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View Full Version : April 20, 1914 - The Ludlow Massacre



blake 3:17
20th April 2014, 18:55
On April 20, 1914, members of the Colorado National Guard opened fire on a group of armed coal miners and set fire to a makeshift settlement in Ludlow, Colorado, where more than a thousand striking workers and their families were camped out. Today, the Ludlow massacre, which Caleb Crain wrote about in The New Yorker in 2009, remains one of the bloodiest episodes in the history of American industrial enterprise; at least sixty-six men, women, and children were killed in the attack and the days of rioting that followed, according to most historical accounts. Although it is less well-remembered today than other dark episodes in American labor history, such as the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire that claimed a hundred and forty-six lives, the Ludlow massacrewhich Wallace Stegner once called one of the bleakest and blackest episodes of American labor historychanged the nations attitude toward labor and capital for the next several decades. Its memory continues to reverberate in contemporary political discourse.

In the summer of 1913, United Mine Workers began to organize the eleven thousand coal miners employed by the Rockefeller-owned Colorado Fuel & Iron Company. Most of the workers were first-generation immigrants from Italy, Greece, and Serbia; many had been hired, a decade prior, to replace workers who had gone on strike. In August, the union extended invitations to company representatives to meet about their grievancesincluding low pay, long and unregulated hours, and management practices they felt were corruptbut they were rebuffed. A month later, eight thousand Colorado mine workers went on strike. Among their demands were a ten-per-cent pay raise, the enforcement of an eight-hour working day, and the right to live and trade outside the company-owned town. Many of the rights they sought were required by Colorado law but remained unenforced.

After getting evicted from their company-owned homes, the workers based their operations in makeshift tent cities surrounding the mines, the largest of which was the Ludlow camp. The Rockefellers responded by hiring a detective agencycomprised of Texas desperadoes and thugs, according to Legacy of the Ludlow Massacre, a sharply researched 1988 book by Howard M. Gitelmanwho would periodically raid the camps, firing rifles and shotguns. In November, the state governor called in the Colorado National Guard at the companys behest; the Guards wages were supplied by the Rockefeller family, and they helped to form militias whose members carried out sporadic raids and shootings in the tent cities.

The strike stretched on for months, and in April, 1914, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., appeared before Congress, where he framed the standoff as a national issue, whether workers shall be allowed to work under such conditions as they may choose. He balked at the possibility of allowing outside peoplemeaning union organizersto come in and interfere with employees who are thoroughly satisfied with their labor conditions. The committee chairman asked Rockefeller whether he would stand by his anti-union principles even if it costs all your property and kills all your employees. Rockefeller replied, It is a great principle.

On April 20th, a day after Orthodox Easter, four militiamen brandished a machine gun at some of the striking miners. At some point, shots were firedthe accounts are predictably inconsistent as to who fired firstand a day-long gunfight ensued.

That evening, the National Guardsmen set fire to the Ludlow colony. Thirteen residents who tried to flee were shot and killed as the camp burned to the ground, and many more burned to death. Discovered among the ruins the following morning was a womens infirmary, where four women and eleven children had sought to escape the fighting by hiding in a cellar-like pit. All the children and two of the women died. One survivor, Mary Petrucci, lost three of her own children in the infirmary. Years later, she recalled, I came out of the hole. There was light and lots of smoke. I wandered among the ashes until a priest found me. I couldnt feel anything. I was cold.

http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/currency/2014/04/the-ludlow-massacre-still-matters.html

Red Commissar
22nd April 2014, 05:40
I think sometimes people forget that with how pathetic the labor situation is in the US, that it was once pretty militant and confrontational, at some points comparable to those in Europe if not exceeding them. The Great Railway Strike, The Pullman Strike, the Homestead Strike, the Battles at Matewan and Blair Mountain, the Ludlow Massacre in the op, the confrontations of the IWW across the West Coast, etc etc

It's a shame, hundred years later we're still stuck in this quagmire, labor movements going from fighting for victories to trying to lessen the sting of ever mounting corporate victories, even in those not co-opted by the company.

erupt
23rd April 2014, 14:26
It's a shame seeing everything our forebearers and ancestors accomplished in the face of vast amounts of wealth, power, and prestige simply be dismantled and forgotten about.

I have relatives that were killed for union organization, and most people are so clueless that if I tell someone in the public that, they'll tell me "No, you must be mistaken. Big companies weren't the best, but they didn't murder people."

This is followed by "Bullshit" coming out of my mouth.

SensibleLuxemburgist
20th May 2014, 23:33
On May 20, 1914, workers walked out of Atlanta's Fulton Bag and Cotton Mill.

Source: http://www.armstrong.edu/Initiatives/history_journal/history_journal_behind_the_strike

Max
23rd May 2014, 21:38
The sad thing is that today, many people have given up on Unions and the labor movement and call them thugs. Nowadays people associate Unions with trying to "bully" corporations and call them "union thugs" when the unions, for the most part, are trying to help the workers.

Brandon's Impotent Rage
23rd May 2014, 21:57
It really is a goddamn shame that my fellow Americans have completely forgotten the hard, bloody struggles that our militant ancestors in labor fought tooth and nail, quite literally risking life and limb in order to get the very basic benefits and regulations that we American workers take for granted.

Then again, it's no coincidence that these events are swept under the rug in history textbooks.

For the record...I am more than anticipating the resurrection of a militant labor force here in the States. Our ancestors did it once. We can take up arms and do it again.

And this time, it won't be for government benefits. It will be for the heads of the oppressors.