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After her husband's death, she began to take an active role in repairing inhospitable race relations in
Philadelphia. As a young widow, she was aghast by the social inequalities inherent in her own neighborhood. She dedicated her life to
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in that capacity. She was a critical figure in ameliorating conflicts such as the racial violence set off when, during World War II, African-Americans obtained jobs in the city's transit system, encountering hostile
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Philadelphia and two years of commercial high school. Early in her life, she held a bookkeeping position at National Label Company. In 1917, she wed Francis McGarry, who died in 1921, leaving her a widow.
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She hosted a weekly radio program on interracial justice and wrote a weekly column on it in an
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Anna McGarry was born on March 17, 1894, in
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Parish
Boundaries: The Catholic Encounter With Race in the Twentieth Century Urban North
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McGarry received numerous accolades during her career, including honors from the
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and veteran social action leader. Most of her work occurred in the city of
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and thus often had to pursue her endeavors without its assistance.
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condoned her message of social justice, she was seen as too
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The Irish
Relations: Trials of an Immigrant Tradition
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Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice
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