261 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
261 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
From _The Rebel Girl: An Autobiography My First Life (1906-1926)_,
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by Elizabeth Gurley Flynn
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Centralia, 1919
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After the war ended, lawless force and violence came back,
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led by ex-soldiers, fomented by stay-at-home patriots, employers
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and their hirelings. Many violent scenes had occurred in 1918 and
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1919. The Rand School in New York City was attacked by a mob of soldiers
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and sailors who tore down the American flag flying from the building.
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The Socialist daily paper, the New York _Call_, was raided and
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wrecked. Employees were driven out and beaten as they were forced
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to run the gauntlet of armed men.
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On Memorial Day, in 1918, the IWW hall was raided by paraders
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in Centralia, Washington, its records and literature burned in the
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street, its furniture wrecked or stolen. All who were found in the
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hall were beaten, arrested and driven out of town. The governor,
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the mayor, the chief of police and a company of National Guard were
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in the parade. The mob action was led by the president of the
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Employers Association. The hall looked like a war ruin. But the
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undaunted IWW opened another hall. They determined to defend
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themselves and their headquarters from further lawless attacks.
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Many attempts had been made to smash the Lumber Workers
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Industrial Union of the IWW, especially during and after the great
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strike of 1917 for the eight-hour day. Men had been beaten and
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jailed in Yakima, Ellensburg and other lumber towns. Rope, tar and
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feathers, and clubs were used time and time again. The Eastern
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Railway and Lumber Company controlled much of the lumber land,
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sawmills, railways and banks around Centralia. The head of this
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outfit, F. B. Hubbard, was also president of the Employer's
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Association. The American Legion had been organized in Centralia
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after the war and was in the forefront of the campaign to smash the
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IWW and imprison its members.
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A blind man, Tom Lassiter, made his living at a newsstand in
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Centralia. Among the papers he sold were the Seattle _Union Record_
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and the IWW paper, _The Industrial Worker_. In June 1919 the
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newsstand was broken into and everything taken out and burned. He
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was warned to leave town in a note signed "U.S. Soldiers, Sailors
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and Marines." Later, when he refused to leave town, he was seized,
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beaten and dropped in a ditch across the county line. When he
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returned to Centralia, he was arrested under the criminal
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syndicalist law. All attempts of his lawyer, Elmer Smith, failed to
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bring the perpetrators of these outrages to justice, which
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emboldened the lawless elements in Centralia.
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The Employers Association continually incited its members to
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action by regular bulletins, proclaiming such slogans as "active
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prosecution of the IWW; hang the Bolsheviks; deport Russians from
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this community; deport the radicals or use the rope in Centralia,"
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and similar sentiments. A Citizen's Protective League was organized
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which called meetings to discuss how to handle "the IWW problem."
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The police, the Elks and the Legion participated in these discussions.
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A secret committee, similar to the vigilante committees of the old
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West, was set up. The news leaked out that a raid was being planned
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on the IWW hall, and was discussed by Lewis County Trades Council.
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Some members from there warned the IWW of the threats. The IWW issued a
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leaflet, "To the Citizens of Centralia We Must Appeal," in which
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they recited the threats and accusations against them. It concluded
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by saying: "Our only crime is solidarity, loyalty to the working
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class, and justice for the oppressed."
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At a Legion meeting on November 6, the line of march for the
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Armistice parade was changed to pass the IWW hall and it was agreed
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that they would halt in front of it, make a swift attack and
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proceed with the parade. They voted also to wear their uniforms.
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The line of march was publicized. Walter Grimms, in charge of the
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Legion, replaced Commander William Scales who did not favor raiding
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the hall. Grimms was a veteran of the Siberian Expedition of the
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American army. He had attacked "the American Bolsheveki-the IWW" in
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a Labor Day Speech. Elmer Smith, the IWW's lawyer, advised his
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clients: "Defend the hall if you choose to do so-the law gives you
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the right." For this remark he was subsequently charged with
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murder.
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Armistice Day, November 11, 1919, was the day of the parade.
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Some of the marchers carried coils of rope. At the words, "Let's
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Go" the Centralia Legionnaires raided the hall, led by Grimms.
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Shots were fired from inside the hall as the invaders smashed doors
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and windows. Shots came also from a nearby hillside. Grimms was
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shot, at the head of the invaders. He died later in the hospital.
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A Centralia druggist, Arthur McElfresh, was killed. Wesley Everest,
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an IWW and a veteran of World War I, had done the shooting. Five of
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the IWWs left in the hall took refuge in an unused icebox at the
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rear, where they remained until they were arrested.
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Everest escaped from the back door, chased by the mob. He
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fired again as they closed in on them and killed Dan Hubbard, a
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veteran and nephew of the lumber baron who had instigated the plot
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and then planned "to let the men in uniform do it". Everest was
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kicked and beaten, a rope was put around his neck, and he was
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dragged senseless to the jail. In the night he was taken out and
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castrated and lynched, his swinging body used as a target for shot
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after shot. The next day the body was brought back to the jail and
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thrown in among the prisoners, then taken out and surreptitiously
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buried in an unknown grave-so the IWW could not take pictures of
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it, the authorities said. The men in jail were tortured and third-
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degreed to make them "confess." One, Lorens Robert was driven
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insane as a result.
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Lumber trust lawyers appeared as special prosecutors at the
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trial in Montesano, seat of Gray's Harbor County. A change of venue
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had been granted but it made little difference. Threats were made
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that the defendants would never get out of that county alive-if
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they were acquitted. The men on trial were ably defended by labor
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lawyer George W. Vanderveer. Two of the defendants, Elmer Smith and
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Mike Sheehan, were acquitted. Loren Roberts was declared insane.
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Britt Smith, O.C. Bland, James McInery, Bert Bland, Ray Becker,
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Eugene Barnett and John Lamb were found guilty of second degree
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murder. They were sentenced to from 25 to 40 years in Walla
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penitentiary. Not one of the mob who raided the hall, murdered
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Wesley Everest, or drove Roberts insane was ever punished. A
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"labor jury" of six workingmen of AFL unions from Tacoma,
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Washington met on March 15, 1920, at the Labor Temple there and
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gave their verdict. It was that the defendants were not guilty;
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that there was a conspiracy to raid the hall on the part of the
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business interests of Centralia; that the hall had been unlawfully
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raided and that Warren Grimms had participated in that raid.
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During the trial, the courthouse was surrounded by soldiers
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who camped on the lawn, and jurors admitted later they were
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intimidated by the atmosphere. The court was full of Legionnaires
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in uniform from all the surrounding towns. Two years later, six
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jurors gave affidavits to Elmer Smith, who worked on the case until
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his death in the early 30's, stating their fears and asserting that
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if they had known the full story of the raid they would have voted
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to acquit the defendants. As it was, the jury recommended leniency,
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which the judge ignored.
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Some of the law-abiding elements in the Legion spoke out.
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Edward Bassett, an overseas veteran and commander of the Butte,
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Montana, post issued a statement before the trial, stating that
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the IWW were justified in defending their hall and that the
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Legionnaires disgraced themselves by becoming party to a mob.
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Ten years later, in 1929, the Centralia Publicity Committee issued
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a four-page leaflet called "The Centralia Case" by an American
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Legionnaire of the Hoquiam, Washington, post of the Legion-a former
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U.S. Army captain Edward Patrick Hall-urging people to "rectify a
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great wrong" by writing to the governor to release the innocent
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workers beginning their tenth year of imprisonment." He said, "A
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short resume of the Centralia case shows that the Centralia
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Legionnaires were used by local business interests to eject the
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IWW. On Armistice Day, 1919, the workers' hall was raided before a
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shot was fired in self-defense. A gigantic frame-up followed, and
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the trial at Montesano bears all the earmarks of being an attempt
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at a `lynching'."
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Meetings were held on behalf of the Centralia victims for
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years. Leaflets were issued in 1919 by our Workers Defense Union in
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New York City and funds issued to the Centralia defense. One
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donation of $500 came from the Joint Board of the Amalgamated
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Clothing Workers. I spoke with Elmer Smith in March 1929 at the
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Seattle Civic Auditorium. I recall saying :"If the IWW had raided
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a Legion Hall, imagine what heroes the Legion would be to shoot
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them down!" Elmer Smith died of cancer shortly afterward.
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The legal struggle was taken over by Attorney Irwin Goodman
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of Portland, a valiant civil liberties lawyer. Five men were
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paroled in 1936, after 17 years unjust imprisonment, and the
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others, who refused parole, were released a short time later. The
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Legion defiantly erected a statue to Grimms but the truth has
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prevailed, and the events in Centralia are now known as the murder
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of Wesley Everest and the frame-up of seven innocent
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workingmen.
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--
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Date: Fri, 1 Sep 1995 14:12:09 -0400
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Sender: Progressive News & Views List <PNEWS-L@SJUVM.STJOHNS.EDU>
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Subject: Centralia 1919 II
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From: mark.dickson@dafbbs.com
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At a Legion meeting on November 6, the line of march for the
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Armistice parade was changed to pass the IWW hall and it was agreed
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that they would halt in front of it, make a swift attack and
|
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proceed with the parade. They voted also to wear their uniforms.
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The line of march was publicized. Walter Grimms, in charge of the
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Legion, replaced Commander William Scales who did not favor raiding
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the hall. Grimms was a veteran of the Siberian Expedition of the
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American army. He had attacked "the American Bolsheveki-the IWW" in
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a Labor Day Speech. Elmer Smith, the IWW's lawyer, advised his
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clients: "Defend the hall if you choose to do so-the law gives you
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the right." For this remark he was subsequently charged with
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murder.
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Armistice Day, November 11, 1919, was the day of the parade.
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Some of the marchers carried coils of rope. At the words, "Let's
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Go" the Centralia Legionnaires raided the hall, led by Grimms.
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Shots were fired from inside the hall as the invaders smashed doors
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and windows. Shots came also from a nearby hillside. Grimms was
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shot, at the head of the invaders. He died later in the hospital.
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A Centralia druggist, Arthur McElfresh, was killed. Wesley Everest,
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an IWW and a veteran of World War I, had done the shooting. Five of
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the IWWs left in the hall took refuge in an unused icebox at the
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rear, where they remained until they were arrested.
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Everest escaped from the back door, chased by the mob. He
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fired again as they closed in on them and killed Dan Hubbard, a
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veteran and nephew of the lumber baron who had instigated the plot
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and then planned "to let the men in uniform do it". Everest was
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kicked and beaten, a rope was put around his neck, and he was
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dragged senseless to the jail. In the night he was taken out and
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castrated and lynched, his swinging body used as a target for shot
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after shot. The next day the body was brought back to the jail and
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thrown in among the prisoners, then taken out and surreptitiously
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buried in an unknown grave-so the IWW could not take pictures of
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it, the authorities said. The men in jail were tortured and third-
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degreed to make them "confess." One, Lorens Robert was driven
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insane as a result.
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Lumber trust lawyers appeared as special prosecutors at the
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trial in Montesano, seat of Gray's Harbor County. A change of venue
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had been granted but it made little difference. Threats were made
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that the defendants would never get out of that county alive-if
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they were acquitted. The men on trial were ably defended by labor
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lawyer George W. Vanderveer. Two of the defendants, Elmer Smith and
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Mike Sheehan, were acquitted. Loren Roberts was declared insane.
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Britt Smith, O.C. Bland, James McInery, Bert Bland, Ray Becker,
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Eugene Barnett and John Lamb were found guilty of second degree
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murder. They were sentenced to from 25 to 40 years in Walla
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penitentiary. Not one of the mob who raided the hall, murdered
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Wesley Everest, or drove Roberts insane was ever punished. A
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"labor jury" of six workingmen of AFL unions from Tacoma,
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Washington met on March 15, 1920, at the Labor Temple there and
|
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gave their verdict. It was that the defendants were not guilty;
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that there was a conspiracy to raid the hall on the part of the
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business interests of Centralia; that the hall had been unlawfully
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raided and that Warren Grimms had participated in that raid.
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During the trial, the courthouse was surrounded by soldiers
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who camped on the lawn, and jurors admitted later they were
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intimidated by the atmosphere. The court was full of Legionnaires
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in uniform from all the surrounding towns. Two years later, six
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jurors gave affidavits to Elmer Smith, who worked on the case until
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his death in the early 30's, stating their fears and asserting that
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if they had known the full story of the raid they would have voted
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to acquit the defendants. As it was, the jury recommended leniency,
|
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which the judge ignored.
|
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Some of the law-abiding elements in the Legion spoke out.
|
|
Edward Bassett, an overseas veteran and commander of the Butte,
|
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Montana, post issued a statement before the trial, stating that
|
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the IWW were justified in defending their hall and that the
|
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Legionnaires disgraced themselves by becoming party to a mob.
|
|
Ten years later, in 1929, the Centralia Publicity Committee issued
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a four-page leaflet called "The Centralia Case" by an American
|
|
Legionnaire of the Hoquiam, Washington, post of the Legion-a former
|
|
U.S. Army captain Edward Patrick Hall-urging people to rectify a
|
|
great wrong by writing to the governor to release the innocent
|
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workrs beginning their tenth year of imprisonment." He said, "A
|
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short resume of the Centralia case shows that the Centralia
|
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Legionaires were used by local business interests to eject the IWW.
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On Armistice Day, 1919, the workers' hall was raided before a shot
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was fired in self-defense. A gigantic frame-up followed, and the
|
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trial at Montesano bears all the earmarks of being an attempt at a
|
|
`lynching'."
|
|
Meetings were held on behalf of the Centralia victims for
|
|
years. Leaflets were issued in 1919 by our Workers Defense Union in
|
|
New York City and funds issued to the Centralia defense. One
|
|
donation of $500 came from the Joint Board of the Amalgamated
|
|
Clothing Workers. I spoke with Elmer Smith in March 1929 at the
|
|
Seattle Civic Auditorium. I recall saying :"If the IWW had raided
|
|
a Legion Hall, imagine what heroes the Legion would be to shoot
|
|
them down!" Elmer Smith died of cancer shortly afterward.
|
|
The legal struggle was taken over by Attorney Irwin Goodman
|
|
of Portland, a valiant civil liberties lawyer. Five men were
|
|
patroled in 1936, after 17 years unjust imprisonment, and the
|
|
others, who refused parole, were released a short time later. The
|
|
Legion defiantly erected a statue to Grimms but the truth has
|
|
prevailed, and the events in Centralia are now known as the murder
|
|
of Wesley Everest and the frame-up of seven innocent
|
|
workingmen.
|
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