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MikeDunnAuthor
MikeDunnAuthor
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social  ·  activity timestamp 2 days ago

In honor of Black History Month, a short biography of Ben Fletcher (April 13, 1890 – 1949), Wobbly and revolutionary. Fletcher joined the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) in 1912 and became secretary of the IWW District Council in 1913. He also co-founded the interracial Local 8 in 1913. Also in 1913, he led a successful strike of over 10,000 dockers. At that time, roughly one-third of the dockers on the Philadelphia waterfront were black. Another 33% were Irish. And about 33% were Polish and Lithuanian. Prior to the IWW organizing drive, the employers routinely pitted black workers against white, and Polish against Irish. The IWW was one of the only unions of the era that organized workers into the same locals, regardless of race or ethnicity. And its main leader in Philadelphia was an African American, Ben Fletcher.

By 1916, thanks in large part to Fletcher’s organizing skill, all but two of Philadelphia’s docks were controlled by the IWW. And the IWW maintained control of the Philly waterfront for about a decade. After the 1913 strike, Fletcher travelled up and down the east coast organizing dockers. However, he was nearly lynched in Norfolk, Virginia in 1917. At that time, roughly 10% of the IWW’s 1 million members were African American. Most had been rejected from other unions because of their skin color. In 1918, the state arrested him for treason, sentencing him to ten years, for the crime of organizing workers during wartime. He served three years. Fletcher supposedly said to Big Bill Haywood after the trial that the judge had been using “very ungrammatical language. . . His sentences are much too long.”

#workingclass #LaborHistory #IWW #benfletcher #union #strike #philadelphia #longshore #docker #waterfront #worldwarone #prison #antiwar #freespeech #racism #blackhistorymonth #BlackMastodon

Image: linocut print of African-American IWW organizer and longshoreman Ben Fletcher, by IWW artist, poet and muralist Carlos Cortez. Reads: Ben Fletcher Marine Transport Workers IU 510. The MTW-IWW introduced non-segregated union locals on the waterfronts of Baltimore, Norfolk and Philadelphia, as well as ports on the Gulf. The best organizer was Ben Fletcher. As an orator, his ringing voice needed no microphone. And his sense of humor put many a heckler on the run.
Image: linocut print of African-American IWW organizer and longshoreman Ben Fletcher, by IWW artist, poet and muralist Carlos Cortez. Reads: Ben Fletcher Marine Transport Workers IU 510. The MTW-IWW introduced non-segregated union locals on the waterfronts of Baltimore, Norfolk and Philadelphia, as well as ports on the Gulf. The best organizer was Ben Fletcher. As an orator, his ringing voice needed no microphone. And his sense of humor put many a heckler on the run.
Image: linocut print of African-American IWW organizer and longshoreman Ben Fletcher, by IWW artist, poet and muralist Carlos Cortez. Reads: Ben Fletcher Marine Transport Workers IU 510. The MTW-IWW introduced non-segregated union locals on the waterfronts of Baltimore, Norfolk and Philadelphia, as well as ports on the Gulf. The best organizer was Ben Fletcher. As an orator, his ringing voice needed no microphone. And his sense of humor put many a heckler on the run.
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