Erik Loomis Profile picture
Feb 7 36 tweets 5 min read
This Day in Labor History: February 7, 1894. Gold miners start the Cripple Creek (CO) strike, one of the biggest victories for workers in the Gilded Age!! Why? Because workers had elected a pro-labor governor who didn't allow private militia to kill them. Let's talk about it!
This strike made the Western Federation of Miners the major labor organization among western miners, as well as a reputation for violence that made it unacceptable to conservative labor leaders in the American Federation of Labor.
By the 1890s, the area around Cripple Creek was the center of the Colorado gold fields. Cripple Creek itself was the second largest city in the state.
The Panic of 1893 theoretically could have helped these workers; it was silver prices that collapsed and the government needed all the gold it could get.
But this led silver miners to flood into the mines and convinced the mine owners to lower wages. Announcing a 10 hour day (previously 8) with no pay raise led the miners to walk out.
The strike was widespread and effective. By the end of February, virtually every gold mine in Colorado was shut down. A few gave in and restarted their mines after retreating back to the 8-hour day. However, the big mines were intransigent and brought in scab labor.
At first, the WFM tried to organize these men into the union. But work was scarce in 1894 and even a low-paying job with long hours was too good to pass up.
So on March 16, a group of armed miners captured and beat six sheriff’s deputies heading up to a mine at Victor, where they were to assist in the protection of scabs.
This act of violence led to El Paso County Sheriff M.F. Bowers to request state militia intervention from the governor, the Populist Davis Waite. Waite was not the preferred governor for Colorado capitalists.
When he realized that Bowers was lying to him about the extent of violence and really wanted a state strikebreaking force, he withdrew the militia. Bowers then arrested the strike leaders, but a jury found them not guilty of trumped up charges.
Meanwhile, the strikers began to attack the scabs, throwing bricks and getting into fistfights with them. The mine owners then attempted to negotiate with the miners, offering a return to the 8 hour day but at reduced pay.
When the miners rejected this offer out of hand, and with the refusal of Governor Waite to use the militia as the personal army of the mine owners, the owners decided to raise a private army of their own.
They paid for an army of 100 men, mostly ex-policemen, to become sheriff’s deputies and protect the hundreds of scabs they intended to bring to the mines.
When the miners heard about this, they organized to defend themselves. On May 24, they took over the Strong Mine, near Victor. When 125 deputies marched to take it, the miners blew it up. The deputies fled and the miners wanted blood.
They filled a railroad car with dynamite and send it down the railroad track, hoping to cause an explosion in the deputies’ camp, but it derailed. Many wanted to systematically blow up the mines.
This didn’t happen, but tensions rose even further when the mine owners paid for an additional 1200 deputies for their private army.
Fearing a complete massacre, Governor Waite stepped in. In an extremely rare move for the Gilded Age, Waite issued an order declaring the owners’ private army illegal and ordered the capitalists to disband it, sending in the state militia as a peacekeeping force.
He then went to the miners and got their approval to be their bargaining agent with the mine owners.
To say the least, the mine owners were apoplectic. This was the age of the Great Railroad Strike, of Homestead, of Pullman. Capitalists expected the state to do their bidding.
When Waite called a meeting of the union and owners in Colorado Springs, a mob whipped up by the companies formed outside and threatened to lynch Waite and the unionists. Through a decoy, they snuck out the back door and escaped.
Despite this, Waite forced the mine owners to agree to restore the eight hour day at the previous wages of $3 a day (about $73 today, so basically the equivalent of about $9 an hour for extremely dangerous work).
Even though they had reached an agreement, mine owners wanted revenge. Bowers could not control the 1200 deputies.
After a confrontation with the state militia at Victor, the deputies went to Cripple Creek, where they arrested hundreds of miners on trumped up charges. They even formed a gauntlet and forced townspeople to run through it while being beaten.
The state militia then rounded up the deputies, essentially arresting the police. The mine owners refused to disband the private army but the governor said he’d keep the militia in town for another month which meant that the owners would have to pay the private army to do nothing
Finally, they gave up. It was arguably organized labor’s biggest win in the entire Gilded Age.
Governor Waite was seen by the respectable people of Colorado as a promoter of anarchy and was defeated in his reelection campaign in the fall of 1894, effectively ending the Populist movement in Colorado.
The Western Federation of Miners went on to play a key role in the founding of the Industrial Workers of the World in 1905, although it remained independent of that organization.
It later became the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (or Mine, Mill for short), one of the communist led unions that the CIO eventually kicked out of the organization in the 1940s.
It is probably most famous today for having produced the film Salt of the Earth, detailing a mining strike in southern New Mexico in the early 1950s. It finally merged with the United Steelworkers of America in 1967.
Cripple Creek itself became a gambling town in a state attempt to revitalize its old mining towns.
Although less ravaged and gross than Black Hawk, which has become a gambling mecca for Denver that has completely obliterated the historical character of the town, the gambling has made Cripple Creek pretty unpleasant without providing many of the promised jobs.
Now, the real takeaway from all of this is that you can closely track the victories of American labor and see that the attitude of the government toward the workers is the single biggest factor in whether they win.
This really cuts against a lot of left beliefs about unions that it's about radicalism or organizing and that the government doesn't really matter. The historical record flat out does not support such assertions. Prove me wrong, please! I'd like to be wrong here.
But I am not wrong. Whether on the federal or the state level, it's really about government. If the government unites with employers, it's virtually impossible for unions to win. If government is neutral or on the side of workers, then it is much, much easier for workers.
This demonstrates pretty overwhelmingly that unions have to elect the people they need in office. I realize that the modern Democratic Party has a highly mixed record on supporting labor, though Biden has been very good. But what are the other options that can work???
Back tomorrow to discuss the Dawes Act and how ideas of labor were central to the genocidal project against Native peoples.

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More from @ErikLoomis

Feb 8
This Day in Labor History: February 8, 1887. Grover Cleveland signed the Dawes Severalty Act into law, creating a process to split up Indian reservations to create individual parcels of land and sell them to white settlers. Let's talk about the labor history of genocide! Image
One of the worst laws in American history, the Dawes Act is not only a stark reminder of Euro-American colonialism and the dispossession of indigenous peoples, but also of the role dominant ideas of work on the land have in promoting racist and imperialist ends.
We might not think of the Dawes Act as labor history. But I want to make the beginning of a case that it is absolutely central to American labor history, a point I will expand upon in the future
Read 32 tweets
Feb 6
This Day in Labor History: February 6, 1919. The Seattle General Strike begins. Let's talk about this very real challenge to American capital and also how general strike discourse today is too often a left version of politics without politics!
The Seattle General Strike began with a longshoremen’s strike, as shipyard workers protested two years without a pay raise. 35,000 workers walked off their jobs. They believed they would receive a raise after government wage controls during the war were ended.
Instead, the government-appointed leader of the Emergency Fleet Corporation, designed to promote the rapid construction of America’s Navy, conspired with business leaders to keep down wages.
Read 48 tweets
Jan 14
This Day in Labor History: January 14, 1888. Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward, 2000-1887 was published. Let's talk about why this weird little book was the most influential book of the late 19th century for American labor, much more than anything by Marx!
Basically, Bellamy’s treatise tapped into the dreams of thousands of Americans who found the promises of the post-Civil War economy a lie and were desperate for alternatives to the reality of Gilded Age capitalism.
By the 1880s, the promise of post-Civil War capitalism had failed the American working class. Most working Americans believed, and this was fundamental to the founding ideology of the Republican Party, in free labor.
Read 31 tweets
Jan 5
This Day in Labor History: January 5, 1914. Henry Ford issues his $5 day for workers who live according to his values. Let's talk about the horrors of Henry Ford and how this was very much NOT a pro-worker move despite the good pay.
Turnover was a massive problem for employers through the early 20th century. The horrors of industrialization combined with callousness of employers to lead to workers constantly seeking a job that was just a little bit less terrible than the last.
The growth of assembly line work made this worse because it was so boring. Treating a worker like a machine, as Henry Ford did, deskilled and depressed workers who had once partially defined themselves through their physical labor.
Read 32 tweets
Jan 4
This Day in Labor History: January 4, 1977. Augustus Hawkins, a congressman from California, introduced what became the Humphrey-Hawkins Act. Let's talk about how Jimmy Carter and the AFL-CIO (yes and ugh) undermined the best full employment bill in American history!
This full employment bill initially promised making the government the employer of last resort to ensure basic economic justice for all Americans.
The watering down of this bill by the Carter administration demonstrated both the overwhelming fears about inflation in this era and a consistent lack of leadership by Carter as he governed well to the right of his liberal Congress.
Read 42 tweets
Jan 3
This Day in Labor History: January 3, 1931. Farmers converged on England, Arkansas to demand poverty relief. This led to Will Rogers’ poverty tour and a greater national conversation about conditions in rural America in the early years of the Great Depression!!
In 1930, Arkansas suffered a severe drought, the worst in the state’s history to that time. The state was devastated.
People didn’t grow enough food there anyway, being part of the cotton culture that dominated the region and it was clear by the end of the year that it would not be able to feed itself. Arkansas’ senators went to Herbert Hoover and asked for drought relief.
Read 25 tweets

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