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Title: Labor Agitator Author: Alan Calmer Date: 1937 Language: en Topics: Albert Parsons, biography Source: Retrieved on 17th May 2021 from http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/ANARCHIST_ARCHIVES/bright/aparsons/calmers/calmerstoc.html
ALBERT PARSONSâ ancestors fought for religious liberty in England and
were among the pilgrim fathers of Massachusetts. In the seventeenth
century, five brothers of the family name landed on the shores of
Narragansett Bay. In the centuries that followed, their descendants
helped to establish and build the American nation.
The first Parsons to attain renown was âUncle Jonathan,â he was
reverently, and affectionately, called. He was an old Puritan,
strong-minded and passionate, second only to his friend, George
Whitefield, among the revivalist ministers of the day. Like Albert
Parsons of Haymarket fame, old Jonathan was something of a traveling
agitator: his preaching tour, on which he delivered sermons to eager
audiences, horrified the conservativ-minded clergymen of New England.
Liberty-loving Jonathan could not endure British tyranny. According to
one story, he denounced the English oppressors from his pulpit and, in
the very aisles of his church, mustered a company which marched to
Bunker Hill where another Parsons lost his arm in the famous battle of
the Revolution.
Jonathanâs son was Major-General Samuel Parsons, the first members of
the Patriot party and the revolutionary Committee of Correspondence in
Connecticut. As early as 1773 the General despatched a letter to
Agitator Sam Adams, urging that a continental be held. âThe idea of
inalienable allegiance to any prince or state,â he wrote, âis an idea to
me inadmissible; and I cannot but see that our ancestors, when they
first landed in America, were as independent of crown or king of Great
Britain, as if they never had been its subjects.â
General Parsons fought in a number of Revolutionary battles. He helped
plan the expedition which led to the capture of Fort Ticonderoga by
Ethan Allen and the Green Mountain boys. He saw heavy fighting at Long
Island, and then at Harlem Heights and White Plains. He served under
General Washington in New Jersey. Later the commander-in-chief placed
him in charge of the entire Connecticut front, depending upon him for
the defense of the state. He gave battle to the British at Norwalk,
forcing them to retire in confusion.
After the war, General Parsons was appointed first judge of the
Northwest Territory. Although he was past fifty, he became a
frontiersman, traveling back and forth. One day his canoe overturned in
the rapids of the Big Beaver river and he was drowned.
Samuel Parsons, a namesake of the Revolutionary general, left New
England early in 1830. He married Elizabeth Tompkins, and together they
trekked down the coast to Alabama. They set up a shoe and leather
factory in Montgomery. Here Albert R. Parsons was born June 20, 1848,
just after the Mexican war. His father was one of the outstanding
figures in the community and was highly respected as a public-spirited
citizen; he led the temperance movement in the state.
Albertâs mother also came of pioneer stock. One of her ancestors had
been a trooper in General Washingtonâs bodyguard, serving under him at
Trenton and Brandywine, weathering the privations of Valley Forge, and
helping to drive the Hessians out of New Jersey. Like her husband, she
was a devoutly religious person, loved by her neighbors as well as by
her ten children.
At least this was the picture which Albertâs eldest brother, William,
gave him of his parents. He retained only the flicker of an impression
of his mother, who died when he was still a baby. And before Albert was
five his father followed.
Albert went to live with his brotherâs family, whose home was on the
Texan frontier. In later years he treasured the remembrances of his
boyhood, spent near the border. Life on the Texas range during the
eighteen- fifties was an adventurous affair. Indian raids and out-law
attacks were things of the present. Buffalo and antelope ran over the
plains. While still a boy, Albert became an expert rifle-shot; he always
remembered the praise he had won for his marksmanship and hunting, as
well as his skill in riding the fiery Mexican mustangs. He thought
often, too, of days spent on his brotherâs farm in the valley of the
Brazos river, so far from the next house that he couldnât hear the
barking of their neighborâs dog or the crowing of the cock.
When he was eleven, Albert was sent to Waco, city, to live with his
sisterâs family and to get some schooling. He was soon apprenticed to
the Galveston Daily News. It was an honor to be employed by the biggest
and most influential paper in the state, his brother wrote to him;
espicially, he added, when it was edited by Mr. Willard Richardson. His
brother, who had run a small paper of his own in Tyler city, always
spoke with reverence of Richardson, the leading Texan editor of the
time.
Albert worked on the paper as a printerâs devil and as carrier. Running
through the streets of the town, making new friends and acquaintances
every day, he changed from a frontier boy into a city youngster.
A FEW Years later the Civil War broke out. Albert and the people he knew
were greatly agitated. The city whirled with excitement. Meetings were
held, speeches were made. Civic spokesmen called for action.
Albertâs employer, old âWhiteyâ Richardson-who looked like a
conventional Portrait of the Southern gentleman was a leader of the
secession movement. He carried on a vigorous campaign against his
political enemy, Sam Houston-conqueror Of Santa Anna and father of the
Texan Republic. Houston hoped the civil conflict could be averted and
the Union Preserved. but when Texas joined the Rebels, he was deposed as
governor of the state.
All of Albertâs friends were rabid Confederates. They got together to
make Plans-they wanted to get into the fighting before it would all be
over. Carried away by the war fever, the Young Texans immediately
organized a local volunteer company, which they named the Lone Star
Grays. Albert was only thirteen, and was very short compared to the
rangy natives, but he wiggled his way into the infantry squad.
Of course the whole thing was nothing more than an exciting adventure to
him. He was too young to wonder about the real reasons behind secession
and, besides, if he did have any ideas about it they were merely carbon
copies of âWhiteyâ Richardsonâs opinions. Everybody Albert knew was a
hot partisan of the Confederacy; his circle of acquaintances did not
include any of the followers of Sam Houston, nor did he know any of the
numerous German abolitionists who populated the state and who valiantly
opposed the slaveowners.
When the war started, Federal garrisons withdrew from the Texas forts
and fled toward the sea coast at Indianola, intending to embark for
Washington. They were immediately pursued by the local Confederates.
Albertâs company, the Lone Star Grays, converted the Morgan Passenger
ship into a cotton-clad and joined the chase. Protected by the
breastworks of cotton piled on the deck of their improvised gunboat,
they formed into the Gulf and cut off the escape of some Union troops.
Texas however, was far removed from the center of hostilities. Many of
the young men thought they would never get into the fight if they stayed
at home; so they formed independent companies and proceeded eastward to
the battle zone.
Albert decided he would join the Rebel army, too; he made up his mind to
leave for Virginia and serve under Lee. But when he asked his guardianâs
permission, old âWhiteyâ took hold of his ear and ordered him to remain
at home.
Looming over young Albert, Richardson lectured his apprentice. âItâs all
bluster, anyway,â he told him. âThe war will be ended in the next sixty
days, and I will be able to hold in my hat every drop of blood thatâs
shed.â
That settled it. Albert just had to get into action before it was all
over. He had no way of traveling to Virginia, but he took âFrenchâ leave
and joined his brother, Richard, who captained an infantry company at
Sabine on the Texan coast. Albert drilled with the soldiers and served
as a powder monkey for the artillery.
One day he learned that the Federals were sending a transport army to
invade Texas by way of the Pass. The Federal fleet, led by two gunboats,
came up the channel, bombarding the Rebel fort. Holding their fire until
the enemy was about twelve hundred yards away, the Texans opened a
counter-attack. The third round of shot penetrated the steamdrum of the
leading gunboat and she hoisted the white flag. The guns of the fort
were then trained on the other: a shot carried away the tiller rope; the
vessel grounded. The transports turned around and went back to New
Orleans. Not a man had been lost on the Confederate side.
When the Union army invaded once more, it was under the command of
General Banks, who made for the mouth of the Rio Grande. He landed on
the coast and hoisted the Union flag on Texan soil. Meanwhile, Albert
had joined a cavalry detachment stationed on the west bank of the
Mississippi. Albert became a member of the renowned McInoly cavalry
scouts. He was with his brotherâs brigade when General Bankâs forces,
retreating down the Red river, were attacked by Parsonâs dismounted
cavalrymen who, armed only with rifles, charged the ironclad gunboats of
the Union fleet at Laneâs Landing.
By the time he was seventeen, after serving four years in the military,
Albert took part in the last skirmish of the Civil War, occurring just
before news reached the state of Leeâs surrender at Appomattox.
AT the close of the war, Albert returned to his home in Waco. All the
property he owned was a good mule- but it proved to be quite a valuable
possession. He ran into a man who had to get out of the state in a
hurry; the man had forty acres of corn in his field standing ready for
harvest; Parsons traded the mule for the corn.
Then he rounded up a number of Negro slaves and offered them regular
farmhandsâ wages if they would help him reap the harvest. They jumped at
the opportunity, for it was the first salary they had ever received.
He made enough out of the sale of the corn to pay for half a yearâs
tuition at the local university, which he had long dreamed of atending.
There he studied moral philosophy and political economy.
His instructors, and everybody else who knew him, liked Albert. He was
wild as a buck when he returned from the front â but so were all the
young Texans. He moved in the best society and was welcome wherever he
went. To his neighbors he was a clean-cut, gritty, pleasant and â
considering everything â a well-mannered young man.
By the time he was twenty, however, something happened which was to
suddenly end his popularity. He had begun to think for himself, and he
found it impossible to accept many Southern conventions that he had
formerly taken for granted. Working as a typesetter didnât give him much
of a chance to tell people about his new convictions â but it did
increase his desire to do so. Since these new beliefs were decidedly
unorthodox, there was no place where he could put them into print; so he
started a small weekly paper of his own, calling it the Spectator. In it
he advocated the support of the Reconstruction measure granting civil
rights to the Negroes.
Part of the reason for arriving at this conclusion was very personal. âI
was strongly influenced in taking this step,â he later wrote, âout of
respect and love for the memory of dear old âAunt Easter,â then dead,
and formerly a slave and house-servant of my brotherâs family, she
having been my constant associate and having personally raised me, with
great kindness and a motherâs love.â
In the main, however, his new, humanitarian convictions had grown out of
his reading and independent thinking, based on what he saw and heard
during the years after his return from the war. He had found that in
spite of the defeat of the Confederacy, the old slaveowners â thanks to
President Johnsonâs proclamation of amnesty and pardon â were back in
power. Things hadnât changed very much. Many of the Negroes continued to
work for their former masters; most of the landowners even believed that
slavery would be perpetuated. During this period, Negro suffrage was
shelved. At first Parsons had more or less accepted the situation, but
he was shocked by several incidents in which Negroes, demanding their
freedom, were hounded by his neighbors.
When the Radical Republicans were victorious in the Congressional
elections of â66, drastic changes took place. As in other rebel states,
the conservative government of Texas was swept away. General Sheridan,
appointed commander of the âFifth Military Districtâ which included
Texas and Louisiana, set up Radical-Military rule. Carpetbaggers as well
as native loyalists organized the Negroes into Union Leagues. Radical
Republican papers, usually edited by Southerners who were sneeringly
called scalawags, sprang up in the state and clamored for Negro rights.
This was the wave which caught Parsons; his paper was started in Waco
for this purpose. The Spectator appeared in 1868, during the tensest
moment of the Reconstruction struggle in Texas, after Sheridan had been
forced out by President Johnson and succeeded by General Hancock, a
Democrat whose sympathies were with the Southern planters. The latter
organized guerrila gangs terrorizing the new freedmen and intimidating
the Republicans. Out of these early groups rose the spectre of the Ku
Klux. Bands of giant horsemen, shrouded in white, raided Negro
settlements, whipped and even murdered their victims.
It was during this critical time that Parsons first tried his talents as
an editor. He became a Republican, went into politics. He took to the
stump, upholding the rights of Negro suffrage. The Reconstruction acts
had been passed and the Negroes had their first chance to vote in Texas.
The enfranchised slaves came to know and idolize Parsons as their friend
and champion.
Naturally these new activities cut Parsons off from most of his former
friends. His army comrades cursed and threatened him. He was branded a
heretic, a traitor, a renegade. His life was endangered. Since his arch
enemies made up most of the reading audience in Waco, there was no
chance of continuing with the Spectator, and it soon expired.
Nevertheless, he continued his newspaper work. He became a traveling
correspondent for the Houston Daily Telegraph, which had been a
conservative paper before the Republicans carried the state. This new
job took him on a long trip through northwestern Texas, on horseback.
While he was in Johnson county, where he had once lived with his
brotherâs family, he met an attractive young girl of Spanish-Aztec
descent. She lived in a beautiful section of the country near Buffalo
creek with her uncle, a Mexican ranchero. Parsons lingered in the
neighborhood as long as he could; three years later he returned to marry
Lucy Eldine Gonzalez.
Shortly before his marriage he became a minor office holder under
Grantâs administration. He served as reading secretary of the Texas
State Senate, of which his brother William was a member, and later as
chief deputy collector of the U.S. Internal Revenue at Austin. In 1873,
when the Republicans were defeated in the state elections, he resigned
and joined a group of Texan editors in a tour which took him as far east
as Pennsylvania. In the course of the trip he decided to settle in
Chicago. He wrote to his wife, who joined him at Philadephia, and
together they reached the Windy City late in the summer of 1873.
JUST as Parsons and his wife reached Chicago, the crisis of â73 struck
the nation.
Ever since the war, huge factories had been changing the urban skyline.
Industrial capital was on the make. Armies of workers streamed into
manufacturing centers. Mass production became the order of the day.
Trade unions expanded. Profits skyrocketed. Prosperity soared.
Then came the crash. Early in the fall of â73 â financial panic! The
price of securities, which had risen to new highs during the boom years,
suddenly collapsed. The wave of feverish speculating and inflation was
over.
Old houses folded up. In September the firm of Jay Cooke, monetary
pillar of the states, shut its doors. There was consternation in Wall
Street. After seven wild days the Stock Exchange closed down. Meeting
with financiers, the President urged a moratorium to stem widespread
disaster. There was a run on the Union Trust. Banks were besieged by
frenzied deposirtors. In Chicago, on a âblack Friday,â five big banking
institutions â beginning with the Union National, largest financial
concern outside of New York â were suspended. Life savings were swept
away.
Economic distress spread through the land. Bewildered workers straggled
out of factory gates. They hung disconsolatley around public squares.
The spectre of unemployment drifted along the streeets of American
cities.
Layoffs. Wagecuts. Strikes. Evictions. Breadlines. Starvation. Street
demonstrations against poverty â met with clubs and bullets.
Parsons, however, was lucky enough to land a job as soon as he got to
Chicago. After subbing for a while on the Inter-Ocean, he became a
regular typesetter for the Times. He joined Typographical Union No. 16.
It was a hard winter. In Chicago, tens of thousands who had helped
rebuild the city after the great fire, were thrown out of work. Along
the wide avenues, swept by the freezing winds of the lake, children
cried for bread, for shelter. Meetings of unemployed workers formed
spontaneously. They paraded through the streets holding ragged banners,
with BREAD OR BLOOD scrawled in big black letters. Public attention was
directed toward the needs of the poor.
A procession marched on the Relief an Aid Society to appeal for help,
but a committee elected by the demonstrators was refused an audience.
Several yeares before, over a million dollars had been contributed to
the Society for the victims of the fire. Labor organization now began to
agitate for an accounting of the large sums collected. They charged the
Society with speculation and misuse of funds.
Parsons followed the case in the newspapers. He was puzzled by the
campaign of abuse directed against the protesting labor groups: they
were denounced in the daily press as âCommunists,â âLoafers,â âThieves,â
âCutthroats.â
He wondered what was behind the whole thing. He decided to look into the
matter; what he found convinced him that the complaints were justified.
Then why did the press and pulpit vilify the labor bodies that made the
charge of corruption? He was quick to see the parallel between the
Chicago situation and the way his Texan neighbors had treated the
Negroes. It was the rulers against the slaves, whether wage or chattel.
In his own way, through his own experience, he was beginning to glimpse
the shape of the modern class struggle.
Parsons stopped at street corners to listen to the âagitators.â He went
to labor meeting. He wanted to understand the new problems which the
crisis was pushing forward. He found that the small band of Socialists
in the city were the only ones who seemed to know the answers to the
problems he wanted to solve. They seemed to know exactly why and how
poverty could root itself in the middle of great wealth and plenty.
But he found it hard to understand the Socialists. Most of them were
Germans. He couldnât read their paper, couldnât get hold of more than a
pamphlet or two in English. These were hardly enough to solve the new
problems cascading through his mind.
For several years, as the depression slid downward, he became more and
more concerned over the âlabor question.â One of the new products of he
crisis was the emergence of âtrampsâ as they were called, not hoboes but
educated men, skilled workers looking for jobs. He encountered legions
of them in the streets of the city. And police squads guarded the
depots, turning away new âvagrantsâ who migrated from other centers in
search of work.
One spring evening, near Market street, Parsons was given a handbill. It
announced a mass meeting at the Turner Hall on West Twelfth street. P.J.
McGuire, of New Haven, it said, who was making a lecture tour under the
auspices of the Social-Democratic party of North America, would be he
leading speaker and would discourse on the crisis, its cause and remedy.
When Parsons reached the hall, it was packed. Someone was talking, but
Parsons recognized him as a local agitator.
Just before eight oâclock, a group of men walked briskly through the
hall. People in the audience clapped. The main speaker had arrived.
Tired and dusty, he stepped to the platform.
Parsons listened to a moving address, delivered with the warm, lyrical
eloquence of the Irish.
âWe have come together without bands of music or waving banners,â
McGuire began, dusting his sleeves as he got under way. âWe have no
money to hire polisher speakers or to prepare great demonstrations. But
we have come with something more than these â we have come with the
truth in out hearts, and the truth must surely prevaill...
âShall I recount all the wrongs against the workingman? I could as well
describe the separate stones which compose the Alleghanies or the number
of sands on the ocean beach...
âThe workingman labors with all his strength, not for himself and those
rightly dependent upon him, but for every mean despot who has money in
his pocket and no principle in his heart.
âI am a stranger to many of you, but one cause has made us brothers.
Together we must lift the burden of poverty and oppression from the
shoulders of the working class....â
His earnestness stirred the crowd. Parsons listened intently.
At the end of the meeting McGuire got up and urged them to join the
party. As Parsons passed out of the hall he turned in his name.
The affair was so successful that McGuire spoke again the following day,
in the old Globe Hall on Desplaines Street. He talked for only a short
while, so there was time for questions and discussion. This was Parsonsâ
chance. Perhaps he would now get an authoritative answer to some of the
problems consuming his thoughts.
He jumped up. His clear, ringing voice cut through the hall. Everybody
turned toward him. He was well-dressed, distinguished. His long, black
hair brushed back, his waiscoat buttoned high, his body slim and wiry,
the eyes alert and smiling, the long curve of his moustache neatly
trimmed â Parsons commanded attention.
âDo I understand, sir,â he said, with a certain dignity, âthat in the
cooperative state, so ably outlined by the speaker, all persons will
share and share alike regardless of what they produce?â
A ripple of voices spread through the hall. It was an important
question. Others must have been wondering about it.
âDo I understand,â he continued, his tone sharpening, âthat your party
is for a whack-up-all-around institution, in which the parasite will
find a loafersâ paradise at the expense of the industrious worker?â
He sat down. Spots of applause broke through the audience. People talked
to each other excitedly. They waited with impatience for the answer.
It was a stock question for McGuire. It had been asked of him so many
times, he had explored the issued so often, that his reply by now was
nearly flawless. Atracted by Parsonsâ striking voice and confident
bearing he phrased his remarks with particular care, directing his
answer straight to Parsons, speaking as if they were alone in a room
together.
The Social-Democratic party, he pointed out skillfully, wished only to
nationalize the land and the instruments of production and exchnge. Such
a reorganization of society was in the interests of the workingman, who
would be rewarded with the just value of his labor. As for the idler,
and that included the capitalist, he would have to pitch in and do his
share-or starve.
McGuire handled the whole thing adroitly. Parsons was fully convinced.
And it won the approval of others in the audience. From that time on,
the English section of the Social-Democratic party in Chicago thrived.
PARSONS joined the Social-Democratic party during a period when unity
was the central issue of the labor movement. In the spring of â76 the
party sent delegates to a congress which was called for the purpose of
consolidating all the labor forces in the country. The conference was
also attended by other socialist groups and by members of the Knights of
Labor. However, the gathering was split largely between socialists on
the one side and greenbackers, with their money-reform schemes, on the
other. They couldnât agree on a program and, when the sessions were
over, unity had not been accomplished.
Nevertheless, the get-together did a lot of good: it paved the way for
uniting the various socialist factions, including the Social-Democratic
party to which Parsons belonged, into a single organisation. During the
summer, this fusion was effected. Radicals of various brands--made up
chiefly of followers of Lassalle (political reformists who were
indifferent to trade union action) and members of the old First
International (who stressed the importance and need of trade union
organization which, they pointed out, was the way in which the
proletariat as a class carried on its daily struggle against
capital)--met in Philadelphia and organiaed the Workingmenâs party of
the United States.
âPolitical liberty without economical independence being but an empty
phrase,â the constitution adopted at the congress read, âwe shall in the
first place direct our efforts to the economical question.â
Participating in politics was not to be thought of until the movement
was âstrong enough to exercise a perceptible influence, and then in the
first place locally in the towns or cities, when demands of a purely
local character may be presented.â
This stand was largely a victory for a small group of First
Internationalists, headed by Marxâs friend, Sorge. However, McGuire, who
led the Social-Democratic party delegates, won a concession for his
adherents: he moved that the executive committee be given the power to
permit local election campaigns wherever advisable.
It was decided that the executive committee should be located in
Chicago; and Philip Van Fatten, who lived in the city and whom Parsons
knew, was later elected national secretary. Candidates who belonged âto
no political party of the propertied classâ were admitted into the
Workingmenâs party, although it was decreed that âat least three-fourths
of the members of a section must be wages-laborers.â
Parsons followed the news of the convention in the pages of the
Socialist, edited from New York; by decision of the âUnionâ congress,
held at Philadelphia, this newspaper was now changed to the Labor
Standard, and became the English organ of the new Workingmenâs party.
One of the treats in the paper was the poetic efforts contributed
regularly by John McIntosh. Parsons, who was very fond of verse and
could recite reams of it from memory, soon added McIntoshâs long
âsocialistic balladâ on âThe Trampâ to his repertoire:
We canvassed the city through and through,
Nothing to work at--nothing to do;
The wheels of the engines go no more,
Bolted and barred is the old shop door;
Grocers look blue over unpaid bills,
Paupers increase and the poorhouse fills.
He was overjoyed to find an English paper which saw things through the
eyes of the workers, especially since the Chicago sheets continued to
castigate the Socialists, dubbing them âRobbers,â âLoafers,â âTramps,
âBandits.â
The capitalist press angered Parsons beyond endurance. As he walked home
from work, he felt an overwhelming desire to shout to the workers on the
street to tell them the truth about the class struggle, to carry to them
the message of the Workingmenâs party. Outside of John McAuliffe, there
was no decent English mass speaker in the Chicago section and, while
Parsons admired his impetuous rhetoric, McAuliffe was inclined to be a
bit wild and incoherent.
Soon Parsons was making use of the experience he had gained on the stump
in Texas. His resonant voice and his good presence quickly made him one
of the very best agitators in the city. He spoke whenever and wherever
he could: in parks, in vacant lots, on street corners, in halls and
private houses. But the crowds were rather small. Often, after putting
up posters and handing out leaflets, and speaking, he had to give his
last nickel to pay for the hall rent and, late at night, walk all the
way home-and to work early the next morning.
Just before the Philadelphia âUnionâ congress was held, and the
Social-Democratic party merged into the Workingmenâs party, Parsons
helped to work out an excellent idea for their local July Fourth picnic.
Parsons was was unable to be there himself--he had to speak at a meeting
sponsored by Knights of Labor in Indianapolis --but the idea worked out
very well.
After parading through the Chicago streets, the Socialists gathered
around the platform at Ogden Grove, their picnic grounds. Later in the
day Van Fatten arose and, on the hundredth anniversary of the American
Revolution, read the Chicago Workingmenâs Declaration of Independence,
paraphrased after the original:
â...We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created
equal, that they are endowed with certain inalienable rights; that among
these are life, liberty and the full benefit of their labor....â
It was a good stunt. After the new Declaration was read, in both English
and German, the three thousand listeners, with cheers and loud applause,
adopted it unanimously.
As Parsons became more active, he was perplexed by the squabbling which
took place among the Socialists, who had all joined the Workingmenâs
party. There seemed to be two groups of extremists. Merging into one
party had evidently not dissolved the differences between the warring
factions. One still demanded immediate participation in politics, while
the other, which had come out on top at the âUnionâ congress, was
against such activity. However, the former refused to give up its aims
and soon took its first political steps.
In New Haven, the political activists won Van Pattenâs permission to
nominate local candidates. Their example was followed in other cities.
Early in 1877, a Chicago group decided to enter the city spring
elections. Without consulting anybody, they held a mass meeting and
passed a resolution to that effect. Although angered by this highhanded
move, their opponents decided not to oppose it, because they wanted to
avoid a split in the party. Only one candidate was nominated â Parsons,
for alderman of the fifteenth ward. The party ticket stressed chiefly
demands of an immediate local character, such as abolition of the
contract system on city works, better hours and wages for city
employees, etc.
Concentrating upon the fifteenth ward, which was in a working-class
section, the party âimportedâ canvassers from other parts of the city,
worked day and night and, when the count was taken, polled four hundred
votes â one-sixth of the total cast in that ward. It was something of a
moral if not a political victory.
JULY, 1877. The great depression nosed downward, hit rock bottom. Even
employed workers got barely enough for food. They grew sullen,
desperate.
The railroads posted a notice of another wage cut. Accumulated
resentment rose, brimmed over. Spontaneous protests broke out; a
âstriking maniaâ sped along the railway lines of the nation.
A running battle took place in Baltimore. With fixed bayonets, troops
marched to the depot. Beleaguered by an indignant crowd, the soldiers
fired volleys into the throng, shooting workers straight through the
heart.
In Pittsburgh, factory hands turned out to help the railroad men. They
took over the switches; the trains couldnât move. Almost the entire city
supported the strikers. âButcherâ Hartranft, governor of the state, sent
âhussarsâ from Philadelphia. They attacked the people: scores were
killed and wounded. The enraged citizens drove the troops into a
roundhouse, seized arms and ammunition and counter-attacked. The
besieged soldiers had to shoot their way out of the city.
A regiment in Reading, made up almost wholly of Irishmen, fraternized
with the strikers. âThe only one weâd like to pour our bullets into is
that damned Bloodhound Gowen,â they said, referring to the notorious
coal and rail magnate, who had smashed the minersâ union.
U.S. regulars swept through strike-ridden Pennsylvania. Marines were
landed. Troop trains with gatling guns â mounted on gondola cars in
front of locomotives â pushed through the state. âGive the strikers a
rifle diet for a few days and see how they like that kind of bread,â
were the instructions of âKingâ Scott, railroad president. The press
howled, raved, ranted; the pulpit ran a close second with its abuse.
Only after weeks was the strike smashed, the state blockade broken.
The strike wave rolled westward. Huge demonstrations moved through the
streets. Men marched at night with torchlight flares to show the rags on
their backs and the hunger in their their faces. BREAD OR BULLETS read
their banners.
âIt is impossible to predict how or when this struggle will end,â said
the Labor Standand editorially. âEnd as it may it will accomplish more
for the cause of labor than years of mere oratory.â âIt is life or death
with us,â said one of the rank-and-file leaders, âand weâll fight it to
the end.â
Traffic was almost wholly paralyzed from the Atlantic to the
Mississippi, from the Canadian border to the Virginia line and the Ohio
river. In St. Louis the situation developed into a general strike. It
was led by the Workingmenâs party. Committees marched into the mill and
factory: laborers downed tools. Mass meetings raised the demand for the
eight-hour day. Steamers on the Mississippi were halted until the
captains agreed to increase wages. Business houses closed down. The city
was in the hands of the workers for almost a week. Finally the rich St.
Louis merchants, recovering from their panic, raised an army, equipped
it with muskets and raided labor centers, putting down the strike by
force. The Socialist leaders were seized and charged with conspiracy
against the government. âOrderâ was restored.
Chicago was ignited too. On Sunday morning, July 22, Parsons learned
that Pittsburgh was in the hands of the strikers. An emergency
conference of the party was called and a mass meeting arranged for the
following day. They issued a leaflet which began: âWorkingmen of
Chicago!...Will you still remain disunited, while your masters rob you
of all your rights as well as all the fruits of your labor? A movement
is now inaugurated by the Money Lords of America to allow only
property-holders to vote! This is the first step toward Monarchy! Was it
in vain that our forefathers fought and died for Liberty?...â
About twenty thousand spectators gathered at the Workingmenâs party
demonstration, held on Market square near Madison street. Workers
marched from various sections of the city, converging at the meeting
place with torchlight processions, carrying slogans reading WE WANT WORK
NOT CHARITY, WHY DOES OVER-PRODUCTION CAUSE STARVATION? and LIFE BY WORK
OR DEATH BY FIGHT.
George Schilling introduced Parsons, the main speaker of the evening.
Parsons was developing into a remarkable agitator, was learning how to
speak to the masses, to hold the attention of multitudes.
He looked over the seething square. It was the largest assembly he had
ever addressed. The listeners seemed tense, rigid, straining toward him.
He mounted to new peaks of oratory; his gestures and his inflexions were
flawless. At last the tension snapped, waves of approbation crashing
through the crowd.
âFellow workers, let us remember that in this great republic that has
been handed down to us by our forefathers from 1776 â that while we have
the republic, we still have hope. A mighty spirit is animating the
hearts of the American people today....When I say the American people I
mean the backbone of the country (loud cheers), the men who till the
soil, who guide the machine, who weave the fabrics and cover the backs
of civilized men. We are part of that people (from the crowd â âWe
are!â), and we demand that we be permitted to live, that we shall not be
turned upon the earth as vagrants and tramps.
âWhile we are sad indeed that our distressed and suffering brothers in
other states have had to resort to such extreme measures, fellow
workers, we recognize the fact that they were driven to do what they
have done (âThey were!â)....We are assembled here tonight to find means
by which the great gloom that now hangs over our republic can be lifted,
and once more the rays of happiness can be shed on the face of this
broad land.â
He turned next to an attack upon the press, which he said filled its
columns âwith cases of bastardy, horseracing and accounts of pools on
the Board of Trade.â It never saw fit, he said, âto go to the factories
and workshops and see how the toiling millions give away their lives to
the rich bosses of the country.â
At last he wound up: âIt rests with you to say whether we shall allow
the capitalists to go on or whether we shall organize ourselves. Will
you?â he shouted to the crowd, and many answered. âThen enroll your
names in the grand army of labor â and if the capitalists engage in
warfare against our rights, we shall resist them with all the means that
God has given us.â
McAuliffe, who followed, was even more emphatic. âIf the nation must go
to a monarchy,â he roared, âit must go over the dead body of every
workingman in the country. I am not in favor of bloodshed. But if the
Fort Sumpter of the workingmen is fired upon, I register a vow, by all
that is high and holy, that my voice, my thought and my arm shall be
raised for bloody, remorseless war....
âLet there be peace if we can, and war (a voice in the crowd- âif
necessaryâ) -if necessary.â
When he reached home Parsons was drenched in sweat. After a hard dayâs
work in the composing room, mass speaking was no lark. He was sunk in
exhaustion; but he couldnât get to sleep. His throat ached, and mental
excitement kept him wide awake. He saw the excited faces lifted toward
him, the roar of the crowd in his ears, their acclaim rushing through
his body, their applause echoing through his brain.
As usual, Parsons reported for work early next morning. The story of his
speech, however, had already appeared in the press, one of the papers
denouncing him as the âLeader of the Commune.â When he got to the
composing room, the foreman told him to clear out, he was fired. And he
was soon to learn that he had been blacklisted in his trade.
He shuffled out of the Times building in a daze. He wandered down the
street, walking mechanically homeward; but he soon caught hold of
himself and decided to report at the party center on Market street â he
wanted to check on the progress of the strike and see what he could do
to help.
The strike had started in the city the night before, when the switchmen
of the Michigan Central Railroad walked out. Now it spread to the
firemen and brakemen and moved from yard to yard, and even to shop,
factory, mill and lumber company.
Before the day would be over, not a train would move out of Chicago, Van
Fatten told Parsons exultantly.
They worked together at the office all morning, making plans for another
open-air rally, and signing up strikers who wanted to join the
Workingmenâs party.
About noon, two hard-looking men came in, and told Parsons that the
mayor wanted to see him. Puzzled, Parsons accompanied them to the City
Hall, where he was ushered into a room filled with a number of well
dressed citizens and police officials. In spite of his protests, Parsons
was grilled by Chief of Police Hickey, who probed into every corner of
his life. Hickey insulted and browbeat him, trying to make him say that
the Workingmenâs party had started the strike.
Parsons had been through an excruciating twenty-four hours. He was
almost entirely spent. He gripped his chair, answering quietly,
straining to keep his reserve. Every time he denied responsibility for
the strike, the spectators buzzed and muttered.
âWhatâre we waiting for,â he heard one say. âLetâs lock him up and get
it over with.â
For two hours he parried questions. Finally, Hickey gave up, turned
around, and consulted with several of the civilians in the room. They
talked for a few minutes, arguing with each other. Then Hickey turned
back.
âAll right,â he snapped, âyou can get out of here.â He pushed Parsons to
the door. âIâm giving you some advice, young man,â he said. âYour life
is in danger. Those men in there belong to the Board of Trade and they
would as leave hang you to a lamp-post as not. Youâd better get out of
town and get out quick.â
He shoved Parsons into the corridor, slammed the door. The place was
dark and empty. Somehow he got into the street.
Feeling tired and depressed, he stumbled downtown. Later, when he passed
the Tribune building, he decided to see if he could get a job on the
night shift. As he reached the composing room, he met Manion, chairman
of his union, and they talked for a while. All of a sudden somebody
grabbed him from behind and swung him around.
âCome on, get the hell out of here.â Two men held his arms and another
began shoving him to the door.
Parsons tried to get away. âI came in here as a gentleman and I wonât be
dragged out like a dog,â he shouted, twisting to break loose. Then he
felt the barrel of a gun against his head.
âYouâd better keep quiet or weâll throw you out the window.â Parsons
stopped struggling.
They jostled him down the five flights of stairs. âOne word out of you
and weâll blow your brains out.â They knocked him into the street.
âNext time you put your face in this building youâll get whatâs coming
to you.â
Parsons barely caught his balance and ran down the street. He felt sure
they were going to send a bullet through his back. His utter
helplessness made him half-mad with rage.
As he moved down Dearborn street, his anger began to subside and he
recovered his normal mood, The weather was not too warm and the night
was pleasant. But the streets seemed hushed, deserted. When he turned
west on Lake to Fifth avenue, he saw soldiers sitting on the curb.
Muskets leaned against the walls of the huge buildings that lined the
street. A regiment of National Guards idled around; they seemed to be
waiting for orders to march. Lucky they didnât know him. He passed by
and reached home.
Later that night he went over to Market square where the party was
holding another meeting. He stood in the crowd listening to the
speakers. An ex-soldier came up to the platform and showed the wounds he
had received âwhile fighting for this glorious country.â All at once
Parsons heard the clatter of hoofs, the crack of pistols, screams of
pain. Mounted police charged into the gathering. They mowed a wedge
through the mass of flesh. A tremendous roaring cacophony rose, swelled,
ebbed. The throng broke, the listeners scattered. A tumultuous rush of
feet drowned out the thud of descending clubs....
Next morning, Wednesday, was misty; vapor clouds hung over Lake Michigan
and the city streets. Blood splashed on the Black Road, near the
McCormick Reaper Works. Everywhere the strikers gathered, leaderless;
everywhere they were shot, clubbed, dispersed. On the Randolph street
bridge a crowd of spectators (âRioting Roughsâ the Chicago Tribune
called them) were brutally attacked.
Later, Parsons learned from a German comrade that the police had swooped
down on the Furniture Workersâ meeting at Turner Hall, breaking in the
door and shooting directly into the assembly; caught in the unexpected
onslaught, the cabinet makers had stampeded like cornered animals,
clambering up the pillars, hiding behind the stage, jumping out of
windows, or breaking out of the hall and running the gauntlet of more
cops stationed on the stairs.
A pitched battle took place at the Halsted street viaduct immediately
after, with charge and counter-charge, until a body of cavalry, with
drawn swords, rode through the massed workers, leaving many dead and
wounded on the bridge.
By this time the Board of Trade had mobilized a formidable army.
Infantry regiments patrolled various districts, firing on the slightest
pretext. Thousands of special deputies, âcitizensâ patrolsâ and bands of
uniformed vigilantes like the Boys in Blue and Ellsworth Zouaves,
smashed down upon parades of silent strikers, marching with set faces.
Troops of cavalry clattered through the streets at a sharp trot, their
bridles jingling the horsesâ hoofs kicking against the cobblestones. In
great panic, the Board of Trade had despatched couriers to General
Sheridan, who was campaigning in the Sioux country; and by Thursday
several companies of veteran Indian fighters, bronzed and grizzled and
covered with dust, rode into the city, their repeating rifles slung over
their shoulders. They were quartered in the Exposition building and sent
marauding groups through the murky streets to end any sign of protest.
With the frenzy of a holy crusade, the Chicago strike was suppressed.
As in the other cities, the Workingmenâs party, the Socialists, suffered
most. Their halls were demolished, their leaders arrested, their
membership shot and beaten. Ruling class violence attained its worst
excesses in Chicago and created a tradition of bitter hatred which was
to shape the future course of the radical movement.
LONG after the strike, Parsons couldnât find work. He tried every
newspaper in Chicago, but it was no use, he couldnât get anywhere near a
composing room. He was blacklisted. He and his wife went hungry.
Soon he was spending most of his time in party work. Before he knew it,
he was drawn into the top leadership of the Workingmenâs party and was
made an organizer. He became a âprofessional revolutionist,â giving all
his energies to his job. It became his daily routine and his diversion,
his food and lodging, his conscious existence and even part of his
dreams. His life and experience merged into the history of the party.
Parsons began his new duties at the beginning of a period of extreme
ferment in the labor movement. The great strike wave of â77, broken by
relentless terrorism, and coming after four years of devastating crisis,
lifted thousands of workers to class consciousness. Having learned the
lesson of solidarity, they banded together for mutual protection. Then
they pushed slowly ahead to take the offensive.
Hard times still hung over the country. The protests of the workers
against wagecuts and layoffs, their efforts to build and strengthen
their trade unions, were ruthlessly crushed by local, state and national
government. The lesson of this armed suppression seemed too obvious to
be overlooked: strikes could not be won, living conditions could not be
bettered, if the armed forces of the government stood in the way. So the
workers turned toward independent political action. They wanted to
nominate their own candidates, to elect their own representatives, men
who would not side with the employers but would fight for the demands of
their own class.
The political-minded faction in the Workingmenâs party was quick to see
the new trend of labor. Particularly in Chicago, where the extremity of
conditions had leveled away the barrier between jobless Yankees and
foreign Socialists, a large English-speaking branch of the party was
being built, under the leadership of Tom Morgan, a hard-working,
conscientious organizer. In the fall of â77 they nominated a county
ticket, with Parsons for Clerk and one of his comrades, Frank Stauber,
who ran a hardware store on Milwaukee avenue, for Treasurer. They polled
about seven thousand votes. And in other cities, the elections were also
very encouraging.
It was to be expected, then, that at the congress of the Workingmenâs
party â held in Newark during December of the same year â the political
wing would come out on top. Parsons, who was the only delegate from
Chicago, participated in the convention proceedings, which were designed
to clear the deck for political action. The constitution, with its
obstacles to immediate election campaigning, was completely revamped.
The structure of the party was overhauled â sections were divided into
wards and precincts, and united into the State organizations. Even the
name was changed â to the Socialistic Labor party. The executive
committee was removed to Cincinnati â where the Socialists had just
polled nine thousand votes â while Van Fatten was reelected national
secretary.
In the spring city elections of â78, the Chicago Socialists, under their
new name, the Socialistic Labor party, made history. By this time they
had rigged up a real political machine. Concentrating upon the
working-class districts, they mapped out a thorough campaign, holding
one mass rally after the other. Stauber received 1416 votes, nearly as
many as the combined count of his Democratic and Republican rivals, and
was elected alderman of the fourteenth ward. Parsons and another
comrade, running for similar positions in two adjoining wards, lost by
the slimmest margin, and were undoubtedly counted out of office. âWe
shall contest the election in the fifteenth and sixteenth wards,â wrote
a Chicago correspondent to the National Socialist, new organ of the
party, âwhere the most shameful tricks were resorted to, in order to
count out our candidates.â
One of the chief reasons for this political victory was the cooperation
of the trade unions, which stood solid behind the party ticket. âOn
election day, hundreds of members of the newly amalgamated Trades
Unions, left their work and helped us,â wrote a labor reporter from
Chicago.
But how did the party win the support of the trade unionists, many of
whom were hostile at this time to the use of political measures? The key
man in effecting this coalition was Parsons. He belonged to the English
branch, which led the political movement in the Chicago section of the
Socialistic Labor party; at the same time he was an active unionist. In
fact, he was elected president of the Amalgamated Trade and Labor Union
of and Vicinity, which he helped organize. He was also on the central
committee of the International Labor Union, a nationwide movement to
organize the unorganized, led by George E. McNeill and backed by the
Labor Standard- which opposed the political ventures of the party and
was no longer an official publication.
Many of the trade-union Socialists in Chicago were German immigrants,
who were very suspicious of the native-born members of the party.
Nevertheless, Parsons was able, through his organizing his eloquence and
his personal charm, to overcome this distrust and to win their complete
confidence. Thus he was able to swing their support behind the party
ticket.
Throughout the spring and summer of â18, the Chicagoans prepared for the
coming state elections. Parsons was not so busy in this campaign as he
had been in the preceding ones, for he was spending most of his time in
trade union work. Among other things, he brought McNeill to Chicago to
speak at a trade union picnic just before the local Fourth of July
celebrations. After a morning spent in dancing and singing, at the
inevitable Ogden Grove, the comet player â as one worker-correspondent
described the occasion â âcalled the great assembly together, and
Comrade Parsons after a few appropriate remarks, introduced Mr. George
E. McNeill of Boston, president of the International Labor Union,â who
spoke on the eight-hour day.
âJust as soon as we recover from the fatigues of the glorious Fourth,â
wrote another reporter, âthe engineering minds of the party must go to
work and break ground for the coming fall campaign.â
As election day drew nearer, Parsons spoke with Morgan and McAuliffe at
several large open-air gatherings. Occasionally he also covered these
meetings for the National Socialist. Of one rally he wrote:
âThe broad street, from side to side up and down for nearly a block, was
filled with an immense throng of earnest and intelligent workmen. The
âCause and Remedy of Povertyâ was discussed from the Socialistic
standpoint, showing that destitution, ignorance and crime, was an
unnatural condition...and that universal poverty among the masses was
the penalty inflicted by nature for the crime of violating her laws....â
In the same despatch, Parsons outlined his general point of view at this
time, which favored both economic and political action. By organizing
trade unions and by working through the party at the polls, the workers
would âere long,â he said, âcall a halt to the increasing power of
aggregated wealth which is surely turning out once fair America into a
land of paupers, tramps and dependent menials.â
But if Parsons was so confident of the future of socialism during this
period, his optimism was far surpassed by his fellow speaker, John
McAuliffe. âPass the word down the line,â the rhetorical Socialist
shouted at one public gathering, âForward march! Onward, to perfect
organization and the independence of Labor from class servitude! Ho! all
ye oppressed, ye weary and heavy laden, come gather under the protecting
shelter of the banner of Socialism...under whose folds the wage workers,
the masses, shall be inspired to deeds of heroism and drive the fell
monster â poverty â from off the earth forever.â
SCIENCE THE ARSENAL, REASON THE WEAPON, THE BALLOT THE MISSILE.
Under this flamboyant slogan, which was now the guiding principle of
their party, the Socialists moved from one success at the polls to
another. The slogan was probably the creation of John McIntosh, labor
bard, who now edited the party newspaper. Besides contributing a topical
poem to almost every issue of the National Socialist, he often
embroidered the aims of the party in ornate prose.
âWe desire to inflict upon men a Promethean agony,â he declared, in an
editorial note, âchaining them to a sense of misery, feeling the vulture
of harrowing, harassing discontent forever preying upon their peace. We
want them to be victims of a fierce, gnawing, intolerable conviction of
a personal injury â a withering sense of infernal outrage, so utterly
absorbing as to stop up all avenues to enjoyment cultivating a
thirsting, savage longing for relief â but, remember, through the ballot
box. No murder, no arson, no violence of any kind; unless insisted on by
combining bosses â then up and at it like a whirlwind.â
Parsonsâ trade union work tended to draw him away from the National
Socialist. The paper was edited from Cincinnati under the supervision of
Van Fatten, who now lived there and who had steered the Socialists in
their present political direction. The unionists in the party favored
the Labor Standard, and there was a feud between the two papers. Because
he was immersed in trade union organization, Parsons found the Labor
Standard more receptive to his interests; he acted as reporter for it
and even became its Chicago agent. He also began to develop differences
with the National Socialist, and was denounced in its pages.
However, the National Socialist was running into financial trouble;
factional struggles had almost completely destroyed the Cincinnati
section of the Socialistic Labor party and the newspaper could get no
local support. Meanwhile, the Chicago section was proceeding with plans
for an English paper of its own. In view of these circumstances, Van
Fatten made several trips to Chicago and, after threshing the whole
matter out with Morgan, Parsons and others, he patched up the split and
effected a plan whereby the new local paper, to be called the Socialist,
would become the national English organ of the party. Parsons was
appointed assistant editor.
In preparation for the coming state elections, the new paper was
launched early in the fall of â78. September and October were busy
months for the Chicagoans. Their campaign apparatus had been improved a
great deal. They held a convention late in September and nominated a
complete state ticket.
One of the high spots of the campaign was their election rally songs,
composed by their âuntamed troubadour,â W. B. Creech. He had a new tune
for almost every occasion. At large meetings the crowd would usually
listen to the pyrotechnics of John McAuliffe, who was running for
Congress. âLet us yank, and thunder, and roar, and storm, and charge, at
the ballot box,â he would declaim, âand having thus peaceably, yet
boldly, won the victory, we will enjoy it, or know the reason
why....Fellow workers,â he would end, âbe true to yourselves, desert the
enemy, and the morn following election, Laborâs sun will rise radiant
with glory!â Then the crowd would yell for Creech; he would step sprily
to the platform and in his strong, clear voice, sing:
Then raise your voices, workingmen,
Against such cowardly hirelings, 0!
Go to the polls and slaughter them,
With ballots, instead of bullets, 0!
Or, after a less fiery address, he would chant:
Let us rally once again;
We must work with might and main;
Bear a hand, Old Politics to throw away;
Stand for Socialistic light,
And each man demand his right--
Shorter hours to work and for us better pay.
His lyrics were printed on the front page of the Socialist and were sung
wherever the workers assembled. At an election rally held during a
Sunday afternoon on the corner of Larrabee and Crosby streets, Parsons
opened the meeting by singing Creechâs âSocialist Wagonâ:
...So come, my friends, and join us,
And youâll never rue the day,
For weâll change this present system
To the Socialistic way.
He read the local platform and urged the spectators not to vote for the
old parties because they were âsimply the agencies by which the
possessory class would mislead, divide and then plunder the worker of
the fruits of his labor.â A little later he introduced McIntosh, who had
come to Chicago; and the âpoet laureateâ of the Socialistic Labor party
helped out by reciting some new verses, which were boisterously
applauded.
The last weeks before election, meetings multiplied. Torchlight parades,
brass bands, calcium-lighted platforms for the speakers-were nightly
events. On vacant lots, in the open street, with a wagon or beer barrels
for a speaking stand â wherever a spot could be found, Parsons and his
comrades electioneered.
November 5 was bright and clear. Men standing on wagons and waving the
Union and the red flags, drove through the streets. VOTERS, DO NOT VOTE
AS HERETOFORE FOR CORRUPTIVE POLITICIANS AND OFFICE SEEKERS â read one
of their banners. Socialist voting was heavy in working-class sections,
in the fifteenth and sixteenth wards, especially in the evening when the
laborers came from the shops to cast their ballots. In spite of all
sorts of tricks and interference, the party elected three
representatives and one senator to the state legislature.
The evening after election, the Socialists celebrated at their
headquarters, which was lighted up brilliantly, the entrance illuminated
with Chinese lanterns. What a contrast it presented to the office of
their rivals, the Greenbackers, for the latter had made a very poor
showing. âNotwithstanding the Greenback party sought to bargain with
everybody willing to sell out to the highest bidder,â the Socialist
declared gleefully, âthe Socialists, who stood firm and unwavering, have
by far outnumbered them in votes.â
Celebrations lasted for more than a week and culminated in a large mass
meeting where the elected representatives spoke. In the center of the
stage stood a life-size portrait of a prominent European Socialist,
guarded by pictures of Lincoln and Washington, and surrounded by a sea
of emblems and red flags. From the gallery were suspended the trade
union banners, and pyramids of Stacked guns were in the background.
Creech was ready with a stirring song, and everybody joined in the
chorus:
Raise aloft the crimson banner,
Emblem of the free,
Mighty tyrants now are trembling,
Here and oâer the sea.