Expose Writer Jessica Mitford Dies At Age 78 -- Funeral Homes And Fat Farms Among Targets Of Muckraker

Jessica Mitford, sometimes called "Queen of the Muckrakers" for her proclivity to skewer in print every profession from funeral homes to fat farms, died yesterday in her Oakland, Calif., home. She was 78.

Miss Mitford died of lung cancer, according to her daughter, Constancia Romilly of Washington, D.C.

Born to a titled British family, Miss Mitford was already in middle age when she began writing her well-documented but often biting exposes. Her first major success came in 1963 with "The American Way of Death," which excoriated funeral directors for staging unnecessarily pompous and expensive final rites.

Miss Mitford said she was prompted to write the book when she realized the estates of her husband's poor legal clients were drained by excessive funeral and burial costs.

"Miss Mitford does not shrink from the gruesome," a Los Angeles Times critic noted in reviewing her controversial best-seller. "She goes into the embalming process with detailed zest. She exhumes little-known items such as the fact that 120 man-hours are devoted to each corpse."

As a solution to expensive funerals, Miss Mitford touted cooperative burial groups, and quickly became the darling of such organizations.

"Morticians and cemetery promoters live in deathly fear their $2 billion business is slipping from their grasp," she told applauding delegates to a 1963 Fresno convention of the California Federation of Funeral and Memorial Societies.

The author, her daughter said, will be cremated.

From death to birth

Miss Mitford's other books included two autobiographies - "Daughters and Rebels" in 1960 and "A Fine Old Conflict" in 1977 - and several collections of her articles including "Poison Penmanship: The Gentle Art of Muckraking" in 1979. After rising to fame criticizing the high cost of death, she eventually took on unnecessary expenses in childbirth as well, resulting in her 1992 book, "The American Way of Birth."

Her articles, published by such magazines as Life, Esquire and Nation, targeted Bennett Cerf and other members of the Famous Writers School, television executives, a spa catering to overweight wealthy women, and overpriced restaurants.

`Embarrassing the guilty'

"You may not be able to change the world," she was fond of stating, "but at least you can embarrass the guilty."

Known to friends as "Decca," she was born in Batsford, Gloucestershire, England, and schooled at home, as one of the somewhat eccentric and politically daring brood of six daughters and one son of David (second baron of Redesdale) and Sydney Bowles Mitford. She, her sister Nancy and others wrote so prolifically that Jessica christened prose the Mitford Industry.

Prototypes for the writer Evelyn Waugh's "Brideshead Revisited," the family was profiled in a 1985 book, "The House of Mitford: Portrait of a Family," written by Jessica Mitford's nephew, Jonathan Guinness and his daughter, Catherine.

Jessica Mitford ran away to Loyalist Spain during the Spanish Civil War and married Esmond Romilly, a Communist sympathizer who was killed fighting in World War II.

She later married a labor lawyer, Robert Treuhaft, whom she met while working in Washington, D.C., during the war. They settled in a racially integrated section of Oakland and joined the Communist Party - resigning in 1958.

In addition to her daughter from her first marriage, Miss Mitford is survived by her husband, Robert Treuhaft of Oakland; their son, Benjamin Treuhaft of Berkeley; one sister, Deborah the Duchess of Devonshire of England; and three grandchildren, Benjamin Weber of Atlanta, James Forman of Washington, D.C., and actor Chaka Forman of Los Angeles.