A woman of political moral convictions
Lolita Harper
She was not your average society matron.
While Fanny Bixby Spencer came from one of the wealthiest families
in Long Beach, she came to Costa Mesa -- then named Harper -- in the
1920s to escape her family’s class position.
Spencer, the daughter of Jotham Bixby, the “father of Long Beach,”
was an artist, poet and playwright who possessed distinct political
moral convictions for a woman in her time. She vehemently opposed war
and was never afraid to spread her political position, despite the
fact she couldn’t even vote.
“She had social position and money on which to indulge her whims,”
the Sunday Press Telegram wrote about her in 1965.
She was born Fanny Weston Bixby in 1879 and grew up on a
27,000-acre ranch that is now the cities of Long Beach, Downey,
Paramount and Lakewood. She followed in the footsteps of her
socialist grandfather and often got herself into trouble with her
radical views.
The outspoken activist wrote a play titled, “The Jazz of
Patriotism,” just after the first world war, which indicted combat.
Because of the tension it caused, she and her equally
politically-minded husband, Carl Spencer, moved to Harper.
The Spencers bought a large ranch in Harper and hired immigrant
families to farm the land. With no offspring of her own, Spencer
adopted a number of disadvantaged children and also opened her home
to the homeless, prostitutes and political and religious refugees.
She did not allow her children to recite the pledge of allegiance
at school.
She survived public taunts from many and remained stubborn to her
beliefs. She died of cancer in 1930 at 51. Spencer left a
$2.5-million estate, most of which went to loyal employees and foster
children.
She also left property for a city park and Costa Mesa library, but
specified that it could not be used for military training, encampment
for veterans groups or the Boy Scouts.
* LOOKING BACK runs Sundays. Do you know of a person, place or
event that deserves a historical Look Back? Let us know. Contact
James Meier by fax at (949) 646-4170; e-mail at
[email protected]; or mail her at c/o Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay
St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627.
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