Saturday, May 16, 2026

How Minneapolis Got That Way--The General Strike of 1934—From Strike to Class War Part II

 

The strike kitchen run and managed by wives, mothers, sisters, and sweethearts fed thousands daily and was part of a carefully planned and organized mass strike.

After the surprising and relatively easy victory which secured recognition from Minneapoliss coal yards for little Teamster Local, drivers and warehousemen from other local industries flocked to the union clamoring to join.  The Trotskyist-led union responded with an intense, but necessarily secretive organizing drive. 

They went public on April 15, 1934 at a mass rally attended by 3,000 at a rented theater downtown.  In addition to rousing speeches by leaders Vincent R. (Ray) Dunne, his brothers Miles and Grant, and Swedish born Carl Skoglund, the Central Labor Council made up of the city’s conservative AFL craft unions sent messages of Solidarity and Farmer-Labor Party Governor Floyd B. Olson sent a high ranking aide to read a message of support and encouragement—“It is my counsel, if you wish to accept it, that you should follow the sensible course and band together for your own protection and welfare.”  Workers in attendance voted overwhelmingly in favor of authorizing a strike if the city’s powerful and rabidly anti-union Citizens Alliance, which represented the employers, did not agree to recognize the union and enter negotiations on a contract.

The Citizen’s Alliance flatly refused any dealings with the Teamsters.  After they formally rejected a union proposal, a second mass meeting of May 15 voted for an immediate strike.  All over the city drivers and helpers walked off the job in the early hours of May 16.

What would make this strike so different than any other mass strikes in American history was the detailed preparation that had been made before a single worker left the job.  First, many of the 100 or so members of the Trotskyist Communist League of America (CLA) who were not members of the Teamsters were rallied to organize support from the city’s unemployed.  There were nearly 30,000 of them in a city still deeply wracked by the Great Depression despite the beginning of a modest recovery in the second year of the New Deal.  Organizers found their work well received.  An organization of the unemployed was founded which pledged support of the Teamsters and any strike.  Several large marches of the unemployed served notice on the Citizens Alliance that there would be no mass pool of scabs and strikebreakers.  As the strike progressed many unemployed workers joined the pickets, provided support, and even rose to leadership.  


Earlier Teamster support of the National Farm Holiday producers' strike paid off as the NFHA reciprocated when the strike was on in Minneapolis and donated  tons of food to the strike kitchen.  Trucks carrying milk,  eggs, and produce from NFHA members were alowed to operate and supply their own Farmers' Market for the duration.

The Teamsters also secured critical support from the National Farm Holiday Association (NFHA) an organization of militant farmers who declared a strike of their own in 1932 to which many truckers lent active solidarity by refusing to move milk, produce, and grain to buyers in the Twin Cities in protest of collapsed farm prices.  The dramatic strike attracted nation attention—and the fierce resistance of major forces in Citizen Alliance like Pillsbury, General Mills, and the Minnesota Cooperative Creameries Association which marketed butter under the brand name Land O Lakes.  The NFHA became an enthusiastic backer of the strike, raising thousands of dollars from their members for the strike fund and contributing tons of food to the strike kitchens.  In return the Teamsters let trucks belonging to NFHA members enter the city to supply their own Farmers Market for the duration of the strike.

Getting women, the wives, mothers, sisters, and sweethearts of strikers was hardly a new idea.  Mother Jones had done it in the coal fields, and it was a regular feature of major IWW strikes, including the bitter struggles on the Iron Range in which some of the union leadership cut their teeth in earlier years.  It had been long recognized that when the women were left at home to stew and worry about missing pay packets and listening to hungry children while their husbands risked injury or death on picket lines was a recipe for a strike that falls apart.  By enlisting them side-by-side with the strikers they became equally engaged—and often even more militant.  The Teamsters organized an active women’s auxiliary

Not only did the women organize and staff a modern industrial scale kitchen that at the height of the strike served as many as 10,000 strikers and their families in a single day.  The also staffed a well-equipped dispensary which after the strike took a violent turn resembled a combat field hospital patching up scores of injured workers a day.  They performed clerical and courier duties, organized their own demonstrations and marches, and pressured landlords to forgo evictions.  Some women served with the scout pickets who roamed the city looking attempts to run trucks and move goods.  Others even volunteered with the flying picket squads that were dispatched from strike headquarters when the scouts reported the need.


Teamster Flying pickets intercept a driver and counsel him
.

All of this was made possible because the Teamster leadership rented a huge vacant garage as strike headquarters.  It was large enough to easily accommodate up to 1,000 people, most of them assigned to the flying picket squads that worked around the clock.  In addition to the kitchen and dispensary, the building accommodated a large machine and repair shop which kept a fleet of 100 trucks and cars of the flying squadrons in repair and eventually housed a daily newspaper that circulated 10,000 copies a day.  

Four phone lines were constantly monitored taking calls from the scouts reporting from the many pay phones that were in almost every establishment and in free-standing phone booths on many corners.  A call would come in, a courier would run the message to one of the dozens of flying squads waiting, and they would be speeding off in automobile or trucks within minutes.  When the strikers discovered the four phone lines were tapped, they quickly employed codes that changed daily.  The strikers also had a shortwave radio that was able to monitor all police calls.

All of this was up and running from the first day of the strike.  Regular pickets were maintained at all of the main freight terminals, especially in the critical Market District and forty roads into the city were monitored.  The roving scout pickets included many on motorcycles.  Employers were stunned at how completely effective the Teamster picketing system worked.  Virtually nothing was moving in the city but the trucks of the Farm Holiday Association and already unionized coal and milk delivery. 

The first days of the strike were as peaceful as they were effective.  Pickets and flying squads were unarmed and instructed to prevent trucks from moving by swarming them with scores of bodies.  The Citizen Alliance leaders seemed dazed by how tightly the city was shut down.

But the bosses made preparations as well.  They already employed a small army of spies and the usual plug-uglies who could always be hired to beat on workers.  They had a cooperative Police Department which swore many of them in as special police.  The bosses set up their own strike headquarters and their own flying squads.  As the conflict quickly deepened, they sent out a call for a “mass movement of citizens” to oppose the strike and began organizing their citizen army or militia.  Merchants, professional men, managers, other “respectable” white collar workers and their sons flocked to the banner.  They were well armed and equipped and put under the command of officers and World War I combat veterans, including some who held high positions in their companies and on the Board of the Citizens Alliance.

Seldom was the class war so stark, with the employers not just hiding behind the police and the usual hired thugs but fielding an ideologically driven army of their own kind.  With both sides now well organized an explosive confrontation was inevitable.  When it came it would change the face of the strike and the conflict.

Early on Saturday, May 19 one of the Alliance spies lured a flying squad made up of both male and female pickets with a false phone report that trucks were trying to unload newsprint at the loading docks of the two daily newspapers.  It was a well-planned trap.  When the flying pickets arrived on the scene, they were surrounded by a large body of police, special police, and citizen militia and were brutally beaten inflicting several serious injuries.  Abruptly the whole character of the strike changed.

At union headquarters strikers spent the weekend making saps, clubs, and cutting lengths of pipe.  They were preparing not only to defend themselves, but to go on the offensive.  The union learned that the Police and Alliance forces planned to seize the whole Market District on Monday and sweep aside the mass pickets who had blocked most of the warehouse docks.  Union leadership planned for a confrontation.

First they quietly moved up to 600 strikers to the Central Labor Council headquarters on Eighth Street, moving them in small groups at night.  They avoided detection.  Meanwhile at the headquarters garage, the flying squads assembled as a single force augmented by many other militants.  As many as 1000 were in the building waiting to attack.


Workers go on the offensive--Teamsters armed with clubs and pipes charged and scattered police.

Early Monday, May 21 as many as 500 Citizen Alliance special police and volunteers attempted to break picket lines at the Market.  Reinforcements from Strike Headquarters arrived, and a general club wielding melee broke out.  Photographs of the strikers assaulting police and volunteers with clubs shocked the country which had never seen workers physically fighting back before.  It was a pitch battle during which the pickets slowly drove their enemies to one side of the Market and then cut the Police off from the Citizen Army.  Then on signal, the 600 armed strikers poured out of the nearby Central Labor Council building, clearly an overwhelming force.

As the strikers expected, the panicked police began to draw their guns.   At that point a truck driven by a hand-picked striker and filled with the toughest, most reliable men barreled out of the union ranks and bore directly down on the police, who had to scatter.  The strikers in the back of the truck leapt from the bed and began wailing on the police, who could not now use their pistols for fear of hitting their own men. 

Fighting continued most of the day, but was not decisive on either side, although more than 30 police had to be treated for injuries.  The workers took casualties, too, which kept the dispensary busy, but not on the same scale.


On May 22, up to 30,000 strikers and supporters swarmed the Market District precipitating the Battle of Deputies Run.  At the end of a long day of street battles strikers had complete control of the streets.

Overnight more workers joined the fight.  And the Citizen Alliance had 500 more men sworn in as Special Police.  The next morning more than 30,000 showed up for a march on the market.  The march was peaceful until a merchant tried to move some crates of tomatoes and pickets threw them through his store window.  General fighting erupted again.  This time, armed with clubs the strikers drove the police and Citizen Army out of the Market and chased them through the city. By night the police had completely withdrawn from the city streets and strike marshals were directing traffic.  Two special police, including a member of the board of directors of the Citizens Alliance, were killed in the fighting.

The riot on May 22 became known as the Battle of Deputies Run A joint delegation of Teamsters, Central Labor Council, and Building Trades Council leaders offered Chief of Police Mike Johannes a 24-hour truce to allow negotiations to start on the understanding that no trucks would move during negotiations.  Governor Olsen and Federal Mediators urged authorities and the Citizen Alliance to take the deal.   Reluctantly the Citizen Alliance signed it.  But Johannes immediately announced that his police would attempt to move trucks as soon as the 24 hours expired.  The union responded by ordering a resumption of picketing.

The battle was on again.

Tomorrow—Escalating violence leads to a General Strike.

Friday, May 15, 2026

Walking the Walk and Compassion for Campers Update for May 15 2026

 


Signs like this are popping up around McHenry County.  Someone in Cary added a comment.

Look for new opportunities for action, education, community, and solidarity in and around McHenry County here every week.  

 Walking the Walk  

Now two Pride Events!


Crystal Lake Pride Walk & Social  now sponsored by Crystal Lake Pride on Sunday, June 7 from 11 am-6 pm at Brink Street Market in Downtown Crystal Lakee.

Woodstock Pride Fest--June 13-14 Annual family-friendly events celebrating the LGBTQIA+ Community. Multiple special events.  Pride Parade and the Festival on the Square 11 am to 4 pm.

Ride/Walk to Leave a Light On--On and around Woodstock Square, Friday, June 19 7 pm.  Benefiting Break Crystal Lake Teen Center, Compassion for Campers, Community Connection for Youth, IMC--employment, education, health, and housing services, Jail Breakers, Lemonade & Advocate, Live4Lali, and Woodstock Pride.

Two Juneteenth celebrations:.


Honoring Legacy, Empowering the Future presented by McHenry County Now Thursday, June 18 at 5:30 pm at the Cary Public LibraryRegister here.


The McHenry County Juneteenth Festival will be held on Saturday, June 20, from 3 to 5:30 pm on Woodstock Square Woodstock.


The Rally of the Silent Majority--The local MAGA loyalists in various guises and McHenry County Republicans are feeling overshadowed by the No Kings Rallies and other roadside protests organized by Indivisible McHenry County.  They are claiming the same turf along Route 31 in McHenry for a National Day of Prayer event for Donald Trump and his various disastrous projects like his losing War With Iran, massive ICE abuse of immigrants and asylum seekers, and attacks on honest and fair elections.  Expect pomp and bluster.  No official counter protests have been announced, but likely some people will want to respond.  Caution and safety are urged.  Indivisible McHenry County denied that they ever called for counter demonstrators and urged activist to avoid the protest.


Friday, May 1 turned out to be the last C4C distribution at Community Resource Days at Willow Crystal Lake.  New leadership at Willow's home church announced a suspension of services at least until the Fall on May 24.  Our own resources are exhausted and we could not afford another on May 14.  

Sue Rekenthaler and Chaplain Dave Becker of Tree of Life UU Congregation are leading discussion on how to move forward Compassion for Campers's mission. Talks on Monday explore possible new collaboration with Warp Corps in Woodstock. Nada LunsfordExecutive Director of Steven's Home circulated a letter to organizations and agencies who participated in Community Resource Days asking for help in finding possible locations for distributions and continuing comprehensive services.  So far more than a dozen organizations have enthusiastically agreed to help with the search and many want deeper on-going cooperation

C4C hopes to continue our service to the unhoused.  Until we find a new venue, we will not be able to accept material donations due to lack of storage space.  The best thing you can do is offer your critically needed financial support to get us through this emergency.  Money donations are always welcome at     https://tinyurl.com/3bz96axe.   Look for updates here.  Email compassionforcampers@treeoflifeuu.org .

How Minneapolis Got That Way--The General Strike of 1934—Of Teamsters and Trotskyites--Part I

 

After Minneapolis Teamsters stuck city-wide in 1934 police try to move a scab truck using force against unarmed pickets.  Police and Citizen Committee thug violence and mayhem would soon both spread the strike defiantly and cause workers to take up clubs and brick bats to battle it out in the streets.

Note:  The epic story of the events in Minneapolis in 1934 is too much for one entry.  We will cover it in three parts.

Before 1934 Minneapolis, Minnesota was a conservative, anti-labor bastion.  A railroad and river transportation hub for the upper-Midwest breadbasket and a significant manufacturing city, the local elites organized in the Citizens Alliance in conjunction—or collusion—with local authorities long kept the city relatively free of unions except for some traditionally well-behaved craft unions, members of the American Federation of Labor (AFL).  All of that began to change dramatically when a successful strike by Teamsters Local 574 closed down sixty-five of the city’s sixty-seven coal yards during the midst of one of the notoriously brutal Minnesota winters earlier that year causing the employers to capitulate and recognize the union in only three days.

Impressed, drivers, warehousemen, and dock workers in other industries flocked to the victorious union setting up a city-wide cartage strike which began on May 16.  Superbly organized, the strike effectively shut down the city with a system of peaceful and unarmed flying squad pickets.  

                                             

                                                            A Teamster Local 574 dues button issued during the strike.

The character of the strike changed dramatically on May 21 when a mixed flying squad of men and women pickets was lured into to a trap and severely beaten.  That transformed the walkout into a general strike with the support of even the Building Trades and Central Labor Council and workers in all industries, many of them unorganized, downed tools and joined the strike.  Strikers also armed themselves with saps, clubs, and lengths of pipe determined to battle it out with police and special deputies in a “citizens militia” organized by the Citizen Alliance.  Intensely violent confrontations erupted, and virtual open class warfare gripped the city for months before a stunning union victory.

At the heart of the strike were the Teamsters, nationally one of the largest unions in the AFL but gripped by the conservative leadership of President Daniel Tobin who opposed most use of the strike.  The union’s members had a reputation for solidarity in respecting the picket lines of other unions’ strikes.  But strict allegiance to craft unionism meant that divers, warehouse men, and dockworkers were divided into small locals by occupation and also by industry—ice deliverymen, milk drivers, movers, general cartage divers, etceach in separate locals.  It was a perfect recipe for a weak movement.

In Minneapolis however, Local 574 had a somewhat unusual and loose charter from the international union covering general cartage, which new leadership quickly defined as all traffic that moved by truck or wagon.  In 1933 the local had only about 100 dues paying members and it represented workers at only a handful of employers.  But the new leadership changed that.

Vincent R. (RayDunne, his brothers Miles and Grant, and Swedish-born Carl Skoglund were all veteran unionists and former members of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW).  They were conditioned to think of labor struggle as class war and had a commitment to industrial rather than craft unionism.  Elected to leadership in Local 574 they chose immediately to ignore the strictures against strikes by the national leadership and to make the local a union of all workers engaged in transportation, delivery, and support across industries.  When unorganized workers in other industries joined the fight they were readily welcomed in the spirit of the One Big Union in which they had all cut their teeth.


Local Teamster leaders were militant former IWW members, dedicated industrial unionists, and Trotskyist Left Communists.

But all of them were also Communists.  In fact, they were leading members of the Partys Left Opposition which recently split after the purge of Leon Trotsky and founded the Communist League of America (CLP) which would later become the Trotskyist Socialist Workers Party (SLP).  The prominence of the Trotskyists in the leadership of the strike, which soon included young Farrell Dobbs who had joined as a rank-and-file coal driver in 1933 and quickly rose to prominence during the strike, has always colored views of the history of the epic struggle in Minnesota.

It would cause many labor historians sympathetic to the role of Communist Party militants in the development of industrial unionism and the Congress of Industrial Unions (CIO) to downplay the Minneapolis General strike in comparison with other important militant strikes in 1934—the West Coast Longshoremens Strike let by CP member Harry Bridges and the Toledo Auto Lite Strike led by the independent socialist American Workers Party.  Many AWP members later that year joined the CLP, but others switched to the CP giving it some bragging rights in the Toledo struggle.

The Teamsters look on the Minneapolis strike as the pivot point in their history, transforming them into a modern, militant union and eventually leading to their domination not just of local delivery services, but cross-country trucking.  The Trotskyist leadership developed in Minneapolis was key to the spread and success of the union with new locals growing up side by side with SWP chapters.  But by the early ‘40s Teamster national leadership purged the Trotskyists and most other radicals including Dobbs, who had become young Jimmy Hoffa’s mentor and right-hand man.  After that they rewrote their history of the Minneapolis strike to minimize or erase the Trotskyist leadership.  


Farrell Dobbs was a young rank-and-file driver during the 1934 Minneapolis strike and later rose in Teamster leadership, was purged and a Red, and became the head of the Trotskyist Socialist Workers Party,  His history is controversial and frankly partisan, but it is the best detailed day to day account of the struggle and a major American working class classic.

After emerging from prison for violating the Smith Act, which made it illegal to “conspire to advocate the violent overthrow of the United States Government,” Dobbs became a major figure and eventually leader of the SWP.  His histories of the Minneapolis strike and the spread of the union, Teamster Rebellion and Teamster Power tried to build a mythology around the Trotskyist leadership and resulted in a backlash by other labor historians.

Of course, conservative historians have always discounted the significance of the virtual rebellion in Minneapolis or characterized it as evidence of a Communist conspiracy to incite violence and subvert order.  It is in their interest to minimize, if not erase, such a major event from the public memory.

Whatever you think of the Trotskyists, the story of the Teamsters and the Minneapolis general strike is important to working people and replete with valuable lessons.

Tomorrow—we begin to examine all of the events in detail.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Pity the Pomo--The Bad Day on Bloody Island Was One More Massacre of Peaceful Native People

  

Pomo survivors of the massacre on the island in Clear Lake were gunned down by militia men as they swam to shore.  The few who got away were hunted along the Russian River and 50 more were killed over the next days.

May 15, 1850 was a very bad day for the Pomo, a Native American people from northern California that you have probably never heard of.  Because no one wants to talk about them, or what happened that gruesome day when Lt. Nathaniel Lyon led troopers of the U.S. First Dragoons Regiment, against a village on an island in Clear Lake.  Sketchy and contradictory accounts claim that between 100 and 400 mostly women, children, and old men were killed and another 50 or more were run down and slaughtered as they tried to escape along the Russian River.

Of course massacres of Native villages were not even then something new.  They were, you should pardon the expression, as American as apple pie.  And before the first protest, let me acknowledge that there were also massacres of white settlers committed by various tribes.  What should probably be called the 400-year-long War of the Conquest of North America was brutal and terrible—a conquering people on one side and a desperate, doomed defense on the other, quarter not asked and seldom given. 

The trouble is after all these years, even after school textbooks have taken a more sympathetic view of the native resistance, popular culture has kept the memories of hair-raising, bloody Red savages committing unspeakable atrocities on nice settler women in gingham and sunbonnets and their innocent, adorable blond children alive and well.  Burning villages and troopers tossing papooses on their saber tips, not so much.

And it is also important to remember that the cycle of massacre and mayhem generally started with the invader/settlers.  Way back in 1637 in the Pequot WarEnglish colonists and Mohegan and Narragansett allies, launched a night attack on a large Pequot village on the Mystic River in present-day Connecticut, where they burned the inhabitants in their homes and killed all survivors, for total fatalities of about 600–700.  And the village that was attacked had not even been involved in the minor depredations in Massachusetts Bay which started the war.

That also started a pattern.  White militia and later regular troops could not tell “good Indians” from “Bad Indians.”  They all looked alike to them, and frankly they did not give a damn.  Time after time peaceful bands, even allies, were attacked and brutalized because they were easy to find and at hand.  Notable instances include the massacre of the Praying Indians—a village of Lenape (a/k/a Delaware) who had been converted by pacifist Moravian missionaries—by Pennsylvania Militia in 1782 and the infamous Sand Creek Massacre by the Colorado Volunteer Cavalry who attacked and massacred Black Kettlepeaceful Cheyenne who were flying an American flag in 1864.  The Bloody River Massacre, as we shall see, fit into the same familiar pattern.

Since native warriors were notoriously hard for militias or Army troops to engage in the field—they tended to break up into small groups after raids and melt into whatever wilderness was available—settler troops early on began seeking out villages which, even if hostile were usually empty of warriors.  That became pretty much standard U.S. Army operational tactics in the Indian warfare after General William Henry Harrison and his troops pushed deep into Shawnee territory to attack Prophetstown, seat of Tecumsehand the Shawnee Prophet Tenskwatawas confederacy.  The idea was to disrupt the food supply of the tribes and to force them to come to the defense of their homes.  After destroying several impotent villages, Harrison finally fell upon the main camp of hostiles defending Prophetstown and decisively whooped them at the Battle of Tippecanoe.  After that searches and attacks on villages became standard operating procedure.  Again, the hapless Pomo fell victim to the same strategy.

The Pomo had one of the most unfortunate of histories.  At the dawn of the 19th Century it is estimated about 10,000 of the loosely related peoples now lumped together as Pomo lived in a broad swath of northern California as hunter/gatherers and fishers who also traded with neighboring tribes for items using the magnesium-rich red clay of the region which was used in making beads, dyes, and face paint.  Not politically united, they lived in small bands or clans and spoke 7 related, but mutually unintelligible languages.

They had largely escaped the slavery and misery of the Mission Indian further south.  But as Europeans pressed more deeply into north, they came under pressure.  They were attacked by Russian fur traders who wanted to force them to abandon their traditional hunting and fishing to trap for trade goods.  Then the Dons of California began to arrive with pieces of paper from a far-off king giving them huge land grants.

Without central leadership and lacking a well-developed warrior culture the Pomo around the Big Valley Region and Clear Lake, were easily turned into semi-enslaved peons on Salvador Vallejovast 1844 grant from MexicoRancho Lupyomi.  The men were turned into vaqueros as Vallejo and his brother introduced beef cattle to the range.  Women were discouraged from traditional fishing and foraging and some were turned into house servants.  Life was hard, and punishments cruel, but it was about to get worse.  Much worse.

  

When engaging in seasonal fishing in Norther California lakes, Pomo bands built tule reed structures like this.  Elsewhere they built a variety of crude huts out of whatever materials were available.

That same year American settlers aided by explorer and U.S. Army Captain John C. Frémont acting on his own authority established the Bear Flag Republic.  Meanwhile the United States and Mexico went to war.  Commodore David Stockton and the Pacific Squadron arrived to claim California and General Stephen Kearny led 150 Dragoons overland from Kansas via Santa Fe, New Mexico.  After several battles with the Californios, California was secured and later ceded by Mexico to the U.S. in the treaty of Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.

Under the circumstances American settlers Andrew Kelsey and Charles Stone were able to force a purchase of a large number of Vallejo’s cattle and established a ranchero of their own in 1847.   With a handful of hired men, they raided Pomo villages, rounded up men women and children, and made them build a stockade in which to imprison themselves.  All arms, down to simple knives and hatchets, as well as fishing gear were confiscated.  With their wives and children held hostage, the men were once again used as vaqueros—and in back breaking labor building the grand hacienda and outbuildings, digging wells, erecting fencing, and other work.  Women and girls were called to the house as sex slaves for the masters and beaten, sometimes to death if they resisted.

Rations for the enslaved Pomo were four cups of crudely milled flour a day—no meat or protein. It was hardly enough to survive on and soon many were dying of starvation and disease.  Then, things got even worse.

In 1849 Kelsey took 50 of the Pomo men as laborers on expedition to the new gold fields to try back-breaking placer mining.  Kelsey got sick.  His claim did not produce and in desperation he sold all of his slave’s rations to other miners.  Most of the Pomo starved to death and only two made it back with Kelsey.

The remaining Pomo at the hacienda were becoming desperate.  Under the leadership of Chief Augustine two of the men stole Stone’s horse in an attempt to kill a cow and smuggle the meat back to the stockade.  But in a thunderstorm, Stone’s horse ran off.  Knowing that the enraged Stone would wreck vengeance, horrible vengeance, Augustine had his wife, a maid in the hacienda, pour water on all of Kelsey and Stone’s gunpowder rendering it useless.  At dawn the men armed only with a handful of hastily made and crude bows, cudgels, farm tools, and stones attacked the house in force.  Kelsey quickly fell with an arrow and died.  Stone tried to escape by a window and to run for cover.  It is said that Augustine personally found him and crushed his head with a rock.

The Pomo knew there would be trouble.  They hastily gathered all of the provisions they could carry, rounded up the families, and fled north hoping to join up with other Pomo bands.


                                 Nathaniel Lyon as a Brigadier General and Commander of the Department of  the West during the Civil War.

Word of the killing quickly reached a U.S. garrison and Lt. Lyons set out in pursuit.  He got word of a large Pomo fishing camp on an island known to the Indians as Badon-napo-ti (Island Village), at the north end of Clear Lake.  Lyons assumed the fugitive Pomo had headed there.  He was wrong, those Pomo steered clear of the lake as they made a dash north towards Oregon Territory.  The Pomo on the island did not even speak the same language and were, as far as they knew, at peace with the United States. Most were Habematolel Pomo of Upper Lake and from a band from the Robinson Rancheria.  Most able bodied men were off hunting in the north leaving the fishing and drying of the catch to their women and children.

When Lyon arrived on the scene he recognized that the Island afforded the Indians some natural protection.  He quickly sent to the Arsenal at Benicia where he obtained two small brass field guns and two whale boats that were hauled overland.  Outfitting each boat with the cannon in the prow, he launched them in secret from the southern shore of the lake.  Meanwhile highly undisciplined mounted militia joined his Dragoons.

On the morning of the attack Lyon opened fire on the village from the boats attacking the south end of the island.  That naturally sent the inhabitants of the camp stampeding in a panic to the north of the island where they were cut down by musket fire from the wooded shore.  The cavalry then splashed across the shallow water and began cutting down everyone they encountered with saber slashes.  Babies and small children were bayonetted by dismounted troops and their bodies thrown into the water.

The Army encountered virtually no resistance.  Lyon reported three light injuries.  Almost every living person on the island was killed.  Many of those who tried to escape in the water were shot as they swam or drowned.  A few made it to shore and a desperate run for safety.

One six year old girl, Ni’ka managed to escape the slaughter by hiding under the water and breathing through tulle reed.  Later known as Lucy More she became a folk hero to her people and her descendants continue to work to memorialize the massacre.

Lyon ordered his men to pursue the escapees and as noted over the next few days they hunted down and killed about 50 survivors.  A general war against all native people in the north continued for months with members of any and all tribes ruthlessly killed whenever they were encountered.  Large numbers of usually drunken Militia did most of this dirty work, but the Dragoons also participated.

Lyon, already cited for bravery in the Mexican War for capturing enemy cannon in the Battle for Mexico City, was proclaimed a hero all over again and his advancement in the Army was assured.  He was soon sent to Bloody Kansas where conflicts with Missouri Border Ruffians made him an ardent anti-slavery man and loyal Republican.  In 1861 as commander of the StLouis Armory, he kept the powder and weapons there out of the hands of the pro-Confederate state government, secretly armed Republican Wide Awake militia, and attacked Governors Jackson’s camp, marching his prisoners through St. Louis.  He also ordered his troops to fire on rioting southern sympathizers killing 75.

For his ruthless efficiency, Lyon was promoted to Brigadier General and made Commander of the Department of the West, relieving the incompetent but politically well-connected John C. Frémont.  Lyon at the head of Federal regulars and four quickly mustered and armed regiments of loyal Unionist Missouri Volunteers pursued Jackson and his troops across the state.  After forcing the Rebels out of the capital of Jefferson City, he beat them at the Battle of Booneville, forcing them to retreat to the southwest.

On August 10, 1861 he caught up to the force of the Missouri Militia and Confederate troops under the command of Ben McCulloch near Springfield at the Battle of Wilsons Creek. Lyon was killed during the battle while trying to rally his outnumbered soldiers. Although the battle was a technical Confederate victory, it broke the power of the south to operate conventional forces in the state and kept Missouri in the Union. That made Lyon one of the first great martyr heroes of the Union.

Keeping the noble hero’s reputation untarnished only partly explains how the Massacre at Bloody Island was quickly stripped from California’s collective memory.

As for the scattered Pomo survivors of the nasty little war, they lived on in small bands, many of them back in virtual slavery to local rancheros.  Later, despite pleas for a unified reservation with enough land to hunt and fish, the local bands were assigned small Rancherias on marginal land.  They were among the poorest of California Indians, and that is saying a lot.  They survived on the tiny plots through much of the 20th Century but current policy aims to move them to urban areas.


As brief as it is, the original Bloody Island historical maker was riddled with errors and glorified the massacre as a battle.  Protesters have smeared the marker with red paint in protest.  A more historically correct marker was erected near the passing highway in 2005 by the state of California and the decedents of a Pomo girl who survived the massacre by hiding in the lake and breathing through a tule reed.

As for the battle ground, Clear Lake was drained and “reclaimed” for agriculture in the 1930’s.  The island is now a mound rising from the dusty lake bed.  It is a California State Park.  In 1942 an outfit called the Native Sons of the Golden West erected a historical marker a third of a mile off of U.S. Highway 20 noting that it was the site of a Battle between Cavalry under “Captain” Lyon and Indians under Chief Augustine.  It attracted few visitors as the entire episode goes unmentioned in California history texts.


 The new state marker.

Just to set matters straight, however, a second plaque was erected in 2005 by the Department of Parks and Recreation and the Lucy Moore Foundation, telling the story in greater, and more accurate detail.