Hellraisers Journal, Tuesday May 21, 1918
“Heroine of Paint Creek” Recalls the Miners’ Friend, Senator Kern
From The United Mine Workers Journal of May 16, 1918:
NOTICE TO LOCAL UNIONS
When Senator John W. Kern introduced his resolution in the United States Senate calling for an investigation into the conditions of the Paint Creek and Cabin Creek regions of West Virginia all the special interests in the country became active in an effort to defeat it.
A Wall street representative who had known Senator Kern in other days called him on the phone and begged him to drop the resolutions. “I’ll see you in hell first,” replied Kern, hanging up the receiver.
A more bitter battle has seldom been waged in the Senate, and for the first time in history in a straight fight between the powerful and the workers the workers won—through Kern’s gallant fight.
And that was in keeping with Kern’s battles for labor all his life.
The story of the ten-year battle for the unionization of miners in West Virginia is told fully and graphically in the
Life of Senator Kern,
which is being written by Claude G. Bowers, who was intimately associated with him.
Mother Jones, the “heroine of Paint Creek,” has furnished much data to the author for this chapter—the longest in the book.