Hellraisers Journal: Thirty-Three Fellow Worker Now Jailed at Fresno; Sheriff Says He Can “Accommodate” 300

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Quote Frank Little, Fresno Jails Dungeons, FMR p6, Sept 2, 1910———-

Hellraisers Journal – Saturday October 22, 1910
Fresno, California – Thirty-Three Fellow Workers Now in Jail

From The Fresno Morning Republican of October 21, 1910:

THIRTY-THREE MEMBERS OF I. W. W.
NOW IN COUNTY JAIL
————
Police Arrest Five More for Speaking
on Streets Without Permit.
————
Sheriff Chittenden Says He Can
Accommodate 300 “Workers.”
————

Dont Buy Jobs, IW p4, Oct 19, 1910
Industrial Worker
October 19, 1910

With the arrest of five members of the I.W.W. last night by the police, there are now thirty-three of the so-called “workers” in the county jail. One was released yesterday as he declared that he was not an I.W.W. and asked for an opportunity to shake Fresno’s dust from his feet. Police Judge Briggs gave him the chance and he left town. All of the remainder, excepting the five jailed last night, have entered pleas of not guilty and demanded immediate trials by jury.

Four of the “workers” were in court yesterday morning. Alfred Nelson said he was not an I.W.W. and pleaded guilty to a charge of vagrancy. He was given a “floater.” H. S. Barnes, E. F. Doree and William Love pleaded not guilty to the same charge and demanded immediate jury hearings. The trio was returned to jail in default of bonds of $100.

At 8 o’clock last night, five were arrested on a charge of violating the city ordinance against speaking on the public streets without a written permit from the chief of police. Patrolman Al Hayes arrested J. Alpert, a lineworker; Helms arrested William Cashman and George Berger, miners; Pickens jailed Manuel Carragal, a laborer; and McKee arrested C. R. Neeley, a smelter-worker. All had I.W.W. buttons, working cards and literature but no money. The men arrived in town on the brakebeams of the southbound trains yesterday afternoon.

Since the I.W.W. headquarters were removed from Mariposa street to a tent in Belmont, just beyond the city limits line, the “workers” who arrive in town have found some difficulty in locating the place where they are supposed to register and receive financial assistance.

Sheriff Chittenden, who witnessed the scene at I and Mariposa streets last night, stated that he had made arrangements to accommodate three hundred of the I.W.W.’s if they come to Fresno.

“I can, on a moment’s notice, take all of the vags out of the bull-pen and turn it over to the ‘workers.’ This bull-pen, which is on the lower floor of the northwest wing of the jail, will accommodate approximately three hundred men. I am prepared for any invasion,” said the sheriff.

When the “workers” tried to speak at I and Mariposa streets last evening, a crowd of fully five hundred was in attendance. At the same time, evidently at a given signal, four men tried to speak, each on a different corner. The police were on hand in large numbers and the men had no sooner started than they were jerked from their boxes and taken to jail. The big crowd lingered for several minutes expecting to see more of the “workers” on the boxes, but after the arrest of the five men, none ventured forth and the crowd gradually melted away.

[Photograph and emphasis added.]

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

SOURCES

Quote Frank Little, Fresno Jails Dungeons, FMR p6, Sept 2, 1910
https://www.newspapers.com/image/606951967/

The Fresno Morning Republican
(Fresno, California)
-Oct 21, 1910
https://www.newspapers.com/image/606953930/

IMAGE
Don’t Buy Jobs, IW p4, Oct 19, 1910
https://www.marxists.org/history/usa/pubs/industrialworker/iw/v2n31-w83-oct-19-1910-IW.pdf

See also:
Tag: Fresno Free Speech Fight of 1910-1911
https://weneverforget.org/tag/fresno-free-speech-fight-of-1910-1911/

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The Workers of the World are Now Awaking – Willard Losinger
-Thank you to Willard Losinger for performing songs from LRSB that are rarely found performed online. Richard Brazier’s songs were prominent in early editions of Little Red Songbook.
Lyrics by Richard Brazier from First LRSB of 1909

See Big Red Songbook; search with song title:
https://books.google.com/books?id=QaXECwAAQBAJ