Lexington Books
Pages: 208
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-1-4985-6939-2 • Hardback • June 2018 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-4985-6941-5 • Paperback • December 2019 • $50.99 • (£39.00)
978-1-4985-6940-8 • eBook • June 2018 • $48.00 • (£37.00)
Allison Hepler is professor of history at the University of Maine at Farmington.
Chapter 1: The Children’s Librarian and the Samuel Adams School
Chapter 2: Anticommunism in Massachusetts
Chapter 3: The Fifth Amendment in Norwood, Massachusetts
Chapter 4: Loyalty Oaths, Libraries, and Quakers in Pennsylvania
Chapter 5: Public Funding for the Local Library: Quakers v. Local Officials
Chapter 6: “Citizens for Philbrick” Anticommunist Campaign to Fire the Librarian
Chapter 7: Fund for the Republic: Rewarding Freedom or Communists?
Chapter 8: Contempt of Congress
Chapter 9: National Scrutiny
Chapter 10: Quakers and the House Un-American Activities Committee
Chapter 11: Legal and Moral Victories
This story of stalwart defiance at the height of McCarthyism draws our attention away from the many examples of repression in that era, about which we know a lot, to wonder about instances of effective opposition, about which we know less. Were Knowles and her champions typical of those who successfully defied red scare politics, or were they anomalous? We need more studies like Hepler’s to find out. — Journal of American History
In Allison Hepler’s McCarthyism in the Suburbs we learn about intellectual freedom not through the exercise of the First Amendment, but exercise of the Fifth: not through speech, but through silence.
The work delivers a highly granular examination of the experience of a seemingly ordinary and decidedly un-ideologically inclined librarian.
— Libraries: Culture, History, and Society
Histories of McCarthyism have almost always focused on the ‘big fish’ brought before congressional investigating committees. In contrast, Allison Hepler shows in her excellent case study of librarian Mary Knowles how the anti-communist witch hunts of the postwar period could afflict largely anonymous persons and roil the communities in which they lived. In this case, the drama unfolded in Plymouth Meeting, Pennsylvania, a suburb located just outside Philadelphia that takes its name from the local Quaker Meeting. Happily, Quaker values and the defense of friends, mainly of local women, allowed Knowles to keep her position until retirement. Hepler’s study is essential reading for anyone who wants to have a fuller understanding of America’s McCarthy era.— David R. Contosta, Chestnut Hill College
The story of McCarthyism in the United States is usually told as a national story of famous actors testifying before Congressional committees faced with decisions about whether or not to ‘name names.’ Allison Hepler’s thoroughly researched book provides a perspective of McCarthyism at the local level, focused on the case of Mary Knowles, a local librarian in the small community of Plymouth Meeting, northwest of Philadelphia. Hepler unravels the threads as Mary Knowles and local organizations—from the American Legion to the Society of Friends (Quakers)—take positions on whether to fire or retain Mary Knowles. This book should encourage more local studies of McCarthyism in the 1950s. It also provides a case study of how communities at the local survive when hot-button national issues are being fought out at the local level.— Christopher Densmore, Swarthmore College