Haviland H. Lund
Haviland Haines Lund | |
---|---|
Born | Haviland Haines December 25, 1871 |
Died | 1952 |
Haviland Haines Lund (December 25, 1871 – 1952) was the head of the Forward-to-the-Land League which advocated for unemployed city men in America to go to rural areas and become farmers.[1] She was vice president and editorial director of Little Farms Magazine.[2] She was president of the Institute of Government.[3] She was the inspector of home settlement projects for the United States Department of the Interior.[4]
Biography
She was born on December 25, 1871, in Adrian, Michigan, as Haviland Haines. She married Adolph Lund (?-1905) of Denmark.[5] He died in 1905 in Chicago, Illinois. By 1910, she was living in Pasadena, California.[6][7] In California, she was involved in efforts to create sanatoriums for patients with tuberculosis. These projects were short-lived. Lund later lived in New York City and Washington D.C. She was a member of the Republican National Committee. She also belonged to the National Council on Women, but felt the leadership was too left-wing. She opposed the League of Nations and a proposed World Court. She belonged to the American Guardian Society. In the early 1920s, she worked to resettle World War I veterans. She also often gave public lectures on the film industry while she served as president of the Institute of Government. She worked as an investigator for the Department of Labor during the administration of Herbert Hoover. She later worked as a freelance writer. She died in 1952 at the age of 80 and was survived by her daughter.[8]
References
- ^ "Back to The Farm". The Hartford Courant. August 21, 1913.
Mrs. Haviland H. Lund is the head of the Forward-to-the-Land League which ... Mrs. Lund advises city men to go to the suburbs [sic] and cultivate a piece of land ...
- "Forward To Farms, Not Back To Land. New Slogan Holds Forth Promise of an Attractive Community Life to Soldiers After War on Government Domain". New York Times. October 13, 1919. Retrieved November 25, 2011. - ^ "Forward-to-the-Land League". Los Angeles Times. May 7, 1913. Archived from the original on October 23, 2012. Retrieved October 17, 2009.
Meeting was held in the office of Haviland H. Lund, vice president and editorial director of the Little Farms Magazine, at which plans were made for ...
- ^ Terry Lindvall (2007). Sanctuary cinema: origins of the Christian film industry. NYU Press. p. 143. ISBN 978-0-8147-5210-4.
An influential club woman and President of the Institute of Government, Haviland Haines Lund, contributed her voice in addressing the church's dilemma ...
- ^ "Man Governed World Criticized By Women". Reading Eagle. November 11, 1921. Retrieved November 29, 2011.
... at the sessions of the National Council of Women by Mrs. Haviland Haines Lund, inspector of home settlement projects in the Department of the Interior. ...
- ^ "United States passport for Haviland Haines Lund". United States Department of State. April 25, 1924.
- ^ "Haviland H. Lund of Michigan in the 1920 US census for Pasadena, California". United States Census Bureau.
- ^ "The Garden City vs. The City Slums". California Outlook. July 19, 1913. pp. 6–7.
- ^ ""The Proposed Village of Havilah, of Which el Reposo is the Seed": Photos of el Reposo Sanatorium, Sierra Madre, ca. 1910, Part Two". 3 August 2023.