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'''Jane K. Speed de Andreu''' was a noted Communist activist and book shop owner in [[Birmingham]].
[[Image:Jane Speed.jpg|right|thumb|191px|Jane Speed]]
'''Jane K. Speed de Andreu''' (born [[1910]]; died [[1958]]) was a noted Communist activist and book shop owner in [[Birmingham]].


Speed was the daughter of [[Dolly Speed|Mary Martin "Dolly" Craik Speed]], a descendant of George Washington's personal physician. Her father, James Buckner Speed, was from an important family in Louisville, Kentucky and an executive with the Southern Pacific Railroad. After his death, Dolly took the teenage Jane and her brother Craik to Vienna, Austria for schooling. There the three of them were swept up in the anti-fascist activities of the Austrian communists. As conditions in Europe worsened, Dolly brought the family to live with her sister, Jean (Mrs Nash) Read, in Montgomery.
Speed was the daughter of [[Dolly Speed|Mary Martin "Dolly" Craik Speed]], a descendant of George Washington's personal physician. Her father, James Buckner Speed, was from an important family in Louisville, Kentucky and an executive with the Southern Pacific Railroad. After his death, Dolly took the teenage Jane and her brother Craik to Vienna, Austria for schooling. There the three of them were swept up in the anti-fascist activities of the Austrian communists. As conditions in Europe worsened, Dolly brought the family to live with her sister, Jean (Mrs Nash) Read, in Montgomery.
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While living there, Dolly and Jane became involved in supporting the rights of sharecroppers in Tallapoosa County to organize as a union. Violence broke out, and Mrs Read found herself unwilling to continue sheltering the radical pair. They moved to Birmingham where Jane opened [[Jane Speed's Book Store]], selling communist, anti-fascist and anti-racist literature and periodicals. Jane's application to hold an integrated [[May 1|May Day]] meeting in [[1933]] was denied by the [[Birmingham City Commission]]. She brought a large group to [[Kelly Ingram Park]] anyway and, when the [[Birmingham Police Department|police]] started to break it up, some violence broke out. Speed was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct, speaking without a permit, and violating the city's [[segregation ordinances]].
While living there, Dolly and Jane became involved in supporting the rights of sharecroppers in Tallapoosa County to organize as a union. Violence broke out, and Mrs Read found herself unwilling to continue sheltering the radical pair. They moved to Birmingham where Jane opened [[Jane Speed's Book Store]], selling communist, anti-fascist and anti-racist literature and periodicals. Jane's application to hold an integrated [[May 1|May Day]] meeting in [[1933]] was denied by the [[Birmingham City Commission]]. She brought a large group to [[Kelly Ingram Park]] anyway and, when the [[Birmingham Police Department|police]] started to break it up, some violence broke out. Speed was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct, speaking without a permit, and violating the city's [[segregation ordinances]].


Subsequently Jane and her mother spent more time traveling, attending rallies in Harlem, New York and in Puerto Rico, where Jane met novelist and Communist Party leader [[Cesar Iglesias|César Andreu Iglesias]], whom she soon married. She notoriously threw an inkpot at an Italian diplomat in [[1935]].
Subsequently Jane and her mother spent more time traveling, attending rallies in Harlem, New York and in Puerto Rico, where Jane met novelist and Communist Party leader [[Cesar Iglesias|César Andreu Iglesias]], whom she soon married. She notoriously threw an inkpot at an Italian diplomat in [[1935]]. She and Iglesias were arrested in November [[1954]] under the anti-Communist Smith Act.


She and Iglesias were arrested in November [[1954]] under the anti-Communist Smith Act. Iglesias died in [[1970]].
The couple settled in Puerto Rico. Speed died from a stroke in [[1958]] and Iglesias died in [[1970]].


==References==
==References==
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Speed, Jane}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Speed, Jane}}
[[Category:1910 births]]
[[Category:1958 deaths]]
[[Category:Labor activists]]
[[Category:Labor activists]]
[[Category:Social activists]]
[[Category:Social activists]]
[[Category:Booksellers]]
[[Category:Booksellers]]
[[Category:Criminals]]
[[Category:Criminals]]
[[Category:Communist Party members]]

Latest revision as of 17:03, 1 July 2015

Jane Speed

Jane K. Speed de Andreu (born 1910; died 1958) was a noted Communist activist and book shop owner in Birmingham.

Speed was the daughter of Mary Martin "Dolly" Craik Speed, a descendant of George Washington's personal physician. Her father, James Buckner Speed, was from an important family in Louisville, Kentucky and an executive with the Southern Pacific Railroad. After his death, Dolly took the teenage Jane and her brother Craik to Vienna, Austria for schooling. There the three of them were swept up in the anti-fascist activities of the Austrian communists. As conditions in Europe worsened, Dolly brought the family to live with her sister, Jean (Mrs Nash) Read, in Montgomery.

While living there, Dolly and Jane became involved in supporting the rights of sharecroppers in Tallapoosa County to organize as a union. Violence broke out, and Mrs Read found herself unwilling to continue sheltering the radical pair. They moved to Birmingham where Jane opened Jane Speed's Book Store, selling communist, anti-fascist and anti-racist literature and periodicals. Jane's application to hold an integrated May Day meeting in 1933 was denied by the Birmingham City Commission. She brought a large group to Kelly Ingram Park anyway and, when the police started to break it up, some violence broke out. Speed was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct, speaking without a permit, and violating the city's segregation ordinances.

Subsequently Jane and her mother spent more time traveling, attending rallies in Harlem, New York and in Puerto Rico, where Jane met novelist and Communist Party leader César Andreu Iglesias, whom she soon married. She notoriously threw an inkpot at an Italian diplomat in 1935. She and Iglesias were arrested in November 1954 under the anti-Communist Smith Act.

The couple settled in Puerto Rico. Speed died from a stroke in 1958 and Iglesias died in 1970.

References

  • Durr, Virginia Foster. (1985). Outside the Magic Circle: The Autobiography of Virginia Foster Durr. Tuscaloosa, AL: The University of Alabama Press.
  • Fosl, Catherine (1997) "Life and Times of a Rebel Girl: Jane Speed and the Alabama Communist Party." Southern Historian Vol. 18, pp. 45-65
  • Gilmore, Glenda Elizabeth (2008) Defying Dixie: the Radical Roots of Civil Rights, 1919-1950. W. W. Norton & Company ISBN 0393062449