Title: Teaching American History
1Teaching American History
2impossible dreams for marginal people
- Labor the eight hour day
- Women suffrage (the vote)
- Ex-slaves real citizenship and autonomy (land)
- New Immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe
a new home
3Which strategy for labor?
- Anarchistic Socialism (Albert Parsons, IWPA)
- Cooperatives (Terence Powderly, KOL)
- More (Samuel Gompers, AFL)
- Democratic Socialism (Eugene Debs, Socialist
Party) - Anarcho-Syndicalism (the IWW Wobblies)
4Socialism / AnarchismAlbert and Lucy
ParsonsInternational Working Peoples Association
- Campaigned for eight-hour day
- Believed in unionism
- Wanted to abolish private ownership
- Study and Rifle Clubs
- The new science of dynamite
5Just to shake things uplet's talk about Albert
Parsons
- Starts out as Confederate soldier
- Switches to being a Radical Republican
- Calls Republicans "the first labor party I joined"
6Life takes a bite out of A.R. Parsons
- Marries Lucy Parsons (mixed Indian Mexican
African American heritage) - Joins the Great Railroad Strike of 1877 railroad
strike, demands the eight-hour day - Sees that (federal) violence decides the strike
- Like the violence of the Klan in Texas
- (this makes a big impression)
7Lucy Albert Parsons
8Parsons joins everything!
- Becomes Washington lobbyist for craft unions
- Joins the Knights of Labor (tries to organize
everybody) - Joins the International Working Peoples
Association - Starts "Study and Rifle Clubs" to protect demands
for the eight-hour day - Vows to defend all strikers
9Study and Rifle Clubsanarchism and education
10Haymarket Chicago 1886
- Mayday (May 1) general strike
- 700,000 workers demonstrate for the eight-hour
day - Police kill several workers
11(No Transcript)
12Protest rally against police violence
- Protest rally against police violence drawsabout
1000 people - Late in the rally, about 200 protesters remain
- Police wait until governor leaves, then begin to
beat up the crowd
13A bomb mysteriously explodes near the police lines
- No one claimed to have thrown the bomb
- Eight immigrants are arrested
- Albert Parsons escaped but turns himself in (he's
the only non-immigrant arrested) - No evidence linking any of them to the bomb
14The Haymarket trials
- Albert Parsons and four others are hung
- Another defendant kills himself in jail
- Three others sentenced to long prison terms
(later pardoned)
15The (temporary) end of labor solidarity
- Knights of Labor refuse to support the "Haymarket
Martyrs" - American Federation of Labor does (sort of)
- Labor's dreams are crushed, and union membership
declines for several decades
16trading cards of the Haymarket Martyrs
17Haymarket What labor learned
- The end (for awhile) of the eight-hour day
movement - Don't call for sweeping social changes
- Take small actions, not general strikes
- Labor shrinks its dreams
18the Knights of Labor
19The beginnings of the KOL
- Uriah Stephens and nine tailors
- At first, a secret organization (after Masons)
- Problems with Irish workers
- Terence Powderly hired in 1881 drops secrecy
- Changed from a craft union to an industrial union
(skilled and unskilled) - Equal pay for women and African Americans
- Grew to 700,000 members by 1886
- Included 95,000 African Americans
- Not all-inclusive against Chinese workers
20Knights of Labor program
- Eight-hour day
- No more child labor
- No more convict labor
- Progressive income tax
- Equal pay for equal work
- Government ownership of railroads and telegraphs
- Public lands for settlers, not speculators
- Cooperatives to replace wage labor
21CooperativesTerence Powderly and the Knights of
Labor
- Workers would own their own factories
collectively - Factories would still compete
- Not socialism (government would not own the
factories)
22Knights of Labor initial victories
- At first, KOL opposed strikes
- New members radicalized the union
- Won the Union Pacific Strike of 1884
- Won the Wabash Railroad Strike of 1885
- Won Missouri Pacific Strike of 1886 (Jay Gould)
23Jay Gould beats the KOL, 1886
- Texas Pacific (Great Southwest) Railroad strike
- Give em a rifle diet.
- I can hire one half of the working class to kill
the other half. - KOL membership drops
- KOL loses credibility with rank and file when
Powderly refuses to support the Haymarket martyrs
24The American Federation of Labor
- Craft union skilled workers only
- Most of these have served a seven year
apprenticeship - Many jobs require a license
- As a result, the union is largely white and male
(women and people of color need not apply) - Most conservative of the labor unions
25American Federation of Labor (AFL)Samuel Gompers
- Accepted capitalism
- What does labor want? "More.
- Wanted shorter hours, higher wages, better
working conditions - Change will come through collective bargaining
26American Socialist PartyEugene Debs
- Ex-head of American Railway Union led 1894
Pullman Strike (smashed by federal troops) - Starts American Socialist Party, worked through
elections - Diverse membership, includes many women
- Wanted government ownership of big industry, vote
for women, no child labor, right to strike - Change will come by winning elections
27(No Transcript)
28The IWW (Wobblies)
29Industrial Workers of the WorldBig Bill Haywood
- "The Wobblies"
- Industrial union, came out of Western mining
strikes - Especially big in Oregon and Washington
- Used strikes, boycotts, songs, and education
- Rejected political parties and elections
- Change will come through a national strike and
the workers will take over
30IWW founding conventionChicago 1905
- Big Bill Haywood
- Eugene Debs
- Mother Jones
- Lucy Parsons (widow of Haymarket martyr Albert
Parsons)
31Principal areas of strength
- the lumber camps of the Northwest
- dock workers in port cities
- in the wheat fields of the central states
- textiles
- mining areas.
32Most important IWW-led strikes
- Goldfield, Nevada (miners, 19067)
- Lawrence, Massachusetts (textile workers, 1912)
- Paterson, N.J. (silk workers, 1913)
- Mesabi range, Minnesota (iron miners, 1916)
- the lumber camps of the Northwest (1917)
- The Seattle General Strike (1919)
- Colorado miners (192728)
33Joe Hill of the IWW (Wobblies)
- Swedish immigrant (born Hillstrom)
- IWW songwriter
- Framed for murder and executed
- "Don't mourn organize!"
34Elizabeth Gurley Flynn of the IWWthe original
Wobbly "Rebel Girl"
- Joined the Wobblies at age 16
- Great public speaker
- Helped to organize the 1912 Lawrence, Mass.
"Bread and Roses" strike - A founder of the American Civil Liberties Union
35What the Wobblies wanted
- Against capitalism
- Revolutionary union
- One big union
- Workers should own industries
- Work toward a national general strike
36Miners Fight Back
37What will kill capitalism?
Why is the caption in Italian?