Strike: Labor Unites for Rights
"SOLDIERS AND SAILORS MUST BE EMPLOYED NOW,"
the bold headlines read as World War I neared its end in
November 1918.
But as more heroes of war arrived home looking for work, the heroes of the
homefront -- the laborers who had kept local industries running -- began their
own fight to maintain fair wages and recognition for their efforts.
American workers had accomplished a "miracle of production" to support the
country's war effort, but with the Armistice signed and peace negotiations under
way, curtailments had begun quickly. Seattle's huge shipyards had paid high
wages to attract men during the war years, but as production needs declined, the
government intervened, establishing a nationwide pay scale much lower than Puget
Sound workers found acceptable.
On Jan. 21, 1919, news that 25,500 shipyard workers had begun a strike in
Seattle overshadowed reports of the Paris peace negotiations. The Metal Trades
Council staged the walkout, seeking to maintain $1 an hour for its skilled
workers.
In sympathy with their demands, the city's Central Labor Council voted to
hold a referendum, allowing affiliated unions to vote on joining the
metalworkers in a general strike.
The threat of a walkout by the council's 130 locals, representing more than
30,000 additional workers, caused citywide consternation. "This is the time for
Common Sense," editorials in The Times pleaded. But as union after union voted
to join the protest, Seattle braced itself for the worst.
The "latest developments" in the strike began to appear daily on the front
page of local papers; articles warned residents about potentially "grave
difficulties in obtaining the necessities of life."
Dire predictions abounded: Seattle would be paralyzed. Alaska was threatened
with famine if docks shut down. Milk supplies would disappear in two days. Meat
markets would have no meat and bakeries no flour for bread. Streets would be
dark, electric heaters cold, 50,000 homes without light.
A local citizens committee tried to help with arbitration, but the
government nixed any possibility of a settlement between shipyard owners and
workers. If exceptions were made for some workers, no contract would be sacred,
federal officials argued, explaining their no-compromise position in full-page
newspaper announcements. Some residents took sides but most stocked up on oil
stoves, lamps and groceries, afraid of what might happen.
Ministers used their pulpits to urge forbearance, while Seattle's flamboyant
mayor, Ole Hanson, promised to preserve order and protect life and property.
As tensions grew, rumors persisted that a radical takeover of the city was
imminent, and that the Bolsheviks, successful in Russia, hoped to start a
revolution in Seattle.
The chief of police urged people to stay off the streets and
temporarily deputized nearly 3,000 soldiers, sailors and guards, even forming a
machine-gun squad. A special edition of The Seattle Star urged workers to "Stop
Before It's Too Late," and the message was printed as a paid announcement in
other papers.
But it was too late. And at 10 a.m. on Feb. 6, 1919, most union men and women
walked off their jobs. Seattle's general strike, the largest in the United
States, shut down the city for several days. Streets were quiet. Most newspapers
ceased publication, streetcars stopped running, and industry ground to a halt.
But for average citizens the strike's consequences were not as severe as
predicted. No babies were deprived of milk, and local residents, though
inconvenienced, were not without food, lights or heat. Above all, there was no
violence, no revolution in the streets.
SEATTLE'S LABORING PEOPLE HAD PROVED A POINT:
Union solidarity was possible. But where would the strike lead
them? Radical activist Anna Louise Strong, editorializing in the city's labor
paper, The Union-Record, had used the stirring phrase "No One Knows Where" to
underscore the strike's potential.
But instead of leading labor to new gains, the strike seemed merely to
provide fuel for harshly reactionary responses. An anti-syndicalism law passed
by the state Legislature early in its 1919 session was used as a basis for
numerous raids on Socialist and radical labor headquarters, police disruption of
meetings, and the arrest of suspected revolutionaries.
When three marchers were mysteriously shot in Centralia's 1919 Armistice Day
parade, vigilantes retaliated by lynching a radical union leader, Wesley
Everest. The Seattle Union Record's sympathetic coverage of the union side
prompted federal marshals to suspend publication of the paper for several days,
charging its editor with sedition.
Others made political capital of the continuing fear of labor radicalism.
Seattle's Mayor Hanson -- whose pledge that "anarchists in this community shall
not rule its affairs" had gained him nationwide recognition -- resigned from
office. He launched a cross-country speaking tour, hoping the publicity might
even propel him into the Republican presidential nomination.
But for labor, the strike that began with such hope and proceeded with such
calm ended with bitterness and repression. The strike that could go "No One
Knows Where" in the short term led the unions nowhere nearer their goals.
Source: The Seattle Times, March 31, 1996