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Revolution or Evolution: The Socialist Party, Western Workers, and Law in the Progressive Era

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 November 2010

John P. Enyeart
Affiliation:
Stanford University

Extract

In 1913 Socialist Party (SP) leader Morris Hillquit contended that the United States had embarked on the path toward socialism. He argued that the “modern principle of control and regulation of industries by the government indicates the complete collapse of the purely capitalist ideal of non-interference, and signifies that the government may change from an instrument of class rule and exploitation into one of social regulation and protection.” He then asserted that like “the industries, the government is being socialized. The general tendency of both is distinctly towards a Socialist order.” This fit with his understanding of the stages a nation underwent as it progressed first from a society with little to no state involvement in the economy, to a social democracy with state regulation of corporations and protections for workers, to, finally, a socialist state where a government which the people elected managed the economy.

Type
Essays
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 2003

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References

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14 By growth I do not only mean ballot box victories. Socialist growth also included increased membership and influence beyond the party.

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19 ibid; and Pratt, Norma Fain, Morris Hillquit: A Political History of an American Jewish Socialist (Westport, CT, 1979), 100.Google Scholar

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28 The Revolt (San Francisco), May 13, 1911, 2.

29 Calvert, The Gibraltar and McCormick and Sillito, “Respectable Reformers.”

30 Debs, Eugene V., “The Western Labor Movement,” International Socialist Review 3 (November 1902): 264.Google Scholar For the militancy of the WFM, see Dubofsky, Melvyn, “The Origins of Western Working Class Radicalism, 1890–1905,” Labor History 7 (Spring 1966): 131–54CrossRefGoogle Scholar and Dubofsky, We Shall Be All. Elizabeth Jameson provides an alternative view of western miners beyond the “labor wars” and an in-depth examination of the WFM's endorsement of the SP. Importantly, Jameson points out that Cripple Creek Socialists, mostly hard rock miners, blended Utopian rhetoric with practical demands. See her, All That Glitters: Class, Conflict, and Community in Cripple Creek (Urbana, 1998), 161–96.

31 For Debs' quote, see Labor World (Butte), June 2, 1902, 8. On Utopian influences, see Buhle, Paul, Marxism in the United States: Remapping the History of the American Left (London, 1987), 5885Google Scholar; Thomas, John L., Alternative America: Henry George, Edward Bellamy, Henry Demurest Lloyd and the Adversary Tradition (Cambridge, MA, 1983)Google Scholar; Spann, Edward K., Brotherly Tomorrows: Movements for a Cooperative Society in America, 1820–1920 (New York, 1989)Google Scholar; Haber, Samuel, “The Nightmare and the Dream: Edward Bellamy and the Travails of Socialist Thought,” Journal of American Studies 36 (December 2002): 417–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Salvatore, , Eugene V. Debs, 145–77.Google Scholar

32 Miners' Magazine 1 (June 1900): 34–35. For the letter see vol. 3 of the Miners' Magazine and WFM Executive Board Minutes, December 12, 1903, University of Colorado at Boulder Archives. For other examples of WFM cooperative ventures, see Jameson, , All That Glitters, 245–46.Google Scholar

33 Miners' Magazine 11 (March 3, 1910): 8; John Ervin Brinley Jr., “The Western Federation of Miners” (Ph.D. diss., University of Utah, 1972): 116–20; Industrial Worker, June 25, 1910, 2. Progressive Era intellectuals recognized this trend. See Walling, William English, “The New Unionism – The Problem of the Unskilled Worker,” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 24 (September 1904): 1213CrossRefGoogle Scholar and Glocker, Theodore, “Amalgamation of Related Trades in American UnionsAmerican Economic Review 5 (September 1915): 554.Google Scholar Glocker classified only twenty-eight of 133 unions affiliated with the AFL as strictly craft unions.

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40 Official Report of the Proceedings and Debates of the Convention Assembled at Salt Lake City on the Fourth Day of March 1895, to Adopt a Constitution for the State of Utah, vol. 2, 1171; and Holden v. Hardy, 169 US 366 (1898).

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43 For discussions of the BMU's contract, see Official Proceedings of the Fifteenth Annual Convention of the Western Federation of Miners (n.p., 1907), 308–52.

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53 Butte Labor World, 1902–1904 and Montana News, 1904–1907.

54 For a different interpretation, see Emmons, , Butte Irish, 243–48 and 263–66.Google Scholar Emmons points out that few BMU members joined the SP, and that most miners, especially the Irish, were conservatives who rejected the party. He does acknowledge that some BMU members broke their traditional Democratic ties to vote for the S P in 1911, but claims that “hard times” led miners to this decision. I contend that like the many skilled AFL workers who supported the evolutionary wing – whom Emmons compares BMU members to – Butte's hard rock miners recognized the commonalities between themselves and the evolutionary Socialists they helped elect.

55 Montana Socialist Party Flyer 1911, Socialist Party Papers, Microfilm Edition Reel 99.

56 Calvert, , The Gibraltar, 39.Google Scholar For more on the importance of health issues to Western workers in this period, see Derickson, Alan, Workers' Health, Workers' Democracy: The Western Miners' Struggle, 1891–1925 (Ithaca, 1988).Google Scholar

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63 Montana Socialist, September 14, 1913, 1–3 and January 25, 1914, 1. For the law, see Laws, Resolutions and Memorials of the State of Montana Passed by the 14th Regular Session of the Legislative Assembly (Helena, 1914), 168–218.