Studs in his element--a Bug House Square rally in 1989. |
Note: Portions
of this entry were adapted from a post from May 1, 2008, the day after Studs
Terkel died.
Today marks the centennial
of the birth of Lewis Terkel in
1912. But Louis evaporated long ago,
about 1938. The Jewish Brooklyn-to-Chicago transplant who found his true
education among the patrons of his parents’ working class Wells-Grand Hotel and at the nearby free speech Mecca of Bug House Square adopted the name of
the pugnacious Irish anti-hero of James T. Farrell’s novel. And
Studs he was ever after.
They are celebrating
today, fittingly enough, at the Newberry
Library in the heart of Stud’s old neighborhood and overlooking Bug House
Square itself. The program begins at 6
PM with a reception starting a half an hour earlier. If you are in the neighborhood, drop by. I wish I could. Here is what they say about the festivities.
Celebrate the centenary of Studs Terkel with writers,
activists, reporters, historians, and artists Terkel inspired. Alex Kotlowitz, Alison Cuddy, Penelope
Rosemont, Alma Washington as Lucy Parsons, Steve Mosqueda and Sean
Benjamin, David Roediger, and Ed Sadlowski will reflect on how this
expansive and generous public figure moved them and shaped their work.
Heather Radke,
a freelance audio recorder, will share clips of people who have shared their
own memories of Studs Terkel. Bucky
Halker and Jon Langford will
provide music. Come and remember Studs together, with good stories, music,
and food.
Co-sponsors include the Illinois Labor History Society, the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame, the Chicagoan, Haymarket Pub and Brewery, the Pocket
Guide to Hell, Chicago Publishes,
Charles Kerr Publishing, Chicago Metro History Fair, the Jane Addams Hull-House Museum, the Swedish Bakery, and the
Newberry Library.
This program is free and open to the public; no
reservations are required.
It seems like every breathing human being in Chicago
has a Studs Terkel connection and story.
Here is mine.
It was the summer of 1969. The original Mayor Daley was pursing an aggressive policy of urban removal, as activists called it,
bull dozing vast swaths of neighborhoods, including the rapidly changing
neighborhoods on the North Side. After a block of working class housing and
neighborhood store fronts at Halstead and
Armitage was razed, the city
announced plans to allow a private developer to build a swanky, indoor private
tennis club.
Neighborhood groups led by the Young Lords Organization, a radicalized Puerto Rican street gang allied with the Chicago Black Panthers and community
organizing factions of the SDS sprang
into action. After contentious meetings
with city officials, the last at near-by Waller
High School, turned confrontational complete with police arrests and
beatings, community members seized the plot of land one night and announced
plans to construct a park molded on the famous Berkley People’s Park built the year before. Hundreds of people were mobilized moving
rubble with their bare hands, shovels and wheelbarrows and laying out future
playgrounds and gardens. Protestors
slept on the site to protect it from seizure by “the pigs.”
I was a brand new member of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), whose Chicago Branch
shared offices with the General
Organization Headquarters in space over an Assyrian restaurant just four blocks north of People’s Park on
Halstead. I helped bring the branch into
the coalition building the park. Besides
joining in the physical labor and sleeping over some nights, I was asked to
call local labor folks to secure trucks to haul debris out and topsoil in and
to try and get some heavy equipment.
Amazingly, I was able to do so. I
even got a guy to drive a grader over to help scrape and level the land, “to
hell with what the boss thinks,” he told me.
Soon I was also helping dealing with the press, who
seemed more comfortable talking to “that hippy kid with the cowboy hat and
goatee,” than scary, purple bereted Young Lords.
Two or three nights into the excitement, a small guy
chomping a cigar and carrying a bulky portable tape recorder showed up. I didn’t know who he was. He didn’t look like the regular press—not
even the slovenly members of the daily press in that pre-journalism school
era. He looked—and sounded—more like the
guy at the corner stool of every shot-and-a-beer joint in Chicago. Someone brought him over. “This is Studs Terkel. He’d like to talk to you.”
We sat around a make shift fire sitting on chunks of
broken concrete. We talked for nearly
two hours while young guys from the Lords huffed typewriter cleaning fluid out
of paper bags and passed 4-for-a-dollar quarts of Meister Brau. Studs asked
questions. Lots of them. He leaned in close, eager for the
answers. He listened. He nodded.
He asked more. It was the best,
deepest interview I ever gave in my life.
Studs was excited by the project, like he was any time “the little guy
stands up.”
A few weeks later, I met him again at street party/pig
roast hosted by the Young Lords outside their converted church headquarters on
Armitage. The crowd was loud but festive
that Sunday afternoon. The police
presence heavy and menacing. Studs had
his recorder handy. He introduced me to
his wife Ida. I asked her to dance. I jerked around to the hot Latin rhythms like
a spastic Irishman. I don’t think I
actually hurt Ida, but it must have been close thing. She laughed.
He laughed. Ever after when he
would see me he would call me “the kid who danced with Ida.” Not long after that dance the police, as was
the custom in those days, dispersed the crowd with tear gas and night sticks.
We saw each other over the years. At least once I was an in-studio guest on his
WFMT radio program, talking
about the IWW. Mostly we saw each other
at rallies and protests, left wing social events, on grape boycott picket lines.
I particularly remember a 1971 Six
Hour Day Rally on May Day, where
he spoke with passion from a wagon on the site of the speaker’s platform at the
Haymarket rally of 1886.
Sometimes we saw each other at periodic attempts to
revive the free speech traditions at Bug House Square. It was a thrill for me to mount the soap box
with Studs and a dwindling handful of old time Bug House Square orators in the
audience.
Of course, I read his books—great books because he knew
how to get out of the way and let real people tell real stories. After Will the Circle Be Unbroken: Reflections of
Death, Rebirth and Hunger for Faith was published I was pleased to be
invited to be one of the readers of selections from the book as part of a
special service at the Congregational
Unitarian Church in Woodstock.
When he died Studs’s and Ida’s, who had preceded him in
1999, ashes were mixed and scattered at Bug House Square. “It's against the law,” he told an
interviewer “Let ‘em sue us."
I will close, with Studs’s own choice for
his epitaph, “Curiosity did not kill this cat.”
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