Hellraisers Journal: Southern Pacific Official at Arizona Desert Town Denies Water to Striker’s New Born Babe and Wife

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Quote Joe Hill, General Strike, Workers Awaken, LRSB Oct 1919———————-

Hellraisers Journal – Monday December 4, 1911
Gila Bend, Arizona – Southern Pacific Official Denies Water to New Born Babe

From the Duluth Labor World of December 2, 1911:

LW p1, Dec 2, 1911

TUCSON, Ariz., Nov. 30.-The Southern Pacific officials at this point have resorted to brutal and de­sperate methods to compel its strik­ing employees to return to work. Out on the desert where many men are on strike they depend upon the company to bring them water. As a last re­sort the company has refused to fur­nish or sell water to any employee on strike. 

In a news story published by, “The Voice of the People” of this city, a tale is told of the tactics of the com­pany in its attempt to crush the men on strike: The paper states: 

Refused Water. 

“Even a Digger Indian or a Papago buck on the war path, will turn over a rock and allow a squaw with a new born pappoose the first pick of the fat grubs which may be found beneath it, but it has remained for an official of the Southern Pacific railroad, Superintendent J. H. Dyer, of the Tucson division, which extends from El Paso, to Yuma, to refuse a drink of waiter to a strikers’s wife with a new born babe at her breast,

“The babe was only three days old when the order was issued by the railroad superintendent, and on account of the order the wife of W. E. Stewart a striking boilermaker at Gila Bend, Ariz., out in the desert, miles from civilization, is without water for the nurse to wash the linen, which the simplest demands of sanitation, to say nothing of civilization, require in such cases. 

Two Kind of Water. 

There are two. kinds of water at Gila Bend-the water which the engines must use—it eats the flues out of boilers with a celerity which requires a force of men at the round house to make what are called “running repairs” on the locomotives, and W. E. Stewart was one of these men. 

“The other water is drinking water, which is brought in a water car from Sentinel. Since the strike Stewart has been standing with the other me­chanics of the federation at his post, the little semi-oasis of the desert about half way between Tucson and Yuma. 

“On November 7, Superintendent Dyer, angered and furious at the un­breakable lines of the shopmen who would not return to work until the grievances are adjusted, issued his order to cut off the water from all strikers at Gila Bend. 

Money Is Tendered. 

“The secretary of the Tucson branch of the federation received a wire from Stewart telling of the action and asking legal counsel. A. A. Worsley, the attorney for the fed­eration, notified Stewart by wire, to tender pay for the water. 

“Stewart obeyed and money was of­fered by his father-in-law, while Stewart held his three days old babe in his arms and looked into the eyes of his suffering wife, unable to offer her a drink of water which she craved, but the money was refused by the roundhouse foreman, Allgood, who was acting under Dyer’s orders. 

“Kindly disposed women neighbors, whose husbands are still in the rail­road service in other departments than that affected by the strike, have seen to it that enough water to drink has been smuggled to the bedside of Mrs. Stewart, whose condition forbids her being moved to any other place at this time.”

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SOURCES & IMAGES

Quote Joe Hill, General Strike, Workers Awaken, LRSB Oct 1919
https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=vTlRAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&pg=GBS.PA6

The Labor World
(Duluth, Minnesota)
 -Dec 2, 1911
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn78000395/1911-12-02/ed-1/seq-1/
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn78000395/1911-12-02/ed-1/seq-6/

See also:

The San Francisco Call
(San Francisco, California)
-Oct 1, 1911
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85066387/1911-10-01/ed-1/seq-33/
https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85066387/1911-10-01/ed-1/seq-42/

GENERAL STRIKE OF S. P. SHOPMEN IS INAUGURATED

[…..]

In conformity with orders issued by the presidents of their craft unions, the general strike of the Southern Pacific shopmen went into effect at 10 o’clock yesterday morning. Al over California, as well as east of the mountains on every branch and division of the Harriman system, the shop employes were called upon at the same hour to lay aside their tools and to refuse their services to the company until their federation was recognized……

Tag: Illinois Central and Harriman Lines Strike of 1911 to 1915
https://weneverforget.org/tag/illinois-central-and-harriman-lines-strike-of-1911-to-1915/

Note: re “Voice of the People” of Tucson AZ, see:
Coopers International Journal Volume 20
(search separately: “voice of the people” ; “labor party”)
https://books.google.com/books/about/Coopers_International_Journal.html?id=yOJ8AAAAMAAJ

-page 485 (Sept 1910)

F. H. Bighton, editor of Voice of the People, the Labor Party’s official organ of Tucson, Arizona, was recently the victim of an assault by his political enemies whom the police refused to arrest. Blighton, however, was jailed, released under $1,000 bonds, and then declared not guilty by the judge. His trial was attended by the entire force of union machinists working the Southern Pacific shops at this place, who left their work and marched to the court room in a body without stopping to take off their overalls. The acquitted editor was carried from the court room on the men’s shoulders.

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