Rose Livingston
Rose Livingston (circa 1885-?), known as the Angel of Chinatown, was a suffragist who worked to free prostitutes and victims of sexual slavery.[1][2][3][4][5][6]
Biography
She was born around 1885.
In 1912 while trying to rescue a prostitute she was severely beaten: "serious and permanent damage ... a fracture of the alveolar process of the upper jaw bone which caused severe neurities [sic] with persistent neuralgic pain both day and night ... likewise causing the loss of all the teeth of the upper jaw on one side of the face."[7]
In 1914 she participated in one of the Suffrage Hikes from Manhattan to Albany, New York.[8]
In 1929, she was awarded a gold medal by the National Institute of Social Science.[3]
In 1934 she was found living in poverty, and a retirement fund was established for her.[9]
In 1937 she was awarded a silver cup by Edith Claire Bryce (1880-1960) of the Peace House for her "deeds of courage without violence".[10]
See also
- Somaly Mam, also rescued sex slaves
Footnotes
- ↑ "Suffragists Give Talk In The Park. Miss Rose Livingston and Mrs. Myron Vorce Give Address", Mansfield Shield, 13 October 1914
- ↑ "Finds Mission Work at Home" (PDF), New York Sun, 21 March 1934
- 1 2 "White Slave Racket. Rose Livingston, "Angel of Chinatown," Warns Mothers to Be on Their Guard", Lincoln Star, 29 April 1934
- ↑ "How Rose Livingston Works In Chinatown. Free Lance Missionary's Worst Enemy Is Mayor Gaynor, Metropolitan Temple Audience Hears", New York Times, 3 December 1912
- ↑ Ruth Rosen (1983), The Lost Sisterhood: Prostitution in America, 1900-1918, JHU Press, p. 57, ISBN 9780801826658
- ↑ Alan F. Dutka (2014), AsiaTown Cleveland: From Tong Wars to Dim Sum, The History Press, p. 29, ISBN 9781625850867
- ↑ Mary Ting Yi Lui (1 September 2009), "Saving Young Girls from Chinatown: White Slavery and Woman Suffrage, 1910–1920", Journal of the History of Sexuality, Vol. 18 (3): 393–417, doi:10.1353/sex.0.0069
- ↑ "Fears Gang Will Kill Her. Miss Livingston Says $500 Has Been Offered for Her Death", New York Times, 8 January 1914
- ↑ "Chinatown Angel Found Destitute", United Press in the Berkeley Daily Gazette, 17 August 1934
- ↑ Eugene Kinkead and Harold Wallace Ross (October 2, 1937). "Peace House". New Yorker. Retrieved 2013-12-02.