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View Full Version : May 1st International Labour Day.......Chicago 1886



Cidersomerset
30th April 2012, 16:52
Today is International labour day, although in most countries it is celebrated as a
bank holiday, I was not sure of the facts of its origins, and its relevence to
what is happening today.Its only relitively recently that our grand parents threw off
the yoke of Fuedalism, though this is alive and well in new forms, especially sweat shops around the world...
Our 'Mazzers' have never gone away and they are now claiming more victims thru debt
and fear as we can see today. Its important to remember the blood spilt for better
wages and conditions and rights . Which TPTB and there political pawns are trying
to swing the balance back to the rich, which they have been doing all the time
behind the scenes thru the corporate world....


KpTAWspTxtc


History of May 1st, International workers’ day
Published April 30, 2008 Uncategorized 5 Comments
Tags: Chicago anarchists, eight-hour day, Haymarket, International workers day, May 1st

May 1st, International Workers’ Day, commemorates the historic struggle of working people throughout the world, and is recognized in most countries. The United States of America and Canada are among the exceptions. This despite the fact that the holiday began in the 1880s in the USA, linked to the battle for the eight-hour day, and the Chicago anarchists.

The struggle for the eight-hour day began in the 1860s. In 1884, the Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions of the United States and Canada, organized in 1881 (and changing its name in 1886 to American Federation of Labor ) passed a resolution which asserted that “eight hours shall constitute a legal day’s work from and after May 1, 1886, and that we recommend to labor organizations throughout this district that they so direct their laws as to conform to this resolution”. The following year the Federation repeated the declaration that an eight-hour system was to go into effect on May 1, 1886. With workers being forced to work ten, twelve, and fourteen hours a day, support for the eight-hour movement grew rapidly. In the months prior to May 1, 1886, thousands of workers, organized and unorganized, members of the organization Knights of Labor and of the federation, were drawn into the struggle. Chicago was the main center of the agitation for a shorter day. The anarchists were in the forefront of the Central Labor Union of Chicago , which consisted of 22 unions in 1886, among them the seven largest in the city.

During the Railroad strikes of 1877, the workers had been violently attacked by the police and the United States Army. A similar tactic of state terrorism was prepared by the bureaucracy to fight the eight-hour movement. The police and National Guard were increased in size and received new and powerful weapons financed by local business leaders. Chicago’s Commercial Club purchased a $2000 machine gun for the Illinois National Guard to be used against strikers. Nevertheless, by May 1st, the movement had already won gains for many Chicago workers. But on May 3, 1886, police fired into a crowd of strikers at the McCormick Harvester Machine Company, killing at least one striker, seriously wounding five or six others, and injuring an undetermined number. Anarchists called for a mass meeting the next day in Haymarket Square to protest the brutality.

The meeting proceeded without incident, and by the time the last speaker was on the platform, the rainy gathering was already breaking up, with only about two hundred people remaining. It was then a police column of 180 men marched into the square and ordered the meeting to disperse. At the end of the meeting a bomb was thrown at the police, killing one instantly, six others died later. About seventy police officers were wounded. Police responded by firing into the crowd. How many civilians were wounded or killed from police bullits never was ascertained exactly. Although it was never determined who threw the bomb, the incident was used as an excuse to attack anarchists and the labor movement in general. Police ransacked the homes and offices of suspected radicals, and hundreds were arrested without charge. A reign of police terror swept over Chicago. Staging “raids” in the working-class districts, the police rounded up all known anarchists and other socialists. “Make the raids first and look up the law afterward!” publicly counseled the state’s attorney.

Anarchists in particular were harassed, and eight of Chicago’s most active were charged with conspiracy to murder in connection with the Haymarket bombing. A kangaroo court found all eight guilty, despite a lack of evidence connecting any of them to the bomb-thrower, and they were sentenced to die. In October 9, 1886, the weekly journal Knights of Labor published in Chicago, carried on page 1 the following announcement: “Next week we begin the publication of the lives of the anarchists advertised in another column.” The advertisement, carried on page 14, read: “The story of the anarchists, told by themselves; Parsons, Spies, Fielden, Schwab, Fischer, Lingg, Engle, Neebe. The only true history of the men who claim that they are condemned to suffer death for exercising the right of Free Speech: Their association with Labor, Socialistic and Anarchistic Societies, their views as to the aims and objects of these organizations, and how they expect to accomplish them; also their connection with the Chicago Haymarket Affair. Each man is the author of his own story, which will appear only in the “Knights of Labor” during the next three months, – the great labor paper of the United States, a 16-page weekly paper, containing all the latest foreign and domestic labor news of the day, stories, household hints, etc. A co-operative paper owned and controlled by members of the Knights of Labor, and furnished for the small sum of $1.00 per annum . Adress all communications to Knights of Labor Publishing Company, 163 Washington St., Chicago, Ill.” Later this journal and the paper Alarm published the autobiographies of the Haymarket men.

Albert Parsons, August Spies, Adolf Fischer and George Engel were hanged on November 11, 1887. Louis Lingg committed suicide in prison. The authorities turned over the bodies to friends for burial, and one of the largest funeral processions in Chicago history was held. It was estimated that between 150,000 to 500,000 persons lined the route taken by the funeral cortege of the Haymarket martyrs. A monument to the executed men was unveiled June 25, 1893 at Waldheim Cemetery in Chicago. The remaining three, Samuel Fielden, Oscar Neebe and Michael Schwab, were finally pardoned in 1893.

On June 26, 1893, the governor of Illinois, John Peter Altgeld, issued the pardon message in which he made it clear that he was not granting the pardon because he believed that the men had suffered enough, but because they were innocent of the crime for which they had been tried, and that they and the hanged men had been the victims of hysteria, packed juries and a biased judge. He noted that the defendants were not proven guilty because the state “has never discovered who it was that threw the bomb which killed the policeman, and the evidence does not show any connection whatsoever between the defendants and the man who threw it.”

It is not surprising that the state, business leaders, mainstream union officials, and the media would want to hide the true history of May Day. In its attempt to erase the history and significance of May Day, the United States government declared May 1st to be “Law Day”, and gave the workers instead Labor Day, the first Monday of September – a holiday devoid of any historical significance.

Nevertheless, rather than suppressing the labor and anarchist movements, the events of 1886 and the execution of the Chicago anarchists, spokesmen of the movement for the eight-hour day, mobilized many generations of radicals. Emma Goldman, a young immigrant at the time, later pointed to the Haymarket affair as her political birth. Instead of disappearing, the anarchist movement only grew in the wake of Haymarket.

7frdXZzRtPQ

Cidersomerset
30th April 2012, 20:22
The Telegraph

May Day bank holiday threat angers unions
Government plans to move the May Day bank holiday, possibly to St George’s Day, have been criticised by trade union leaders.
Caroline Shearing

By Caroline Shearing

12:05AM GMT 04 Mar 2011

Comments8 Comments

Trade union leaders have criticised Government plans to move the May Day bank holiday.

The holiday, which has been traditionally associated with celebrating workers’ rights, could move from the first weekend in May to St George’s Day (April 23) in England, and St David’s Day (March 1) in Wales, or to the October half-term.

Under proposals outlined in the Government’s new Tourism Policy, the move is an attempt to lengthen the tourist season.

If the latter date is chosen, it could be named “UK Day”, which the Government believes would allow the country as a whole to commemorate military victories such as Trafalgar and underpin David Cameron’s Big Society initiative.

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This is amusing... the May bank holiday in the UK is not connected directly to Labour day...

May Day may have its roots in ancient pagan rites of spring, but its place in the calendar as a bank holiday is fairly modern.

It is the most recent of the eight bank holidays in the UK to be set in stone, following the first ones set down in legislation in 1871.

It was introduced by the then employment secretary Michael Foot in 1978, just before he went on to lead the Labour Party.

At the time many opposed the move saying a May Day holiday was essentially a communist idea because most countries behind the Iron Curtain used May 1 to celebrate International Workers' Day.

The BBC at the time described the inaugural May Day as a "dismal washout" after most of the country suffered from downpours. A debate in the House of Lords, just a week later, saw Lord Wallace, a Labour whip, defend the bank holiday with a quip that could have been used equally today. .....
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Its typical of the Tory party that they would rather celebrate symbolicaly a victoryday
where blood was spilled for whatever reason..... than to the sweat and toil of the working
folk....

Cidersomerset
1st May 2012, 08:44
I appreciate this is not a popular subject but is worth knowing about...

-OoHl_mUE68


B1g5Ng4QiFU


3-eww849ChA

The1% are getting nervous and using their power thru the Police and authorities
to quash the truth getting out !!

wynderer
1st May 2012, 09:27
Hi, Cidersomerset -- i took quite a few courses recently on the history of USA labor -- this is another part of the 'hidden history'

one of my personal heroes is Big Bill Haywood -- i am proud to say that i have an IWW [International Workers of the World] t-shirt, IWW-made in the USA

i cried at times when learning of all the resistance from Human Beings to the insane & cruel industrial machine they were being forced into -- funny -- i never learned about that in school ...

& each time the workers of the world actually began to unite, along came a world war

Big Bill fled to Russia before they could put him in Leavenworth -- they could see he was a key player & took some others out before him

2 quotes for Int'l Labor Day, in honor of all the courageous men & women who gave their lives trying to stop the early stages of the meltdown going on now

'The People, united, shall never be defeated!' -[best said w/a whole bunch of others in a loud voice]

'Never underestimate the intelligence of the common man' -- DW Griffith

wyn







Today is International labour day, although in most countries it is celebrated as a
bank holiday, I was not sure of the facts of its origins, and its relevence to
what is happening today.Its only relitively recently that our grand parents threw off
the yoke of Fuedalism, though this is alive and well in new forms, especially sweat shops around the world...
Our 'Mazzers' have never gone away and they are now claiming more victims thru debt
and fear as we can see today. Its important to remember the blood spilt for better
wages and conditions and rights . Which TPTB and there political pawns are trying
to swing the balance back to the rich, which they have been doing all the time
behind the scenes thru the corporate world....


KpTAWspTxtc


History of May 1st, International workers’ day
Published April 30, 2008 Uncategorized 5 Comments
Tags: Chicago anarchists, eight-hour day, Haymarket, International workers day, May 1st

May 1st, International Workers’ Day, commemorates the historic struggle of working people throughout the world, and is recognized in most countries. The United States of America and Canada are among the exceptions. This despite the fact that the holiday began in the 1880s in the USA, linked to the battle for the eight-hour day, and the Chicago anarchists.

The struggle for the eight-hour day began in the 1860s. In 1884, the Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions of the United States and Canada, organized in 1881 (and changing its name in 1886 to American Federation of Labor ) passed a resolution which asserted that “eight hours shall constitute a legal day’s work from and after May 1, 1886, and that we recommend to labor organizations throughout this district that they so direct their laws as to conform to this resolution”. The following year the Federation repeated the declaration that an eight-hour system was to go into effect on May 1, 1886. With workers being forced to work ten, twelve, and fourteen hours a day, support for the eight-hour movement grew rapidly. In the months prior to May 1, 1886, thousands of workers, organized and unorganized, members of the organization Knights of Labor and of the federation, were drawn into the struggle. Chicago was the main center of the agitation for a shorter day. The anarchists were in the forefront of the Central Labor Union of Chicago , which consisted of 22 unions in 1886, among them the seven largest in the city.

During the Railroad strikes of 1877, the workers had been violently attacked by the police and the United States Army. A similar tactic of state terrorism was prepared by the bureaucracy to fight the eight-hour movement. The police and National Guard were increased in size and received new and powerful weapons financed by local business leaders. Chicago’s Commercial Club purchased a $2000 machine gun for the Illinois National Guard to be used against strikers. Nevertheless, by May 1st, the movement had already won gains for many Chicago workers. But on May 3, 1886, police fired into a crowd of strikers at the McCormick Harvester Machine Company, killing at least one striker, seriously wounding five or six others, and injuring an undetermined number. Anarchists called for a mass meeting the next day in Haymarket Square to protest the brutality.

The meeting proceeded without incident, and by the time the last speaker was on the platform, the rainy gathering was already breaking up, with only about two hundred people remaining. It was then a police column of 180 men marched into the square and ordered the meeting to disperse. At the end of the meeting a bomb was thrown at the police, killing one instantly, six others died later. About seventy police officers were wounded. Police responded by firing into the crowd. How many civilians were wounded or killed from police bullits never was ascertained exactly. Although it was never determined who threw the bomb, the incident was used as an excuse to attack anarchists and the labor movement in general. Police ransacked the homes and offices of suspected radicals, and hundreds were arrested without charge. A reign of police terror swept over Chicago. Staging “raids” in the working-class districts, the police rounded up all known anarchists and other socialists. “Make the raids first and look up the law afterward!” publicly counseled the state’s attorney.

Anarchists in particular were harassed, and eight of Chicago’s most active were charged with conspiracy to murder in connection with the Haymarket bombing. A kangaroo court found all eight guilty, despite a lack of evidence connecting any of them to the bomb-thrower, and they were sentenced to die. In October 9, 1886, the weekly journal Knights of Labor published in Chicago, carried on page 1 the following announcement: “Next week we begin the publication of the lives of the anarchists advertised in another column.” The advertisement, carried on page 14, read: “The story of the anarchists, told by themselves; Parsons, Spies, Fielden, Schwab, Fischer, Lingg, Engle, Neebe. The only true history of the men who claim that they are condemned to suffer death for exercising the right of Free Speech: Their association with Labor, Socialistic and Anarchistic Societies, their views as to the aims and objects of these organizations, and how they expect to accomplish them; also their connection with the Chicago Haymarket Affair. Each man is the author of his own story, which will appear only in the “Knights of Labor” during the next three months, – the great labor paper of the United States, a 16-page weekly paper, containing all the latest foreign and domestic labor news of the day, stories, household hints, etc. A co-operative paper owned and controlled by members of the Knights of Labor, and furnished for the small sum of $1.00 per annum . Adress all communications to Knights of Labor Publishing Company, 163 Washington St., Chicago, Ill.” Later this journal and the paper Alarm published the autobiographies of the Haymarket men.

Albert Parsons, August Spies, Adolf Fischer and George Engel were hanged on November 11, 1887. Louis Lingg committed suicide in prison. The authorities turned over the bodies to friends for burial, and one of the largest funeral processions in Chicago history was held. It was estimated that between 150,000 to 500,000 persons lined the route taken by the funeral cortege of the Haymarket martyrs. A monument to the executed men was unveiled June 25, 1893 at Waldheim Cemetery in Chicago. The remaining three, Samuel Fielden, Oscar Neebe and Michael Schwab, were finally pardoned in 1893.

On June 26, 1893, the governor of Illinois, John Peter Altgeld, issued the pardon message in which he made it clear that he was not granting the pardon because he believed that the men had suffered enough, but because they were innocent of the crime for which they had been tried, and that they and the hanged men had been the victims of hysteria, packed juries and a biased judge. He noted that the defendants were not proven guilty because the state “has never discovered who it was that threw the bomb which killed the policeman, and the evidence does not show any connection whatsoever between the defendants and the man who threw it.”

It is not surprising that the state, business leaders, mainstream union officials, and the media would want to hide the true history of May Day. In its attempt to erase the history and significance of May Day, the United States government declared May 1st to be “Law Day”, and gave the workers instead Labor Day, the first Monday of September – a holiday devoid of any historical significance.

Nevertheless, rather than suppressing the labor and anarchist movements, the events of 1886 and the execution of the Chicago anarchists, spokesmen of the movement for the eight-hour day, mobilized many generations of radicals. Emma Goldman, a young immigrant at the time, later pointed to the Haymarket affair as her political birth. Instead of disappearing, the anarchist movement only grew in the wake of Haymarket.

7frdXZzRtPQ

Cidersomerset
1st May 2012, 10:33
Default Re: 40,000 Norwegians Sing Out In Defiance And Love.....

The Unions are essential to the well being of most working people without them conditions & standards would soon lapse back to pre WW2 levels,
although around the world the majority of workers are totaly under valued compaired to the 1% and there lacky's....As they move their corporate
wealth around the sweatshops of the the world..
There is a balance and the Union movement reached its peak in the UK in the 60's/70's and strikes though a important tool
of the worker can also be manipulated....This culminated in the 70's and 80's miners strike which led to the elites thru puppets
like Thatcher to decimate the industry and the Press Barons like Murdoch backed the 'Iron Lady' ( now very rusty..LOL ) in the
resubjugating of the working class back to where they belong servicing the 1% exstotionate life style....

One song I loved from the era, which obviously got on the right wingers nerves was by the strawbs....


KdOCWUgwiWs

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On the other thread we have broadened out to protest songs in general which ties into this thread.I am niether right or left wing , but strongly believe in the principle of workers rights and the Union.....I'm a member of the Postal workers union which traditionally was one of the stronger ones in the UK, but we have been udermined by successive governments and this
present one is determined to sell us off !!

Cidersomerset
1st May 2012, 16:49
The first Legitslative body in history to represent the poor....

vkORiPUiSas

Zf71gy3uME4