Charlotte Anita Whitney
- Born:
- July 7, 1867, San Francisco, California, U.S.
- Died:
- February 4, 1955, San Francisco
- Political Affiliation:
- Communist Party of the United States of America
- Socialist Party
Charlotte Anita Whitney (born July 7, 1867, San Francisco, California, U.S.—died February 4, 1955, San Francisco) was an American suffragist and political radical who was prominent in the founding and early activities of the Communist Party in the United States.
Whitney was the daughter of a lawyer and a niece of Supreme Court justice Stephen J. Field and of financier Cyrus W. Field. In 1889 she graduated from Wellesley College. A visit to the College Settlement House in New York City in 1893 turned her to social work, and she soon returned to California to work in the slums of Oakland.
From 1901 to 1906 Whitney was secretary of the Council of Associated Charities of Alameda County. She led a campaign for a women’s suffrage amendment to the California constitution and subsequently joined in similar campaigns in Oregon, Nevada, and Connecticut. At the same time, she became involved in the free-speech fights of the International Workers of the World.
Whitney joined the Socialist Party in 1914 and five years later helped lead the defection of the party’s radical wing and the founding of the Communist Labor Party (later the Communist Party). In November 1919, during the height of the postwar “Red Scare,” she was arrested after a public address at the Oakland Center of the California Civic League (of which she was president from its founding that year) on five counts of criminal syndicalism. Convicted on one count, Whitney was sentenced to 1 to 14 years in prison. Because of ill health she served only 11 days of her sentence; however, her appeals of the conviction dragged on for nearly 8 years before she was pardoned by the governor in June 1927.
In 1924 Whitney ran for state treasurer of California on the Communist ballot and polled more than 100,000 votes. In 1935 she was convicted of distributing radical literature, lecturing without a permit, and falsely attesting Communist election petitions. She was named national chairman of the Communist Party in 1936 and ran unsuccessfully for a seat in the U.S. Senate from California in 1950.