Sybil Brand
Sybil Brand | |
|---|---|
| File:Sybil Brand, 1986.jpg Brand in 1986 | |
| Born | Sybil Morris[1] May 8, c. 1899[a] |
| Died | (aged 104)[3][b] |
| Spouse(s) | Gabriel B. Leavy (December 6, 1926–19??)[4] [5][6] |
| Children | 1 |
Sybil Brand (née Morris; May 8, c. 1899 – February 17, 2004)[3][a] was an American philanthropist and activist, best known locally for her work in improving jail conditions for women in Los Angeles. She was the namesake of the Sybil Brand Institute (SBI), a women's jail in Los Angeles County. SBI was closed after the 1994 Northridge earthquake.[1]
Early life
[edit | edit source]Sybil Morris was born in Chicago, Illinois[7] to Jewish immigrant parents Abraham "A.W." Morris (c. 1877–1951)[8] and Hattie Morris (c. 1883–1969)[9] sometime between 1899 and 1903, with some of her friends favoring the earliest year.[1][a][10][full citation needed]
Her father, a stockbroker, relocated the family to Los Angeles when Sybil was two years old.[11] At age twelve, she began what would become a lifelong pursuit of charity and volunteering when she organized a diaper hemming program with the other girls in her class.[12] Brand would later recall being inspired by meeting a young triple amputee in a hospital at the insistence of her mother.[13]
Prison reform
[edit | edit source]Already well-known in charity circles, Brand was first named to the Public Welfare Commission in 1945 by then-Supervisor Leonard Roach. In the 1950s, Brand was serving on a commission that inspected hospitals and jails in Los Angeles County. The only commissioner to volunteer to inspect the jails, Brand was appalled at the conditions in which women were jailed. At the time, some 1800 women were being held in facilities designed to hold 1300, on the thirteenth floor of the Los Angeles Hall of Justice.
After this incident, Brand led a drive to build a new county jail for women. On January 29, 1963, Los Angeles County opened the Sybil Brand Institute, which was forced to close after the 1994 Northridge earthquake. Budget shortfalls delayed its remodeling and reopening. Women prisoners most recently have been housed in the Twin Towers Correctional Facility in downtown Los Angeles.[7][14]
Personal life
[edit | edit source]In 1926, she married her first husband, Gabriel "Gabe" Leavy in Los Angeles; they had one son, George.[7] In 1933, she married her second husband, Harry Brand, who became head of publicity and advertising at 20th Century Fox.[citation needed]
Notes
[edit | edit source]References
[edit | edit source]- ^ a b c d Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ^ Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014, Ancestry.com.
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- ^ 1997 Congressional Record, Vol. 143, Page E2189 (November 7, 1997).
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- 20th-century American philanthropists
- American prison reformers
- American human rights activists
- American women human rights activists
- Jewish human rights activists
- Jewish American activists
- American women centenarians
- Jewish centenarians
- Jews from Illinois
- 20th-century American Jews
- 20th-century American women philanthropists
- 2004 deaths