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Ligne n°11 : ... Due to his experience in WWI, Washington's Governor asked Suzzallo to- Ligne n°12 : aid the State Attorney General during the Strike. They defied Mayor
Ligne n°13 : Hanson's call for martial law and worked with military officials to ...
Ligne n°14 : ... bring in unarmed soldiers to help keep order. There was no reported- Ligne n°15 : violence during the strike. Photo Courtesy of Manuscripts, Special
Ligne n°16 : Collections, University Archives, UW Libraries ...
Ligne n°19 : ... the job on February 6, 1919 the city came to a halt. All but the most- Ligne n°20 : urgent services ceased as the sympathy strike for the shipyard workers
Ligne n°21 : on Seattle's docks took hold. While the city lay dormant, the mayor, ...
Ligne n°30 : ... war and bizarrely enough asked Suzzallo to fill his position as he lay- Ligne n°31 : dying during the strike. Suzzallo's unwavering patriotism and close
Ligne n°32 : compliance with conservative wartime rhetoric and practice were evident ...
Ligne n°41 : ... indoctrination using many of the methods organized labor: speeches,- Ligne n°42 : pamphleteering and strikes. Suzzallo's attempts to suppress socialism
Ligne n°43 : on campus would meet with middling success as there was a strong ...- Ligne n°62 : By the time Seattle was in the throes of the General Strike, Suzzallo,
Ligne n°63 : his supporters and opposition at the University had been through a ...
Ligne n°63 : ... his supporters and opposition at the University had been through a- Ligne n°64 : number of strikes of their own. Suzzallo's sympathy for organized labor
Ligne n°65 : waned as he served on strike mediation boards. The Industrial Workers ...
Ligne n°64 : ... number of strikes of their own. Suzzallo's sympathy for organized labor- Ligne n°65 : waned as he served on strike mediation boards. The Industrial Workers
Ligne n°66 : of the World, revolutionary-minded labor activists central to lumber ...
Ligne n°67 : ... strikes in the Pacific Northwest, engendered much of his contempt while- Ligne n°68 : he served on strike mediation boards. His sympathy for organized labor
Ligne n°69 : waned the more involved he became in the State Council of Defense ...
Ligne n°237 : ... Workers of the World. The I.W.W. became scapegoats blamed for the- Ligne n°238 : increasingly assertive labor movement's strikes and demands. The
Ligne n°239 : Wobblies were not popular with the American Federation of Labor for ...
Ligne n°240 : ... their one big union idea and business hated them for stirring workers- Ligne n°241 : to strike. Government tended to side with business, wary of the group
Ligne n°242 : for its revolutionary rhetoric. Many believed that the I.W.W. were part ...
Ligne n°251 : ... organization, he served on mediation boards of two pivotal labor- Ligne n°252 : strikes that preceded and may have influenced the General Strike of
Ligne n°253 : 1919. Suzzallo worked with James A. Duncan to settle the Seattle Street ...
Ligne n°253 : ... 1919. Suzzallo worked with James A. Duncan to settle the Seattle Street- Ligne n°254 : Car Strike of 1917 and his work on the Wobblie-tinged lumber strikes of
- Ligne n°254 : Car Strike of 1917 and his work on the Wobblie-tinged lumber strikes of
Ligne n°255 : 1917 further galvanized his anti-I.W.W. stance. ...
Ligne n°257 : ... The I.W.W. were in fact organizing and spreading the word of- Ligne n°258 : solidarity and strikes in logging communities, much to the chagrin of
Ligne n°259 : state officials. The Council of Defense notes in its 1919 Report to the ...
Ligne n°264 : ... devotes seven pages of its report entirely to the problems it- Ligne n°265 : encountered dealing with the I.W.W. and lumber strikes. There is no
Ligne n°266 : author cited, but it can be assumed that the report reflects the vision ...
Ligne n°312 : ... attitude and used it in their own pamphlets and leaflets. The famous- Ligne n°313 : We're Ready pamphlet of the General Strike aimed at striking workers
- Ligne n°313 : We're Ready pamphlet of the General Strike aimed at striking workers
Ligne n°314 : reads, "Labor power under the present system is a commodity," a ...
Ligne n°322 : ... remembered that the Bolshevik Revolution had taken place in Russia only- Ligne n°323 : a few years prior to the General Strike. Fear of a similar Socialist
Ligne n°324 : takeover weighed heavy on the minds of those who ran and owned ...
Ligne n°360 : ... spruce collection is up for debate. Carlton Parker greatly aided- Ligne n°361 : Suzzallo in the lumber strikes, his sympathies for labor, even the
Ligne n°362 : I.W.W. were well known and may also have been an influence on the ...
Ligne n°397 : ... response was to side with the Wilson administration's request to end- Ligne n°398 : the strikes and institute the eight-hour day. For his decision Suzzallo
Ligne n°399 : was criticized as being a labor sympathizer by some. It was not the ...
Ligne n°446 : ... the University's management. The Seattle Chamber of Commerce, one of- Ligne n°447 : the most agitated groups during the General Strike, sent a letter to
Ligne n°448 : the Board of Regents congratulating the University for their ...
Ligne n°565 : ... Of those students who were labor oriented, their experiences on campus- Ligne n°566 : and off during the war and strike years were springboards to careers as
Ligne n°567 : leftists and labor advocates. Harvey O'Connor, who was briefly enrolled ...
Ligne n°587 : ... and dropped out. O'Connor had quit the University by February of 1919- Ligne n°588 : when the General Strike took place but his activities as a labor
Ligne n°589 : journalist, particularly since he was editing the International Weekly ...
Ligne n°590 : ... at the time, won him a place in jail with other alleged conspirators of- Ligne n°591 : labor unrest following the Strike. O'Connor and his friend from Tacoma
Ligne n°592 : Hays Jones were arrested in the Seattle Police's Red roundups days ...
Ligne n°592 : ... Hays Jones were arrested in the Seattle Police's Red roundups days- Ligne n°593 : after the Strike came to a halt.
Ligne n°623 : ... campus is a letter from the Associated Students of the University of- Ligne n°624 : Washington President, Walter Hodge addressing the strike crisis that
Ligne n°625 : had come to the state. Hodge, writing to express the student opinion on ...- Ligne n°660 : Ethel recalled that during the strike wealthy people "cultivated the
Ligne n°661 : people in uniform," possibly for protection. Members of these "superior ...
Ligne n°663 : ... wherever they wanted to go. Most uniformed men, Ethel believes were- Ligne n°664 : headed down to volunteer, "for anti-strike, anti-revolutionary
Ligne n°665 : services." Uniformed students, Ethel remembers were immediately issued ...
Ligne n°668 : ... substance," who would "sound off" to him. Ethel reported whatever- Ligne n°669 : information he had heard to the strike committee at headquarters daily.
- Ligne n°671 : Ethel, Hays and O'Connor's pro-strike actions are important to the
Ligne n°672 : understanding of a lively, if small group of student labor ...
Ligne n°680 : ... groups met and leftist politics were widely discussed. By the end of- Ligne n°681 : the war, at the time of the General Strike, the prevailing attitude of
Ligne n°682 : the University had become far more conservative. ...