In the 1930s she founded a small
muckraking newspaper, the
Boston City Reporter, which she edited and
mimeographed herself. Originally she focused on political corruption, but in the late 1930s, she expanded its mission to fighting
fascist and
antisemitic propaganda. Boston was one of the most antisemitic cities in the
United States.
Jewish residents, businesses, and synagogues were frequent targets of what would now be called
hate crimes: gangs, mostly of Irish Catholic youths, were incited by the priest
Charles Coughlin and the
Christian Front. They roamed the streets of Jewish neighborhoods, vandalized property, and assaulted residents. Many victims were seriously injured with
blackjacks and
brass knuckles. As the columnist
Nat Hentoff recalled, "Riding by Franklin Field on this trip, I remembered losing some teeth there back then to a gang of readers of Charles Coughlin's
Social Justice, who recognized me as a killer of their Lord." Boston's predominately-Irish police, politicians, and clergy were of little help, and the local press largely ignored the problem. Boston's popular Irish mayor,
James Michael Curley, once proudly proclaimed Boston "the strongest Coughlin city in the world." Sweeney was particularly appalled by antisemitism when it came from her fellow Irish-American Catholics. Having been subjected to religious bigotry themselves, she reasoned, they, of all people, ought to know better. She wrote scathing editorials condemning Coughlin, the Christian Front, and anyone else who spread antisemitic or fascist propaganda. She alerted federal agents to the activities of Francis P. Moran, the leader of the Christian Front in Boston. Moran had been distributing Nazi propaganda linked to
George Sylvester Viereck and once publicly threatened to "take care of Roosevelt." Alone in a crowd of 2000 Irish Catholics in
South Boston, Sweeney protested a speech by Fr. Edward Lodge Curran, a Coughlinite, and was roughly ejected from the hall to a chorus of hisses and boos. In his best-selling exposé of fascist organizations,
Under Cover (1943),
John Roy Carlson mentioned Sweeney as an inspiration, but likened her work in Boston to "digging at a mountain with a hand spade." According to Carlson, Sweeney's editorials led to
Catholic International, a pro-fascist magazine, being banned from the city's principal newsstands. In 1943, Sweeney helped raise public awareness of widespread antisemitism in the Boston police force, which eventually led to the firing of the police commissioner, which was followed by a sharp drop in antisemitic violence in Boston. Many Catholics considered Sweeney an
anticlerical, but she saw herself as a defender of the church against attacks from within. When she criticized Cardinal O'Connell for his silence on Catholic antisemitism, he summoned her to his office and threatened her with excommunication. Other Catholics, such as Bishop
Bernard James Sheil of Chicago and Monsignor
John A. Ryan of Washington, applauded her. ==
Boston Herald Rumor Clinic==