Trial of a New Society

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Justus Ebert 1913
English
  • Introduction
  • Chapter I: The Industrial Democracy Arrives
  • Chapter II: The Industrial Democracy Gets Into Action
  • Chapter III: The Industrial Democracy Overcomes All Opposition
  • Chapter IV: The Industrial Democracy Re-Asserts Itself
  • Chapter V: The Industrial Democracy Triumphs In Court
  • Chapter V, part 2
  • Chapter VI: Will The Industrial Democracy Endure?
In 1912 textile workers in Lawrence, Massachusetts, mostly immigrants, went on strike in response to a pay cut, speedups, and unsafe working conditions. Representatives from the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW/Wobblies) came in to help organize the strike. The city declared martial law and a tense standoff went on for weeks. National newspapers provided breathless coverage of the strike and painted drastically different pictures of what was happening and who was to blame. When a woman was shot in ambiguous circumstances, strike leaders were tried for murder--not for shooting her, but for purportedly inciting mob violence leading to her death. They were acquitted.

This book by an ardent IWW member, which seems to have been written in haste as well as in great enthusiasm, gives a vivid journalistic account of labor conditions, of the strike which was afterward known as the Bread and Roses strike, of the trial of strike leaders Joseph Ettor and Arturo Giovanitti, and of the general strike organized to support them.

The linked text includes reproductions of various cartoons, posters, and leaflets from the strike, which have not been read aloud. It also includes many footnotes, detailed citations of sources for quotes, which also have not been read aloud--only those footnotes required to explain quotes which had no attribution in the main text have been included. (Summary by Joanna Michal Hoyt)

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