| Mother Jones: The
Mother of the Labor Movement
by Local 2195 Webmaster John Davis
Mary Harris is name that you wont find in
many history books. There are no skyscrapers in New York City that bear
her name, or federal governmental office buildings named after her. The
lone representation
of her legacy by governmental recognition is the Mary Harris Jones Elementary
School in Adelphi, Maryland. However, the record of her life is one of
great importance to working people in this country.
Far too often history records the exploits of the wealthy
and powerful while ignoring the triumphs of those who dedicated their
life to helping others. Mary Harris was one such person, whose life and
legacy is one that deserves recognition on this the day set aside to honor
America’s workers. While the name Mary Harris is not know, it is
her nickname “Mother Jones” that briefly scratches recognition
in the history books.
Mary Harris “Mother” Jones was born in Ireland
in 1830 and moved to Toronto with her family at an early age. Once completing
her schooling, Mary worked as both a teacher and seamstress in the United
States, ending up in Memphis, Tennessee in 1861. It was here she met and
married George Jones, a member of the Iron Molders’ Union. Mary
and George had a good life and began a family right away. In 1867 a yellow
fever epidemic swept through Memphis, claiming the life of her husband
George and their four small children. George and Mary nursed each child
as the sickness claimed them one by one, with George finally succumbing
to the disease after the children. His union brothers came and took care
of the burial for Mary, as she found herself alone in the world. The poor
of Memphis could not afford nurses to help them during the plaque, so
Mary applied for and received a permit to care for the sick. Helping those
she could, she spent her final days in Memphis caring for the sick until
the disease had ran its course.
Afterwards, Mary moved to Chicago where she had briefly
lived before moving to Memphis and took work as a seamstress. Her position
as a seamstress placed her in the homes of the rich and powerful of Chicago,
while the hungry and downtrodden lived on the streets outside the windows
of the fine mansions in which she worked. Each day Mary watched the poor
struggle to survive as the rich feasted off their labor. It was in Chicago
that she joined the Knights of Labor.
The Knights of Labor had been founded in the years following
the Civil War, when a group of men from both the North and South came
together to fight a new type of slavery, with that being industrial slavery.
The poverty in the years following the war had resulted in poor people
of all races being exploited by the rich and powerful. Mary spent many
evenings listening to the speakers at the union hall who inspired her
to take up the struggle for the working poor and downtrodden. The great
Chicago fire of 1873 left many poor and homeless, including Mary Jones
who also lost her seamstress shop in the tragedy. It was then that she
would wholly devote herself to the cause of labor.
In the 1880s, a massive immigration of the poor from Europe
to the United States flooded the job market, further driving down wages
and working conditions. To try and level the job market, the Knights
of Labor and other unions began to work toward the idea of an eight hour
work day in 1886, due to the fact that most workers were forced to toll
long hours each day which meant fewer jobs and more desperation. Mary
Jones was instrumental in the movement and helped lead a parade on Christmas
Day of the poor and poverty stricken down the streets that lined the mansions
of the wealthy. The next May a strike was called at the McCormick Harvester
Works in support of the eight-hour workday. The police were brought in
to shoot the striking workers and those who organized the strike were
arrested and hanged on November 11, 1886. Mary Jones was not one of the
unlucky activists to be charged and murdered, but she continued her fight
for workers.
By now Mary had become known as “Mother Jones”
and moved down into the mining areas of West Virginia, Pennsylvania and
Virginia. Through many communities she worked to organize the miners so
they could collectively demand better working conditions and fairer treatment.
In the spring of 1903, Mother Jones took up the struggle
of children working in mills and joined a strike of 75,000 textile workers
in Kensington, Pennsylvania. Of this number of strikers, over 10,000 were
children, many of which were missing fingers from working in the mills.
Most were under ten years old, while the law required children to be twelve
before they could work in the mills. Mother Jones soon discovered that
most of the children were working illegally because their fathers had
been maimed or killed in the local mines. She tried to get the local newspapers
to carry stories about the tragedy of children labor, but they refused
because the mill owners held stock in the papers. So, again Mother Jones
turned to parading the poor in the streets and took thousands of these
little children down the streets to city hall where she called upon the
mill owners to stop sacrificing children upon the altar of profit. While
local papers would not carry the story, papers in larger Pennsylvania
cities and in New York told of the sacrifice of the innocents in the mills
in the name of profit.
Mother Jones then got the idea to take the children on
a tour to spread the news of how they were being exploited. The marchers
carried signs that read “More Schools and Less Hospitals”
and “We Want Time To Play.” The group marched from Pennsylvania
to Oyster Bay, New York where President
Theodore Roosevelt was vacationing with his children. The President refused
to grant an audience to the army of children that followed Mother Jones,
but they continued to spread the word. In New York City the Mayor denied
them access to the city until Mother Jones – then in her 70s- visited
the Mayor in person and shamed him into letting the group enter the city.
The people of New York listened to Mother Jones tell of how children as
young as eight worked eleven hours a day in a factory for just three dollars
a week.
The owner of the wild animal show at Coney Island offered to treat Mother
Jone’s “Army” to a day on the boardwalk. Mother Jones
was allowed to speak to the crowd at the show and she placed a group of
little children in the cages that usually housed animals and told the
crowd that children were being held captive in the mills of Pennsylvania
just as the animals were captive in the show.
While her pleas continued to fall on deaf ears in Washington,
the Pennsylvania Legislature were pressured into passing laws that forbid
children under the age of fourteen to work in the mills.
In 1925 Mother Jones was attacked by a pair of men at
friends house in which she was staying. She fought off the men and one
eventually died from wounds he suffered in the attack. Mother Jones was
arrested and charged with murder. However, the charges were later dropped
when it was learned the men were associates of a prominent local businessman
carrying out his despicable wishes.
Mother Jones died at the age of 100 in 1930, following
a long life of working for the rights of others. While she lost her own
children in 1867, her work for all children earned her the name “Mother
Jones” for virtually everyone else. This Labor Day, remember it
is not just the last fling of summer, but rather a day to remember heroes
such as Mother Jones who fought so all working class Americans could have
a better life.
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