Born in
Hartford, Connecticut in 1946, Berson is the second of three daughters. Her parents were first generation Americans of
Ashkenazi Jewish descent. Her grandparents immigrated from
Eastern Europe at the end of the nineteenth century. The family moved to
Fairfield, Connecticut when Berson was in kindergarten and opened a family-run children’s clothing store called the
Peter Pan Shop.
Athletics From a young age, Berson recognized the professional limitations imposed on women during the mid-twentieth century. One of her childhood dreams was to play baseball in the Major Leagues, however, this opportunity was denied to her because of her gender. She went on to play softball as a shortstop on the Pinturas Glidden softball team while serving in the
Peace Corps in
Panama, helped organize women’s softball games in Washington DC, played second base for Terry’s Trumpeteers (a fast-pitch Class A lesbian bar softball league in Los Angeles), and played with the East Bay Blues and the Vampire Bats in Oakland, California.
Activism and identity formation Berson graduated from
Mount Holyoke College in 1967 with a degree in political science. During her time in college, she developed her writing skills and became active in the anti-
Vietnam War movement, holding a vigil every week on the college’s campus. The combination of her political research and exposure to elite higher education was a radicalizing moment that solidified her as a political activist, driven by a longing for justice. After graduating from Mount Holyoke, Berson spent two years in the Peace Corps in Panama, where she became fluent in Spanish, gained more experience in community organizing, had a first-hand look at US colonialism, and was certain she was a lesbian. == The Furies Collective and Olivia Records ==