Hellraisers Journal: General Strike of Silk Industry in City of Paterson, N. J., to Be Called by Local 152, IWW, Next Week

Share

Quote BBH re Capitalist Class, Lbr Arg p4, Mar 23, 1911—————

Hellraisers Journal – Sunday February 23, 1913
Paterson, New Jersey – Silk Workers Vote with Great Enthusiasm for General Strike

From the Paterson Morning Call of February 20, 1913:

GENERAL STRIKE DUE NEXT WEEK?
———-
Labor Committee Will Decide on Date
at Tonight’s Meeting.
———-

Paterson Faces Big Silk Strike, Newark Eve Str p8, Feb 20, 1913
Newark Evening Star
February 20, 1913

Two meeting rooms were necessary in Turn hall last night to accommodate all the silk workers that attended to take action on a proposed general strike throughout the industry in this city. When more than a thousand had crowded into one hall and the police prohibited any additional people there, the committee from local 152, Industrial Workers of the World, under whose auspices the mass meeting was conducted, opened a smaller hall, where between two and three hundred stood while they listened to urgent appeals on the part of the labor leaders to join the walkout, which they claimed to be inevitable now. Men and women continued going and coming during the entire evening, so that it is safe to assume there were more than two thousand who heard all or part of the speeches at least.

After all the speakers had concluded, the chairman of the meeting asked what decision the people had arrived at and what they considered doing in the matter of the movement to do away with the three and four-loom system in Paterson. One man to the rear of the hall yelled “strike” in no uncertain tones, and the hundreds applauded.

“How many vote to have this striker?” asked the chairman, and then requested that all in favor of going out raise their right hands. The people had been worked to a white heat of enthusiasm by the addresses and many of them raised both hands and then jumped on chairs to make their approval the more pronounced. After joining in huzzas for the period of a minute or more the people filed out.

Whether this spirit is a lasting one will remain to be seen when the executive committee of the local 152 call upon the workers to strike. It was evident last night that the men were more than interested in the matter, but even sanguine labor leaders would not vouch for their support. Such action by the people was expected after the oratorical fireworks that had been presented, but there was no indication that the same line of action would be adhered to when the privations consequent to the loss of work and wages are met with.

Between 500 and 600 of the workers that crowded the two halls last night did not wait until the vote was taken, and their presence might be accounted for by assigning curiosity as the cause. They made no expression of their opinion one way or another, and while their support is banked upon, there is no positive assurance that the support will be there when wanted.

A Polish speaker named Lauer, an Italian speaker, Organizer Kaplen, who spoke in Yiddish, and Miss Elizabeth Flynn made up the list of talkers that had been brought into the city for the meeting. When it became necessary to open the second hall, several of the local leaders jumped into the breach and made addresses on the situation as they sized it up.

One thing is certain, a general strike will be called. The executive committee of local 152, I. W. W., will hold a closed meeting this evening in Turn Hall, where manifestos will be brought up and translated into several languages. As soon as they are taken from the press they will be distributed directly to the silk workers.

In these manifestos will be the final instructions to the workers of the silk industry in this city. They will be told when to walk out and how to conduct themselves after they have left the mills. The rules will apply not only to those working in establishments where the three and four loom system is in vogue at the present time, but also to those now running the two looms. Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday of  next week will be the date selected by the committee tonight for the general walk-out. No one of the committee would say last night just what day would be chosen; but Wednesday was placed as the last day on which action will be taken.

Another mass meeting will be held in Turn hall on Saturday afternoon at 3 o’clock, to which all the silk workers have been asked to attend, but which is set principally for the dyers of the city, the purpose being to include this part of the industry in the general strike as well.

It was expected that Miss Flynn would remain in Paterson after her address last night, but she received a call to go to Hazelton, Pa., from the headquarters in New York. She will be in Paterson on Saturday and then return the first part of next week. There were no indications of rioting, but the “arms of the law” were needed to limit the size of the crowd in each meeting room.

[Newsclip and emphasis added.]

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

SOURCES & IMAGES

Quote BBH re Capitalist Class, Lbr Arg p4, Mar 23, 1911
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85059855/1911-03-23/ed-1/seq-4/

The Morning Call
(Paterson, New Jersey)
-Feb 20, 1913
https://www.newspapers.com/image/552430671/
https://www.newspapers.com/image/552431198/

Newark Evening Star
(Newark, New Jersey)
-Feb 20, 1913
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn91064011/1913-02-20/ed-1/seq-8/

See also:

New Jersey Bureau of Statistics of Labor and Industries
Report for Year Ending October 31st 1913, page 175 (189 of 334)
“Silk Industry Strike, Paterson, 1913”
https://www.njstatelib.org/wp-content/uploads/slic_files/imported/NJ_Information/Digital_Collections/Bureau_Statistics/Statistics1913.pdf

Diary of Paterson Silk Strike by Alexander Scott from CIR, p2629
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112087783186&view=1up&seq=591
https://books.google.com/books?id=luYeAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA2629&dq=paterson+%22silk+strike%22+1913&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwj6gdyQ_6v9AhW2kWoFHXYwBaQ4oAEQ6AF6BAgFEAI#v=onepage&q=paterson%20%22silk%20strike%22%201913&f=false

Search CIR Vol III: paterson
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt/search?id=uiug.30112087783186;q1=paterson;sz=25;start=1;sort=seq;hl=true;page=search;seq=1;orient=0

Title page: CIR Vol III
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112087783186&view=1up&seq=7&q1=paterson

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Dump the Bosses Off Your Back – Utah Phillips