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Hellraisers Journal – Friday March 8, 1912
Children of Lawrence Strikers Appear before House Committee at Washington
From The Washington Times of March 2, 1912:
From the Washington Evening Star of March 2, 1912:
Child Tells Her Story.
There was Camello [Camella] Teoli, a little Italian girl, who stood up when she was told and who said she was sixteen years old, although she didn’t look it. She started to work in the spinning room of one of the American Woolen Company’s mills in Lawrence two years ago and three weeks later had her hair caught in a shafting and her scalp torn off, just as did Miss Houghton, at the census office, more than twelve months ago. But little Camello Teoli was the oldest of seven children and, with her father, the support of the family.
She earned several dollars a week when “speeded up,” and her father, when he was lucky, made seven. She is still under treatment as a result of the horrible accident of which she was a victim, but lately has been working just the same, she said, for her father has been on “slack time” and has been making $2.80 a week.
There were other children there, too, who, while they showed no scars, looked even to the untrained eye as if they had been “speeded up” beyond the limit of juvenile endurance.
Cheeks sallow, lips pinched and eyes that seemed to have looked upon all the misery of the world, the children sat unmoved throughout the hearing, presented by Mr. Berger as an exhibit of what “one of the most highly protected industries in America does to the human life by which it is served,” as he declared.
The children, with several adult strikers as guardians, and accompanied by George W. Roewer, the Boston attorney, who has defended in court the strikers arrested in Lawrence, reached Washington last night several hours behind schedule time, and were met at the Union station were escorted to the accommodations that had been provided for them by a big crowd of local socialists and labor sympathizers. All of the Lawrence delegation wore little cards, bearing the inscription “Don’t be a scab,” and although weary from their journey, marched to their lower Pennsylvania avenue hotel singing and cheering.
Today they marched to the Capitol in the same way, and outside of the House building had to run the fire of a battery of cameras and moving picture machines stationed right outside of the entrance.
[Note: Camella Teoli was introduced to the Committee on March 2nd. She made her full statement before the Committee on March 4th.]
[Emphasis added.]
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From The Boston Daily Globe, Evening Edition, of March 1, 1912:
Child Workers at Lawrence Ready to Depart for Washington in Charge of Lenrenzo Maroni, William D. Haywood, Riccordo Frazio, Mary Grandy and Josephine Liss.
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From the Buffalo Evening Times of March 4, 1912:
From the New York Tribune of March 3, 1912:
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SOURCES & IMAGES
Quote BBH Weave Cloth Bayonets, ISR p538
https://www.marxists.org/history/usa/pubs/isr/v12n09-mar-1912-ISR-gog-Corn.pdf
The Washington Times
(Washington, District of Columbia)
-Mar 2, 1912, p1
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84026749/1912-03-02/ed-1/seq-1/
The Evening Star
(Washington, District of Columbia)
-Mar 2, 1912, p1+2
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045462/1912-03-02/ed-1/seq-1/
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045462/1912-03-02/ed-1/seq-2/
The Boston Daily Globe
(Boston, Massachusetts)
-Evening Edition
-Mar 1, 1912, p1
https://www.newspapers.com/image/430938914/
Buffalo Evening Times
(Buffalo, New York)
-Mar 4, 1912, p1
https://www.newspapers.com/image/442827265/
New York Tribune
(New York, New York)
-Mar 3, 1912, p1
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1912-03-03/ed-1/seq-1/
See also:
The Strike at Lawrence, Massachusetts
-Hearings Before the Committee on Rules
of United States House of Representatives
-March 2-7, 1912
U.S. Government Printing Office, 1912
(search separately and use pages: wilson; berger; teoli)
Notes:
-page 3: Saturday, March 2, 1912
-page 3: Statement of Rep William B. Wilson
-page 8: Statement of Rep Victor Berger
-page 35: Camella Teoli introduced
-page 96: Monday, March 4, 1912
-page 96: Statement of Rep William B. Wilson
-pages 169-173: Statement of Camella Teoli
https://books.google.com/books?id=i0wuAAAAYAAJ
Camella Teoli Testifies about the 1912 Lawrence Textile Strike
Source: Hearings on the Strike at Lawrence, Massachusetts, House Document No. 671, 62nd Cong., 2nd sess.
Reprinted in Joyce L. Kornbluh, ed. Rebel Voices: An I.W.W. Anthology (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1964), 181–184.
http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/61/
Rebel Voices
An I. W. W. Anthology
-ed by Joyce L. Kornbluh
University of Michigan Press, 1964
https://books.google.com/books?id=-qtNAAAAMAAJ
Carmela/Camella Teoli
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carmela_Teoli
Camella Teoli Way, Lawrence, MA 01841
https://www.google.com/maps/place/Camella+Teoli+Way,+Lawrence,+MA+01841/@42.7121802,-71.1616678,387m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m5!3m4!1s0x89e307084f84b77f:0xe009436802b5c473!8m2!3d42.7121645!4d-71.1589212
“Whose America Is This?” by Paul Cowan
The Village Voice of April 2, 1979
(mentioned in wiki article above)
-Sadly, could not find Cowan’s article online,
however found review and analysis of said article here:
Radical History Review: Volume 65
-Rhr Collective
Cambridge University Press, Apr 26, 1996
(search separately: teoli; lawrence)
https://books.google.com/books?id=hQBHd8p_Hl4C
Tag: Lawrence Textile Strike of 1912
https://weneverforget.org/tag/lawrence-textile-strike-of-1912/
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Bread and Roses