Background
Anna McGarry was born on March 17, 1894, in Philadelphia to John and Sara McGinley.
Anna McGarry was born on March 17, 1894, in Philadelphia to John and Sara McGinley.
One of eight children, she attended parochial school in Philadelphia and two years of commercial high school.
Most of her work occurred in the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where she was a central figure in improving race relations. She was also a journalist for the Philadelphia Tribune. She worked as a bookkeeper with National Label Company early in her life.
After her husband’s death, she began to take an active role in repairing inhospitable race relations in Philadelphia.
As a young widow, she was aghast by the social inequalities inherent in her own neighborhood. She dedicated her life to social justice, spreading word of the mounting problems during the 1930s by teaching.
She was a critical figure in ameliorating conflicts such as the racial violence set off when, during World World War II, African-Americans obtained jobs in the city’s transit system, encountering hostile Irish transit union leaders. She hosted a weekly radio program on interracial justice and wrote a weekly column on it in an African-American Philadelphia newspaper.
A leading figure in the National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice and the National Catholic Social Action Conference, she went on to press for equal access to educational, housing, and public facilities for all, regardless of race.
After her formal retirement in 1959, she remained active in those organizations, and she continued to tour and give public speeches in an attempt to raise awareness of the social and economic barriers faced by African-Americans.
Beginning with World World War II, she helped found and began working with the Philadelphia Catholic Interracial Council, becoming a staff member of the city’s Commission on Human Relations and fighting for fair employment practices for African-Americans in that capacity.