Olivereau, Louise (1883- 1963)

Louise Olivereau
Louise Olivereau

A short biography of anarchist and war resister Louise Olivereau

Author
Submitted by Battlescarred on January 27, 2013

Will those in power never learn that ideas can never be imprisoned?” Olivereau at her trial.

She was one of those poetic souls to whom war never became a statistical movement of forces, but always vividly remained torn flesh, scattered brains and blood. She heard in her soul the shrieks of each murdered victim and hated war with emotion”, Anna Louise Strong.

The maximum penalties on the counts upon which you were convicted amount to 75 years. You must realize that we cannot get along without organized society,” Judge Neterer at the trial.

An idealist of the finest type of American womanhood”, Emma Goldman.

Louise Olivereau was the daughter of immigrants, with a French father, a minister, and a German mother. She was born around 1884 in Wyoming and educated as a stenographer at what later became Illinois State University. She worked in resort camps as a cook. An anarchist and poet, she acted as assistant to William Thurston Brown in setting up a Modern Schol in Portland, run on the principles of Francisco Ferrer. In March 1915 she and H.C. Uthoff set up the Portland Birth Control League, holding meetings and distributing literature, following local agitation by Emma Goldman. She moved to work as a stenographer in the offices of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) in Seattle later in the year.

When the United States went to War on the side of the Allies in 1917, Congress passed The Espionage Act in June of that year, making it a crime to incite insubordination in the armed forces, to obstruct the recruitment of soldiers, and to use the mails to do so. The IWW took an anti-war position, and already targeted by the authorities because of their agitation among workers, now became seen as even more of a threat.

In August 1917, Olivereau spent $40 of her own money (she only earned around $15 dollars a week) to mimeograph and post letters and circulars encouraging young men to refuse the draft and become conscientious objectors. On September 5, 1917, Bureau of Investigation agents, raided the Seattle IWW and confiscated literature.

Two days later, Olivereau went to the agents' office to retrieve her property. The agents attempted to get Olivereau to admit that the IWW was behind the circulars, but she insisted that she acted alone. They went with her to her home where they confiscated more documents and then arrested her. She later said that she had told the agents that “if out of 2,000 circulars I could persuade five men to consider the connection between the individual and government and war, I would consider myself quite successful”.

Olivereau was indicted on three counts of violation of The Espionage Act in connection with a letter and circular posted to one man in Bellingham. At the trial, she defended herself, saying that an attorney "would worry more over getting me a light sentence than over the preservation of the ideals I care for more than for my own liberty."

In court she readily admitted her actions, defended her concept of Anarchism and described the American government as an apparatus to protect the property of the rich. The jury convicted Olivereau and the judge sentenced her to 10 years in prison on November 30th 1917. He finished by declaring Miss Olivereau a woman above the average in intelligence, and hoped she would change her ideas to conform to organized government!

She served 28 months in the state penitentiary in Cañon City, Colorado, before being paroled. The first year she was not allowed to receive any letters, magazines or newspapers.The IWW provided no support for Olivereau or her case because of her openly professed allegiance to anarchism in court. Her case was hardly mentioned in IWW newspapers and no other IWW member attended her trial. Only Anna Louise Strong, whom she knew from her visits to the IWW offices, appeared in court to support her. As a result she lost her job with the Seattle School Board and subsequently started working as a radical journalist.

Despite this, Olivereau , once the ban on newspapers was lifted, always looked forward to receiving IWW newspapers in jail. She ran classes in prison teaching other prisoners English.

Released in March 1920, Olivereau stayed with a friend in Portland, Oregon, where she spoke to union meetings and women’s clubs, distributed pamphlets and supported herself with secretarial work. She spoke to Finnish workers in Portland on May Day. She planned on giving the proceeds of her meetings to support the movement in Mexico inspired by the anarchist Ricardo Flores Magon. She got a job as a stenographer but was disgusted that as an anarchist she had to type out a book on accounting. When she told the boss that he should give his workers a pay rise she was sacked. She then was contemplating, according to the last letter she wrote to friends in the movement, looking to work in a delicatessen or a café. These last few letters of hers reveal her sadness at the way so many of her old friends would have nothing to do with her because of her anti-war stance. She now disappeared into obscurity, continuing to work at a variety of clerical and sales jobs in Oregon and California. She settled in San Francisco in 1929 and worked as a stenographer. She died there on March 11th 1963.

Nick Heath

Sources:

Avrich, Paul. Anarchist Voices

O'Connor, Harvey. Revolution in Seattle: A Memoir

Online article on Olivereau: adsearem.wordpress.com/tag/louise-olivereau/

Comments

Steven.

6 years 10 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Steven. on May 9, 2017

This is a great biography. Although her abandonment by the IWW is completely shameful. Anyone know more about that?

syndicalist

6 years 10 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by syndicalist on May 9, 2017

The IWW provided no support for Olivereau or her case because of her openly professed allegiance to anarchism in court. Her case was hardly mentioned in IWW newspapers ...

Steven.

6 years 10 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Steven. on May 9, 2017

syndicalist

The IWW provided no support for Olivereau or her case because of her openly professed allegiance to anarchism in court. Her case was hardly mentioned in IWW newspapers ...

yeah I saw that, but to my knowledge plenty of IWW activists were anarchists, and even if they weren't the stated goals of the IWW are so similar to anarchists that it's not as if distancing themselves would make them look "respectable" to the capitalist media. So it just seems very bizarre

syndicalist

6 years 10 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by syndicalist on May 10, 2017

Steven.

syndicalist

The IWW provided no support for Olivereau or her case because of her openly professed allegiance to anarchism in court. Her case was hardly mentioned in IWW newspapers ...

yeah I saw that, but to my knowledge plenty of IWW activists were anarchists, and even if they weren't the stated goals of the IWW are so similar to anarchists that it's not as if distancing themselves would make them look "respectable" to the capitalist media. So it just seems very bizarre

I think it was different back then and this sorta reflects some of those differences.

Nealwp

6 years ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Nealwp on March 11, 2018

Eugene Deb's spent time in prison as well. He ran for President behind bars. There were many in this country involved in organized labor that wouldn't take an anti-war stance.