As strikers and their families try to flee the tear gas and gun fire they stumble over the dead and wounded only to be beaten senseless by the Chicago Police |
Note: This
is becoming one of those annual posts.
But that’s all right. The story
needs to be told and retold. Never
forget.
It was a hot, muggy day. But the sun was shining brilliantly. Due to the week old strike and the Memorial Day holiday,
the giant mills nearby were not
belching their customary heavy smoke. Maybe those unaccustomed dazzling skies
contributed to the air of a holiday outing as steel workers, their wives in their finest summer dresses, and
their children converged by bus, trolley, auto, foot on Sam’s Place, an erstwhile dime-a-dance
hall, turned into a makeshift soup kitchen and strike headquarters on Chicago’s
Southeast Side less than a mile from the Republic Steel mill.
It was May 30, 1937. The
Steel Workers Organizing Committee (SWOC),
the pet project of John L. Lewis’s
Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO),
had shocked the nation earlier in the year by bringing industry behemoth U.S. Steel under contract by
infiltrating the company unions and
having them vote to affiliate. Faced
with rising demand as there seemed to be a recovery under way from the depths
of the Depression on one hand and a
popular, labor friendly administration in Washington
on the other, the nation’s dominant steel company quietly surrendered.
Buoyed by the success, organizers
turned their attention to Little Steel,
the smaller, independent operators in Pittsburgh,
Youngstown, Chicago and other grimy
industrial cities. But the bosses of Youngstown Sheet and Steel, Republic,
Bethlehem, Jones and Laughlin and others were a tougher bunch than the Wall Street stock manipulators that ran
the huge rump of the old Steel Trust. In fact they had nothing but contempt for the
monopolists, their old business
enemies, and their “weakling” attitude toward unionization. Little Steel vowed to fight. Tom
Girdler, President of Republic, had said that he would go back to hoeing
potatoes before he met the strikers’ demands.
The ferocity of the opposition to
unionization was not just empty rhetoric either. They had shown they meant business in blood
on more than one occasion. Famously in Youngstown, Ohio back in 1916 strikers accompanied by their
wives and children marched from the slums to the gates of the Sheet and Tube mill to keep strike
breakers from reporting to work. Inside
the gates a small army of private security forces responded by throwing dozens
of tear gas bombs. As the thick,
poisonous haze hung over the workers obscuring their vision, guards unleashed
volley after volley of rifle fire directly into their ranks. The exact toll may never be known as workers
were afraid to bring the wounded to medical attention. At least three were killed, probably twice
that many including women. Twenty-seven
injuries were confirmed, but strikers made oral reports of more than a
hundred. Enraged as the dead and wounded
lay bleeding on the ground the strikers attacked the guards with stones and
bricks and perhaps a pistol shot or two before retreating to town.
In rioting over the next two days,
workers burned much of the town’s business district only to be eventually
crushed by Ohio National Guard troops. The memory of those events was still fresh to
workers more than twenty years later.
Especially when Little Steel bosses quietly let it be known that they
had been stockpiling armories for years and were ready, even eager to repeat
the carnage.
The USWOC had called their national
strike against Little Steel a week earlier.
In Chicago it had been marred by predictable violence, particularly on
the part of the Chicago Police
Department which had a long history of being used as armed strike
breakers. Beatings and arrests on the
picket lines were occurring daily. Some
strike leaders had been kidnapped and held incommunicado. For their part senior police officers were
“subsidized” by corporate bosses who also bought political clout with the usual
campaign contributions and bribes to local officials. They also pledged to reimburse the city for
police over time during the strike. In
addition the still largely Irish
Catholic force was kept inflamed by homilies preached in their parishes
deriding USWOC as “Godless Communists.”
Despite this, moral among the
strikers was high. After only a week
out, families had not yet felt the full pinch of lost incomes and strike soup
kitchens kept them fed. Organizers made
a point of engaging workers’ wives from the beginning, including them in
planning and giving them important support roles. This was critical because many a strike had
been lost in the past when families went hungry and the women urged their men
to return to work.
As the large crowd gathered at Sam’s
Place for the first mass meeting of the strike, vendors plied the crowd with
ice cream, lemonade, and soft drinks.
Meals were passed out from the soup kitchen. Other families munched on sandwiches wrapped
in wax paper brought from home. Many of
the men passed friendly bottles as they settled into a round singing—mostly old
Wobbly songs including Solidarity
Forever and Alfred Hayes’s I
Dreamed I Saw Joe Hill Last Night.
Then came the rousing speeches. Joe
Webber, USWOC’s main organizer pointed his finger at the distant plant. The
plan was to establish the first mass picket at the gates of the Republic
Works. Some workers carried homemade
signs. Organizers passed out hundreds of
pre-printed placards stapled to lathing emblazoned with slogans.
With a sense of a gay holiday parade
the strikers marched away from Sam’s Place behind two American flags singing as
they went one block up the black top and then turned into the wide, flat
prairie that separated them from the distant plant.
Historian/novelist Howard Fast later described the scene.
…snake-like, the line of pickets crossed the meadowland,
singing at first...but then the song died as the sun-drenched plain turned
ominous, as five hundred blue-coated policemen took up stations between the
strikers and the plant. The strikers’ march slowed—but they came on. The police
ranks closed and tightened… now it was to unarmed men and women and children
that a police captain said, “You dirty sons of bitches, this is as far as you
go!”
About two hundred and fifty yards from the plant, the police
closed in on the strikers. Billies and
clubs were out already, prodding, striking, nightsticks edging into women’s
breasts and groins. It was great fun for the cops who were also somewhat
afraid, and they began to jerk guns out of holsters.
“Stand fast! Stand fast!” the line leaders cried. “We got
our right! We got our legal rights to picket!”
The cops said, “You got no rights. You Red bastards, you got
no rights.”
Even if a modern man’s a steelworker, with muscles as close
to iron bands as human flesh gets, a pistol equalizes him with a weakling—and
more than equalizes. Grenades began to sail now; tear gas settled like an ugly
cloud. Children suddenly cried with panic, and the whole picket line gave back,
men stumbling, cursing, gasping for breath. Here and there, a cop tore out his
pistol and began to fire; it was pop, pop, pop at first, like toy favors at
some horrible party, and then, as the strikers broke under the gunfire and
began to run, the contagion of killing ran like fire through the police.
They began to shoot in volleys. It was wonderful sport,
because these pickets were unarmed men and women and children; they could not
strike back or fight back. The cops squealed with excitement. They ran after
fleeing men and women, pressed revolvers to their backs, shot them down and
then continued to shoot as the victims lay on their faces, retching blood. When
a woman tripped and fell, four cops gathered above her, smashing in her flesh
and bones and face. Oh, it was great sport, wonderful sport for gentle, pot-bellied
police, who mostly had to confine their pleasures to beating up prostitutes and
street peddlers—at a time when Chicago was world-infamous as a center of
gangsterism, assorted crime and murder.
And so it went, on and on, until ten were dead or dying and
over a hundred wounded. And the field a bloodstained field of battle. World War
veterans there said that never in France had they seen anything as brutal as
this.
Because workers were afraid to bring
their injured to hospital, the exact casualty count may never be known for
sure. Ten men were confirmed dead. All shot in the back. More than 50 gunshot
wounds were reported. At least a hundred were badly injured, many more with
scrapes, bruises, and turned ankles from police clubs and the panicked stampede
to escape.
Many reporters and photographers
were on the scene. Police confiscated
most of their film. Newsreel cameras
caught the action, but the companies were pressured not to show the footage. The next day, led by the rabidly anti-union Chicago
Tribune, most of the press dutifully recorded that the police had come
under attack by fanatic Reds and had
acted in self-defense.
Although covered in the labor press,
the nation as a whole was kept in the dark about what had happened. Even the workers supposed friend Franklin D. Roosevelt, pretty much
accepted the official account and told reporters that “the majority of people
are saying just one thing, ‘A plague on both your houses.’”
A Cook County Coroner’s Jury ruled the deaths that day as
“justifiable homicide.” Not only was no
action taken against any of the police involved that day, but senior officers
were commended and promoted.
The truth about what happened was
very nearly suppressed, as so many atrocities committed against working people
had been. But a single newsreel
cameraman saved the footage he shot from the roof of his car. Some of the photographers on the scene
retained their shots. The stills and the
moving pictures were placed on exhibit during the hearing on Republic Steel
held by the subcommittee of the Senate
Committee on Education and Labor almost a year later. A shocked nation saw for itself the
senseless, unprovoked brutality of the police.
As for the strike, it dragged on
through the summer, as did regular violence on picket lines. Then on July 19th it was Ladies Day on the picket line in front of the Republic Steel mill
in Youngstown. After a company guard
assaulted one of the women, they were pelted with rocks and bottles. Retreating into the plant, in an eerie replay
of the 1916 violence, guards let loose with tear gas and then opened fire, many
firing down on the crowd from virtual snipers’ nests. At least two were killed and dozens wounded. Once again the National Guard was called in
and the town became a virtual occupied territory. The strike was crushed and workers went back.
But the Steel Workers turned to the
new National Labor Relations Board
for help. They complained of unfair
labor practices by the Little Steel companies.
The case took years to resolve.
But in 1942, with another war on and the need for industrial peace, the
NLRB ordered the companies to recognize what had become the United Steel Workers Union.
Today a local union hall stands on
the site of Sam’s Place. The Republic
Mill and other Little Steel plants are closed and pad-locked eyesores. The city seeks desperately to find some way
to redevelop what are now called simply Brown
Fields. Recently the site was
suggested as one possible future home for Barack
Obama’s Presidential Library. USW
members and the Illinois Labor History
Society sometimes gather in remembrance of that terrible day. And the last aging survivors, including some
of the children present, fade away one by one, their stories untold.
The more things change the more they stay the same
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