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Posts by Louise Crowley Library

A short documentary on the NWDC that anarchists made in 2008: youtu.be/bTrR1s7du6s?...

1 month ago 9 4 0 0

Found three related flyers, two for noise demos at the detention center, one for an info night about it, all from 2010.

1 month ago 9 4 0 1
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We added an article about the Northwest Detention Center, published in Autonomy//253, way back in 2011, while Obama was president.

louisecrowleylibrary.org/a-brief-analysis-of-the-northwest-detention-center

1 month ago 9 7 0 2
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A former collective member of Seattle's Black Cat Cafe is looking for people to collaborate on a collective history of the project.

www.faythelevine.com/blackcatcafe

3 months ago 11 3 0 0
Washington Criminal Anarchy Law — Louise Crowley Library

I just randomly remembered that in 1903 the state of Washington made it illegal to be an anarchist.

louisecrowleylibrary.org/washington-criminal-anarchy-law

6 months ago 8 1 1 0

The US government has always been a force for censorship.

7 months ago 34 13 0 0

Time is a spiral.

7 months ago 10 3 0 0
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Anarcho-Feminism: Two Statements Red Rosia and Black Maria Anarcho-Feminism: Two Statements 1971 The Anarcho-Feminist Manifesto was written by Chicago Anarcho-Feminists. Blood of the Flower...

Will try to scan to PDF and upload soon, in the meantime, the full texts can be read here: theanarchistlibrary.org/library/red-...

8 months ago 5 0 0 0
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Just got a hard copy of Anarcho-Feminism: Two Statements, published by the Seattle branch of the Social Revolutionary Anarchist Federation in the early 1970s.

8 months ago 44 7 1 1
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Henry Addis, "Essays on the Social Problem" (1898) - The Libertarian Labyrinth Henry Addis was an anarchist-communist, a co-editor of the Portland Firebrand, and a contributor to several of the anarchist papers published in the western United States. In this collection, part of ...

Full text is here: www.libertarian-labyrinth.org/from-the-arc...

10 months ago 3 0 0 0
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Just got a copy of Home resident Henry Addis' pamphlet "Essays on the Social Problem," published by Free Society out of San Francisco (formerly Portland) in June, 1898.

10 months ago 4 0 1 0
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On May 29, 1899, Emma Goldman spoke at the Germania hall in Seattle.

louisecrowleylibrary.org/anarchy-at-germania-hall

1 year ago 13 4 0 0
Floyd Turner (L) and Stan Iverson (R) in front of the ID bookstore in Seattle's University District.

Floyd Turner (L) and Stan Iverson (R) in front of the ID bookstore in Seattle's University District.

On May 12, 1967, Seattle anarchist Stan Iverson burned an American flag in Seattle. Despite Iverson admitting that he burned the flag, Floyd Turner was convicted of it and served 45 days before being released on bond and acquitted by the WA Supreme Court.

louisecrowleylibrary.org/stan-iverson

11 months ago 8 4 0 0
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On May 11, 1898 the first issue of Discontent: Mother of Progress was published at Home, Washington. Discontent was published weekly for four years, until it was suppressed by the US Post office for publishing “obscenity.”

louisecrowleylibrary.org/discontent

1 year ago 7 5 0 0
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On May 8, 1903, anarchist William Dorenson was sent to the chain gang for 50 days for having praised Leon Czolgosz’s assassination of President William McKinley while drinking in the Pioneer saloon in Tacoma.

1 year ago 12 6 0 0
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On May 4, 2021 Tacoma anarchist Arthur J. Miller died. Miller was the publisher of the anarchist newspaper "Bayou La Rose" for 26 years, as well as a key organizer for supporting imprisoned American Indian Movement member Leonard Peltier.

louisecrowleylibrary.org/arthur-j-miller

1 year ago 13 6 0 0
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On May 3, 1886, 16-year-old Jay Fox was shot in the finger by a Chicago cop, and watched another worker killed by the same bullet. He would be present the next night as a bomb was thrown into a crowd of police that was trying to break up the rally in the Haymarket.

louisecrowleylibrary.org/jay-fox

1 year ago 4 3 0 0

The longer story of all the trials suffered by Home's publishers is here: louisecrowleylibrary.org/obscenity

11 months ago 4 2 0 0

Postal Inspector Anthony Comstock (and his followers) was one of the more significant opponents that US anarchists faced in that era.

11 months ago 1 0 0 0
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On 4/28/1919, amidst a wave of mail bombs intended by anarchists to be delivered on May 1, Seattle Mayor Ole Hanson's office received a bomb, which failed to go off. After, Hanson declared that the government should “buck up and hang or incarcerate for life all the anarchists.”

1 year ago 4 4 0 0

[archivist’s note: If you have access to the reportback “Short reflection on what led to Olympia Anarchist Convergence ‘not-happening’” please let us know]

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
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On April 20, 2013, the Olympia Anarchist Convergence began at Evergreen State College, but was moved to a different location after a hostile blogger had his camera smashed.

louisecrowleylibrary.org/olympia-anarchist-convergence

1 year ago 11 1 1 0

Tacoma anarchist Andrew Klemencic had it right.

louisecrowleylibrary.org/andrew-klemencic

1 year ago 2 0 0 0
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On April 13, 1890, anarchist/feminist/spiritualist Lois Waisbrooker delivered two lectures at Tacoma Hall, the first on “Modern Spiritualism”. This is the earliest evidence we can find of anarchist activity in our area.

louisecrowleylibrary.org/clothed-with-the-sun

2 years ago 3 4 0 0
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On April 9, 1884, Seattle anarchist Louise Olivereau was born. In 1917, Olivereau mailed out 2000 letters, encouraging draft resistance. She was convicted of violating the Espionage Act, and sentenced to 10 years, though she was released after 28 months.

louisecrowleylibrary.org/louise-olivereau

2 years ago 6 6 0 0
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On April 1, 1969, Morningtown Pizza opened in Seattle’s University District. Collectively-owned and operated by many Seattle anarchists, Morningtown operated until 1993.

louisecrowleylibrary.org/morningtown-pizza

1 year ago 19 5 0 0

On March 21, 1900, the first part of Henry Addis’ article on free love, “Talks With the Boys and Girls,” was published in Discontent: Mother of Progress. Discontent’s publisher, Charles Govan, was fined $75 for printing it.

louisecrowleylibrary.org/talks-with-the-boys-and-girls

2 years ago 1 3 0 0
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Anarchism In America (1983) : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive pooh pooh yeah

The film: archive.org/details/Anar...

1 year ago 5 2 0 0
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On March 15, 1984, the documentary “Anarchism in America” was screened at Seattle’s New City Theatre (11th and Olive).

1 year ago 23 6 1 0
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Obscenity at Home: The Trials of an Anarchist Community on Puget Sound — Louise Crowley Library This pamphlet tells the stories of the trials that anarchist publishers were subjected to in the early 1900s at Home , Washington. Included is the four essays that so offended some in the government ...

You can read about all of the trials that newspaper editors from Home, WA endured in our pamphlet Obscenity at Home: The Trials of an Anarchist Community on Puget Sound. (2/2)

louisecrowleylibrary.org/obscenity

1 year ago 4 0 0 0