Sunday, October 19, 2014

Leonel Ross Campbell Anthony O'Bryan



Leonel was born on November 11, 1857 on a Mississippi Plantation. She was educated at a private school in St. Louis until, at the age of 15, she scaled a wall to elope with George Anthony.
In 1878 she left her husband and arrived in New York City where she asked a friend of the family for a position at the New York World.  She did such a great work that they sent her to Panama as the Latin American correspondent.  After twenty years she moved to Denver, Colorado to be near her parents, and began writing for the Denver Post.  She assumed the pen name “Polly Pry” which was a rhyming tribute to her role model, Nellie Bly.
While writing an article on Colorado prisons, she met Alfred Packer who was serving a reduced sentence of forty years in prison for eating five prospectors to save himself from starvation. She argued his case as an investigative journalist stating that he had not killed them but only eaten the men after they were already dead.   She secured Packer’s release in 1901.
When union workers boycotted the Post for her stance on labor issues and immigration, Leonel started her own liberal feminist magazine named “Polly Pry”. In January of 1904 answering a knock on her door, she was shot twice by an unknown assailant.  Luckily the bullets missed her and she claimed it was organized labor trying to silence her.

She closed her magazine in 1905 and married Denver Lawyer Harry J. O’Bryan who died four years later while she was on assignment in Mexico doing a story on Pancho Villa.  She spent World War I in Greece and Albania, an advocate for free speech and as director of publicity for the Red Cross. She also came to the aid of French war orphans.  After the war, she settled again in Denver, where she continued work for the Red Cross. 

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