- Helen Dortch Longstreet
Helen Dortch Longstreet (
April 20 ,1863 –May 3 ,1962 ), known as the "Fighting Lady," was the second wife of ConfederateGeneral James Longstreet . She earned her nickname from being a champion of causes such as preservation of the environment and civil rights. She is also remembered for her work as a Confederate memorialist and postmistress.Helen Dortch was born in Carnesville, Georgia and attended Georgia Baptist Female Seminary (now
Brenau College ) and theNotre Dame Convent inMaryland . Having met Longstreet through her roommate, she married him onSeptember 8 ,1897 , when she was just 34 and he was 76. She was widowed in 1904, childless.Prior to marrying Longstreet, she was the first woman in Georgia to serve as Assistant State Librarian in 1894. She also authored the "Dortch Bill" (which became law in 1896) to allow a woman to hold the office of State Librarian.
Before and after becoming a widow, Helen Dortch Longstreet devoted much time to ensure that General Longstreet was accurately portrayed by history. In 1905, she documented her husband’s account of the Civil War by publishing the book "Lee and Longstreet at High Tide". Another important cause that she took up about 1911 was the creation of a state park at
Tallulah Gorge . Helen Longstreet was opposed to a plan byGeorgia Power to build a series ofhydroelectric dam s along the original course of theTallulah River and particularly concerned about the potential impact on the Tallulah Gorge. Although unsuccessful, her campaign was one of the firstconservation movement s in Georgia.DuringWorld War Two she was a Rosie the Riviter at the Bell Aircraft plant inAtlanta . She said "I was at the head of my class in riviting school. In fact I was the only one in it."Helen Longstreet was also politically active. She became a member of the Progressive Party and supported
Theodore Roosevelt when he Republican nomination to Taft in 1912. In fact, she was a delegate to the Progressive Party convention in 1912. She ran an unsuccessful write-in campaign for governor of the State of Georgia againstHerman Talmadge in 1950.She received a number of honors. In 1947, she became the first woman to have her portrait placed in the State Capitol. When the
Tallulah Gorge State Park was finally created in 1993, it was done in her honor and the trails in the park were named the "Helen Dortch Longstreet Trail System" in 1999. Helen Dortch Longstreet was inducted in the Georgia Women of Achievement in 1994.References
* Life Magazine December 27, 1943.
External links
* [http://www.gawomen.org/honorees/long/longstreeth_long.htm Georgia Women of Achievement Biography of Helen Dortch Longstreet]
* [http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/nge/Article.jsp?id=h-881 Helen Dortch Longstreet on the New Georgia Encyclopedia]Persondata
NAME=Longstreet, Helen Dortch
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Dillard, Captain John
SHORT DESCRIPTION=captain in theAmerican Revolution , settler
DATE OF BIRTH=April 20 ,1863
PLACE OF BIRTH=Carnesville, Georgia
DATE OF DEATH=May 3 ,1962
PLACE OF DEATH=Milledgeville, Georgia
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