Award-winning author Jane Little Botkin served as a public school teacher for thirty years before turning to historical investigation and writing. As a high school teacher, she supervised the compilation of fifteen volumes of the student publication A History of Dripping Springs and Hays County (1993--2008), a valuable resource for Texas researchers. In 2008 the Texas state legislature honored her career in education by formal resolution. Botkin continues to contribute to local historic preservation in the Texas Hill Country and New Mexico's White Mountain Wilderness. Her book Frank Little and the IWW has won two Spur Awards from the Western Writers of America, the Caroline Bancroft History Prize from the Western History and Genealogy Department of the Denver Public Library, and the Best Historical Nonfiction Award from the Texas Association of Authors. She is currently working on a biography of labor organizer Jane Street.
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"Inspiring and engrossing."---Cowgirl Magazine "Jane Street's story elucidates the difficulties of young female organizers, particularly within a union led primarily by males. Jane Little Botkin's access to sources held by Street's family, as well as her detailed research of FBI records, allows for a deeper look into this complicated and dramatic story."--Heather Mayer, author of Beyond the Rebel Girl: Women and the Industrial Workers of the World in the Pacific Northwest, 1905-1924 "This highly original work explores the life and efforts of Jane Street, an organizer of maids and household servants in Denver. Street played a significant role in IWW attempts to organize one of the poorest-paid and least-respected groups of women. Despite tremendous opposition, Jane persisted, a latter-day St. Joan of Arc."--Tom "Dr. Colorado" Noel, author of A Short History of Denver