Lois Orr

Lois Orr (23 April 1917 - August 1985), also known as Louise Cusick, Lois Cusick and Lois Culter, born in Louisville, Kentucky, lived in Barcelona during the Spanish Civil War, where she was a member of the Workers' Party of Marxist Unification (POUM) female militia. She and her husband, Charles Orr, survived the Stalinist attack on the POUM in June 1937, after the fighting of the Barcelona May Days.

They were arrested on 17 June, the day after Andrés Nin and the POUM executive were arrested, but were released on 1 July and placed by the US consul, Mahlon Perkins, on a ship bound for Marseilles on 3 July 1937.[1] They were in Mexico in 1940 when Leon Trotsky was murdered.

An edited collection of her letters home to the US from Spain were published in 2009.[2][3]

References

  1. Víctor Alba and Stephen Schwartz, Spanish Marxism versus Soviet communism: a history of the P.O.U.M., ISBN 0-88738-198-7, 1988
  2. Lois Orr, Letters from Barcelona: An American Woman in Revolution and Civil War, edited by Gerd-Rainer Horn, ISBN 978-0-230-52739-3, 2009
  3. Jeremy Harding, Paralysed by the Absence of Danger, London Review of Books, 31(18), 2009
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