Consuelo Reyes-Calderon, also known as Consuelo Reyes, was born in Costa Rica and became a naturalized American. She was an author and activist, working for the Peoples Mandate Committee for Inter-American Peace and Cooperation and National Woman's Party. She created audio-visual materials, such as film strips and slide presentations with audio. She wrote about Costa Rican and Guatemalan people and culture.
Early life
Born Consuelo De Jesus Calderon Reyes in San Jose, Costa Rica on September 14, 1904, her mother was Maria Calderon.
Career
Costa Rica
From 1926 to 1941, Consuelo Reyes-Calderon worked for the Secretariat of the Apostolado de la Oración. In 1941, she was a librarian at the Biblioteca Apostolica de la Oracion. Also in 1941, Reyes-Calderon visited Guatemala at the invitation of :es:Aída Doninelli|Aida Doninelli to study at the :es:Conservatorio Nacional de Música |Conservatorio Nacional de Música.
Reyes-Calderon prepared audio-visual materials for the National Woman's Party and the British and American women's suffrage movements. The completed projects are A Meeting at the Cemetery, Roots of Suffrage,Alice Morgan Wright, Sculptor, Suffragist, a tribute to Mabel Vernon, Our Friend Alma Lutz, and information about other leaders of the movement. These includes slideshows with scripts and slides, which were narrated by Fern Ingersoll and Mabel Vernon and recorded on audio tapes with music. She created film strips about a wide range of topics, about a number of countries. The topics include economics, music, the arts, and culture. She worked on a documentary regarding the women's liberation movement in 1970.
Writer
She was one of the writers for the 1948 radio program, Know Your Neighbor. The other writers were Amelia Himes Walker and Vernon. She wrote Letras y Encajes; Revista Femenina al Servicio de la Cultura in 1954. In 1980, Reyes-Calderon wrote Aída Doninelli : prima donna siempre, artista de Guatemala. Nine years later, she wrote Carolina de Jesús Dent Alvarado, un alma amiga de Dios about the Costa Rican woman Carolina de Jesús Dent Alvarado, who opened the Librería del Sagrado Corazón, together with Don Eladio Prado S. She contributed to Speaker for Suffrage and Petitioner for Peace, a memoir by Vernon. Other contributors were Hazel Hunkins-Hallinan, Fern S. Ingersoll, and Rebecca Hourwich Reyher.
Personal life
Reyes-Calderon was also a music lover and took singing lessons. She was a long-life friend of Madame Aída Doninelli, a soprano from Guatemala. Reyes-Calderon and Vernon shared a Washington apartment from 1951 until Vernon’s death in 1975. They used to spend time in the summer at Highmeadow, biographer Alma Lutz and Marguerite Smith's country home in Berlin, New York, who were good friends from the National Woman's Party. She became a United States citizen by 1970. When Vernon died in 1975, Reyes-Calderon was noted for her devotion to her companion. According to archive records, she corresponded with Rebecca Hourwich Reyher into 1986. Records about her contributions are among the Peoples Mandate Committee Records, 1935-1975 archives in the Swarthmore College Peace Collection. Several documents are also held at Georgetown University and in the Amelia Roberts Fry Collection of the Alice Paul Institute in Mount Laurel, New Jersey.