Knowledge (XXG)

Brotherhood of Timber Workers

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50:, but also had locals in Arkansas (7) and Mississippi (1). The BTW was organized in 1910 by Arthur Lee (A.L) Emerson and Jay Smith as an industrial union. Estimates of membership fall between 20,000 and 35,000 people. Despite being located in the Jim Crow South the union was open to members of all races and women were granted membership in 1912. Roughly half of the membership is believed to have been African American. Members of Brotherhood had their work cut out for themselves, organizing an interracial union during Jim Crow in one of the largest industries in the South. Louisiana, Texas, and Mississippi were three of the largest timber producing states in the country during that era. 57:, or massacre, in 1912. Men who worked for Galloway Lumber Company opened fire on union meeting: three union workers were killed and one of the company men. The BTW had struck against the mill in Grabow, Louisiana. The Brotherhood of Timber Workers was known as having interracial membership at a time when racial segregation was increasing in many areas of the Deep South. It also included both males and females, but most of the mill jobs were held by men. 242:; Steven A. Reich, “The Making of a Southern Sawmill World: Race, Class, and Rural Transformation in the Piney Woods of East Texas, 1830-1930” (PhD diss., Northwestern University, 1998), 279, 324; Melvyn Dubofsky, We Shall Be All: a History of the Industrial Workers of the World (New York: Quadrangle, 1969), 211; Ruth A. Allen, East Texas Lumber Workers: An Economic and Social Picture, 1870-1950 (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1961), 182 90:
effectively locking out the workers in an attempt to defeat the BTW before it could gain momentum. This shutdown continued for months and BTW members were blacklisted. In order for workers to work again, the SLOA came up with a solution - they had to disown the union on paper called "yellow card" contracts or anti-union cards. Although this was one of the only ways for workers to gain their jobs back, many members refused.
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managers pulled back their threat after the full-scale strike. Promises of increased pay and better conditions were made. Over the course of the next few years, conditions and pay continued to be low. The work was dangerous and routine actions required workers to have enough endurance to keep up with the machines. In 1919 there were 125 deaths reported in the industry, and 16,950 accidents with injuries.
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the Merryville Mill with 1,200 men. This strike although was partially successful in the beginning, but the BTW in shutting down the mill began to lose its strength as the mill began to fully operate with nonunion workers. The end of the strike was signaled when a group of people called "The Good Citizens League" attacked the headquarters of the strike and essentially ran the BTW out of Merryville.
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brought in scab labor. The mills also employed operatives to expose workers who were a part of the union. They hired armed guards, essentially their own private police or militia, to keep organizers out. Many of these guards were deputized by the local sheriff, providing an impression of legal sanction and creating a militarized environment. This set the stage for the incident at the Grabow mill.
815: 109:. He noticed that two separate conventions being held, one for blacks and one for whites. Haywood addressed this problem in an attempt to unite the union, calling for black and white to join in one convention hall. The BTW made a step toward equality for their colored members. The affiliation with the 167:
The loss of the Merryville strike resulted in the decline of the BTW. Their resources had been depleted and membership had fallen since the Grabow Trial. SLOA has successfully defeated the BTW and crushed the union following the loss of the Merryville strikes. While the union continued to exist until
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Following the incident, 49 union men and officials were arrested and facing charges of conspiracy and murder. After two months all 49 men, including A.L. Emerson were acquitted at trial of all charges and were set free. This victory was a key point in the history of the BTW, but the trial had drained
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The new management made clear their feelings towards the BTW by firing 15 employees that played a part in the Grabow Trial. This instigated a strike that the BTW knew that they didn't have the funds to support following the Grabow Trial. Although funds were depleted the BTW started a strike against
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hit the United States. In response, owners and operators of sawmills in the southern pine region threaten to cut wages by 20% and increase working hours. The poor working and living conditions on top of the unannounced pay cuts angered the sawmill workers, organized a large strike in response. The
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The Lumber Operators' Association criticized the BTW as an anarchistic, race-mixing organization, in an attempt to diminish support among white workers. After affiliation with the IWW, the BTW had presented the Lumber operators with a list of demands. Company managers locked out union workers and
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The clash began in 1911 when SLOA encouraged their members to rid their plants of union labor by firing anyone associated with the union. These firings coincided with mass walkouts of union members in some plants resulting in the SLOA's decision to shut down 23 mills in East Texas and Louisiana,
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was an American sawmill that was owned and managed by Sam Park. What set Merryville apart from the rest of the mills operating during that time, was that the owner Sam Park "tolerated" the BTW. Most of his workforce was composed of union members. This made Merryville an important piece in the
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and Jay Smith began to recruit members for the Brotherhood of Timber Workers. They moved from camp to camp to recruit hundreds of black, white, and Mexican workers; membership grew and word spread rapidly. By the time they felt strong enough to come public they held their first convention in
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Park was strongly disliked by SLOA and they criticized him for "treachery" for his refusal to shut down his mills during lockouts, and for tolerating the BTW. Park became a target for SLOA in their attempts to crush the BTW. They were successful and Park was removed from Merryville.
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page/n117/mode/2up/search/%22timber+workers+and+timber+wolves%22; Bernard A. Cook, “Covington Hall and Radical Rural Unionization in Louisiana”, Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association 18, no. 2 (Spring 1977): 228,
829: 82:. It was here where they drafted their constitution that extended membership to all races and sexes. The creation of the BTW sparked the interest of the Southern Lumber Operators' Association (SLOA) whose purpose was to prevent 1103: 135:. After arriving Emerson began to talk to the crowd, when gunshots were fired from the company office. This sparked a gun battle between the company gunmen and the armed union participants. According to a news article in the 346:
Marquis, David, "Race, Sexuality, and Radicalism in the Piney Woods: The Industrial Workers of the World and The Brotherhood of Timber Workers, 1910-1916," (master's thesis, The College of William & Mary, 2016),
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Marquis, David, "Race, Sexuality, and Radicalism in the Piney Woods: The Industrial Workers of the World and The Brotherhood of Timber Workers, 1910-1916," (master's thesis, The College of William & Mary, 2016),
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Marquis, David, "Race, Sexuality, and Radicalism in the Piney Woods: The Industrial Workers of the World and The Brotherhood of Timber Workers, 1910-1916," (master's thesis, The College of William & Mary,
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Brotherhood's financial plans. With other mills locking out workers and blacklisting union members, and the Grabow Trial draining the BTW's funds, Merryville became a source of income for the BTW.
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On July 7, 1912, A.L. Emerson led a group of strikers toward the King-Ryder mill. Upon hearing the news that H.G. Creel was almost assassinated, they changed course toward the Galloway mill in
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The attempts by the SOLA to crush the rising union had failed and mills were reopened. The clash was not over but mill workers had won a small battle receiving a slightly higher wage.
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PhD Diss. Florida State U, 1966. Unrest in the Piney Woods: Southern Lumber and the Brotherhood of Timber Workers in the Early Twentieth Century. Web. Nov.-Dec. 2014.
113:(IWW) was voted in favor by a vote of 71 ½ to 26 ½. A "Board of Colored Executive Officers" was established to work in conjunction with the White Executive Officers. 688: 924: 580: 554: 996: 938: 1036: 678: 643: 1078: 953: 547: 795: 1083: 1068: 628: 356:
Marquis, David, "The Brotherhood of Timber Workers Struggle for Recognition in the Deep South: A Time When the Law Should Be Broken.", p.10
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Marquis, David, "The Brotherhood of Timber Workers Struggle for Recognition in the Deep South: A Time When the Law Should Be Broken.", p.9
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Green, James R. "The Brotherhood of Timber Workers 1910-1913: A Radical Response to Industrial Capitalism in the Southern U. S. A.",
139:, four men were killed and four other men were seriously wounded as a result of the battle. There were also 37 men who were wounded. 986: 648: 607: 991: 958: 759: 739: 713: 570: 110: 73:
The BTW was created in an effort by workers to improve these terrible working conditions in the sawmills. In 1910, lumberjacks
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The Brotherhood of Timber Workers Struggle for Recognition in the Deep South: A Time When the Law Should Be Broken.
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Unrest in the Piney Woods: Southern Lumber and the Brotherhood of Timber Workers in the Early Twentieth Century.
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William D. Haywood, “Timber Workers and Timber Wolves,” International Socialist Review, August 1912, 108,
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Green, James R., Grass-roots Socialism: Radical Movements in the Southwest, 1895-1943, p. 275
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Labor's Promised Land: Radical Visions of Gender, Race, and Religion in the South
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Labor's Promised Land: Radical Visions of Gender, Race, and Religion in the South
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Labor's Promised Land: Radical Visions of Gender, Race, and Religion in the South
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Labor's Promised Land: Radical Visions of Gender, Race, and Religion in the South
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http://0www.jstor.org.wncln.wncln.org/stable/pdfplus/4231678.pdf?acceptTC=true
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https://archive.org/stream/InternationalSocialistReview1900Vol13/ISRvolume13#
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At the BTW's second annual convention held in Alexandria, Louisiana in 1912,
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Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association
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Grass-roots Socialism: Radical Movements in the Southwest, 1895-1943
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Grass-roots Socialism: Radical Movements in the Southwest, 1895-1943
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Grass-roots Socialism: Radical Movements in the Southwest, 1895-1943
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1916, the union was "effectively destroyed" by Merryville strike.
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workers, farmers, and small business people primarily located in
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Trade unions affiliated with the Industrial Workers of the World
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from rising in the lumber camps and sawmills of the South.
498:(Tulsa, Ok.). November 3, 1912. (Accessed November, 2014). 532:
U of North Carolina at Asheville, 2013. Web. 7 Dec. 2014.
197:"Lumberjacks and Longshoremen: The I.W.W. in Louisiana" 482:, 23 July 1912: 2+. Google News. Web. Nov.-Dec. 2014. 1009: 977: 923: 883: 822: 768: 727: 616: 590: 579: 1094:History of racial segregation in the United States 53:The BTW became known for its participation in the 97:Uniting with the Industrial Workers of the World 516:. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State UP, 1978. Print. 555: 8: 1074:Industrial Workers of the World in Louisiana 997:Metal and Machinery Workers Industrial Union 939:Australasian Meat Industry Employees Union 931: 689:1916–1917 northern Minnesota lumber strike 587: 562: 548: 540: 1089:Defunct trade unions in the United States 959:Marine Transport Workers Industrial Union 954:Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee 1099:Industrial Workers of the World in Texas 1037:Workers' International Industrial Union 258: 256: 254: 252: 250: 248: 177: 147:Merryville and the decline of the union 27:Former trade union of the United States 303: 301: 679:Bayonne refinery strikes of 1915–1916 644:1912–1913 Little Falls textile strike 7: 830:List of General Secretary-Treasurers 489:. N.p.: U of Tennessee, 2003. Print. 949:Education Workers Industrial Union 629:1912 New York City waiters' strike 25: 987:Agricultural Workers Organization 18:The Brotherhood of Timber Workers 1079:1910 establishments in Louisiana 813: 608:Pressed Steel Car strike of 1909 478:"Clash between Strikers Fatal". 439:"Grabow Rioters Are Acquitted," 426:"Clash between Strikers Fatal". 992:Lumber Workers Industrial Union 760:Stockton cannery strike of 1937 740:1922 New England Textile Strike 572:Industrial Workers of the World 493:“Grabow Rioters Are Acquitted.” 111:Industrial Workers of the World 750:1927–1928 Colorado Coal Strike 745:1923 San Pedro maritime strike 443:(Tulsa, Ok.). November 3, 1912 1: 649:1913 El Paso smelters' strike 603:1907 Skowhegan textile strike 143:most of the BTW's resources. 38:) (1910–1916) was a union of 32:Brotherhood of Timber Workers 1084:1910 establishments in Texas 1069:Timber industry trade unions 1032:Western Federation of Miners 624:1912 Lawrence textile strike 505:No. 60 (1973): 161-200, via 195:Reed, Merl E. (1972-01-01). 791:2018–2019 Education strikes 776:1964 Mount Isa Mines strike 598:First Convention of the IWW 1120: 124: 1045: 944:Burgerville Workers Union 934: 811: 755:1933 Yakima Valley strike 669:1913 Ipswich Mills strike 654:1913 Paterson silk strike 308:Cook, Bernard A. (1977). 213:10.1080/00236567208584190 1022:Glossary of Wobbly terms 263:Green, James R. (1973). 1049:Organized Labour portal 969:United Campaign Workers 964:Starbucks Workers Union 786:2011 Wisconsin protests 840:Elizabeth Gurley Flynn 735:Anaconda Road massacre 709:Seattle General Strike 674:1913 Studebaker strike 509:. Web. Nov.-Dec. 2014. 801:2021 Frito-Lay strike 796:Lyft and Uber strikes 276:10.1093/past/60.1.161 153:Merryville, Louisiana 80:Alexandria, Louisiana 900:Industrial democracy 699:Green Corn Rebellion 1027:Little Red Songbook 915:Solidarity unionism 905:Industrial unionism 519:Haynes, John Earl. 1017:Free speech fights 714:Centralia massacre 694:Bisbee Deportation 639:Wheatland hop riot 503:Past & Present 268:Past & Present 1056: 1055: 1005: 1004: 809: 808: 728:1920s & 1930s 496:Tulsa Daily World 480:Dawson Daily News 441:Tulsa Daily World 428:Dawson Daily News 413:Green, James R., 391:Green, James R., 137:Dawson Daily News 133:Grabow, Louisiana 16:(Redirected from 1111: 1050: 932: 927: 887: 817: 684:Everett massacre 659:Paterson pageant 588: 583: 573: 564: 557: 550: 541: 526:Marquis, David, 512:Green, James R. 466: 463: 457: 450: 444: 437: 431: 424: 418: 411: 405: 402: 396: 389: 383: 376: 370: 363: 357: 354: 348: 344: 338: 337: 305: 296: 295: 260: 243: 231: 225: 224: 192: 186: 182: 21: 1119: 1118: 1114: 1113: 1112: 1110: 1109: 1108: 1059: 1058: 1057: 1052: 1048: 1041: 1001: 973: 925: 919: 885: 879: 865:Matilda Robbins 818: 805: 764: 723: 664:Hopedale strike 612: 581: 575: 571: 568: 475: 470: 469: 464: 460: 452:Fannin, Mark., 451: 447: 438: 434: 430:23 July 1912: 2 425: 421: 412: 408: 403: 399: 390: 386: 378:Fannin, Mark., 377: 373: 365:Fannin, Mark., 364: 360: 355: 351: 345: 341: 307: 306: 299: 270:(60): 161–200. 262: 261: 246: 232: 228: 194: 193: 189: 183: 179: 174: 149: 129: 123: 99: 63: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 1117: 1115: 1107: 1106: 1101: 1096: 1091: 1086: 1081: 1076: 1071: 1061: 1060: 1054: 1053: 1046: 1043: 1042: 1040: 1039: 1034: 1029: 1024: 1019: 1013: 1011: 1010:Related topics 1007: 1006: 1003: 1002: 1000: 999: 994: 989: 983: 981: 975: 974: 972: 971: 966: 961: 956: 951: 946: 941: 935: 929: 921: 920: 918: 917: 912: 907: 902: 897: 891: 889: 881: 880: 878: 877: 872: 867: 862: 857: 852: 847: 842: 837: 835:Eugene V. 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Emerson 72: 64: 55:Grawbow Riot 52: 35: 31: 29: 719:Bisbee Riot 634:Grabow riot 127:Grabow Riot 121:Grabow Riot 1063:Categories 886:Philosophy 875:Ben Legere 769:After 1940 473:References 44:East Texas 326:0024-6816 284:0031-2746 221:0023-656X 48:Louisiana 46:and West 926:Sections 850:Joe Hill 417:, p. 219 395:, p. 211 369:, p. 199 979:Extinct 582:History 456:, p. 50 334:4231678 61:History 40:sawmill 823:People 332:  324:  292:650194 290:  282:  219:  84:unions 617:1910s 591:1900s 536:2016) 507:JSTOR 330:JSTOR 288:JSTOR 172:Notes 347:p22. 322:ISSN 280:ISSN 217:ISSN 65:The 30:The 272:doi 209:doi 185:p5. 151:In 36:BTW 1065:: 328:. 318:18 316:. 312:. 300:^ 286:. 278:. 247:^ 215:. 205:13 203:. 199:. 563:e 556:t 549:v 336:. 294:. 274:: 223:. 211:: 34:( 20:)

Index

The Brotherhood of Timber Workers
sawmill
East Texas
Louisiana
Grawbow Riot
Panic of 1907
A.L. Emerson
Alexandria, Louisiana
unions
Bill Haywood
Covington Hall
Industrial Workers of the World
Grabow Riot
Grabow, Louisiana
Merryville, Louisiana
"Lumberjacks and Longshoremen: The I.W.W. in Louisiana"
doi
10.1080/00236567208584190
ISSN
0023-656X
https://archive.org/stream/InternationalSocialistReview1900Vol13/ISRvolume13#
http://0www.jstor.org.wncln.wncln.org/stable/pdfplus/4231678.pdf?acceptTC=true






"The Brotherhood of Timber Workers 1910-1913: A Radical Response to Industrial Capitalism in the Southern U. S. A."
doi

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