Swarthmore College Peace Collection, 500 College Avenue, Swarthmore, PA 19081 USA
 

Lella Secor Florence

Papers, 1915-1935


Document Group: DG 126

Provenance: Donated by Barbara Moench Florence, 1981 (acc. 81A-31)

Size: 5 inches (13 cm.)

Restrictions: None

Microfilm: None

Finding Aids: Checklist prepared by Martha P. Shane, February 1986

These records were processed under a grant from the Ford Foundation

This checklist is the property of the Swarthmore College Peace Collection



Historical Introduction

Lella Faye Secor was born in Battle Creek, Michigan, in 1887, the youngest of her mother's seven children. When an older brother settled in the West, Secor homesteaded on property adjoining his, near Coulee, Washington. She soon moved to Seattle. Earlier, she had met Rebecca Shelley at the University of Michigan, and the two young women had become close friends. When Shelley asked Secor to be a reporter on the Henry Ford Peace Expediton, Secor accepted and was on board when the ship, the Oscar II, sailed in December 1915. While not a pacifist when she left on the voyage, Secor quickly became "heartily in sympathy with the plan for continuous mediation" and a "thorough pacifist".

Her companions on this trip, besides Mr. Ford, included such dedicated pacifists as Shelley, Rosika Schwimmer, and Louis Lochner. After her return from the Ford trip in January l9l6, she remained in New York City and became very active in pacifist efforts to keep the United States out of World War I. She already considered herself and Shelley "radicals" who found it necessary "to fight the old pacifists every step of the way".

She was on the executive committee of the American Neutral Conference Committee whose specific object was "to urge our government to call or co-operate in a Conference of Neutral Nations which shall offer joint mediation to the belligerents by proposals calculated to form the basis of a permanent peace." This organization faltered and was reborn in early 1917 as the Emergency Peace Federation, of which Secor was the secretary. That summer, Secor and Shelley launched the People's Council of America with which the Emergency Peace Federation merged. This group tried to hold a conference in Chicago, but because of pro-war sentiment, was unable to do so and no effective work was carried out after that by The People's Council. As Emily Greene Balch wrote, "The movement had different names at different times - American Neutral Conference Committee, First American Conference for Democracy and Terms of Peace; People's Council of America; Emergency Peace Federation; National Council of Labor; ..." The names were often the same - Balch, Rebecca Shelley, Lella Secor, Fanny G. Villard, Oswald Villard, and Louis Lochner among them.

Secor was on the executive committee of The Young Democracy in l9l8 and also on the Mass Meeting Committee of Friends of New Russia, both short lived ventures.

In 1917, she married Philip Sargant Florence, a teacher who respected Secor's right to pursue a career. The couple had two sons and moved to Cambridge, England, in 1921. Here, Secor joined the Women's International League and spoke on women's rights, using her maiden name of Lella Secor. She founded the Cambridge Birth Control Clinic in 1925. In 1930, she wrote a book, Birth Control on Trial. The family finally settled permanently in Birmingham, England, where she continued to write and to be active in politics and birth control causes. Lella Secor Florence died in 1966.


Scope and Contents

Secor's papers contain letters to her family (1915-1917), most of which were used in the book Lella Secor, A Diary in Letters, 1915-1922, edited in 1978 by her daughter-in-law, Barbara Moench Florence, and available in the SCPC library. There is also a small amount of correspondence written to her. The bulk of her papers consists of the records from pacifist causes in which Secor was active during the years 1916 through 1918. There is correspondence written by members of the Henry Ford Peace Expedition as well as newsclippings and accounts of the voyage, some written by Secor twenty years later.

There are minutes from the Neutral Conference for Continuous Mediation (1916), The American Neutral Conference Committee (1916-1917), and the Emergency Peace Federation (1917), as well as literature, drafts of reports, and correspondence of these organizations. There is also noteworthy material about the People's Council of America (1917-1919), the Young Democracy (1918-1923), and the American Union Against Militarism (1917-1919).

Correspondents include Louis P. Lochner, Gaston Plantiff, and Rosika Schwimmer.



Arrangement

The records of each organization about which there was material in the Secor papers was placed together in a single folder. This includes minutes, literature printed by the organization, drafts, and correspondence. A scrapbook containing newspaper clippings about the Henry Ford Peace Expedition was disassembled for conservation purposes. Copies of these clippings are found in Series II.






Box 1

Series I. CORRESPONDENCE

From L.F.S., to family (1915-1917)
To L.F.S. (1916-1922)

Series II. HENRY FORD PEACE EXPEDITION (1915, 1916)

Correspondence/Cablegrams, mostly from Lochner and Schwimmer
Accounts of voyage by Secor and others (1915, 1916, 1935)
Newsclippings from Secor scrapbook


Series III. ORGANIZATIONS

Neutral Conference for Continuous Mediation: Minutes, etc. (1916)
American Section of International Committee for Immediate Mediation (1916)
American Neutral Conference Committee (1916-1917)
Emergency Peace Federation (1917)
The People's Council of America (1917-1919)
The Young Democracy (1918-1923)
American Union Against Miltarism (1917-1919)


Series IV. MISCELLANEOUS


Series V. MATERIAL FROM BOOK: LELLA SECOR, A DIARY IN LETTERS, 1915-1922 by Barbara Moench Florence

Book: Found in SCPC Library. HQ1413 .F58A34
Book jacket and enlarged, mounted illustrations




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