791 lines
41 KiB
Plaintext
791 lines
41 KiB
Plaintext
THE IWW IN CANADA............by G. Jewell 1975, IWW General
|
|
Administration /Chicago
|
|
|
|
GENERAL INTRODUCTION
|
|
Established in 1886, the American Federation of Labor had by the
|
|
turn of the century secured its domination over North American
|
|
organized labour. True, the federation was still a shaky affair;
|
|
the AFL - interested primarily in "respectable" craft unions --
|
|
refused to organize the great bulk of industrial workers. But
|
|
with the Knights of Labor (the first genuine, albeit mystical
|
|
attempt to bring all workers together under one all-embracing
|
|
organization) everything but buried, and industrial unions like
|
|
the American Railway Union destroyed and the Western Federation of
|
|
Miners under increasing attack by the mine owners, the AFL managed
|
|
to establish hegemony and either batter down or absorb all
|
|
rivals.
|
|
|
|
This craft union hegemony existed in Canada as well as the United
|
|
States. The original Canadian unions -- insular and indecisive --
|
|
failed. The same fate met the first mass- industrial union from
|
|
the U.S., the Knights. In 1902, the Trades and Labour Congress,
|
|
already the leading force in Canadian labour and controlled by the
|
|
AFL union branches in Canada, expelled from its ranks all Canadian
|
|
national unions, British internationals, and the Knights of Labor.
|
|
The opposition formed a Canadian Federation of Labour (CFL) but it
|
|
never amounted to much. Prospects seemed clear for the TLC and,
|
|
behind it, Samuel Gompers, U.S. president of the AFL.
|
|
|
|
Yet only three years were to pass before the IWW emerged as a
|
|
revolutionary challenge.
|
|
|
|
BIRTH OF THE IWW
|
|
The Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) was founded in 1905 in
|
|
Chicago. The driving force behind the new union was the Western
|
|
Federation of Miners, which had been fighting a bloody but losing
|
|
battle throughout the western US and Canada. Joining were the
|
|
WFM's parent, the American Labor Union (which included several
|
|
hundred members in B.C) the United Brotherhood of Railway
|
|
Employees, and Daniel DeLeon's Socialist Trade and Labor Alliance.
|
|
Observers were sent from the United Metal Workers (US and Canada),
|
|
the North American branch of the Amalgamated Society of Engineers
|
|
of Great Britain, the International Musicians Union, the Bakers
|
|
Union, and others.
|
|
|
|
Keynote speeches were delivered by Big Bill Haywood of the WFM,
|
|
Eugene Debs of the Socialist Party, Mother Jones of the United
|
|
Mine Workers, DeLeon, Lucy Parsons, anarchist and widow of a
|
|
Haymarket martyr, Father Hagerty, who drew up the One Big Union
|
|
industrial structure, and William Trautmann from German Brewery
|
|
Workers of Milwaukee (who was expelled from that union for his
|
|
participation in the IWW convention). Trautmann's and Hagerty's
|
|
views were influenced by European anarcho-syndicalism, as were
|
|
Haywood's by the revolutionary syndicalism of the French CGT. A
|
|
claimed membership of 50,827 was pledged to the IWW. The
|
|
professed aim was nothing less than the overthrow of the
|
|
capitalist system by and for the working class.
|
|
|
|
Two months later, after the United Metal Workers brought in 700 of
|
|
their claimed 3,000 members, the actual total of union members was
|
|
a mere 4,247. There was a magnificent $817.59 in the treasury.
|
|
The new union had begun to march on the wrong foot and the AFL
|
|
crowed with delight. Within a few years all the founding
|
|
organizations had either quit the IWW or had been expelled. By
|
|
1910, a low year with only 9,100 dues-paid members, the IWW was
|
|
the unruly bastard of the labor movement, ridiculously challenging
|
|
the AFL and the Capitalist Class to a battle to the death.
|
|
|
|
However, the IWW then suddenly burst out with an amazing explosive
|
|
force, becoming a mass movement in the US, Canada, Australia, and
|
|
Chile, and leaving a fiery mark on labour in South Africa,
|
|
Argentina, Mexico, Peru, Great Britain and the world maritime
|
|
industry.
|
|
|
|
The reasons for this sudden expansion lay at the very root of the
|
|
economic crisis underlying capitalist society in the years
|
|
immediately prior to the First World War. To begin with,
|
|
organized labour, divided as it was into squabbling craft unions,
|
|
was in a pitiful state, unable to effect even the most innocuous
|
|
reforms. The larger mass of unorganized and chronically
|
|
under-employed workers lived in appalling misery as it reeled from
|
|
a capitalist "boom and bust" cycle of high speculation followed by
|
|
crushing depression every five or ten years.
|
|
|
|
Yet despite this seemingly tremendous weakness of the working
|
|
class, many unionists had already recognized the great power
|
|
inherent in the vast industrial monopolies which the
|
|
ever-shrinking number of super-industrialists themselves scarcely
|
|
knew how to handle. That a working class already trained in the
|
|
operating of these industries might continue to do so in the
|
|
enforced absence of the capitalist owners was a matter of
|
|
new-found faith and high expectations. At this particular moment,
|
|
it was precisely the IWW which gave not only voice to these hopes
|
|
and desires, but also offered the first INDUSTRIAL strategy to
|
|
effect that transference of power.
|
|
|
|
The IWW, cutting across all craft lines, organized workers into
|
|
industrial unions -- so that no matter the task, all workers in
|
|
one industry belonged to one industrial union. These industrial
|
|
unions formed the component parts of six industrial departments:
|
|
1-Agriculture, Land, Fisheries and Water Products, 2-Mining,
|
|
3-Construction, 4-Manufacturing and General Production,
|
|
5-Transportation and Communication, and 6-Public Service. The
|
|
industrial departments made up the IWW as a whole; yet although
|
|
functioning independently, they were bridged by the rank and file
|
|
power of the total general membership to vote on all union general
|
|
policy and the election of all officers of the General
|
|
Administration coordinating the industrial departments.
|
|
|
|
The IWW was characterized by a syndicalist reliance on the job
|
|
branch at the shop floor level; a strong distrust of labour
|
|
bureaucrats and leftist politicians; an emphasis on direct action
|
|
and the propaganda of the deed. Above all, Wobblies believed in
|
|
the invincibility of the General Strike, which to them meant
|
|
nothing less than the ultimate lock-out of the capitalist class.
|
|
They wrapped their theory and practise with a loose blanket of
|
|
Marxist economic analysis and called for the abolition of the wage
|
|
system.
|
|
|
|
The IWW pioneered the on the job strike, mass sit-downs, and the
|
|
organization of unemployed, migrant, and immigrant working people.
|
|
It captured the public imagination with free speech fights,
|
|
gigantic labour pageants, and the most suicidal bluster
|
|
imaginable. Its permanent features were an army of roving
|
|
agitator-organizers on land and sea, little red song books, boxcar
|
|
delegates, singing recruiters.
|
|
|
|
In Australia IWW members were involved in a plan to forge
|
|
banknotes and bankrupt the state. During the Mexican revolution
|
|
of 1911, Wobblies joined with Mexican anarchists in a military
|
|
effort that set up a six-month red flag commune in Baja
|
|
California. In the Don Basin they faced Cossacks; at Kronstadt
|
|
they died under Trotsky's treacherous guns; in the German ports
|
|
they were silenced only by the Gestapo; in the CNT anarchist
|
|
militias and the International Brigades they battled Franco.
|
|
|
|
CANADA 1906 - 1918
|
|
|
|
The IWW immediately began organizing in Canada, and experienced
|
|
erratic growth from 1906 to 1914, especially in B.C. and Alberta.
|
|
The first Canadian IWW union charter was issued May 5, 1906 to the
|
|
Vancouver Industrial Mixed Union No.322.
|
|
|
|
Five locals were formed in BC in 1906, including a Lumber Handlers
|
|
Job Branch on the Vancouver docks composed mainly of North
|
|
Vancouver Indians, known as the "Bows and Arrows."
|
|
|
|
By 1911, the IWW claimed 10,000 members in Canada, notably in
|
|
mining, logging, Alberta agriculture, longshoring and the textile
|
|
industry. That year a local of IWW street labourers in Prince
|
|
Rupert struck, initially bringing out 250 but swelling to 1,000
|
|
assorted strikers. 56 arrests resulted from several riots, and a
|
|
special stockade was built to house them (reportedly by TLC union
|
|
carpenters). A number of strikers were injured and wounded; the
|
|
HMS Rainbow was called in to suppress the strike.
|
|
|
|
In 1912 the IWW fought a fierce free speech fight in Vancouver,
|
|
forcing the city to rescind a ban on public street meetings.
|
|
|
|
Organizing began in 1911 among construction workers building the
|
|
Canadian Northern Railway in BC. In September a quick strike of
|
|
900 workers halted 100 miles of construction. IWW organizer
|
|
Biscay was kidnapped by the authorities and charged as a
|
|
"dangerous character and a menace to public safety." A threatened
|
|
walkout by the entire Canadian Northern workforce prompted a
|
|
not-guilty verdict in a speedy trial. In December, a 50-cents a
|
|
day pay raise was won by on-the-job action.
|
|
|
|
THE 1,000- MILE PICKET LINE
|
|
|
|
By February 1912, IWW membership on the CN stood at 8,000. A
|
|
demand for adequate sanitation and an end to piece-rate or "gypo"
|
|
wages was ignored by the government. On March 27, unable to
|
|
further tolerate the unbearable living conditions in the work
|
|
camps, the 8,000 "dynos and dirthands" walked out. The strike
|
|
extended over 400 miles of territory, but the IWW established a
|
|
"1,000-mile picket line" as Wobs picketed employment offices in
|
|
Vancouver, Seattle, Tacoma, San Francisco, and Minneapolis to halt
|
|
recruitment of scabs.
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile the strike camps were so well run and disciplined that
|
|
the press began calling the Yale camp in particular a "miniature
|
|
socialist republic." While not going that far, the west coast IWW
|
|
weekly, Industrial Worker, proudly pointed to this example of
|
|
working class solidarity in which Canadians, Americans, Italians,
|
|
Austrians, Swedes, Norwegians, French and other countrymen --- one
|
|
huge melting pot into which creed, colour, flag, religion,
|
|
language and all other differences had been flung -- were welded
|
|
together in common effort. Even "demon rum" was proscribed,
|
|
which alone indicates the seriousness of the strikers.
|
|
|
|
Authorities arrested the strikers by the thousands for "unlawful
|
|
assemblage" and vagrancy. Many were forcibly deported at
|
|
gunpoint. But the picket lines held. In August they were joined
|
|
by 3,000 construction workers on the Grand Trunk Pacific in BC and
|
|
Alberta. The entire action, better known as the Fraser River or
|
|
Fraser Canyon Strike, was popularized in song by Joe Hill's
|
|
"Where the Fraser River Flows." The strike also spawned the
|
|
nickname Wobbly. A Chinese restaurant keeper who fed strikers
|
|
reputedly mispronounced "IWW" in asking customers "Are you eye
|
|
wobble wobble?" and the name stuck.
|
|
|
|
The CN strike lasted until the fall of 1912, when exhausted
|
|
strikers settled for a few minor improvements: better sanitary
|
|
conditions and a temporary end to the gypo system. The BC Grand
|
|
Trunk strike was called off in January 1913 after the Dominion
|
|
government promised to enforce sanitation laws. A greater gain
|
|
was development of the "camp delegate" system in which the IWW
|
|
secretary in town delegated a worker to represent him in the field
|
|
-- a method later refined into the permanent "Job Delegate" system
|
|
of the roving Agricultural Workers.
|
|
|
|
Other unique features of the strike are worth mentioning. One,
|
|
used again in the 20's on the Northern Railway strike in
|
|
Washington, was to "scab on the job" by sending convert Wobs into
|
|
scab camps to bring the workers out on strike. Another came in
|
|
response to the "free" transportation offered scabs by the
|
|
Railways on condition a man's luggage was impounded until such
|
|
time as his strike breaking wages repaid the fare. Large Wob
|
|
contingents signed on, leaving the Railways with cheap suitcases
|
|
stuffed with bricks and gunny sacks, and then deserted en route.
|
|
|
|
Edmonton, Alberta was then a major railroad construction center
|
|
and in the winter of 1913- 14, thousands of workers from all over
|
|
Canada and the US were stranded there without jobs or funds. The
|
|
city fathers refused to alleviate their plight. The IWW
|
|
established an Edmonton Unemployed League, demanding that the city
|
|
furnish work to everybody regardless of race, colour or
|
|
nationality, at a rate of 30 cents an hour, and further, that in
|
|
the meantime the city distribute three 25-cent meal tickets to
|
|
each man daily, tickets redeemable at any restaurant in town.
|
|
These demands were backed by mass parades which police clubs and
|
|
arrests could not stop.
|
|
|
|
On January 28, 1914 the Edmonton Journal headlined the news: IWW
|
|
Triumphant! The city council provided a large hall for the
|
|
homeless, passed out three 25-cent meal tickets to each man daily,
|
|
and employed 400 people on a public project.
|
|
|
|
That summer the IWW began organizing a campaign in the Alberta
|
|
wheat fields, but the guns of August were drawing near.
|
|
|
|
REPRESSION IN W.W.I
|
|
With the outbreak of World War one and Canada's subservient entry
|
|
as British cannon fodder, the federal government effected a number
|
|
of articles in the War Measures legislation embodied in the
|
|
British North America Act. IWW members were hit by a wave of
|
|
harassment and arrests that presaged that which swept most of the
|
|
American IWW leadership into jail in 1917-18 (by 1920 there were
|
|
2,000 Wobblies behind bars in the USA). In late 1914 the union
|
|
could claim only 465 members in Canada and in 1915 its last three
|
|
remaining branches dissolved. Agitation continued, however,
|
|
especially among Finnish lumber workers in Northern Ontario.
|
|
|
|
The Russian Revolution of 1917 caused severe jitters in the ruling
|
|
classes around the world and with the unilateral withdrawal of
|
|
Russian forces from the war effort against Germany, the conflict
|
|
in Europe reached a critical stage. This was coupled with a
|
|
number of mutinies in the Allied forces and weary dissension on
|
|
the homefronts. Repression was intensified and Canada a number of
|
|
Wobblies were jailed in 1918. The "Vancouver World" of August
|
|
5, 1918 outlined the "facts" in the case of Ernest Lindberg and
|
|
George Thompson:
|
|
|
|
**Two IWW Prospects Caught in Police Trap-- Couple Declared Active
|
|
at Logging Camps Arrested and German Literature is Seized... "Lot
|
|
of Good Rebels Quitting, stated letter...Message in German to
|
|
Tenant of House is postmarked Glissen.**
|
|
Lindberg, accused of delivering speeches in a logging
|
|
bunkhouse, after which a number of workers quit their jobs and
|
|
returned into the city, was held under the Idlers Act. Thompson,
|
|
**who is alleged to be a firebrand and whose connection with the
|
|
pro-German element is said to be close**, was charged with having
|
|
banned literature in his possession, including copies of the Week,
|
|
LaFollette's Magazine (LaFollette: anti-war Progressive US
|
|
Senator), and of the Lumber Worker, as well as letters written in
|
|
German.
|
|
|
|
The World went on to editorialize:
|
|
|
|
** For some time past the Dominion authorities have been alive to
|
|
the situation existing in the camps, and have been desirous that
|
|
the ringleaders of the movement which is responsible for draining
|
|
of the logging centres, should be found... By the arrest of
|
|
Lindberg and Thompson, the authorities believe they have succeeded
|
|
in locating two main workers in the IWW cause, although there are
|
|
others who will be carefully watched and apprehended in due
|
|
course... The IWW is the short term used for the Industrial
|
|
Workers of the World, an American organization with very extreme
|
|
policies, Bolsheviki principles, and far reaching aims for the
|
|
betterment of the conditions of the masses. Like other large
|
|
organizations, it has two factions, the red flagging element
|
|
generally regarded as dangerous as inciters against the observance
|
|
of law and order. The organization is disowned by all but the
|
|
lowest type of union labour men, as well as by Socialists.***
|
|
|
|
On September 24, 1918, a federal order in council declared that
|
|
while Canada was engaged in war, 14 organizations were to be
|
|
considered unlawful, including the IWW and the Workers
|
|
International Industrial Union (DeLeons' expelled Detroit faction
|
|
of the IWW).. Penalty for membership was set at 5 years in
|
|
prison.
|
|
|
|
The same order banned meetings conducted in the language of any
|
|
enemy country (German, Bulgarian, Hungarian, Turkish etc) or in
|
|
Russian, Ukrainian or Finnish (except for religious services.)
|
|
|
|
IWW organizer Dick Higgins was tried under the War Measures Act in
|
|
Vancouver, but a defense by the Socialist Party of Canada kept him
|
|
out of jail. In the USA, two of those receiving minor sentences
|
|
were well known British Columbia unionists who had been
|
|
temporarily organizing in the USA, as headlined in the B.C.
|
|
Federationist September 1918:
|
|
**IWW Members Given Long Terms: G. Hardy and A.E.Sloper are among
|
|
those who received year terms.**
|
|
|
|
POSTWAR GROWTH
|
|
|
|
1918 witnessed a major change in Canadian Labour. The drive for
|
|
industrial unionism resumed and stiffened resistance against the
|
|
AFL affiliated TLC and the latter's support for conscription and
|
|
the suspension of civil liberties.
|
|
|
|
This groundswell culminated in the founding of the One Big Union
|
|
at the Western Labour Conference in Calgary in March 1919.
|
|
Directly affiliated to the OBU were a number of independent mining
|
|
and lumber industrial unions, but its influence reached into a
|
|
majority of TLC locals west of Port Arthur, Ontario. This
|
|
explosive mix of militant independent unionists and rebellious TLC
|
|
units resulted in the Winnipeg General Strike that summer. It
|
|
began with the building trades striking for recognition, followed
|
|
by the metal trades, and on until 30,000 workers were out directly
|
|
or in sympathy and a Central Strike Committee was running the
|
|
city. Fred Tipping, a member of the Strike Committee, explains
|
|
the situation:
|
|
|
|
**First of all, you should remember that there were a series of
|
|
unsuccessful strikes through 1918. In a sense the 1919 strike was
|
|
a climax to many months of labour unrest due to a great deal of
|
|
unemployment after the War, big increases in prices and no job
|
|
security. Bear in mind too that Winnipeg and Vancouver were
|
|
centres of advanced radical thought at the time. The Socialist
|
|
Party of Canada/Marxist had been strong for a number of years and
|
|
had gained support among industrial workers and even farmers. In
|
|
the Winnipeg Trades and labour Council you would find men who were
|
|
Marxists and others who supported the IWW. There was also the
|
|
Social Democratic Party, many of these people were strong
|
|
enthusiasts for the Russian revolution and were commonly called
|
|
Bolsheviki. When the Social Democrats split during the War some
|
|
of these later joined the Communist parties. Others of us became
|
|
members of the Labour Party -- later to become the Independent
|
|
Labour Party and then the CCF. The idea of the general strike
|
|
seemed to have been in the air. Don't forget that not too many
|
|
months before, some key people on the Strike Committee had
|
|
attended the OBU conference in Calgary and the general strike was
|
|
a weapon much favoured by the OBU. Then there was the attitude of
|
|
business. They were first generation businessmen. I call them
|
|
Ontario bushmen. Most of them had been farmers. They felt
|
|
paternalistic to the workers. "I don't want a bunch of workers
|
|
telling me how to run my plant," was a remark commonly heard. On
|
|
the other hand the union leaders had come from industrial England.
|
|
They had years of bitter strike experience. They were not
|
|
novices**---- Canadian Dimension/Winnipeg----
|
|
|
|
The strike was smashed by a combination of government troops and a
|
|
"Citizens committee." Many strike leaders were arrested and tried
|
|
for subversion. A number of immigrants were deported. The OBU
|
|
was shattered as an all-industry federation as court after court
|
|
ruled that the TLC "internationals" owned the contracts in the
|
|
majority of organized locals, though the OBU continued to hold the
|
|
Lumber Workers Industrial Union, some mine unions, the Winnipeg
|
|
streetcar workers, and Saskatoon telephone operators.
|
|
|
|
After a series of disastrous strikes by its 23,000 members, the
|
|
LWIU collapsed in 1921. Stepping into the breach, the newly
|
|
founded Workers Party -- later the Communist Party-- declared war
|
|
on the OBU's industrial unionism and succeeded in directing it
|
|
into "geographical unionism," following the dictate of Lenin's 3rd
|
|
International union strategy, which was to break up dual or
|
|
independent unions and bring them into locals affiliated with the
|
|
AFL, which the Communists hoped to capture from within. By the
|
|
mid-twenties, the Communist TUEL had captured about a third of the
|
|
important union positions in the AFL, but were purged overnight by
|
|
a counter-coup of the Gompers faction.
|
|
|
|
The Communists were aided in the move for geographical unionism by
|
|
some syndicalists, especially in Edmonton, who had moved toward
|
|
that defensive concept in the period of the OBU"s decline. In BC,
|
|
the Communists managed to get many of the lumberworkers "east of
|
|
the hump' into the AFL Carpenters union.
|
|
|
|
AT the same time, however, the IWW was reorganizing in Canada. In
|
|
1916, virtually extinct in the rest of the country, the IWW had
|
|
moved from the Minnesota iron fields in the Mesaba Range northward
|
|
into Ontario and had gained a large following in the northern
|
|
woods, especially among Finnish Lumber workers. After the orders
|
|
in council outlawing the IWW in 1918, organizers went underground.
|
|
In 1919 the Ontario lumber workers joined the OBU, but Wobbly
|
|
delegates continued to bootleg union supplies to the minority who
|
|
wanted to keep their IWW membership books as well, as well as did
|
|
OBU-IWW delegates in B.C. On April 2, 1919 the ban on the IWW was
|
|
lifted. Two branches were formed in Toronto and Kitchener.
|
|
|
|
ORGANIZING IN THE 20'S
|
|
|
|
An exchange of union cards was arranged between the IWW and the
|
|
OBU locals still functioning in the lumber fields, seaports and
|
|
Great Lakes. This exchange was a system in which separate unions
|
|
recognized as valid the union cards of workers transferring into
|
|
their own jurisdiction from that of the other union and required
|
|
no initiation fee. an OBU an d IWW delegate travelled together
|
|
to the 1921 Red International of Labour Unions conference in
|
|
Moscow. The obu delegate, Gordon Cascaden, was denied a vote
|
|
because he represented the "anarchist wing "of the OBU.
|
|
|
|
The IWW delegate, who originally supported ties the RILU, argued
|
|
against affiliation on his return.... Among the ultimatums RILU
|
|
attempted to impose... was that the IWW affiliate the virtually
|
|
defunct Lumber Workers Industrial Union/OBU in Western Canada,
|
|
already permeated by Communists.
|
|
|
|
Following the collapse that year of the LWIU, the IWW, OBU and the
|
|
Communists all made bids for the former members. Some sections
|
|
joined the Communist Red International (a way station to the AFL
|
|
Carpenters) others made an abortive attempt to revive the LWIU,
|
|
which still had support in the east. The remainder joined IWW.
|
|
largest section being the Vancouver LWIU branch, which had
|
|
revolted when LWIU joined the Communists. By 1923 IWW had three
|
|
branches with job control in Canada: Lumberworkers IU 120 and
|
|
Marine Transport Workers IU 510 in Vancouver and an LWIU branch in
|
|
Cranbrook BC for a total of 5,600 members.
|
|
|
|
Organizing in the 20's was extremely difficult. The defeat of the
|
|
Winnipeg General Strike and the depression of the early part of
|
|
the decade weakened unions everywhere. During 1921 and 1922 the
|
|
usual cause of strikes was resistance to wage reductions. Most
|
|
such disputes were won by the employers. A large number of
|
|
strikes were smashed by scabs drawn from a vast pool of new
|
|
workers migrating from the farms to the cities.
|
|
|
|
Nonetheless, 1924 marked a peak year for the IWW in Canada. This
|
|
was in direct contra distinction to the US IWW, which underwent a
|
|
disastrous split over the questions of decentralization and
|
|
amnesty for IWW prisoners in federal prisons (the decentralists
|
|
demanded total autonomy of all industrial unions, with no central
|
|
clearing house or headquarters dues. The anti-amnesty faction
|
|
called for a boycott on any federal amnesty., instead relying on
|
|
class struggle to win the release of imprisoned Wobblies).
|
|
|
|
The split in the US IWW puzzled the Canadian membership, who
|
|
decided to support the Constitutional IWW in Chicago instead of
|
|
the decentralist Emergency Program IWW in the West -- the latter
|
|
lasted for ten years; the resulting raids and counter-raids
|
|
destroyed IWW power in the western lumber fields and caused a
|
|
temporary membership drop nationwide.
|
|
|
|
In Northern Ontario the Canadian Lumber Workers (the OBU remnant
|
|
of the LWIU) voted in 1924 to bolt the geographically based OBU
|
|
and join the IWW. The same referendum elected a Finnish
|
|
lumberworker, Nick Vita, as secretary. Vita had joined the IWW in
|
|
1917 and secretly carried an IWW red card through the War Measures
|
|
Act and his years in the OBU. In 1919 he had attended the IWW
|
|
Work People's College and then Ferris Institute, a business
|
|
college in Michigan, after a meagre three months of school before
|
|
adulthood.
|
|
|
|
Vita's first chore as secretary was to issue 8,000 IWW union
|
|
cards. Branches were set up in Sudbury -- Ontario head office -
|
|
and Port Arthur. Vita began organizing railroad workers and
|
|
miners in Timmins and Sudbury districts, but a brief success of
|
|
3,000 recruits soon faded. That same year an Agricultural Workers
|
|
Organization IU 110, was formed in Calgary. Four IWW organizers
|
|
were arrested on charges of vagrancy. IWW headquarters in Chicago
|
|
provided legal fees and three of the cases the charges were
|
|
quashed. On January 1, 1924, after the firing of an IWW member of
|
|
the Cranbrook BC branch IWW Lumber Workers IU120 struck the lumber
|
|
owners, calling for an 8 hour day with blankets supplied, minimum
|
|
wage of $4 per day, release of all class war prisoners, no
|
|
discrimination against IWW members and no censuring of IWW
|
|
literature. After three weeks the camp operators tried to bring
|
|
in scabs from Alberta and Saskatchewan. Pickets severely
|
|
curtailed the scabbing and on February 26 the operators served an
|
|
injunction on the officers and members of the IWW to restrain the
|
|
strikers from picketing. The seven companies asked for
|
|
$105,340.41 in damages. At a mass meeting March 2, strikers voted
|
|
to "take the strike back on the job." As the injunction came up
|
|
for review on June 24, the Mountain Lumbermen's Association paid
|
|
to the IWW $2,450 to settle out of court.
|
|
|
|
In 1925 the LWIU branch disappeared from Cranbrook -- a not
|
|
unfamiliar event in the IWW, which still refused to sign binding
|
|
contracts with employers, and often dwindled away as an
|
|
organization after specific demands had been won. A new
|
|
Agricultural Workers branch was formed in Winnipeg, bringing the
|
|
IWW a total of 6 branches in Canada for a membership of 10,000 --
|
|
the same as in 1910.
|
|
|
|
Included was a coal miners branch in Wayne Alberta which fought
|
|
that year the IWW's first large strike in coal -- a bitter and
|
|
losing affair. Fighting a mandatory dues check off to the United
|
|
Mine Workers, which did not represent them, the miners originally
|
|
joined the OBU, but along with the Ontario lumberworkers switched
|
|
to the IWW in 1924. The mine company offered a 10% wage increase
|
|
if they agreed to accept the UMWA. Considering it a bribe, the
|
|
miners refused and struck, unsuccessfully.
|
|
|
|
The Winnipeg AWO folded in 1926, as did the Alberta Coal Miners IU
|
|
branch, but a new General Recruiting Union branch was formed in
|
|
Port Arthur, in addition to the lumberworkers for a total of 4,600
|
|
members in Canada. Seven branches carried 4,400 members through
|
|
1927-28 -- the IWW General Convention in Chicago urged a joint
|
|
IWW/OBU convention, which did not materialize -- in 1929 the
|
|
Calgary GRU disappeared, bringing membership down to 3,975.
|
|
|
|
The IWW Lumber Workers Industrial Union 120, came under
|
|
competition in 1928 from the refurbished Lumber Workers Industrial
|
|
Union of Canada, organized by the Communists following the failure
|
|
of their AFL take-over bid, and in tune with Stalin's new 1928-34
|
|
"left turn" period which demanded independent Communist unions.
|
|
Communist organizers who had left for BC in the early 20's to
|
|
bring carpenters and lumberworkers there into the AFL now returned
|
|
home to build dual unions under the aegis of Workers Unity League.
|
|
A number of meagre contracts were obtained from small operators in
|
|
the northern Ontario woods, for whom the largely Finnish
|
|
lumberjacks worked. IWW branches asked that union policy be
|
|
changed to allow them to sign contracts as well, but the 1932
|
|
General Convention again voted against allowing binding contracts,
|
|
and a majority of Ontario lumber workers ended in communist
|
|
controlled unions. Ironically, it was only a few years later that
|
|
the US IWW was signing contracts and running in federal NLRB
|
|
elections.
|
|
|
|
CHANGES IN THE 30'S
|
|
|
|
The early 30s were a watershed era in the history of North
|
|
American labor. Initially stunned by the vicious poverty and
|
|
unemployment caused by the Capitalist breakdown in 1929-31, the
|
|
working class by 1933-34 had gained the offensive in a massive
|
|
wildcat strike wave that swept the continent. The period saw an
|
|
upsurge in IWW activity in Canada, a phenomenon applicable also to
|
|
the OBU, which even expanded organizing into the New England and
|
|
opened a hall in San Francisco, and the Canadian Communist Workers
|
|
Unity League, which was especially strong among textile workers,
|
|
needle trades, mine and mill workers, and seamen's unions.
|
|
|
|
Radical influence was also strong in the US mass strike period,
|
|
represented by the IWW: longshore, maritime, lumber,
|
|
construction, mining, metal trades, early auto organizing, and
|
|
unemployed -- the Socialist Party: needle trades, unemployed,
|
|
later auto -- the Communist Trade Union Unity League: mine and
|
|
steel, textile, furriers, longshore and seamen, teachers,
|
|
unemployed, veterans, Blacks ---- Trotskyists: Minneapolis
|
|
Teamsters -- and the Musteite CPLA/American Workers Party: Toledo
|
|
Auto-Lite strike, unemployed.
|
|
|
|
By 1930, the Sudbury IWW LWIU folded, but a new Lumber workers
|
|
branch formed in Sault Ste. Marie, giving the union 3,741 members
|
|
in Canada. Canadian delegates met in Port Arthur September 20,
|
|
1931, and voted to form a Canadian administration, primarily to
|
|
overcome customs problems over supplies sent from Chicago and to
|
|
coordinate specifically Canadian industrial activity. The move
|
|
was submitted for consideration at the IWW Convention in Chicago
|
|
November 8-19, 1931, where it was referred to a general membership
|
|
referendum and ratified. The Canadian administration was to be
|
|
autonomous but ultimately responsible to the General
|
|
Administration and paying a monthly 1/2 cent per capita for
|
|
international organizing costs.
|
|
|
|
IWW unemployment agitation generated a number of arrests,
|
|
especially one big crackdown by Royal Mounted Police at Sioux
|
|
Lookout, Ontario. Ritchie's Dairy in Toronto was unionized IWW
|
|
for a time, and a fisher's branch formed in McDiarmid, Ontario.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Organizing was undertaken in the Maritimes but did not sustain
|
|
itself. In 1935 the IWW had 12 branches in Canada with 4,200
|
|
members: 2 branches in Vancouver-- Lumber workers and General
|
|
Recruiting Union -- General Membership Branches in Sointula, BC,
|
|
Calgary, Toronto, Sudbury; lumber workers in Fort Francis,
|
|
Nipigon, Sault Ste. Marie, and Port Arthur Ontario; a General
|
|
Recruiting Union in Port Arthur; and a Metal Mine Workers branch
|
|
in Timmins, Ontario.
|
|
|
|
The working class rebellion of the mid thirties culminated in a
|
|
series of sit down strikes -- using the tactics developed a few
|
|
years earlier in the auto plants by the IWW, including the little
|
|
cards passed hand to hand, reading: "Sit down and watch your pay
|
|
go up." -- which established the Congress of Industrial
|
|
Organizations/CIO. The CIO was a reformist semi- industrial
|
|
movement launched by the United Mine Workers which succeeded where
|
|
the revolutionary industrial unions had failed. Its success was
|
|
due primarily to its willingness to collectively bargain with
|
|
employers for modest wage and conditions changes and then to
|
|
enforce submission to the contract on any subsequent rank and file
|
|
rebellion. Both the Roosevelt administration and a sector of
|
|
"far-seeing" Capitalists saw in this an opportunity to corral the
|
|
strike wave into the bounds of a lightly reformed capitalist
|
|
system. (Slower to move, the Canadian ruling class followed suit
|
|
only toward the end of the Second World War.)
|
|
|
|
Hundreds of unauthorized work stoppages were suppressed by CIO
|
|
chieftains. At one point CIO head and leader of the United Mine
|
|
Workers, John L. Lewis, threatened to dispatch "flying squads of
|
|
strong-arm men" to bring auto wildcatters into line.
|
|
|
|
The CIO drive coincided with a far reaching right turn by Stalin
|
|
(and by iron-fisted extension, the then monolithic world communist
|
|
movement, sans Trotskyites of course). The Workers Unity League
|
|
was jettisoned by the Canadian Communists; its independent unions
|
|
were brought into the AFL or CIO or sabotaged. Communist
|
|
militants flocked into the CIO organizing committees and
|
|
assiduously worked themselves into key positions, ranging from
|
|
stewards to actual union presidents. The CIO ventures were highly
|
|
successful, initially in the US and after WWII in Canada.
|
|
|
|
The Communists captured the leadership of ten industrial unions,
|
|
including the United Electrical Workers, the Mine Mill & Smelter
|
|
Unions, the Fur and Leather Workers, the Canadian Seamens Union
|
|
and United Fishermen, and the B.C. Ship builders Union. They also
|
|
become strong in the International Woodworkers, especially in BC,
|
|
the AFL International Longshoremen, and others.
|
|
|
|
In the broader Canadian union movement, a number of things were
|
|
happening. In 1921 TLC expelled the Cdn. Brotherhood of Railway
|
|
Employees in favour of the Brotherhood of Railway and Steamship
|
|
Clerks from the USA. In 1927, the CBRE, the OBU remnant, and the
|
|
old CFL joined together to form the All Canadian Congress of
|
|
Labour. The CFL had been the stillborn result of the merger of
|
|
the Knights of Labour and some national unions in 1903, after
|
|
their expulsion from AFL-dominated TLC.
|
|
|
|
First called the National Trades and Labour Council, in 1908 it
|
|
became the Cdn. Federation of Labour, a big name for so little,
|
|
and now in 1927 it dissolved into the ACC of L. The All-Canadian
|
|
Congress grew, in its own reactionary way; in the early 30s the
|
|
OBU supported the red-baiting bureaucracy, only to find itself
|
|
later ousted. In 1937 the ACCL chiefs aided the anti-union
|
|
Ontario Premier Hepburn in his attack on the AFL, CIO, and
|
|
Communists -- all seen as "American."
|
|
|
|
In 1938, however, the TLC under AFL pressure expelled the CIO
|
|
unions in Canada and, in a complete flip-flop, the CIO units
|
|
joined the ACCL in 1940 to form the Canadian Congress of Labour.
|
|
Considering that many of the CIO organizers were Communists, and
|
|
all the CIO unions internationals from the USA, it was quite a
|
|
marriage of convenience. In 1943 the CCL came out in support of
|
|
the social-democratic Cooperative Commonwealth (now the New
|
|
Democratic Party)-- although the Communists were supporting the
|
|
Liberal Party.
|
|
|
|
After WWII the CCL grew closer to the TLC, especially as both were
|
|
expelling communists en masse. Finally in 1956 the CCL and TLC
|
|
merged to form the Canadian Labour Congress. Another independent
|
|
union body organizing during this period was the Canadian and
|
|
Catholic Confederation of Labour in Quebec, established in 1921,
|
|
now the syndicalist
|
|
CNTU.
|
|
|
|
The success of a moderate semi-industrial unionism, temporarily
|
|
fringed with a radical hue, greatly hampered the revolutionary
|
|
industrial unionism of the IWW. Another factor was the extremely
|
|
conservatizing influence of the Second World War -- ostensibly an
|
|
anti-fascist crusade -- with its no-strike pledges, for which the
|
|
Communists were the strongest backers in the interests of the
|
|
Soviet Fatherland -- even to the point of denouncing all strikers,
|
|
such as the United Mine Workers, as "fascist agents."
|
|
|
|
Even so, the IWW in the USA was able to stabilize a number of
|
|
solid job units, particularly metal shops in Cleveland area, and
|
|
by fighting the no-strike pledge expanded general membership on
|
|
the docks and construction camps. In 1946 the IWW numbered 20,000
|
|
members.
|
|
|
|
IWW agitation continued strong in Canada until 1939, especially in
|
|
northern Ontario, but Canada's entry as British ally into the war
|
|
and the resulting mass conscription and War Measures Act, caught
|
|
the union without a job-control base. Moreover, in-fighting with
|
|
the Communists had become particularly vicious. Sudbury was being
|
|
organized by the Communist controlled Mine Mill & Smelters to the
|
|
point that J. Edgar Hoover later called it the "red base of North
|
|
America."
|
|
|
|
Wobbly units in Sudbury and Port Arthur were mixed membership
|
|
branches of scattered lumbermen, miners and labourers. During the
|
|
Spanish Civil War 1936-39, the IWW in Ontario actively recruited
|
|
for the anarcho-syndicalist CNT union militia in Spain, in direct
|
|
challenge to the Communist sponsored Mac-Pap International
|
|
Brigade. A number of Canadian Wobs were killed in Spain -- some
|
|
possibly shot by Stalinist NKVD agents. Not only weapons and
|
|
ammunition but even medical supplies were denied the CNT by the
|
|
Communist-controlled government of Madrid. Violent altercations
|
|
erupted at northern Ontario rallies for the communist doctor
|
|
Norman Bethune, soon to quit Spain for Mao's partisans in China,
|
|
when Wobblies openly denounced Communist perfidy.
|
|
|
|
WORLD WAR II
|
|
|
|
In Toronto where the IWW Canadian Administration headquarters was
|
|
temporarily moved, Wobblies gave physical support to the soap
|
|
boxing efforts of anarchists from the Italian, Jewish and Russian
|
|
communities. Pitched street battles often occurred at Spanish CNT
|
|
support rallies, and IWW secretaries McPhee and Godin, both former
|
|
lumberjacks, were noted for their quick despatch of Young
|
|
Communist goon squads.
|
|
|
|
But the War halted IWW organizing. A number of young Wobs were
|
|
immediately inducted into the Armed Forces. At war's end
|
|
re-growth was too slow. In 1949 membership in Canada stood at
|
|
2,100 grouped in six branches; two in Port Arthur and one each in
|
|
Vancouver, Sault Ste. Marie, Calgary and Toronto.
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile the government in the USA was attempting to destroy the
|
|
IWW once and for all. After refusing to sign the Taft-Hartley
|
|
anti-red clause, the IWW was denied the certification services of
|
|
the National Labor Relations Board. In 1949 the IWW was placed on
|
|
the Attorney General's list, which came replete with mailing
|
|
curtailments, refusal to members of government jobs, loans or
|
|
housing, and FBI harassment of individual members, especially at
|
|
their place of employment. To cap it off, the IWW was slapped
|
|
with a "corporate income tax", the only union in North America to
|
|
be so taxed. As a culminative consequence the IWW lost its last
|
|
shops, including all the IU440 Metal shops in Cleveland.
|
|
|
|
During the same period the AFL and CIO began a mass purge of
|
|
Communists in its ranks, an easy task, so riddled was the
|
|
Communist party with opportunism and cowardice. Completed quickly
|
|
in the US, the expulsions were slower and less thorough in Canada,
|
|
lasting beyond 1955. Those unions the reactionaries could not
|
|
purge they expelled and then raided. The Communists in Canada
|
|
managed to hold only the United Electrical Workers, the remnant of
|
|
Mine & Mill, and the United Fishermen in BC.
|
|
|
|
The Canadian IWW retained branches in only Vancouver, Port Arthur
|
|
and Calgary by 1950- 51. The following year the Canadian
|
|
Administration in Port Arthur folded and membership reverted to
|
|
the services of the Chicago office. By comparison, the OBU-- by
|
|
now a mild trade grouping in Winnipeg - continued until 1955-56
|
|
with 34 locals and 12,280 members at which time it merged with the
|
|
CLC.
|
|
|
|
THE DARK 50'S
|
|
|
|
The Cold War snuffed out the Canadian, British and Australian
|
|
administrations of the IWW. It remained for the General and
|
|
Scandinavian administrations to hold together scattered Wobs in
|
|
Canada, USA, Britain, Sweden, and Australia. Through the 1950s
|
|
the IWW still exerted some power on the docks and ships with IU510
|
|
branches in San Francisco, Houston and Stockholm. But with the
|
|
early sixties, the IWW was near extinction.
|
|
|
|
Yet, the IWW survived. One, in the courage and dedication of
|
|
old-timers who kept the structure going. Two, with the slow
|
|
influx of young workers of a casual labour hue. In the mid-60s,
|
|
the IWW organized a restaurant job branch in San Francisco, only
|
|
to be raided by the Waiters & Waitresses Union. In 1964 the IWW
|
|
led a blueberry harvest strike in Minnesota. With the Vietnam War
|
|
the IWW began taking in young workers with ties to the campuses.
|
|
IN 1968 it was decided to sign up students alongside teachers and
|
|
campus workers into Education Workers IU620. There followed a
|
|
wild and erratic campus upsurge, two notables being Waterloo U in
|
|
Ontario and New Westminster BC. The results were nil in
|
|
themselves, but it got the IWW over the hump and left a fine
|
|
residue of militants who left campus to find jobs.
|
|
|
|
The next 5 years spawned some 20-odd industrial drives, including
|
|
one among construction workers in Vancouver, another among
|
|
shipbuilders in Malmo, Sweden, and two tough factory strikes in
|
|
the USA. For the most part unsuccessful, a number had interesting
|
|
features.
|
|
|
|
In a Vancouver drive, a construction crew in Gastown was signed
|
|
IWW -- but certification before the Socred-appointed BC Labour
|
|
Board was denied, the IWW declared not a "trade union under the
|
|
meaning of the Act." A subsequent strike fizzled.
|
|
|
|
Industrial organizing efforts continue. The IWW has picked up a
|
|
number of newspapers, print shops and print co-ops over the years,
|
|
a few highly viable and long lived.
|
|
|
|
The new IWW has its own list of labour martyrs: the San Diego Wobs
|
|
shot, bombed and arrested during the 1969-71 Free Speech Fight and
|
|
Criminal Syndicalism frame up trial. Robert Ed Stover, knifed to
|
|
death in San Quentin Prison, where he was framed on an arms cache
|
|
charge; and Frank Terraguti, shot to death by Chilean fascists in
|
|
Santiago during the 1973 coup.
|
|
|
|
In 1975, the IWW is organizing in Canada, USA, Sweden, Britain,
|
|
Guam, New Zealand and Australia.
|
|
--------------------------END----------------------------------------
|
|
*see also WHERE THE FRASER RIVER FLOWS, New Star (Canada) 1991*
|
|
|