by Kornbluh, Joyce L. , Rosemont, Franklin, Thompson, Fred, Gross, Daniel
Carstens, C. C, “The Children’s Exodus from Lawrence,” Survey, 28, April 6, 1912, pp. 70–71.
Cole, J. N., “The Issue at Lawrence—The Manufacturers’ Point of View,” Outlook, 100, February 24, 1912, pp. 405–6.
Deland, L. F., “The Lawrence Strike; A Study,” Atlantic Monthly, 109, May 1912, pp. 694–705.
Heaton, J. P., “The Salem Trial,” Survey, 29, December 7, 1912, pp. 301–4.
____, “The Legal Aftermath of the Lawrence Strike,” Survey, 28, July 6, 1912, pp. 503–10.
Lauck, W. J., “The Significance of the Situation at Lawrence,” Survey, 27, February 17, 1912, pp. 1772–74.
Leupp, CD., “The Lawrence Strike Hearings,” Survey, 27, March 1912, pp. 1953–54.
Marcy, Leslie H. and Boyd, Frederick S., “One Big Union Wins,” International Socialist Review, 12, April 1912, pp. 613–30.
Marcy, Mary, “The Battle for Bread at Lawrence,” International Socialist Review, 12, March 1912, pp. 533–43.
McGowan, Kenneth, “Giovannitti: Poet of the Wop,” Forum, 52, October 1914, pp. 609–11.
“Poet of the I.W.W.,” Outlook, 104, July 5, 1913, pp. 504–6.
“Poetry of Syndicalism,” Atlantic, 3, June 1913, pp. 853–54.
Russell, Phillips, “The Second Battle of Lawrence,” International Socialist Review, 13, November 1912, pp. 417–23.
____, “Lawrence and the Industrial Workers of the World,” Survey, 28, April 6, 1912, pp. 79–80.
“Salem Trial of the Lawrence Case,” Outlook, 102, December 7, 1912, pp. 739–40.
“Social Significance of Arturo Giovannitti,” Current Opinion, 54, January 1913, pp. 24–26.
Sumner, M. B., “Lyric Singer,” Survey, 29, November 2, 1912, pp. 163–66.
Vorse, Mary H., “The Troubles at Lawrence,” Harpers Weekly, 56, March 16, 1912, p. 10.
Weyl, Walter E., “It Is Time to Know,” Survey, 28, April 6, 1912, pp. 65–67.
____, “The Strikers at Lawrence,” Outlook, 100, February 10, 1912, pp. 309–12.
Woods, R. A., “The Clod Stirs,” Survey, 27, March 16, 1912, pp. 1929–32.
____, “The Breadth and Depth of the Lawrence Outcome,” Survey, 28, April 6, 1912, pp. 67–68.
Government Publications
Report on Strike of Textile Workers in Lawrence, Massachusetts in 1912. 62nd Congress, 2nd Session, Senate Document 870, Washington, 1912.
The Strike at Lawrence, Massachusetts, Hearings Before the Committee on Rules of the House of Representatives … 1912. 62nd Congress, 2nd Session, House Document 671. Washington, 1912.
Unpublished Material
Morris, James O., “The Dynamite Conspiracy at Lawrence, Massachusetts.” Unpublished manuscript in the Labadie Collection, The University of Michigan Library.
Chapter 7. Paterson: 1913
Books
Flynn, Elizabeth G., I Speak My Own Piece. New York: Masses and Mainstream, 1955.
Haywood, William D., Bill Haywood’s Book. New York: International Publishers, 1929.
Hicks, Granville, John Reed: The Making of a Revolutionary. New York: Macmillan, 1936.
Luhan, Mabel Dodge, Intimate Memories, Vol. 3, Movers and Shakers. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1933.
May, Henry F., The End of American Innocence: A Study of the First Years of Our Own Time, 1912–1917. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1959.
Valentine, Alan C, 1913: America Between Two Worlds. New York: Macmillan, 1962.
Vorse, Mary H., Footnote to Folly. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, 1935.
Articles
“A Double Labor War,” Outlook, 104, May 3, 1913, p. 11.
“Aftermath of the Paterson Strike, Outlook, 105, November 29, 1913, p. 679.
Boyd, Frederick S., “The General Strike in the Silk Industry,” The Pageant of the Paterson Strike. New York: Success Press, 1913, pp. 3–8.
“City Officials Adopt Repressive Measures,” Survey, 30, April 19, 1913, pp. 82–83.
“End of the Paterson Strike,” Outlook, 104, August 9, 1913, p. 780.
Fitch, John A., “I.W.W.: An Outlaw Organization,” Survey, 32 June 7, 1913, pp. 355–62.
Fitch, John A., “The Paterson Silk Strike: A Year After,” Survey, 32, June 27, 1914, pp. 339–40.
Haywood, William D., “On the Paterson Picket Line,” International Socialist Review, 13, June 1913, pp. 847–51.
____, “The Rip in the Silk Industry,” International Socialist Review, 13, May 1913, pp. 783–88.
____, “Smoothing Out the Wrinkles in Silk,” The Pageant of the Paterson Strikers. New York: Success Press, 1913, pp. 22–27.
“Haywood’s Battle in Paterson,” Literary Digest, 46, May 10, 1913, pp. 1043–44.
Koettgen, Ewald, “Making Silk,” International Socialist Review, 14, March 1914, pp. 551–56.
Mannheimer, Leo, “Darkest New Jersey,” Independent, 74, May 29, 1913, pp. 1190–92.
Mason, Gregory, “Industrial War in Paterson,” Outlook, 104, June 7, 1913, pp. 283–87.
“New Jersey’s Journalistic Perils,” Literary Digest, 46, June 21, 1913, pp. 1366–67.
“Pageant of the Paterson Strike,” Survey, 30, June 28, 1913, p. 428.
“Paterson Convictions Again Set Aside,” Survey, 31, November 22, 1913, pp. 191–92.
“Paterson Strike Leaders in Jersey Prison,” Survey, 34, April 3, 1915, p. 387.
“Paterson Strike Pageant,” Independent, 74, June 19, 1913, pp. 1406–7.
Quinlan, Patrick L., “The Paterson Strike and After,” New Review, 2, January 1914, pp. 26–33.
Reed, John, “War in Paterson,” International Socialist Review, 14, July 1913, PP. 43–48.
Russell, Phillips, “The Arrest of Haywood and Lessig,” International Socialist Review, 13, May 1913, pp. 789–92.
“Strike of the Jersey Silk Weavers,” Survey, 30, April 19, 1913, pp. 81–83.
Sumner, Mary B., “Broad Silk Weavers of Paterson,” Survey, 27, March 16, 1912, pp. 1932–35.
Wheeler, Robert J., “The Allentown Silk Dyers Strike,” International Socialist Review, 13, May 1913, pp. 820–21.
“Work of the I.W.W. in Paterson,” Literary Digest, 47, August 9, 1913, pp. 197–98.
Other Sources
Newman, Philip, “The First I.W.W. Invasion of New Jersey,” New Jersey Historical Society Proceedings, 58, October 1940, pp. 268–83.
Government Publications
U.S. Commission on Industrial Relations, Final Report and Testimony on Industrial Relations. 64th Congress, 1st Session. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1916, pp. 2411–2645.
Unpublished Material
Beffel, John N. “Patrick Quinlan.” Manuscript in the La-badie Collection, The University of Michigan Library.
Flynn, Elizabeth G., “The Truth About the Paterson Strike.” Manuscript in the Labadie Collection, The University of Michigan Library.
Chapter 8. Organizing the Harvest Stiffs
Books
McWilliams, Carey, Factories in the Fields. Boston: Little Brown, 1939.
____, III Fares the Land. Boston: Little, Brown, 1942.
Parker, Carleton H., The Casual Laborer and Other Essays. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Howe, 1920. Appendix 1, “Report on the Wheatland Riot,” Official Report of the Commission on Immigration and Housing, 1914.
Pamphlets
Woodruff, Abner E., Evolution of American Agriculture. Chicago: Industrial Workers of the World, n.d.
Articles
Bell, G. L., “Wheatland Hop Fields Riot,” Outlook, 107, May 16, 1914, pp. 118–23.
Downing, Mortimer, “The Case of the Hop Pickers,” International Socialist Review, 14, October 1913, pp. 210–13.
Gilmore, Inez Haynes, “Marysville Strike,” Harper’s Weekly, 59, April 4, 1914, pp. 18–20.
Krysto, Christine, “California’s Labor Camps,” Survey, 43, November 8, 1919, pp. 70–78.
Lescohier, D. D., “With the I.W.W. in the Wheatlands,” Harpers, 147, August 1923,
pp. 371–78.
____, “The Farm Labor Problem,” Journal of Farm Economics, 2, March 1921, pp. 10—15.
Nef, W. T., “Job Control in the Harvest Fields,” International Socialist Review, 17, September 1916, pp. 140–43.
Parker, Carleton H., “The California Casual and His Revolt,” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 30, November 1915, pp. 110–26.
Ruess, Carl F., “The Farm Labor Problem in Washington: 1917–1918,” Pacific Northwest Quarterly, 34, October 1943, pp. 339–52.
Taft, Philip, “The I.W.W. in the Grain Belt,” Labor History, 1, Winter 1960, pp. 53–67.
Whitten, Woodrow C, “The Wheatland Episode,” Pacific Historical Review, 17, February 1948, pp. 37–42.
Government Publications
Baker, Oliver E., Seed Time and Harvest. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bulletin No. 183. Washington: Government Printing Office, March 1922.
Jamieson, Stuart, Labor Unionism in American Agriculture. U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Bulletin No. 836. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1946.
Lescohier, D. D., The Harvest Worker. U.S. Department of Labor, Bulletin No. 1020. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1922.
____, Conditions Affecting the Demand for Harvest
Labor in the Wheat Belt. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bulletin No. 1230. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1924.
U.S. Commission on Industrial Relations, Final Report and Testimony on Industrial Relations. 64th Congress, 1st Session. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1916, 5, pp. 4911–5027.
Chapter 9. Lumberjacks: North and South
Books
Allen, Ruth A., East Texas Lumber Workers: An Economic and Social Picture, 1870–1950. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1961.
Bing, Alexander M., War Time Strikes and Their Adjustments. New York: E. P. Dutton, 1921.
Holbrook, Stewart H., Holy Old Mackinaw—A Natural History of the American Lumberjack. New York: Macmillan, 1939.
Jensen, Vernon H., Lumber and Labor. New York: Farrar and Rhinehart, 1945.
Smith, Walker C, The Everett Massacre—A History of the Class Struggle in the Lumber Industry. Chicago: I.W.W. Publishing Bureau, 1917.
Spero, Sterling D. and Harris, Abram L., The Black Worker —The Negro and the Labor Movement. New York: Columbia University Press, 1931.
Todes, Charlotte, Labor and Lumber. New York: International Publishers, 1931.
Pamphlets
Chaplin, Ralph, The Centralia Conspiracy. Chicago: I.W.W. Publishing Co., 1920.
Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America, The Centralia Case—A Joint Report on the Armistice Day Tragedy at Centralia, Washington, November 11, 1919. New York: Department of Research and Education, Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America, 1930.
Lampman, Ben H., The Centralia Tragedy and Trial. American Legion, 1920.
The Lumber Industry and Its Workers. Chicago: I.W.W. Publishing Co., n.d.
Articles
Boaz, R. P., “The Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen,” Atlantic Monthly, 127, February 1921, pp. 221–26.
Bruere, Robert W., “Following the Trail of the I.W.W., New York Evening Post, beginning February 16, 1918.
Clay, Samuel H., “The Man Who Heads the Spruce Drive,” Review of Reviews, 57, June 1918, pp. 633–35.
Coleman, B. S., “The I.W.W. and the Law-The Result of Everett’s Bloody Sunday,” Sunset, 39, July 1917, pp. 3, 5, 68–70.
“Colonel Disque and the I.W.W., New Republic, 14, April 6, 1918, pp. 284–85.
“Company Stores and the Scrip System,” Monthly Labor Review, 61, July 1935, pp. 44–50.
Creel, G., “Feudal Towns of Texas,” Harpers Weekly, 60, January 23, 1915, p. 76.
Disque, Brice P., “How We Found a Cure for Strikes,” System, 36, September 1919, pp. 379–83.
Gill, R. S., “The Four L’s in Lumber,” Survey, 44, May 1, 1920, pp. 165–70.
Griffin, C. R., “The Short Log Country,” International Socialist Review, 17, January 1917, pp. 422–23.
Lockhart, J. W., “The I.W.W. Raid at Centralia,” Current History, 17, October 1922, pp. 55–57.
McMahon, Teresa S., “Centralia and the I.W.W.,” Survey, 43, November 29, 1919, pp. 173–74.
Merz, C, “Tying Up Western Lumber,” New Republic, 12, September 29, 1917, pp. 142–44.
Mittelman, E. B., “The Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen,” Journal of Political Economy, 31, June 1923, pp. 313–41.
____, “Gyppo System,” Journal of Political Economy, 31, December 1923, pp. 840–51.
Mueller, J. R., “Food in the Lumber Camps,” Journal of Home Economics, 13, June 1921, pp. 241–45.
Payne, C. E., “Captain Coll—Legionnaire,” Nation, 129, July 10, 1929, pp. 38–39.
Smith, Walker C, “The Voyage of the Verona,” International Socialist Review, 17, December 1916, pp. 341–46.
Strong, Anna Louise, “Centralia, an Unfinished Story,” Nation, 110, April 17, 1920, pp. 508–10.
Thompson, E. Bigelow, “The Case of the Lumberjack,” World Outlook, 6, June 1920, pp. 22–37.
Tugwell, Rexford G., “The Casual of the Woods,” Survey, 44, July 3, 1920, pp. 472–74.
Tyler, Robert L., “I.W.W. in the Pacific N. W.; Rebels of the Woods,” Oregon Historical Quarterly, 60, March 1954, pp.3–44.
____, “Violence at Centralia, 1919,” Pacific Northwest Quarterly, 65, October 1954, pp. 116–24.
Winstead, Ralph, “Enter a Logger: An I.W.W. Reply to the Four L’s,” Survey, 44, July 3, 1920, pp. 474–77.
Wolff, W. A., “The Northwest Front,” Colliers Weekly, 61, April 20, 1918, pp. 10 ff., 31 ff.
Government Publications
Howd, Cloice R., Industrial Relations in the West Coast Lumber Industry. U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Bulletin No. 349. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1924.
Report of the President’s Mediation Commission to the President of the United States—Unrest in the Lumber Industry. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1918.
U.S. Commission on Industrial Relations, Final Report and Testimony on Industrial Relations. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1916. Vol. 5, pp. 4394, 4412.
Unpublished Material
Cox, John H., “Organizations of the Lumber Industry in the Pacific Northwest, 1889–1914.” Unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of California, 1937.
Jensen, Vernon H., “Labor Relations in the Douglas Fir Lumber Industry.” Unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of California, 1939.
McCord, Charles R., “A Brief History of the Brotherhood of Timber Workers.” Unpublished master’s thesis, University of Texas, 1958.
Chapter 10. Down in the Mines
Books
Duffy, J. H., Butte Was Like That. Butte: Tom Greenfield Press, 1941.
Holbrook, Stewart H., Iron Brew: A Century of American Ore and Steel. New York: Macmillan, 1939.
Jensen, Vernon H., Heritage of Conflict. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1950.
Murdock, A., Boom Copper. New York: Macmillan Co., 1943.
Work Projects Administration, Copper Camp—Stories of the World’s Greatest Mining Town, Butte, Montana. New York: Hastings House, 1943.
Work Projects Administration, Montana: A State Guide Book. New York: Hastings House, 1949.
Work Projects Administration, Nevada: A Guide to the Silver State, Portland, Oregon: Binford and Mort, 1940.
Articles
Brissenden, Paul F., “The Butte Miners and the Rustling Card,” American Economic Review, December 1920, pp. 755–75.
Bruere, Robert W., “Copper Camp Patriotism,” Nation, 106, February 21, 1918, pp. 202–3.
____, “Copper Camp Patriotism,” Nation, 106, February 28, 1918, pp. 235–36.
____, “Following the Trail of the I.W.W.,” New York Evening Post, November 14, 17, 24, December 1, 8, 12, 15, 1917, February 13, 16, 23, 30, April 6, 13, 20, 1918.
____, “The I
ndustrial Workers of the World,” Harper’s, 137, July 1918, pp. 250–57.
Currie, B. W., “How the West Dealt with One Labor Union,” Harper’s Weekly, 51, June 22, 1907, pp. 908–10.
Debs, Eugene V., “The Butte Affair Reviewed,” Miners’ Magazine, July 23, 1914, pp. 7–8.
Dennett, T., “The Mining Strike in Minnesota,” Outlook, 113, August 30, 1916, pp. 1046–48.
Elliott, Russell R., “Labor Troubles in the Mining Camp at Goldfield, Nevada, 1906–1908,” Pacific Historical Review, 19, November 1950, pp. 369–84.
Hand, Wayland, “The Folklore, Customs, and Traditions of the Butte Miner,” California Folklore Quarterly, 5, January 1946, pp. 1–25, April 1946, pp. 153–76.
Haywood, William D., “The Revolt at Butte,” International Socialist Review, 15, August 1914, pp. 89–96.
____, “Butte Better,” International Socialist Review, 15, February 1915, pp. 473–74.
MacDonald, J., “From Butte to Bisbee,” International Socialist Review, 17, August 1917, pp. 67–69.
Marcy, L. H., “Calumet,” International Socialist Review, 14, February 1914, pp. 453–67.
____, “The Iron Heel on the Mesabi Range,” International Socialist Review, 17, April 1916, pp. 74–77.
Merz, C, “The Issue in Butte,” New Republic, 12, September 22, 1917, pp. 215–17.
Perry, Grover, “Metal Miners’ Riot,” International Socialist Review, 17, June 1917, p. 730.
Taylor, G. R., “The Clash in the Copper Country,” Survey, 31, November 1, 1913, pp. 127–35.
____, “Moyer’s Story of Why He Left the Copper Country,” Survey, 31, January 10, 1914, pp. 433–35
Vorse, Mary H., “The Mining Strike in Minnesota,” Outlook, 113, August 30, 1916, pp. 1036, 1045–46.
West, George P., “Mesabi Strike,” International Socialist Review, 17, September 1916, pp. 158–59.
Government Publications
Labor Troubles at Goldfield, Nevada. House Document No. 607, 60th Congress, 1st Session. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1908.
Report on Bisbee Deportations Made by the President’s Mediation Commission to the President of the United States, November 6, 1917. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1918.