“She is more dangerous than a thousand rioters”.
That was the 
description
 given to her by local Chicago authorities at the time. Lucy Parsons, 
one of the most influential people in American history, was a 
journalist, an anarchist, socialist, and labour organizer who fought for
 the rights of the poor and disenfranchised in society amidst an 
industrial economic system that was oppressive. This was at a time when 
most radicals believed that a woman’s place was in the home.
For about 70 years, she struggled for racial equality, believing that
 violence was the only way to change the capitalist system and ensure 
that workers’ demands were met.
She
 penned down most of her beliefs, and sources say that her writings 
alarmed the government at the time to the extent that police officers 
and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) prevented her from 
speaking in public and often threw her in jail.
It is even recorded that on the day of her death, authorities seized 
her books and papers on socialism and anarchy, burying her ideals and 
depriving historians of her resources.
Despite her bravery and outspokenness, Parsons mostly kept things 
about her background hidden. When asked by a reporter to reveal her 
background, she 
replied: 
“I am not a candidate for office, and the public have no right to my 
past. I amount to nothing to the world and people care nothing of me. I 
am battling for a principle.”
                                   Lucy Parsons. Pic credit:  Famous Biographies 
Thus, not much is known about her early life, apart from the fact 
that she had an African American, Native American, and Mexican ancestry.
 Varying accounts state that she was born in Texas around 1853, during 
the Civil War Era, and it is likely that her parents were slaves. She 
went under many surnames throughout her life just to disguise her racial
 origins in a prejudiced society, writes 
lucyparsons.org.
 She often used the name Lucy Gonzales, denying her African American 
roots and claiming that her Mexican heritage was the cause of her dark 
skin tone.
As a teenager, she married an older, formerly enslaved man, Oliver 
Benton, otherwise known as Oliver Gathings, and had a child who died as 
an infant. She later met Albert Parsons, a printer and a former 
Confederate soldier from Alabama around 1869, who would eventually be 
her husband.
Their marriage was, however, not legal, since local laws at the time 
prevented interracial marriages or cohabitation between white people and
 other races. In 1872, Lucy and her husband, who had become a radical 
Republican after the Civil War, had to leave Texas for Chicago due to 
their marriage and anti-segregation activism. 
Historians say that Albert had worked assiduously on registering 
Black voters and was shot in the leg and threatened with lynching. The 
couple had to leave because they felt threatened. Once in Chicago, they 
immersed themselves in the labour and anarchist movements while Albert 
worked as a printer for the 
Chicago Times.
At
 the time, the country had fallen into depression, and millions were 
unemployed. In Chicago, the situation was no different, and authorities 
were forced to bring wages down. In response to the depression, the 
Great Strike of 1877 took place, one of the greatest mass strikes in 
U.S. history. During the strike, rail workers engaged in a battle with 
the police who had tried to disperse the crowds. Lucy’s husband would be
 a leading figure in the railroad strike, as he is said to have 
organized the thousands of railroad workers. As punishment, he was fired
 from his job at the 
Chicago Times, and Lucy was forced to open a dress shop while working with the International Ladies’ Garment Workers Union.
Lucy, who had worked in support of African Americans throughout her 
time in Texas, began to write for many radical publications, including 
The Socialist and 
The Alarm,
 an anarchist weekly published by the International Working People’s 
Association (IWPA), which she and Albert had helped found in 1883. 
Alongside the IWPA, the couple were deeply involved in the labour 
protest at Haymarket Square in Chicago. The May 3, 1886 protest was in 
support of eight-hour workdays at the McCormick Harvest Works, but the 
protest turned violent, and in the process, police officers and others 
were killed. Lucy’s husband was arrested alongside other men and 
convicted though no evidence was found. Charged with conspiracy and 
murder, Albert was executed in 1887, in spite of Lucy’s fight for the 
release of the prisoners and appeals against an unfair trial.
Her husband’s death did not deter her from continuing her activism, 
as she continued her struggle for the rights of workers, women, and 
African-Americans in general. She continued to write for a strong 
working class movement while working with the Industrial Workers of the 
World (IWW), an organization that was formed out of the labour unrest at
 the time. 
Lucy became the editor of the IWW’s journal, 
The Liberator 
and published her own paper, Freedom. Lucy travelled extensively to 
deliver speeches, “out of both financial necessity and political 
passion”, according to 
The Washington Post.
Due
 to her affiliations with the Socialist Party, Communist Party, and 
scores of radical newspapers, she became a prime target by the FBI and 
was constantly harassed and arrested. She, nevertheless, continued her 
activism until her death at age 89 in a fire on March 7, 1942. 
Even though the FBI confiscated all her books and publications just 
to bury her ideals, her image as a radical crusader has survived, a 
report by the 
Chicago Tribune
 said. A Chicago anti-fascist group called Black Rose uses a drawing of 
Parsons as its symbol. In Boston, there’s the Lucy Parsons Center, a 
radical bookstore and meeting place while a Chicago park was named after
 her in 2004, the report added.
Her legacy also remains valuable for radical groups seeking equality for minorities and the poor.
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