Margaret Dreier Robins

Margaret Dreier Robins in 1919
Margaret Dreier Robins, from a 1911 publication.
Raymond and Margaret Dreier Robins worked tirelessly on human rights issues throughout the United States and around the world. They used their Chinsegut Hill estate as a place to relax and rejuvenate, working the land and enjoying the peaceful setting.

Margaret Dreier Robins (6 September 1868 – 21 February 1945) was an American labor leader.

Early life

She was born in Brooklyn, New York on 6 September 1868.[1] Her parents, Theodor Dreier, a successful businessman, and Dorthea Dreier, were both immigrants from Germany.[2] Her mother's maiden name was Dreier and her parents were cousins from Bremen, Germany. Their ancestors where civic leaders and merchants. Theodor came to the United States in 1849 and became partner of the English iron firm of Naylor, Benson and Company's New York branch. He married Dorothea in 1864 during a visit to Bremen and brought her back with him to the United States and they lived in a brownstone house in Brooklyn Heights, New York.[3]

Margaret Dreier had a brother and three sisters.[2] Her sister Mary was a social reformer. Her sisters Dorothea and Katherine were painters.[3]

She was privately educated because her parents believed that the study of the arts was too often neglected in traditional education. In her teens Robins suffered from physical ailments which left her depressed and weak.[1]

Social reform career

At age nineteen, she began doing charity work at Brooklyn Hospital and soon became involved in other progressive causes. She met the reformer Josephine Shaw Lowell in 1902 and through Lowell joined in the Woman’s Municipal League, an organization that helped women avoid prostitution. Another collaborator was Frances Kellor, with whom she founded the New York Association for Household Research which provided lodging and placement for women domestic workers.[1]

In 1904, increasingly interested in workers’ rights, Dreier joined the Women's Trade Union League, then only a small, budding organization. She became the president of its New York chapter in 1905; president of the Chicago chapter 1907-1914; and treasurer of the national organization and rose quickly in its ranks. In 1907, she was elected president of the national organization and began a fifteen-year tenure as its leader. Meanwhile, she married the lawyer and social worker Raymond Robins in 1905. The newleyweds split their time between running a settlement house in Chicago, Illinois and Chinsegut Hill in Brooksville, Florida.

As president of the League, Robins helped organize women into unions, educate women workers, and advocate for progressive legislation. She created a Training School for Women to educate women workers about organizing and leadership skills. She supported and became active in a number of well publicized strikes, most notably the International Ladies Garment Workers’ strike in 1910. She pushed for protective legislation limiting the hours of women’s work, and she presided over the League during its most influential period.

She served on the executive board of the Chicago Federation of Labor after 1908, and in 1915 was appointed to the unemployment commission by the governor of Illinois.

In 1919, Robins played an important role in the creation of the first International Congress of Working Women. Robins agreed to send both Rose Schneiderman and Mary Anderson to the Paris Peace Conference, where with other female labor leaders they would organize an international labor women’s conference to prepare for the upcoming International Labour Organization convention which would take place in October in Washington D.C.

In 1924, Robins retired from her activist work and moved full-time with her husband to Florida. She died in 1945.

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Sandra Opdycke (1999). "Robins, Margaret Dreier". American National Biography. New York: Oxford University Press.
  2. 1 2 Carol Kort; Liz Sonneborn. A to Z of American Women in the Visual Arts. Infobase Publishing; 1 January 2002. ISBN 978-1-4381-0791-2. p. 55–56.
  3. 1 2 Barbara Sicherman; Carol Hurd Green. Notable American Women: The Modern Period : a Biographical Dictionary. Harvard University Press; 1980. ISBN 978-0-674-62733-8. p. 204–205.

Sources

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