.jpg)
Luisa Capetillo Perone
Labor organizer, feminist writer, journalist, and cigar-factory reader
of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
72/100
Raw Score
61/85
Confidence
76%
Evidence
Medium
About
Luisa Capetillo linked workers rights, women's education, suffrage, and gender freedom through organizing, journalism, public speaking, and international labor work.
The public evidence is strongest for social care, integrity, and resilience. Belief evidence is real but complicated by anticlerical anarchism and spiritist/Christian-anarchist interpretations; ordinary worship discipline is weakly observable.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Repeated public action for workers and women creates a strong social-care and resilience profile; belief and worship are scored cautiously because evidence points to religiously inflected moral thought but not routine devotional practice.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Religiously inflected Christian/spiritist and Tolstoyan moral language is reported, but institutional theology is complex.
Public evidence for afterlife accountability is thin; she did write in moral-accountability terms.
Spiritist and religious-anarchist contexts support some unseen-order belief, with moderate confidence.
Christian-anarchist and Tolstoyan influence suggests scriptural moral guidance, balanced by anticlerical critique.
Her public moral framework drew from Christian-anarchist and Tolstoyan examples of fraternity and liberation.
Contribution to Others
She supported her children through work as a seamstress; broader family-care evidence is limited.
Her women's education arguments centered the formation and protection of children and upright citizens.
Sustained labor organizing for agricultural, tobacco, and cigar workers is the strongest public pattern.
She organized across Puerto Rico, New York, Tampa, Cuba, and immigrant worker communities.
Direct-response evidence is limited, but union organizing and lectora work placed her in practical service roles.
Her record directly targeted class, gender, labor, and legal/social constraints.
Personal Discipline
No strong public evidence of routine prayer practice; score reflects religious life evidence but low observability.
Disciplined solidarity with workers and oppressed people is evident, but formal religious giving is not documented.
Reliability
Her public commitments to labor, women's education, and social equality were repeated over years.
Stability Under Pressure
She worked to support her children and remained active in working-class environments.
She continued public work despite illness and social marginalization.
Arrest, ridicule, and political repression did not stop her public organizing.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Public organizing begins in agricultural strike
Capetillo made her public organizing debut in the 1905 sugarcane workers strike and became active with the Federacion Libre de Trabajadores.
→ Established her as a public labor organizer and advocate for workers.
highPublishes Ensayos libertarios
Her early essays expressed anarchist, anticlerical, fraternal, and social-justice commitments that shaped her later public work.
→ Set out a moral-political framework centered on liberation, fraternity, and critique of oppressive institutions.
mediumPublishes Mi opinion on women's liberties and duties
Capetillo published a major feminist work arguing for women's education, autonomy, rights, and responsibilities, linking women's liberation with labor struggle.
→ Became one of Puerto Rico's foundational feminist texts.
highWorks with Hispanic tobacco communities in New York
While in New York she worked with Hispanic communities, especially tobacco workers and labor leaders, while public attention often reduced her to clothing controversy.
→ Extended her organizing beyond Puerto Rico and kept worker concerns central despite press sensationalism.
mediumOrganizes cigar workers in Ybor City and Tampa
Capetillo organized Spanish, Cuban, Italian, African American, and other cigar workers in Florida labor communities.
→ Broadened her labor work across borders and communities.
highArrested in Cuba while involved in strike activity
During labor activity in Cuba, Capetillo was arrested for wearing men's pants in public and was later released.
→ Her public defiance became a pressure test showing courage under ridicule and legal constraint.
highContinues organizing until death from tuberculosis
Sources describe her as continuing to advocate for workers until her death from tuberculosis in 1922.
→ Closes a record of sustained public advocacy under personal hardship.
mediumPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
1905 labor strike
1905Capetillo entered public labor organizing during a sugarcane workers strike.
Response: She used public speaking and union work to advocate for agricultural workers.
positiveGovernment action against anarchists
1912Puerto Rican authorities acted against anarchists, and public pressure increased.
Response: She relocated and continued work with labor communities in New York and elsewhere.
positiveArrest in Cuba
1915She was arrested for wearing men's pants while involved in labor activity.
Response: She was released and returned to public life rather than retreating from the cause.
positiveTuberculosis and final years
1922Her life ended from tuberculosis at a relatively young age.
Response: Sources describe her as continuing to organize and advocate until death.
positiveProgression
crisis years
Travel, public controversy, and arrest tested whether the commitments survived cost.
stablecurrent stage
Historical profile closed at death in 1922; long-term legacy remains stable.
stableearly years
Lectora work and wide reading built a public-intellectual labor orientation.
upgrowth years
Strikes, union activity, journalism, and feminist writing became sustained service patterns.
upBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Repeatedly joined worker protection with women's education and autonomy.
- • Used writing, lecturing, and organizing rather than symbolic advocacy alone.
- • Moved across borders to serve labor communities beyond her immediate home context.
Concerns
- • Religious evidence is morally serious but not straightforwardly institutional or devotional.
- • Public reputation sometimes centers clothing controversy, which can distort interpretation of her deeper work.
Evidence Quality
3
Strong
3
Medium
1
Weak
Overall: medium
This profile measures observable public evidence, not hidden intention, spiritual rank, or salvation.