Background
Elizabeth Mary "Bessie" Beatty was born and raised in Los Angeles, one of four children of Thomas and Jane Boxwell Beatty, both immigrants from Ireland.
Elizabeth Mary "Bessie" Beatty was born and raised in Los Angeles, one of four children of Thomas and Jane Boxwell Beatty, both immigrants from Ireland.
She attended Occidental College, but did not graduate.
Her first job in journalism was with the Los Angeles Herald, while she was still in college. She had a regular column at the San Francisco Bulletin from 1907 to 1917, called "On the Margin." While on assignment covering a miners" strike in Nevada, she wrote and published Who"s Who in Nevada, a biographical dictionary. Beatty accompanied fellow journalists Rheta Childe Dorr, Albert Rhys Williams, Louise Bryant and John Reed on a trip to Russia in 1917.
Her book about that trip, The Red Heart of Russia, was published in 1918.
"I had been alive at a great moment, and knew it was great," she wrote of her time in Russia. Beatty worked as a freelance journalist for much of her career.
She was editor of McCall"s Magazine from 1918 to 1921. She was American Secretary of the International P. East. North. Club.
In 1932 a play she co-wrote with novelist Jack Black, Jamboree, was produced briefly on Broadway.
From 1940 until her death, she hosted a popular radio show in New York City. Her on-air persona was once referred to as "Mistress Know-it-all" in Time magazine.
She wrote "A Political Primer for the New Voter" (1912), a pamphlet designed for California women newly exercising the right of suffrage.
In 1919 she gave testimony at a Senate hearing on "Bolshevik Propaganda.".
Quotations: "I had been alive at a great moment, and knew it was great,". "A Political Primer for the New Voter".
There she interviewed Leon Trotsky, and members of the Women"s Battalion, whose courage and strength impressed her. As an activist, she was a member of the feminist group Heterodoxy.