Louise Bryant was an American feminist, political activist, and journalist. She became best known for her sympathetic coverage of Russia and the Bolsheviks during the Russian Revolution of November 1917. Bryant died in Paris in 1936 and was buried in Versailles. In 1998, a group from Portland restored her grave, which had become neglected.
About Louise Bryant in brief

She remained there for three or four years, returning to Wadsworth at her mother’s insistence at the age of 12. She edited the Young Ladies Edition of the Student Record in 1905, wrote a short story, The Way of a Flirt, and contributed sketches and sketches to a literary magazine, Artemisia. After the death of her brother Louis, she moved to Eugene, Oregon, where she taught cattle and taught mostly young Mexicans. In 1906, she left for a job in Jolon, California, where for a few months she taught children and taught cattle. She married fellow journalist John Reed in 1916, and they had a son, Floyd, who was born in 1909. She left her first husband in 1915 to follow Reed to Greenwich Village, she formed friendships with leading feminists of the day, some of whom she met through Reed’s associates at publications such as The Masses. During her Greenwich Village years for her these included the playwright Eugene O’Neill and the painter Andrew Dasburg. In 1919 she was arrested and spent three days in jail during a National Woman’s Party suffrage-rally in Washington, D. C. in 1919. She was married to John Reed until his death from typhus in 1920, and continued to write for Hearst about Russia—and also about Turkey and Hungary. After Reed’s death, she married William Bullitt Jr. in 1930, and the couple had a child, a daughter, Anne. In 1934, Bryant moved to Portland, Oregon.
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