Exactly
one hundred years ago today two boat
loads of Wobbly militants approached
the dock of a Washington State lumber town.
They were coming to support a
bitter strike by another and competing labor union. For the IWW
militants singing on the deck solidarity with fellow workers was more
important than the union card in
the overalls or dues button on a cap. Before they could tie up, they were met by a
hail of gun fire. At least five were killed—others fell overboard and were never found and more than two score
treated for wounds. When the boats
limped back to Seattle, the survivors were arrested and put on trial
for murder. It was one of the most celebrated outrages of a bloody era of open class warfare.
The
Centennial is being marked by several events. The city
of Everett, which once held up the Sherriff
and his posse of special deputies and company thugs as heroes and later tried to erase
all memory of the event is now embracing a sympathetic commemoration.
Last
night, November 4 Jason Webley and
friends presented 100 Years Ago Tomorrow at the historic Everett Theater. Performers, including organizer Webley, Tomo Nakayama, Kevin Murphy of the Moondoggies
and others created original material based on their research on the events and
the lives of the people involved. Conor Casey, a labor archivist at the University
of Washington noted that the theatrical
concert was an apt medium “The
Wobblies were so about culture creation,”
he said, with songbooks, newspapers, and a long history of street-theatrics and satirical cartoons. “I call it the first punk rock—it’s got that irony,
that sardonic take on the events of the day. It’s current.”
The
Everett Public Library has been
running a series of events since October 15 and continuing to November 15 that
includes films, lectures by labor historians,
presentations on the dangerous craft of shingle weaving, concerts, and art
work. Today at 2 pm, November 5 they will present a screening
of the film Verona, a documentary
by Denise Ohio piecing together the events
of the Everett followed by a a question
and answer session the filmmaker and
historian David Dilgard. On Sunday
at 1 pm they will present The
Trial of Thomas Tracy, a talk by
King County Superior Court Judge Jim Rogers giving a contemporary view of the trial of Thomas Tracy, one of 74 IWW
members arrested for murder in the aftermath of the Massacre, and the only one ever brought to trial. Then at 2:30
the Seattle duo Rebel Voices—Susan Lewis and Janet Stecher—give their passionate,
humorous interpretations of the
songs of the Industrial Workers of the
World. The concert was funded by
the City of Everett Municipal Employees,
AFSCME Local 113.
Of
course modern Wobblies are johnny-on-the-spot with their own event which they hope till
encourage the re-establishment of an IWW presence in the history town. “IWW members in the Northwest and all of our
friends in the union and radical workers movement will
commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Everett Massacre. Meet at the west end of Hewitt Avenue in Everett in front of the Anchor Pub, 1001 Hewitt
at 1:30 pm Saturday. We will lay wreaths and march up the street 7 blocks to the site of the 1916 IWW Free Speech Fight, the destination of the Wobblies aboard the boat.”
Shingle weaving was the highly dangerous craft of cutting cedar shakes using a series of saws and shears. Many men lost fingers or hands in the unguarded equipment. |
Back
in 1916 the town of Everett in the
heart of Washington state’s timber region was not what you would
call a labor friendly town. The city and
surrounding Snohomish County governments
were firmly in the hands of lumber and
commercial interests determined to keep any kind of unionism out of the woods. And they meant to enforce their will with special
deputies and vigilantes organized
by the Commercial Club. Things had been dangerous for unionists for
some time. On November 5 they turned deadly when two boats of Wobblies tried
to dock for a rally in support of striking AFL Shingle weavers.
1916
was a panic year and around the
country construction ground to a near halt and with it demand for lumber. Already tense
with long term efforts of both the American
Federation of Labor and the more militant Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) to organize in the
woods, industry bosses decided
to step up opposition.
The
IWW was especially feared. It had already launched several Free Speech Fights clogging local jails with prisoners for the right to soap box. That soap boxing was an important organizing tool to educate
men and break the power of the job sharks who contracted labor for the remote
lumber camps. Worse, even without formal recognition, IWW job delegates were organizing in the
camps, getting men to lay down their
tools after 8 hours, burning vermin
infested bedding, and abandoning
camps entirely at critical
production times. The union was thus
able to actually enforce working
conditions even where the bosses would not speak to it.
An IWW recruitment cartoon highlighting the crowded and primitive conditions of the lumber camps. |
The
AFL, a union representing skilled
craftsmen and ignoring more manual
casual laborers, had been seen, however
reluctantly by some, as a safety
valve to keep workers out of the notorious Red union. In other areas of
the state the AFL had been able to gain recognition.
Not
around Snohomish County. When Shingle
Weavers went out on strike for
recognition that summer, they discovered just how determined authorities
were to keep them out. On August 19 a
group of strikers were waylaid, ambushed, and trapped on a railway trestle
outside of Everett and many were beaten
severely with clubs, whips, and axe handles.
Relationships were often tense on the official level between the
AFL and IWW. The Seattle based IWW newspaper The Industrial Worker often derided conservative “business unionism”
and poked fun at workers swallowing
the boss’s or AFL lines in Mr. Block
Cartoon and in song lyrics by Joe Hill. But on the principle of solidarity,
there was no division. IWW leadership
and members determined to come to the aid of the besieged Shingle Weavers.
The
Wobblies tried to open a hall in
Everett. Sheriff Donald McRae, who organized
and led the legal posse and
Commercial Club goons, quickly shut it down. On September 11 IWW organizer James Rowan was seized and taken to the woods where he was sadistically beaten.
Responding to calls in the Industrial
Worker for reinforcements over
the next month or so about 400 Wobs drifted
into town in groups only to be met by armed violence and driven away.
On
October 30 about 40 harvest stiffs
arrived from the wheat fields in eastern Washington. They were rounded up as they arrived
on freight trains and taken to a secluded
railway crossing. There they were
made to run a gauntlet over a cattle crossing grating between lines of club wielding deputies. All were gruesomely injured. A committee
of churchmen investigating the incident soon after reported finding the
men’s skin, hair, and blood still sticking to the grating. Their blistering
report and plea to allow free speech to resume in Everett helped
shift public opinion. With the advice of the ministers, the IWW circulated a flyer in the town calling
for a mass protest.
Meanwhile
the Shingle Weaver strike dragged on. In
Seattle IWW organizers decided it was fruitless
and dangerous for small groups to try and come into town by rail. It was decided to rally hundreds on a Sunday
afternoon, bringing them down from the city on chartered boats for a scheduled rally at a local park.
Between
300 and 400 Wobs rallied at the Seattle hall and marched to the water front where they boarded two small steamers, the Verona
carrying the bulk of them and the slower Calista carrying the overflow.
The
Verona
was well ahead when it pulled up to
the dock in Everett. The men on board
were singing the IWW version of Hold
the Fort. Most crowed the rail on the dock side, eager
to get off. Sheriff McRae and 200
deputies met them. Most were on or near
the dock. A few were hidden in a warehouse and others were
on board a harbor tug, the Edison.
The
Verona managed to come into dock and
got one line looped around a bollard.
Sheriff McRae stepped forward,
pistol in hand and asked, “Who’s in
charge there?” In true Wobbly fashion and in the tradition
of Spartacus the men on the boat yelled back, “We all are!” McRae announced he was “upholding the law” and that the men would not be able to land. “The hell we can’t,” was the unanimous response.
Seconds
later a first shot was fired. No source
was ever identified, but almost immediately teen age Hugo Gerlot,
who had shimmied up a mast to act as
a look out, fell dead to the deck. Then
the whole line of gunmen on the dock and
those in the warehouse and on the Edison
unloaded a terrible fusillade.
A sketch of the attack on the Verorna from the Everett City Dock. |
On
board the Verona, the Wobblies
stampeded to the other side of the ship, causing it to nearly capsize and sending several into the waters Puget Sound where
some drowned. Firing kept up for almost 10 minutes. The pilot
house was later found to be peppered
with more than 177 bullet holes. Captain Chance Wiman only saved himself by crouching behind the ship’s
safe.
After
the ship righted itself from the near capsize, below deck engineer Shellgren frantically and blindly put the engines hard astern. The line tying the
ship to the dock finally snapped and
she was able to pull away. Wiman resumed his place at the wheel, but
deputies using hunting rifles
continued to pepper the retreating boat with sniper fire. The Verona met the lagging Calista and frantically signaled her to turn around.
At
least 5 Wobblies were known dead. But no manifest
was kept and many of the men had just arrived in Seattle in response to the
Industrial Worker calls and were unknown to others on board. Several men had gone over board and not all were accounted for. Some scholars of the event believe as many as
12 may actually have died of gunshot wounds or drown and their bodies either never recovered, or hidden by Everett authorities. 27 would be treated for wounds in Seattle,
and others undoubtedly likely suffered minor
wounds untreated by medical personnel.
The death masks oft he five known IWW dead. |
There
was carnage among the attackers, too. Two men in the warehouse died, shot in the back by their comrades in
the wild shooting as no incoming bullet
holes were ever found in the building.
Ashore and on the dock 20, including Sheriff McCrae were injured. Despite claims
that they had been fired upon from
the ship, no evidence of that was ever found. IWW leaders regularly and routinely discouraged members from carrying guns. Even if a handful had been armed with concealed hand guns and managed to get
off a shot or two, all of the wounds were from long guns. The Sheriff and his men were the victims of their own crossfire,
especially fire from the Edison.
Despite
this, when the Verona tied up in
Seattle the passengers were arrested. 75 of them would be charged with murder. IWW
leader Thomas H. Tracy was the first
to face trial in the hostile Snohomish
County courthouse. The trial dragged on for two months. Mountains
of testimony and evidence revealed
that the shooting were planned by the
posse, that IWW had either not been shooters or acted in self-defense, and
that the deaths and injuries among the posse members were all “friendly
fire.” Tracy was acquitted in May 1917 and publicity
around the case aroused considerable
public sympathy for the IWW. None of
the other members charged were ever brought to trial.
IWW leader Tom Tracy was the first and only one of the Wobblies charged with murder who was brought to trial. He was acquitted. |
As
for the Shingle Weavers, well their AFL leaders never came to the defense of the IWW members who had died trying to
aid them. They eventually lost their
strike. Many of their former members took out Red Cards.
With
World War I once again ramping up demand for lumber and labor shortages as young men were drafted or enlisted,
the IWW was able to exert greater than ever de facto job control in the region’s lumber
camps. Conditions improved, clean
bedding was provided, plentiful
and good quality food was on the mess table, the eight hour day strictly enforced, and the power of the job sharks at least temporarily broken. This prevailed until after the war and a new wave of repression in the infamous Red Scare.
The
Everett Massacre is one of several
labor tragedies that occurred in November and which Wobblies annually
commemorate with In November We Remember. The other event include the execution of the Haymarket martyrs, Joe Hill’s death by firing squad, the lynching of Frank Little in Butte, Montana, and the Armistice
Day 1919 attack by an American
Legion mob on an IWW hall in Centralia, Washington and subsequent
lynching of Wesley Everest.
On
a personal note, I spoke in Everett
on an IWW soapboxing tour in
1970. Not only was our street meeting allowed to go on unmolested, but I was interviewed by the local newspaper and featured in a front page article with a big
photo. The young reporter who conducted the interview said I was the first Wobbly the newspaper had actually
talked to in its long history. Later in Seattle on that same trip the old Norwegian lumber worker Herb Edwards took me to a nursing home and introduced me to one
of the last surviving veterans of
that awful day in 1916.
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