Maria Mayol Colom, sister-in-law of businessman Bernat Marquès Rul·lan, who was murdered in June 1937, managed to escape fascist repression in Sóller. Born in 1883 into a well-to-do family, Mayol grew up in France, where she earned a degree in Borders and Languages. When World War I broke out, she returned to Mallorca and began working as a teacher in Sóller and Felanitx. In 1926, this native of Sóller founded Fomento de Cultura de la Mujer (Women's Cultural Promotion) in her town, a pioneering association in Spain that sought the intellectual development of women. "In 1934," says historian Antoni Queglas, "she had to resign as president of the organization due to pressure from a number of members who belonged to the town's conservative bourgeoisie. They were upset by her political activities. She was a republican, a Catalan nationalist, and a Catholic. She was shot in January 1937. Perhaps the two knew each other."
In the November 1933 general elections, Mayol, at 50 years old, became the first Mallorcan woman to run for office. She ran for the Balearic Republican Left. "She narrowly missed winning the seat," says Quetglas. "She suffered from the sexism within her own party." Those elections were the first in which women could vote in Spain after the right to vote for women had been approved in 1931, thanks to the initiative of Clara Campoamor. During the election campaign, Mayol appealed to women to help stop the pre-war atmosphere that permeated everything. She does so with the following words: "I would like the women who know how to inspire peace within the family to also know how to inspire it in the street, and that with their conduct they would point to the other path of fraternity that they know how to instill among their children. It is largely due to your collaboration, women, that hands will turn to hands, those that are restoring this tranquility amidst the anger; they are hands that calm and impart gentleness."
Following the sexism she experienced in the 1933 elections, Mayol requested a transfer from her teaching position to Catalonia, specifically to Vilanova i la Geltrú. In June 1936, she readily signed the "Reply to the Catalans ." The coup d'état of July caught her in Madrid, where she was attending a training course. In 1939, she went into exile in France, the land of her childhood. By the mid-1940s, she was able to return to Mallorca. Fearing reprisals, she decided to keep a low profile. She first settled in her hometown and later in Cala Major (Palma) with her niece, Catalina Marquès. She died in 1959 at the age of 76. In 1992, she was named an Illustrious Daughter of Sóller. One of her greatest legacies to the municipality is the promotion of women's culture.