Note: Please read Post 1 and Post 2 before continuing.
Rumors of a Jackson Miners Union
On the 26th of August of 1901, the superintendents from the Kennedy, Argonaut, South Eureka and Zeila gold mines in Jackson convened to address a new social movement rippling across mine communities in the western United States. “It has been reported that the Miners of Amador County have created and organized, or are about to create and organize, a society known as and called a MINERS’ UNION, for the purpose of increasing the current wages and reducing the hours of labor at the Mines in this Mining District.” Miners worked ten hours a day for less than a dollar a day, but the superintendents insisted, “The current wages are fair and the hours of labor reasonable.”
The conclusion of the meeting dramatically demonstrates the bosses contempt for union activity:
“Now, therefore, it is agreed by the undersigned, that no employment, trade, custom or business will be given to any member of said Miners’ Union, or to anyone who, directly or indirectly, aids the same; It is therefore agreed that all employees of the undersigned shall at once be given notice of this effect, and that those who may be members of said union be requested to withdraw therefrom or be discharged from service” (emphasis in original).
The growing militancy of the W.F.M. may explain some of the antagonistic attitude of the district superintendents. Melvyn Dubofsky, Distinguished Professor of History at Binghamton University, writes, “During the ten years from 1894 to 1904, Western miners waged armed war with their capitalist adversaries. Miners’ unions sometimes purchased and stocked rifles and ammunitions, drilled in a military fashion, and prepared if all else to achieve their objectives with rifle, torch, and dynamite stick. This resort to violence did not lack substantial reason, as mine operators proved equally martial, and usually less compromising, than their labor foes.” At the 1897 W.F.M. convention is Salt Lake City, president Ed Boyce entreated unions to arm themselves, citing the second amendment and stating: “Every (local) union should have a rifle club. I strongly advise you to provide every member with the latest improved rifle.”
Boyce also recommended to delegates that unions purchase the mines to run them democratically, effectively redistributing the wealth and power held by the mine owners to the miners directly. The WFM officially adopted the political goals of socialism in their 1900 convention, forming a Declaration of Principles that included public ownership of the means of production and the abolition of the wage system, which the miners viewed as a form of slavery forcing workers into dependency. Boyce, speaking to miners in Montana, clarified this idea: “There can be no harmony employer and employee—the former wants long hours and short wages, the latter wants short hours and high wages. Our present wage system is slavery in its worst form. The corporations and trusts have monopolized the necessities of society and the means of life, that the laborer can have access to them only on the terms offered by the trust…Let the rallying cry be ‘Labor, the producer of all wealth, is entitled to all he creates, the overthrow of the profit-making system, the extinction of monopolies, equality for all and land for all the people.’” The WFM aligned itself with the Socialist Party of America, Boyce being an associate with SPA advocate Eugene Debs. It was in this charged environment that Amador miners began to organize.
Fiery speaker Eugene Debs, whose friendship with Boyce influenced the WFM's adoption of socialism. |
John P. Irish |
Two days after the Dispatch ran his speech, Irish’s rhetoric about the assassination of the Republic would come to seem eerily prophetic and newspapers were given all the fodder needed to demonize the growing American left.
References:
Jackson Mine Superintendents. "Concerning a Miners Union". Jackson. 1901. Print
Suggs, Jr. George S. Colorado's War on Militant Unionism: James H. Peabody and the Western Federation of Miners. Tulsa: University of Oklahoma Press, 1972.
"Truths Well Told." Amador Dispatch [Jackson, Ca] 04 Sept. 1901.
Images from Wikimedia.org
Dubofsky, Melvyn. We Shall Be All; a History of the Industrial Workers of the World. Chicago: Quadrangle, 1969. 38-40.
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