Lattimer massacre
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Michael Cheslock James F. Martin | |||
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The Lattimer massacre refers to a
Background
The economies of Central and Eastern Europe were struggling in the late 19th century. The European rural population was growing faster than either the agricultural or new industrial sectors of the economy could absorb, industrialization was disrupting both the agricultural and craft economy, and there was increasing competition from large-scale commercial and foreign agricultural producers.[5][page needed] These were the factors that drove most of the mass immigration to the US, where the economy was booming and many industrial jobs were available requiring little English.[5]
Disproportionate numbers of new
Conditions in coal mines of the late 19th century were harsh. Mine safety was so poor that 32,000 miners in Northeast Pennsylvania had died since 1870.[7] Wages, already low in a competitive industry, fell 17% during the mid-1890s after a coal industry slump.[4][8][page needed]
Although wages had improved to some extent by the fall of 1897, anthracite coal companies in the region cut wages and consolidated operations within the mines, often worsening working conditions.[4] In some cases, companies forced workers to lease homes from the company and required them to see only company doctors when injured.[4]
Events
Strike
In August 1897, the Honey Brook division of the Lehigh and Wilkes-Barre Coal Company laid off workers at its strip mines, cut the pay of the remaining employees, and raised fees for workers residing in the area's company towns.[4] The company consolidated its mule stables, forcing teenage mule drivers to travel, unpaid, much farther each day to pick up their mules.[4][9] After inconclusive talks, 25 to 35 teenaged drivers struck on August 14, 1897.[4][9] A scuffle between a supervisor and some drivers led to additional walkouts by strip miners and underground coal miners; by August 16 nearly 2,000 workers were on strike.[4][9]
Nearly all the miners joined the UMW (United Mine Workers) on August 18; within two days, almost all the mines in the region had closed due to the spreading strike.[1] Many Slavic miners had not joined the nascent United Mine Workers. This was because of ethnic discrimination by English-speaking and American miners and also because of the poor relationship between unionized miners and the former strikebreakers.[6] But, worsening working conditions and a UMW call for a 15 percent wage increase attracted many Slavic miners into the union.[1][10]
The first wave of the strike ended on August 23, 1897, after the company agreed to pay overtime, bring wages up to the regional average, allow miners to see their own doctors when injured, and no longer force miners to live in company-owned housing.[4]
A second strike began on August 25. Teenaged breaker boys at the A.S. Van Wickle coal breaker in the nearby village of Colerain struck for higher wages as well.[4] When Van Wickle attempted to use Slavic workers as strikebreakers, the Slavs also joined the strike. Although the strike spread to two other nearby coal works, the company quickly agreed to raise wages up to the regional average, and the strike ended on about August 28.[4]
When the new pay rates were announced on September 1, 1897, only a few workers received raises.[4][10] Management did agree to treat Slavic workers more fairly,[10] but the mine owners reneged on their other promises.[4]
The strikes resumed. On September 3, 3,000 workers marched on four mines, shutting them down.[1][11]
The mine owners' private armed force, the
Massacre
On Friday, September 10, 1897, about 300 to 400 unarmed strikers—nearly all of them Slavs and Germans—marched to a coal mine owned by Calvin Pardee at the town of Lattimer to support a newly formed United Mine Workers union.[1][2][4][9][10] Their goal was to support the newly formed UMW union at the still-open Lattimer mine.[2][9] The demonstrators were confronted by law enforcement officials several times on the road and ordered to disperse, but kept marching.[10]
The deputies had spent most of the morning joking about how many miners they would kill.[13] While on a streetcar headed for Lattimer with the sheriff and his posse, one deputy was overheard saying, "I bet I drop six of them when I get over there."[14][15]
When the demonstrators reached Lattimer at 3:45 pm, they were met again by the sheriff and 150 armed deputies.[2][9][16] Sheriff Martin ordered the marchers to disperse, and attempted to grab an American flag out of the hands of the lead marcher.[2][9][17] A scuffle ensued, and the police opened fire on the unarmed crowd.[2]
At least 19 miners were killed, and between 17 and 49 were wounded.[1][2][3][9][17] Many had been shot in the back, and several had multiple gunshot wounds, which indicated that they had been targeted by the deputies.[10][18]
Aftermath
The strike led to temporary mass unrest in the area. After Sheriff Martin telephoned for help, the Pennsylvania National Guard was dispatched to the county to restore order.[10][19] Late on the evening of September 10, 1897, more than 2,500 troops of the Third Brigade (partly stationed in Luzerne County) had been deployed.[19][page needed] Local Slavic community leaders held a rally on September 11 to try to calm the workers, raise money for the support of families of the dead and wounded, and seek the prosecution of Sheriff Martin and his deputies.[10]
Outraged miners searched in vain on September 12 for Lehigh and Wilkes-Barre Coal Company mine superintendent Gomer Jones, and destroyed his home when they could not find him.
Sheriff Martin and 73 deputies were arrested and put on trial.[9][10] At trial, the defendants claimed that the marchers had refused to obey an order to disperse and were charging toward the sheriff and his deputies.[18][page needed]
Witness John Pusti gave a different account in formal testimony:
I was with the strikers when the shooting occurred. When we approached the Sheriff he walked to the middle of the road and told us to stop. Some few of the men went forward, and I then heard two volleys from the deputies. None of the strikers was armed. I was shot in the right arm and as I started to run I was shot in the right leg, the ball entering from the back and coming out in front.[21]
Further medical evidence showed that nearly all the strikers had been shot in the back.[10][18] Nonetheless, the sheriff and his deputies were acquitted.[9][10]
The Lattimer massacre was a turning point in the history of the
These events significantly boosted the union career of
The crossroads where the Lattimer massacre occurred did not have any commemoration for 80 years. In 1972, the United Labor Council of Lower Luzerne and Carbon counties and the UMW erected a small memorial on the site.[24][page needed]
List of victims
According to a contemporary report in the New York Herald,[25] 21 men were killed in the Lattimer massacre:
- Michael Cheslock (Ceslak); the only miner who was a naturalized U.S. citizen
- Sebastian Bozestoski, age 35
- John Chobonshi, age 23
- Adalbert Czaja, age 27
- John Futa, age 29
- John Gastack, age 32
- Antonio Grazke, age 33
- Frank Kodel, age 24
- Andrew Kollick, age 30
- Andre Nikzkowuski, age 27
- Rulof Rekenits, age 35
- John Ruski, age 28
- John Sheka, age 27
- John Tranke, age 32
- John Turnasdich, age 27
- Stephen Urich, age 27
- Andrew Varicku, age 28
- Andrew Yerkman, age 31
- Stanley Zagorski, age 45
- Adam Zamoski, age 26
- Andrew Zeminski, age 31
- John Zernovick, age 33
Working from what he describes as "known gravesites" rather than contemporary documents,[26] Michael Novak lists the following 19 names of Lattimer shooting victims in his book The Guns of Lattimer (1996):
- Broztowski
- Čzaja
- Česlak
- Chrzeszeski
- Futa
- Grekoš
- Jurić
- Jurašek
- Kulik
- Mieczkowski
- Monikaski
- Platek
- Rekewicz
- Skrep
- Tarnowicz
- Tomašantas
- Zagorski
- Ziominski
- Ziemba
(Novak described himself as a "philosopher and theologian rather than a historian":[27]
See also
- List of worker deaths in United States labor disputes
- List of incidents of civil unrest in the United States
Footnotes
- ^ ISBN 0-595-33732-5
- ^ ISBN 0-271-02214-0
- ^ ISBN 1-56000-764-8), and 40 wounded (Beers, Paul B. The Pennsylvania Sampler: A Biography of the Keystone State and Its People. Mechanicsburg, Penn.: Stackpole Books, 1970).[page needed]
- ^ ISBN 0-7914-1819-7
- ^ ISBN 0-495-56598-9[page needed]
- ^ ISBN 0-271-01934-4p. 330.
- ISBN 0-7385-0978-7
- ISBN 0-8131-1339-3[page needed]
- ^ ISBN 0-8014-8473-1[page needed]
- ^ ISBN 0-8078-3220-0[page needed]
- ^ Although the striking workers managed to close mines where the employees had not walked off the job, those mines tended to stay closed only so long as the strikers ringed the works. Once they left, the mine re-opened. See: Blatz, Democratic Miners: Work and Labor Relations in the Anthracite Coal Industry, 1875–1925, 1994.[page needed]
- ISBN 0-8057-8427-6[page needed]
- ISBN 1-56000-764-8[page needed]
- ^ Novak, The Guns of Lattimer, 1996, p. 122.
- ^ Wolensky, Kenneth C. The Lattimer Massacre. Historic Pennsylvania Leaflet No. 15. Harrisburg: Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, 1997.
- ISBN 0-8057-8427-6[page needed]
- ^ ISBN 0-8057-8427-6[page needed]
- ^ ISBN 1-56000-773-7[page needed]
- ^ ISBN 1-59652-025-6[page needed]
- ISBN 0-253-21262-6[page needed]
- ^ "Lattimer Shooting Trial" (PDF). New York Times. February 15, 1898. Retrieved August 13, 2013.
- ISBN 0-271-01567-5[page needed]
- ISBN 0-7627-4588-6[page needed]
- ISBN 0-292-70525-5[page needed]
- ^ "These Were Shot by Deputies," New York Herald, Sept. 12, 1897 section 1, pg. 3.
- ^ Novak, The Guns of Lattimer, pg. 257.
- ^ Novak, The Guns of Lattimer, 1996, pg. xi.
Further reading
- M. Mark Stolarik, "A Slovak Perspective on the Lattimer Massacre," Pennsylvania History, vol. 69, no. 1 (Winter 2002), pp. 31–41.
- "Blood Flows at Lattimer," Scranton Republican, Sept. 11, 1897, p. 1.
- "Strikers Fired Upon," Hazelton Sentinel, Sept. 10, 1897, p. 5.