Tag Archives: Women’s March on Washington

New Rosalie Gardiner Jones book release March 2

Websigte Rosalie Cover ImageCelebrate Women’s History Month and the centennial of the ratification of the 19th Amendment this month by sharing the story of one of America’s original social justice warriors in Zachary Michael Jack’s latest work of nonfiction Rosalie Gardiner Jones and the Long March for Women’s Rights, set for nationwide release March 2, 2020.

In February 1913 young firebrand activist “General” Rosalie Gardiner Jones defied convention and the doubts of better-known suffragists such as Alice Paul, Jane Addams, and Carrie Chapman Catt to muster an unprecedented equal rights army. Jones and “Colonel” Ida Craft marched 250 miles at the head of their all-volunteer platoon, advancing from New York City to Washington, DC in the dead of winter, in what was believed to be the longest dedicated women’s rights march in American history. Along the way their band of protestors overcame violence, intimidation, and bigotry, their every step documented by journalist-embeds who followed the self-styled army down far-flung rural roads and into busy urban centers bristling with admiration and enmity. At march’s end in Washington, more than 100,000 spectators cheered and jeered Rosalie’s army in a reception said to rival a president’s inauguration.

This first-ever book-length biography details Jones’s indomitable and original brand of boots-on-the-ground activism, from the 1913 March on Washington that brought her international fame to later-life campaigns for progressive reform in the American West and on her native Long Island. Consistently at odds with conservatives and conformists, the fiercely independent Jones was a prototypical social justice warrior, one who never stopped marching to her own drummer. Long after retiring her equal rights army, Jones advocated nonviolence and fair trade, authored a book on economics and international peace, and ran for Congress, earning a law degree, a PhD, and a lifelong reputation as a tireless defender of the dispossessed.

Zachary Michael Jack reaches national audience with op-eds

SF Chronicle logoZachary Michael Jack’s six op-eds published during the week before and after the Inauguration landed in national venues from coast to coast, from the Des Moines Register, to the San Francisco Chronicle, to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel to the Washington Examiner. Read more about the breadth of the national outreach in the news story “Zachary Michael Jack reaches national audience.”