITFORD(ROMILLY) (TREUHAFT) 


Gezin van Jessica Lucy FREEMAN-MITFORD(ROMILLY) (TREUHAFT)

(1) Zij is getrouwd met Robert Edward TREUHAFT.

Zij zijn getrouwd in het jaar 1943 te Usa, zij was toen 25 jaar oud.


Kind(eren):

  1. Nicholas TREUHAFT  1944-1955
  2. (Niet openbaar)


(2) Zij is getrouwd met Esmond Marcus David ROMILLY.

Zij zijn getrouwd te C 1935.


Kind(eren):

  1. Julia Decca ROMILLY  1937-1938
  2. (Niet openbaar)


Notities over Jessica Lucy FREEMAN-MITFORD(ROMILLY) (TREUHAFT)

Jessica Lucy Freeman-Mitford (11 September 1917 – 22 July 1996) was an English author, journalist and political campaigner, who was one of the Mitford sisters. She became an American citizen in1944.

Contents

1 Biography

1.1 Early life

1.2 Life with Esmond Romilly

1.3 Life with Robert Treuhaft

1.4 Communism and left-wing politics

1.5 Investigative journalism

1.6 Later life

2 Death

3 Legacy and influence

4 Quotations

5 The Mitford siblings

6 Bibliography

7 Dramatization

8 See also

9 References

10 External links

Biography

Early life

Mitford, the sixth of seven children, was the daughter of David Freeman-Mitford, 2nd Baron Redesdale and his wife Sydney (daughter of politician and publisher Thomas Bowles), and grew up in a series of her father's country houses. She had little formal education, since her mother did not believe in sending girls to school, but was nevertheless widely read. Though her sisters Unity and Diana were well-known British supporters of Hitler and her father was described asbeing "one of nature's fascists," Jessica (always known as "Decca") renounced her privileged background at an early age and became an adherent of communism. She was known as the "red sheep" of the family.[1]

Life with Esmond Romilly

At age 19, Mitford met her second cousin Esmond Romilly, who was recuperating from dysentery caught during a stint with the International Brigades defending Madrid during the Spanish Civil War. Romilly was a nephew (by marriage) of Winston Churchill. The cousins fell in love immediately and decided to elope to Spain, where Romilly picked up work as a reporter for the News Chronicle covering the conflict. After some legal difficulties caused by their relatives' opposition, they married. They moved to London and lived in the East End, then mostly a poor industrial area. Attended by doctor and nurse, Mitford gave birth at home to a daughter, Julia Decca Romilly, on 20 December 1937. The baby died in a measles epidemic the following May. Jessica Mitford rarely spoke of Julia in later life and she is not referred to by name in Mitford's autobiographical novel, Hons and Rebels.[citation needed]

In 1939, Romilly and Mitford immigrated to the United States. They traveled around, working odd jobs, perpetually short of money. At the outset of World War II, Romilly enlisted in the Royal Canadian Air Force; Mitford was living in Washington D.C., and considered joining him once he was posted to England. While living in D.C, with contemporaries Virginia Foster Durr and Clifford Durr, she gave birth to another daughter, Constancia ("the Donk" or "Dinky") Romilly on 9 February 1941.[2] Her husband went missing in action on 30 November 1941, on his way back from a bombing raid over Nazi Germany.

Life with Robert Treuhaft

Mitford threw herself into war work. Through this, she met and married the American civil rights lawyer Robert Treuhaft in 1943 and eventually settled in Oakland, California. She became an American citizen in 1944 .[3] There the couple had two sons: Nicholas born 1944 (who was killed in 1955 when hit by a bus), and Benjamin, born 1947. Mitford approached her motherhood in a spirit of "benign neglect", described by her children as "matter-of-fact" and "not touchy-feely".[4] She became closer to her own mother by letter over the decades.

Communism and left-wing politics

Mitford spent much of the early 1950s working as executive secretary of the local Civil Rights Congress chapter. Through this and her husband's legal practice, she was involved in a number of civil rights campaigns, notably the failed attempt to stop the execution of Willie McGee, an African-American accused of raping a white woman. Mitford and Treuhaft became active members of the Communist Party. In 1953, at the height of McCarthyism and the 'Red Scare', they were summoned to testify in front of the House Un-American Activities Committee. Both refused to testify about their participation in radical groups.

In 1956, Mitford published (stenciled) a pamphlet, "Lifeitselfmanship or How to Become a Precisely-Because Man". In response to Noblesse Oblige, the book her sister Nancy co-wrote and edited on the class distinctions in British English, popularizing the phrases "U and non-U English" (upper class and non-upper class), Jessica described L and non-L (Left and non-Left) English, mocking the clichés used by her comrades in the all-out class struggle.[5][6] (The title alludes to Stephen Potter's satirical series of books that included Lifemanship.)

Feeling that in the current political climate they could do more for social justice outside the Party, and disillusioned by the development of communism in the Soviet Union, Mitford and Treuhaft resigned from it in late 1958.[7]

In 1960 Mitford published her first book Hons and Rebels (Americantitle: Daughters and Rebels), a memoir covering her youth in the Redesdale household.

Investigative journalism

In May 1961 she traveled to Montgomery, Alabama while working on an article about Southern attitudes for Esquire. While there, she and a friend went to meet the arrival of the Freedom Riders and became caught up in a riot when a mob led by the Ku Klux Klan attacked the civil rights activists. After the riot, Mitford proceeded to a rally led by Martin Luther King, Jr. The church at which this was held was also attacked by the Klan, and Mitford and the group spent the night barricaded inside until the violence was ended by the National Guard.

Through his work with unions and death benefits, Treuhaft became interested in thefuneral industry and persuaded Mitford to write an investigative article on the subject. Though the article, "Saint Peter Don't You Call Me" published in Frontier magazine, was not widely disseminated, it caught considerable attention when Mitford appeared on a local television broadcast with two industry representatives. Convinced of public interest, she wrote The American Way of Death, which was published in 1963. In the book Mitford harshly criticized the industry for using unscrupulous business practices to take advantage of grieving families. The book became a major bestseller and led toCongressional hearings on the funeral industry. The book was one of the inspirations for filmmaker Tony Richardson's 1965 film The Loved One, which was based on Evelyn Waugh's short satirical 1948 novel of the same name,[8] tellingly subtitled "An Anglo-American Tragedy".

After The American Way of Death Mitford continued with her investigative journalism. In 1970, she published an article in the Atlantic Monthly, "Let Us Now Appraise Famous Writers", an exposé of the Famous Writers School, a correspondence course of questionable business practices founded by Bennett Cerf. She published The Trial of Dr. Spock, the Rev. William Sloane Coffin, Jr., Michael Ferber, Mitchel Goodman and Marcus Raskin, an account of the five men's 1970 trial on charges of conspiracy to violate the draft laws, followed by a harsh critique of the American prison system entitled Kind and Usual Punishment: The Prison Business (1973), an allusion to the phrase "cruel and unusual punishment".

Mitford was a distinguished professor for the fall semester 1973 at San Jose State University where she taught a course called "The American Way", which covered the Watergatescandal and the McCarthy era. Because of disagreements with the dean over her taking a loyalty oath and submitting to fingerprinting, the campus was thrown into protests and she was forced to go to court to remain able to teach.[9]

Later life

Mitford's second memoir, A Fine Old Conflict (1977), comically describes her experiences joining and eventually leaving the Communist Party USA. Mitford titled the book after what, in her youth, she thought were the lyrics to the Communist anthem, "The Internationale", which actually are "Tis the final conflict". Mitford recounts how she was invited to join the Communist Party by her co-worker Dobby, to whom she responded "We thought you'd never ask!" She bristled against the conservative structure in the CP, at one point upsetting the women's caucus by printing a poster with "Girls! Girls! Girls!" to draw people to an event. She mercilessly teased an elder Communist about what she perceived as his paranoia when he wrote out the name of a town where she could get chickens donated from "loyal party members" for a fund raiser. When he wrote Petaluma on a scrap of paper to avoid being overheard by possible bugs, she asked in jest how the chickens should be prepared, and wrote, "Fried or broiled".

In addition to writing and activism, Mitford tried her hand at music as singer for "Decca and the Dectones," a cowbell and kazoo orchestra. She performed at numerous benefits and opened for Cyndi Lauper on the roof of the Virgin Records store in San Francisco. She recorded two short albums: one[10] contains her rendition of "Maxwell's Silver Hammer" and "Grace Darling", and the other, two duets with friend and poet Maya Angelou.[11] Her last work was an update entitled The American Way of Death Revisited.

Death

Mitford died of lung cancer aged 78. In keeping with her wishes, she had an inexpensive funeral, which cost $533.31 – she was cremated without a ceremony, and the ashes scattered at sea, the cremation itself costing $475.[1] The funeral company was the Pacific Interment Service, which prides itself on "dignity, simplicity, affordability".[12]

Her widower survived her by five years. Their surviving daughter had continued the activist tradition by working for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. She had two children with James Forman, its African American director, and eventually became an emergency room nurse.

Legacy and influence

J. K. Rowling, author of the Harry Potter series, reviewed Mitford's book of letters, Decca, in the Sunday Telegraph in 2006.[13]

Rowling stated in 2002, "My most influential writer, without a doubt, is Jessica Mitford. When my great-aunt gave me Hons and Rebels when I was 14, she instantly became my heroine. She ran away from home to fight in the Spanish Civil War, taking with her a camera that she had charged to her father's account. I wished I'd had the nerve to do something like that. I love the way she never outgrew some of her adolescent traits, remaining true to her politics – she was a self-taught socialist – throughout her life. I think I've read everything she wrote. I even called my daughter [Jessica Rowling Arantes] after her."[14]

Heeft u aanvullingen, correcties of vragen met betrekking tot Jessica Lucy FREEMAN-MITFORD(ROMILLY) (TREUHAFT)?
De auteur van deze publicatie hoort het graag van u!


Tijdbalk Jessica Lucy FREEMAN-MITFORD(ROMILLY) (TREUHAFT)

  Deze functionaliteit is alleen beschikbaar voor browsers met Javascript ondersteuning.
Klik op de namen voor meer informatie. Gebruikte symbolen: grootouders grootouders   ouders ouders   broers-zussen broers/zussen   kinderen kinderen

Via Snelzoeken kunt u zoeken op naam, voornaam gevolgd door een achternaam. U typt enkele letters in (minimaal 3) en direct verschijnt er een lijst met persoonsnamen binnen deze publicatie. Hoe meer letters u intypt hoe specifieker de resultaten. Klik op een persoonsnaam om naar de pagina van die persoon te gaan.

  • Of u kleine letters of hoofdletters intypt maak niet uit.
  • Wanneer u niet zeker bent over de voornaam of exacte schrijfwijze dan kunt u een sterretje (*) gebruiken. Voorbeeld: "*ornelis de b*r" vindt zowel "cornelis de boer" als "kornelis de buur".
  • Het is niet mogelijk om tekens anders dan het alfabet in te voeren (dus ook geen diacritische tekens als ö en é).



Visualiseer een andere verwantschap

De getoonde gegevens hebben geen bronnen.

Aanknopingspunten in andere publicaties

Deze persoon komt ook voor in de publicatie:

Historische gebeurtenissen

  • De temperatuur op 11 september 1917 lag tussen 5,8 °C en 21,4 °C en was gemiddeld 13,6 °C. Er was 11,0 uur zonneschijn (85%). De gemiddelde windsnelheid was 2 Bft (zwakke wind) en kwam overheersend uit het noord-noord-oosten. Bron: KNMI
  • Koningin Wilhelmina (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was van 1890 tot 1948 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genoemd)
  • Van 29 augustus 1913 tot 9 september 1918 was er in Nederland het kabinet Cort van der Linden met als eerste minister Mr. P.W.A. Cort van der Linden (liberaal).
  • In het jaar 1917: Bron: Wikipedia
    • Nederland had zo'n 6,5 miljoen inwoners.
    • 17 januari » De Verenigde Staten kopen de Maagdeneilanden van Denemarken voor $25 miljoen.
    • 25 januari » De Maagdeneilanden (Deens-West-Indië) worden voor 25 miljoen dollar aan de Verenigde Staten verkocht.
    • 12 februari » In Toluca wordt de Mexicaanse voetbalclub Deportivo Toluca FC opgericht.
    • 8 juli » De opstand in Petrograd (Sint-Petersburg) mislukt en Lenin vlucht naar Finland.
    • 10 november » De Derde Slag om Ieper gestreden tijdens de Eerste Wereldoorlog.
    • 8 december » De Turken, onder bevel van Erich von Falkenhayn, plannen een aanval op de Britse linies van Edmund Allenby. De Slag om Jeruzalem is begonnen.
  • De temperatuur op 22 juli 1996 lag tussen 13,2 °C en 29,0 °C en was gemiddeld 22,2 °C. Er was 13,4 uur zonneschijn (84%). Het was licht bewolkt. De gemiddelde windsnelheid was 2 Bft (zwakke wind) en kwam overheersend uit het zuid-oosten. Bron: KNMI
  • Koningin Beatrix (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was van 30 april 1980 tot 30 april 2013 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genoemd)
  • Van maandag 22 augustus 1994 tot maandag 3 augustus 1998 was er in Nederland het kabinet a href="https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabinet-Kok_I" class="extern">Kok I met als eerste minister W. Kok (PvdA).
  • In het jaar 1996: Bron: Wikipedia
    • Nederland had zo'n 15,5 miljoen inwoners.
    • 5 mei » Tsjechië verovert in de Wiener Stadthalle in Oostenrijkse hoofdstad Wenen voor de eerste keer in de geschiedenis de wereldtitel in het ijshockey door in de finale Canada met 4-2 te verslaan.
    • 19 mei » De Nederlandse judoploeg sluit de EK judo in Den Haag af met vijf gouden en één zilveren medaille, en eindigt daardoor als eerste in het medailleklassement.
    • 19 mei » Vlucht STS-77 (Spaceshuttle Endeavour) wordt gelanceerd.
    • 2 augustus » Voor het eerst in de geschiedenis wint de Nederlandse mannenhockeyploeg de gouden medaille bij de Olympische Spelen. In de finale wordt Spanje met 3-1 verslagen, onder meer door twee doelpunten van de afzwaaiende Floris Jan Bovelander.
    • 20 oktober » Witte mars in Brussel na de arrestatie van Marc Dutroux.
    • 31 oktober » Philips kondigt aan te stoppen met de productie van de digital compact cassette.


Dezelfde geboorte/sterftedag

Bron: Wikipedia

Bron: Wikipedia


Over de familienaam FREEMAN-MITFORD(ROMILLY) (TREUHAFT)


Wilt u bij het overnemen van gegevens uit deze stamboom alstublieft een verwijzing naar de herkomst opnemen:
Philip James Wood, "Whittington families", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/whittington-families/I55364.php : benaderd 13 juni 2024), "Jessica Lucy FREEMAN-MITFORD(ROMILLY) (TREUHAFT) (1917-1996)".