Alice Riggs Hunt (June 14, 1884 – August 21, 1974) was an American women's rights activist, journalist, writer, and speaker.
[1] Born on July 14, 1884, she was raised in New York City where her childhood consisted of private school study.
She also worked as an international correspondent during the First World War, during which time Riggs Hunt covered the Versailles Treaty and the organization of the League of Nations.
Focused on underscoring the value of face-to-face interaction as a form of societal betterment, the magazine's scope was dismissed by an anonymous author with the Fortnightly review as "hodge-podge of the new psychology and pantheism, designed for consumption by women's literary clubs.
[3] In the fall of 1917 she helped organized and spoke at a series of events in 13 West Virginian cities featuring Anna Howard Shaw regarding the vote for women.