Unit 4 Packet
Unit 4 Packet
Unit 4 Packet
Name: ___________________
Block:_____
Means of Production
Capitalism
Socialism
Anarchy
Union
Strike
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Other Class Notes
2
Spokane Free Speach Fight
3
Other Class Notes
4
Everett Massacre
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Other Class Notes
6
Seattle General Strike
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Other Class Notes
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Worksheets
Directions: for this paragraph, we are focusing on evidence and reasoning. Your job, therefore, is to
select the best possible evidence to support a pre-written claim. Complete the following steps to
prepare yourself to write a paragraph.
Claim: Free speech was important to the IWW in Spokane because it was necessary to their fight
against unjust hiring practices.
4. How did the IWW use free speech to fight for justice?
5. Did the IWW have any other ways to fight for justice? If no, why not?
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Seattle General Strike Writing Prep
Directions: review the sources available to you for the Seattle General Strike. If you’d like to dive
deeper, check out the resources here. Answer the following questions (with properly cited evidence
when possible!) to prepare for our next paragraph.
5. Does the Seattle General Strike match your definition of a successful strike?
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Reading materials
2. Why did Spies (and others) encourage workers to fight against their employers?
3. How did the economic crisis in 1983 affect workers and farmers?
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Spokane Free Speech sources
On November 2, 1909, the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW or Wobblies) formally
begins the Spokane free-speech fight. This is a civil disobedience action mounted in public
defiance of a Spokane City Council ordinance banning speaking on the streets, an ordinance
directed against IWW organizing. On this day, one by one, IWW members mount a soapbox
(an overturned crate) and begin speaking, upon which Spokane police yank them off the box
and take them to jail. On the first day, 103 Wobblies are arrested, beaten, and incarcerated.
Within a month, arrests will mount to 500, including the fiery young Wobbly orator Elizabeth
Gurley Flynn (1890-1964). The Spokane free-speech fight will end with the City revoking the
ordinance. It will inaugurate free-speech fights in other cities, and is considered one of the
most significant battles to protect freedom of speech in American history.
Stevens Street in Spokane was lined with employment agencies that charged the many
transient workers looking for work a dollar to receive a job in a logging camp or construction
crew. The employer would then keep the worker for a day or two, dismiss him, and hire
another. If the worker wanted another job he could go down to one of the employment agencies
and pay another dollar to get one.
IWW organizer James Walsh arrived in Spokane in the fall of 1908, and found the streets
surging with two or three thousand angry workers. On at least one occasion Walsh calmed a
mob set to wreck an employment agency, urging the men instead to join the IWW. That year
the IWW established a union hall with a library, a cigar and newspaper stand, and a meeting
hall. The union conducted meetings and lectures four or five times a week. A newspaper, the
Industrial Worker was established.
The employment agencies, known to laboring men as "sharks" or "leeches," persuaded the
Spokane City Council to pass an ordinance against speaking on the streets, and this went into
effect on January 1, 1909. Spokane Mayor N. S. Pratt, a prominent wholesale lumberman, did
not object.
The IWW cooperated at first, holding union meetings inside the union hall. In the summer the
harvest season was on and many workers left town. In August the City Council made an
exception to the prohibition on street speaking for the Salvation Army. This was not acceptable
to the IWW. In the fall numerous transient workers returned to town, and the free-speech fight
was on. The Industrial Worker sent out a call for Wobbly members to come to Spokane to get
arrested for the cause, and migrant laborers from all over, known as hoboes or bindlestiffs or
timberbeasts, began pouring into town.
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"Friends and Fellow Workers!"
On November 2, a soapbox was put up, and Wobblies began standing on it to begin speaking to
the huge assembled crowd. Each "speaker" was arrested immediately, so there was no need to
be a talented orator. Legend has it that one brave soul mounted the box and began: "Friends
and Fellow Workers!" For the moment there was no police officer at the ready. The man was
struck with stage fright and hollered, "Where are the cops?!"
During the next month more than 500 were arrested. The U.S. War Department assisted the
City of Spokane in its fight against the constitutional right of free speech by providing Fort
Wright to lock up the Wobblies after the city jail was full to overflowing.
The young organizer Elizabeth Gurley Flynn arrived in town and delayed her immediate arrest
by chaining herself to a post. She was an impassioned and appealing orator and one of the
reasons other citizens in town began to come around to the point of view that the Wobblies
were on the right side.
Flynn was put in jail and later published accounts in the Industrial Worker of the filthy,
crowded, and generally horrendous conditions in the city jail, including the charge that the
sheriff was using the women's section of the jail as a profitable brothel, with police soliciting
customers. Police attempted to destroy every copy of the December 10 issue in which Flynn
made these charges. Before this, eight editors in succession had gotten out an issue before
being arrested. After the December 10 issue, the Wobblies moved the Industrial Worker to
Seattle until on May 10, 1910, they moved it back to Spokane.
The Spokane free-speech fight attracted nationwide attention. The IWW's own union history
gives this account of its successful conclusion:
"The constant arrests; the police brutalities; the appearance of men in court matted
with blood; the disrepute into which Spokane had fallen in the more enlightened
portion of the nation's press; the widely-known evil practices of the employment
sharks; the mounting cost to tax-payers; the boycott on Spokane merchants by men
in many camps — all these made it harder for city fathers to continue. Feeling was
for the prisoners. On the rare occasion when they were marched through the streets
to where they could get a bath, citizens showered them with Bull Durham, apples
and oranges" (Thompson and Murfin, 49).
In the end the Wobblies were supported by the Spokane Press, local women's civic groups, AFL
craft union affiliates, various socialists, and German societies.
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On March 4, 1910, Spokane revoked the ordinance, and the prisoners were released. Before
long the licenses of 19 of the employment agencies were revoked and firms began hiring
workers directly. The reputation of the Industrial Workers of the World reached a high point in
Spokane.
https://historylink.org/File/7357
14
Industrial Worker (IWW newspaper), page 1
https://www.marxists.org/history/usa/pubs/industrialworker/iw/v1n40-dec-25-1909-IW.pdf
15
Everett Massacre readings
Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Nov. 6, 1916, (page/column) 5/2
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Seattle Union Record, Nov. 11, 1916, (page/column)1/4
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Why did the Everett “Citizens Committee” form, according to this article?
List at least three pieces of physical evidence the author uses to make his argument:
Whose account do you trust more, Seattle Post-Intelligencer or Seattle Union Record? Why?
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Seattle General Strike sources
KCTS 9 Video: KCTS 9 - History Making: General Strike
2. What was different about the Seattle General Strike from prior strikes in the USA?
3. Why did newspaper editorialists and some members of the public fear the strike?
5. How did Mayor Ole Hanson want the strike to be perceived? Why?
6. Why did the labor movement want to avoid violence and disorder?
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Anna Louise Strong’s article in the Seattle Union Record
Excerpt 1:
Excerpt 2:
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1. Why does Strong think this strike is so exciting?
3. What is the most powerful sentence from this article? Why did you pick that quotation?
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