Police and Teamster pickets face off at warehouse terminal during the 1934 strike in Minneapolis. The truck did not move. |
Note: The
epic story of the events in Minneapolis in 1934 is too much for one entry. We will cover it in two parts.
Before
1934 Minneapolis, Minnesota was a conservative, anti-labor bastion. A railroad
and river transportation hub for the upper-Midwest bread basket and a significant manufacturing city, the local elites
organized in the Citizens Alliance in
conjunction—or collusion—with local authorities had 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. The character of the
strike changed dramatically on May 21 when a mixed flying squad of men and women pickets were 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
confrontation 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, warehousemen, and dockworkers were divided
into small local by occupation and also by industry—ice deliverymen, milk
drivers, movers, general cartage
divers, etc. each 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 its represented workers at only a handful of employers. But new leadership changed that.
Vincent R, (Ray) Dunne and Carl Skoglund, leaders of Teamster Local 574 and avowed Trotskyists. |
Vincent R. (Ray) Dunne, 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.
But
all of them were also Communists. In fact they were leading members of the
Party’s Left Opposition which had
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.
Farrell Dobbs rose from the rank and file to leadership in the Teamster strike and eventually became head of the Socialist Workers Party. |
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 Longshoremen’s 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
with 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 to 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 ‘40’s
Teamster national leadership purged the Trotskyists and most other radicals including Dobbs, who became
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.
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 examine all of the events in detail.
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