Mildred Adams Explained

Mildred Adams Kenyon (1894  - November 5, 1980, New York City[1]) was an American journalist, writer, translator, and critic of Spanish literature.

Biography

Mildred Adams graduated from the University of California with a degree in economics. She moved to New York City, where she wrote articles for her aunt, Gertrude Foster Brown (1868-1956), an early woman's suffrage leader who was then managing editor of Woman's Journal. She soon became a feature writer and book reviewer for the New York Times and various magazines, including the London Economist. She interviewed Calvin Coolidge, Huey Long, and Henry Wallace.

Often in Europe on assignment, she reported on the early days of the League of Nations and the drafting of Spain's 1931 constitution. Her acquaintance with Spanish poet Federico Garcia Lorca in New York in 1929–30, intensified her interest in Spain, and she reported from that country in 1935, a year before the beginning of the Spanish Civil War. This work led to her involvement in helping refugees from that conflict. She was on the board of American Friends of Spanish Democracy and of the Spanish Refugee Relief Campaign, and advised the New World Re-Settlement Fund for Spanish Relief. Later she also helped German intellectuals, liberals, and Jews in exile from Nazi Germany, serving as secretary for the Emergency Rescue Committee, the predecessor of the International Rescue Committee.[2]

In 1935 she married William Houston Kenyon Jr., a prominent patent attorney and graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School and author of The First Half-Century of the Kenyon Firm, 1879-1933. Her sister-in-law, Dorothy Kenyon, was also a prominent politically active New York attorney who in 1950 was the first person to appear before the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee investigating charges by Sen. Joseph McCarthy concerning membership in Communist-front organizations. Mildred Adams once contemplated writing her biography.

During World War II, she worked in the educational division of the Columbia Broadcasting System.

Adams translated six volumes of the works of Spanish philosopher Jose Ortega y Gasset. In 1966, she published The Right to Be People, on women's suffrage. One of her favorite books - a decades-long project - was a biography of Garcia Lorca, which brought to light new information about the poet's stay in the United States.

Several months after her death, Mildred Adams's papers were deposited in the Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America at Radcliffe College.[3] A small collection of her papers, donated by Mildred Adams Kenyon in 1977, is also available at the Immigration History Research Center Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.

Books

Translations

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Archival Collections

Notes and References

  1. Josh Barbanel, "Mildred A. Kenyon, Author Who Wrote as Mildred Adams," New York Times, November 10, 1980.
  2. https://www.lib.umn.edu/ihrca Mildred Adams Kenyon papers, Immigration History Research Center Archives
  3. http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~sch00663
  4. Web site: Adams. Mildred. Correspondence and documents from Committee on the History of the Federal Reserve project. FRASER.