75:, the Tuberculosis Society, and the Massachusetts Conference of Charities. O'Reilly was appointed to the State Prison Commission in Massachusetts in 1907, to oversee children's institutions, including reformatories and orphanages. She resigned that position in 1911. Reform writings by O'Reilly included a 1910 exposΓ© on "baby farms" in New Hampshire, and another in 1913, on unsafe working conditions in canneries. "The canned food consumed by the people of the United States is prepared, only too often, amid conditions of revolting filth, by workers whose bodies are unclean and diseased, and who are forced to live and work in an environment that makes cleanliness and health impossible," she wrote, after going undercover as a cannery worker. She testified before a congressional committee about the conditions she saw among women in the canneries.
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for a month. In London in 1916 she intervened on the question of Roger
Casement's diaries "as the daughter of an Irish patriot" with his solicitor George Gavan Duffy. "She has suffered arrest in every country now at war, save Serbia, where she has never been," reported one newspaper of O'Reilly's war
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to report on their work in 1917. She lectured on her war experiences in the United States after 1917. After the war, she was especially concerned with the way false and lurid stories about German atrocities were circulating, and sought to correct what she called "the Fakes". She also exposed "fake
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O'Reilly joined The
Newspaper Enterprise Association in 1913, as a foreign correspondent; she worked from the association's London office, but traveled to both Russia and Mexico to report stories in 1913. In 1914 she conducted the first interview with
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and Mary Murphy O'Reilly (1850-1897), a journalist for the Young
Crusader who wrote under the name of Agnes Smiley. She attended school at the Sacred Heart convent in
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794:, regarding war conditions in Belgium and Russia, with references to Irish affairs including Roger Casement, 1913-1915, National Library of Ireland catalogue.
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During World War I, she traveled to
Belgium in disguise, several times, and was briefly a prisoner of the Germans. She wrote about the war for
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A 1913 photograph of Mary Boyle O'Reilly, from the Harris & Ewing photographic collection, Library of
Congress; LCCN2016864242
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O'Reilly wrote short stories and at least one novel. Her short-short story "In Berlin" was included in
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30:(May 18, 1873 β October 21, 1939) was an American social reformer, clubwoman, and journalist during
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spoke to O'Reilly about his country's neutrality during World War I. In 1916 she interviewed Lady
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809:"The Pulpit of the Hearthstone: Katherine Conway and Boston Catholic Women, 1900-1920"
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in 1939, aged 66 years. Her papers are archived at the Boston Public
Library, and at
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in South Boston. She was active in the Women's
Educational and Industrial Union, the
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578:"Mary Boyle O'Reilly Flies Above the Clouds to See Uncle Sam's Air Eagles at Work"
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philanthropies" for war relief, often run by and targeting
American women.
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670:"Fake Charity in Belgian and French War Zone Wastes Millions U. S. Money"
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96:, the French politician, after his wife confessed to killing journalist
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American
Journalists in the Great War: Rewriting the Rules of Reporting
343:"Child Slavery and Filth-Reeking Conditions in American Food Canneries"
358:"Her Story of Conditions in the New York Canneries Moves Congressmen"
257:, Boston Public Library Archival and Manuscript Finding Aid Database.
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She has a street named after her "Mary Boyle Wayβ in South Boston.
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633:"The correspondent who exposed the βfake newsβ of World War One"
400:"'No Such Thing as Ritual Murder Among Jews' Says Eminent Rabbi"
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In 1901, O'Reilly helped to found the Guild of St. Elizabeth, a
450:"Caillaux Breaks His Silence, Talks to Mary Boyle O'Reilly"
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Brotherhood of
Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen's Magazine
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Separatism and Subculture: Boston Catholicism, 1900-1920
187:. Her letters to Rev. Thomas Dawson are archived in the
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Letters from Mary Boyle O'Reilly to Rev. Thomas Dawson
476:"King Haakon Tells What He Thinks Neutrals Should Do"
195:has a marker from the Hull Historical Commission.
384:"Mary Boyle O'Reilly Interviews King Constantine"
292:"Comfort and Safety for Boston's 75,000 Lodgers"
267:"Mary Boyle O'Reilly is a Chip o' the Old Block"
191:. The O'Reilly family's house on Main Street in
502:"Wife Who Waits Tell of the Great Pole Mystery"
653:(University of Nebraska Press 2017): 40, 181.
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823:(University of North Carolina Press 2017).
741:"Funeral Services for Mary Boyle O'Reilly"
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108:about her husband's missing expedition to
42:Mary ("Molly") Boyle O'Reilly was born in
348:(February 1913): 205-213; quote from 209.
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317:"A Friend to those Most in Need of One"
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160:The Best American Short Stories of 1915
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179:Mary Boyle O'Reilly died at home in
46:, the daughter of Irish-born writer
814:5(3-4)(Summer-Fall 1986): 355β370.
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889:War correspondents of World War I
255:"O'Reilly, Mary Boyle, 1873-1939"
54:and the Gilman School for Girls.
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834:Works by Mary Boyle O'Reilly
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235:"John Boyle O'Reilly House 1889"
202:married Mary's sister, educator
874:People from Hull, Massachusetts
767:"Feminine Fancies: Paying Debt"
553:"Woman's Irish Fellowship Club"
131:. She witnessed the burning of
700:The Best Short Stories of 1915
1:
879:American women in World War I
772:(December 26, 1939): 24. via
698:, in Edward J. O'Brien, ed.,
558:(February 24, 1918): 47. via
533:(September 19, 1914): 1. via
79:Foreign and war correspondent
746:(October 24, 1939): 21. via
675:(November 3, 1915): 29. via
609:(February 17, 1917): 1. via
34:. She was of Irish descent.
840:(public domain audiobooks)
363:(January 27, 1913): 2. via
297:(January 5, 1908): 37. via
189:National Library of Ireland
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869:American women journalists
718:(March 28, 1928): 19. via
604:"Star Woman Runs Blockade"
528:"Ten Thousand Women Lost!"
405:(October 7, 1913): 1. via
322:(August 7, 1910): 40. via
272:(October 7, 1913): 1. via
44:Charlestown, Massachusetts
430:(March 1, 1913): 32. via
237:Historic Marker Database.
181:Auburndale, Massachusetts
171:, was published in 1928.
140:work. She flew above the
884:American women novelists
812:U. S. Catholic Historian
636:The Ground Truth Project
505:Muskogee County Democrat
481:(June 1, 1915): 6. via
455:(July 20, 1914): 4. via
135:, and worked with nurse
63:Reform work and writings
52:Providence, Rhode Island
38:Early life and education
716:St. Louis Post-Dispatch
507:(June 8, 1916): 8. via
428:The Wilkes-Barre Record
398:Rabbi Ch. R. Aaronson,
770:Democrat and Chronicle
673:Vicksburg Evening Post
583:(May 8, 1917): 1. via
453:Vicksburg Evening Post
361:Pensacola News-Journal
200:William Ernest Hocking
88:
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602:Mary Boyle O'Reilly,
526:Mary Boyle O'Reilly,
500:Mary Boyle O'Reilly,
474:Mary Boyle O'Reilly,
389:(January 3, 1914): 9.
382:Mary Boyle O'Reilly,
341:Mary Boyle O'Reilly,
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73:Boston Public Library
22:
694:Mary Boyle O'Brien,
638:(November 10, 2018).
204:Agnes Boyle O'Reilly
102:Haakon VII of Norway
556:Cincinnati Enquirer
193:Hull, Massachusetts
48:John Boyle O'Reilly
28:Mary Boyle O'Reilly
23:Mary Boyle O'Reilly
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25:
425:"Hand it to Mary"
253:Heather Mumford,
208:Shady Hill School
165:Edward J. O'Brien
146:U. S. Coast Guard
118:Harper's Magazine
106:Ernest Shackleton
16:American novelist
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100:. In 1915, King
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128:Boston Globe
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864:1939 deaths
859:1873 births
696:"In Berlin"
32:World War I
853:Categories
711:F. A. B.,
217:References
125:, and the
110:Antarctica
894:Clubwomen
144:with the
838:LibriVox
702:(1915).
153:Fiction
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133:Leuven
58:Career
825:ISBN
655:ISBN
836:at
855::
733:^
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.