Eleanor Baldwin

Eleanor Florence Baldwin (1854-1928) was a Progressive Era radical journalist and pamphleteer who wrote newspaper columns, treatises, and gave pro-suffrage speeches in Portland, Oregon.

[3] She had a brother named Henry who held similar radical views to her own, supporting both the Greenback and Populist parties.

[2] Most of Baldwin's childhood was spent in the Northeastern United States in Provincetown, Cape Cod, and Boston.

She spoke on “State Capitalism or Socialism: Which?," reviewed “The Food Gamblers,” a motion picture play, and rebutted via speech the “assumption that only men are fit for affairs of government” to an audience of suffragettes in Portland, Oregon.

[3] Funeral services were held at her residence by a pastor of the First Divine Science Church in Tacoma, Reverend Henry Victor Morgan.