When
workers went on strike against the Empire
Zinc Corporation in Grant County,
New Mexico on October 17, 1950 it may have seemed like just another action
in almost 60 years of bitter struggle by hard rock miners and allied workers in
the west. But the bitter strike, which
dragged on for 14 more months took place against a backdrop of anti-communist
hysteria, government suppression, racism, and gender decimation would likely be
forgotten today except that it was documented in a classic film that had its
own epic battle to see the light of day.
Almost
everyone called the strikers Mexicans and
continue to do so to this day, even in histories sympathetic to the
workers. In fact although most were Spanish speaking, few had
immigrated. By in large they belonged to
communities that had lived in New Mexico from colonial days. In the film Salt
of the Earth based on the strike the narrator, based on one of the
striker’s wives, put it this way:
...I am a miner’s
wife. This is our home. The house is not ours. But the flowers... the flowers
are ours. This is my village. When I was a child, it was called San Marcos. The
Anglos changed the name to Zinc Town. Zinc Town, New Mexico, U.S.A. Our roots
go deep in this place, deeper than the pines, deeper than the mine shaft…
The
name of the real town was Silver City,
named after an early mining boom. The
workers were members of the United Mine,
Mill, and Smelt Workers, commonly called simply Mine and Mill. The union was
founded in 1893 as the Western
Federation of Miners and had been on the front lines of often bloody
battles against copper, silver, gold and other metal mine operators
from Montana, Idaho, Colorado, Utah,
Nevada, Arizona and other western states.
The
organization was a pioneer of industrial
union organization and early on was deeply radicalized by the common cause
made by the eastern trusts and cartels with local, state, and even Federal authorities in trying to smash
organizing and strikes by violence and repression. In 1905 William
D. “Big Bill” Haywood other leaders helped found the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) and the Western Federation formed the bulk of the new union’s
original membership.
Internal
disputes caused the Western Federation to drop out and return to independent
status by 1907, although Haywood and many others stayed with the IWW. Over the next decades both unions would
continue to organize metal miners and fight strikes that often resembled open
war.
But
the union had largely been eclipsed by the IWW and was in decline just before American entry into World War I. It changed its name Mine and Mill in
1916. Although it escaped some of the
repression that fell onto the IWW in the post war Red Scare, it limped along until the Depression. In 1934, after
re-claiming its old base in Butte,
Montana the union began to aggressively expand across the west and into new
territories in Ontario and even in
the South. It also organized smelters in New Jersey.
This burst of energy was largely due to the leadership of radicals,
some of them former Wobblies but
most openly members of the Communist
Party. The union became one of the
founders of the Congress of Industrial
Organizations (CIO),
However
another war ushered in another Red Scare.
Despite pressures from John L.
Lewis, the conservative leader of the CIO, the union refused to dump its
Communist leadership. It also refused to
stop organizing minority workers—Blacks in
the South and Hispanics across the Southwest. It encouraged the United Steel Workers and the United
Auto Workers to raid Mill and Mine shops and encouraged use of racial
resentment against minority workers to do so.
Pressure
increased after the Taft-Hartley Act was
passed in 1947 which required unions to sign an anti-communist pledge and purge their leadership of Reds. In 1950, not long before the strike began,
the CIO formally expelled the Mine and Mill Workers.
That
meant that the New Mexico strike would not have the customary support of other
unions. In fact, other unions were
encouraged to cross picket lines.
The
issues in the strike were equal pay for the majority Spanish speaking miners
with the minority of whites, mostly those in the skilled trades and safety in a
mine notorious for repeated injuries and death.
Some of the white miners crossed the picket line, though others remained
loyal to their union and fellow workers.
Predictably
the strike was marked by mass picketing and regular arrests by local
authorities operating openly on behalf of the owners. In addition, owners sought to have strikers’
families evicted from the shoddy company owned housing in town.
As
the strike dragged on, the mine owners sought relief under the Taft-Hartley
Act. On June 12, 1951an injunction was
granted forbidding strikers from picketing.
Facing the collapse of the strike, which would have meant the black
listing of their husbands and their families’ eviction from their home, the strikers’
wives at a dramatic meeting, demanded that their husbands let them replace them
on the picket line. Resistance was
fierce. Cultural norms were macho and women were expected to be
both subservient and stay at home.
Marriages were strained.
But
with few alternatives, the women took their place on the line. The strike held. Intimidation did not stop. Many of the women were arrested. Famously, they were crammed into tiny cells
in the county jail with their children. But
they would not relent. The longer the
strike lasted, the more militant they grew.
And so did the admiration or them by their once reluctant husbands.
The
women’s participation also shifted some of the demands of the strike to include
improvement to the appalling living conditions in company housing. White workers had indoor plumbing. Spanish speaking workers had none. Many did not even have electricity. Sanitation and safety improvement in housing
became key issues.
Against
all odds, the company finally capitulated on January 24, 1952. The strikers won most of their demands.
The
dramatic story would have faded to obscurity if a black listed Hollywood writer had not stumbled upon the women’s
picket line while vacationing at a near-by dude
ranch. Returning to Californian he rounded up other black
listed artists to undertake a fictionalized film about the strike.
Paul Jarrico was the writer
who recruited others for his vision and became producer of Salt of the Earth.
Writer Michael Wilson, who had won an Oscar for A Place in the Sun, would
have to work anonymously if at all for the next ten years working on films like
The
Court Martial of Billy Mitchell, Friendly Persuasion, The Bridge Over the River
Kwai, and Lawrence of Arabia unaccredited.
Director
Herbert J. Biberman was one of the famous Hollywood
Ten and had served time in prison for refusing to “name names.”
Wilson
produced a draft of the script after extensive interviews with the
participants. It was then given to the
strikers for comments and the final drafts reflected their concerns and sensitivities. Interestingly, the strikers themselves wanted
greater attention paid to the family struggles to come to grips with assertive
women.
It
was decided to cast actual participants as far as possible. In the end only five professional actors were
used, the best known was black listed Will
Geer, who played the Sheriff. Mexican actress Rosaura Revueltas was cast in the central role of Esperanza, the pregnant wife of a
striker who also narrated the film. Real
life local union president Juan Chacón
was cast as her chief union steward husband.
Lead union organizer Clinton
Jencks and his wife Virginia played
versions of themselves.
From
the beginning filming in New Mexico attracted as much opposition as had the
strikers themselves. The crew was run
out of the originally selected location by death threats. Harassment of the cast and crew—and of the
union miners themselves was constant. At
least one union family had their house burned down. The local American Legion organized vigilante
attacks, including firing live ammunition at the company on location.
On
February 24, 1953 Representative Donald
L. Jackson (R-Ca.), a member of
the House Committee on Un-American
Activities (HUAC), bitterly
denounced the film as the bidding of Communist Russia in a widely publicized speech on the House floor.
The
next day Revueltas was arrested and deported on the flimsy grounds that her visa had not been properly
stamped. Although most of her scenes
were in the can, some scenes had to be shot with a double at a distance and her
narration had to be recorded in Mexico and smuggled into the states.
After
on site photography was ended, post production was a problem with all of Hollywood’s facilities denied
them. Black listed editors, sound
dubbers, and other crafts people had to work in secret in their homes or, at
great personal peril, in un-used studio facilities late at night. The raw footage and prints were actively
being hunted by both Federal authorities and the Studios themselves hoping to
prove their loyalty. The reels were
hidden in a shack.
And
the trouble did not end when the final cut was made. Producers found it almost impossible to
distribute and show the film. Only a
handful of theater agreed to show it and most of those withdrew under pressure. The AFL
Projectionists Union ordered its members not to show the movie. In the end Salt of the Earth was only shown on 13 of America’s more than
13,000 screens.
It
fared better in both Eastern and Western Europe where it played to
appreciative audiences, rave review, and garnered film festival awards.
Shortly
after the film was released Clinton Jencks was charged by a Federal Grand Jury for lying when he signed a
Taft-Hartley oath in 1950. He was
convicted in 1954 and sentenced to prison.
Even his union abandoned him. In 1957
his conviction was overturned in a landmark case on the ground that the
prosecution had not shared exculpatory evidence with the defense. Jenck’s was never able to return to union organizing
but became a college teacher.
By
the 1960’s writer Wilson and other victim of the black list were able to work once
again under their own names. The Black
List was looked on increasingly as black mark on both Hollywood and the nation.
In
the ‘60’s 16 mm prints of Salt of the Earth began to be circulated
in union halls, on college campuses, and especially among Chicano and women’s
organizations for which it was both an inspiration and a revelation. Soon revival houses were putting it up,
finally, on the big screen.
In
the 1980’s the film was intentionally allowed to go into the public domain. Copies circulated freely on VHS and latter on DVD. It can be viewed in its
entirety here on YouTube.
Salt of the Earth is now hailed as
a classic. It is one of the very few
films with a 100% positive rating on Rotten
Tomatoes. In 1992 the Library of Congress selected it for
preservation in the National Film
Registry for being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.”
Once again, a great, historically accurate & acute article! Thanks for sharing your knowledge & talents so freely.
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