Helen Dortch Longstreet (, Dortch; April 20, 1863 – May 3, 1962), known as the "Fighting Lady", was an American social advocate, librarian, and newspaper woman serving as reporter, editor, publisher, and business manager. She was the first woman who tried to secure a public office in
the state of Georgia.
She was the second wife of
Confederate general James Longstreet
James Longstreet (January 8, 1821January 2, 1904) was one of the foremost Confederate generals of the American Civil War and the principal subordinate to General Robert E. Lee, who called him his "Old War Horse". He served under Lee as a corps ...
. She earned her nickname from being a champion of causes such as preservation of the environment and civil rights. She is also remembered for her work as a Confederate memorialist and postmistress. In Governor
William Yates Atkinson's first campaign, she rendered him valuable service by her vigorous editorials. Her stirring fight to have women made eligible to the position of State Librarian was the first successful movement in the State of Georgia toward breaking down the prejudice against women holding high political positions.
Dortch Longstreet was the proprietor and editor of two weeklies, Vice-President of the Georgia Weekly Press Association, Secretary of the Woman's Press Club of Georgia, and Assistant Librarian of the State of Georgia. She was also the leader of the movement to have the
University of Georgia opened to women, was an advocate of modern industrial education, and took interest in the advancement of the women of her State and country. She died in 1962.
Early life and education
Helen (
nickname, "Ellen") Dortch was born in
Carnesville, Georgia, on April 20, 1863.
She descended from an old
North Carolina family notable in the political and war history of that State. Her father, James Speed Dortch (died August 1891) was a lawyer in the northeast part of the state and, also edited the ''Carnesville Tribune''. She was the only daughter and was the idol of his heart. He directed her education and she grew up as his friend and companion, and was as much at home with law books as in literature.
She attended Gainesville Seminary (now
Brenau University
Brenau University is a private university with its historic campus in Gainesville, Georgia. Founded in 1878, the university enrolls more than 2,800 students from approximately 48 states and 17 foreign countries who seek degrees ranging from asso ...
) for a year. In 1885, she was back at home and began publishing the ''Tribune'', while the father remained as editor. She returned to school 1887–89, studying at
Notre Dame of Maryland University.
Career
Early career
Dortch became the owner and editor of the Carnesville, Georgia, ''Tribune'' in 1888, when the establishment consisted of 150 pounds of long primer type, mostly in "
pi", a few cases of worn adverting type and a subscription book whose credit column had been conscientiously neglected. She replaced them with new and improved ones, and the circulation of the paper increased to thousands. She had been typist, editor and business manager, and had solicited and canvassed the district for subscribers, because she was not able to hire any one to do it for her. Beginning the work at the age of 17, she fought the boycotters and Alliance opponents and overcome the
southern
Southern may refer to:
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* Southern Air, air cargo transportation company based in Norwalk, Connecticut, US
* Southern Airways Express, M ...
prejudice against women using their intelligence in the business world. After working for two years, she went to
Baltimore, Maryland
Baltimore ( , locally: or ) is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Maryland, fourth most populous city in the Mid-Atlantic, and the 30th most populous city in the United States with a population of 585,708 in 2020. Baltimore was ...
, where she studied for two years in the Notre Dame school. She resumed her work on the ''Tribune'' in June, 1890.
In October 1894, it was announced that Dortch, editor at that time of the
Milledgeville ''Chronicle'', was to become the private secretary of Governor Atkinson. This office carried with it a major's commission in the state militia.
She was the first woman in Georgia to serve as Assistant State Librarian in 1894. She also authored the "Dortch Bill" (which became law in 1896) to allow a woman to hold the office of State Librarian.
1897 and later
Having met General James Longstreet, through her school roommate, she married him on September 8, 1897, when she was just 34 and he was 76. She was widowed in 1904, childless.
Before and after becoming a widow, Longstreet devoted much time to ensure that General Longstreet was accurately portrayed by history. In 1905, she documented her husband's account of the
Civil War by publishing the book ''Lee and Longstreet at High Tide''. Another important cause that she took up about 1911 was the creation of a state park at
Tallulah Gorge. Dortch Longstreet was opposed to a plan by
Georgia Power
Georgia Power is an electric utility headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. It was established as the Georgia Railway and Power Company and began operations in 1902 running streetcars in Atlanta as a successor to the Atlanta Consolida ...
to build a series of
hydroelectric dams along the original course of the
Tallulah River and particularly concerned about the potential impact on the Tallulah Gorge. Although unsuccessful, her campaign was one of the first
conservation movements in Georgia.
During
World War II, she was a
Rosie the Riveter at the
Bell Aircraft plant in
Atlanta. She said, "I was at the head of my class in riveting school. In fact I was the only one in it."
[Quoted i]
"Confederate General's Widow"
p. 38, in ''Life'', December 27, 1943.
Longstreet was also politically active. She became a member of the
Progressive Party and supported
Theodore Roosevelt when he lost the
Republican nomination to
Taft in 1912. In fact, she was a delegate to the Progressive Party convention in 1912. She ran an unsuccessful write-in campaign for governor of Georgia against
Herman Talmadge in 1950.
Death and legacy
From 1957, she lived in the Central State Hospital in Milledgeville, Georgia, where she died May 3, 1962; burial was in West View Cemetery, Atlanta, Georgia.
She received a number of honors. In 1947, she became the first woman to have her portrait placed in the State Capitol. When the
Tallulah Gorge State Park was finally created in 1993, it was done in her honor and the trails in the park were named the Helen Dortch Longstreet Trail System in 1999. Dortch Longstreet was inducted in the Georgia Women of Achievement in 2004 according to GWA files.
Selected works
* ''Lee and Longstreet at High Tide : Gettysburg in the Light of the Official Records '', 1902
* ''Helen Dortch Longstreet collection, 1904-1941''
* ''Longstreet, Helen Dortch Papers, 1904-1963''
* ''Helen Dortch Longstreet broadside, circa 1911-1913''
* ''In the path of Lee's "Old War Horse"'', 1917
* ''Travail of the new slavery'', 1917
* ''Helen Dortch Longstreet photograph collection,
a. 1920-1940''
* ''Trail of the spoilsmen in the Gainesville, Ga., Post Office'', 1922(?)
* ''The Great American: General James Longstreet'', 1953
* ''Lee and Longstreet at High Tide.'', 1969
Notes
References
Bibliography
*
*
External links
*
*
*
Georgia Gems: Helen Dortch Longstreetin ''Georgia History Today''
Helen Dortch Longstreet papersat the
Georgia Historical Society
Mrs. Ellen Dortch-Longstreet. "Why She Married Longstreet." Weekly News and Courier, Charleston, South Carolina, 22 Sept. 1897: 10. via 19th Century U.S. Newspapers
Georgia Women of Achievement Biography of Helen Dortch LongstreetHelen Dortch Longstreet on the New Georgia Encyclopedia
{{DEFAULTSORT:Longstreet, Helen Dortch
1863 births
1962 deaths
19th-century American writers
19th-century American women writers
19th-century American newspaper editors
19th-century American newspaper publishers (people)
Helen
American conservationists
American librarians
American women librarians
Brenau University alumni
Georgia (U.S. state) Progressives (1912)
People from Carnesville, Georgia
American newspaper reporters and correspondents
Notre Dame of Maryland University alumni
American women non-fiction writers
Women newspaper editors
Wikipedia articles incorporating text from A Woman of the Century
People born in the Confederate States