San Diego free speech fight

San Diego Free Speech Fight
Part of Free speech fights
DateJanuary 8, 1912 (1912-01-08) to May 9, 1912 (1912-05-09)
Location

The San Diego free speech fight in San Diego, California, in 1912 was one of the most famous class conflicts over the free speech rights of labor unions. Starting out as one of several direct actions known as free speech fights carried out across North America by the Industrial Workers of the World, the catalyst of the San Diego free speech fight was the passing of Ordinance No. 4623 that banned all kinds of speech in an area that included "soapbox row" downtown. Clashes with the police in the area led to riots, multiple deaths including the deaths of police officers, as well as the retaliatory kidnapping and torture of notable Socialists, including Emma Goldman's manager Ben Reitman. As a direct result of the aftermath of this fight, the neighborhood of Stingaree was razed to the ground and the obliteration of San Diego's Chinatown.

Introduction

By the beginning of the 20th century, growing confrontations between the working class and their employers caused suspicion and animosity both within, and against the workers. Striking workers had taken militant action which culminated in the Haymarket Riot in Chicago; the Great Southwest Railroad Strike of 1886 was crushed, destroying the Knights of Labor, coincident with the birth of the conservative American Federation of Labor. In the western United States, the Western Federation of Miners (WFM) inherited the mantle of militant unionism, challenging capital in strikes from Cripple Creek to Canada. Many communities sought to limit the spread of union philosophy by revoking rights granted by the United States Constitution, particularly the freedom of speech granted by the First Amendment.

Industrial Workers of the World

In 1905, the WFM and other unions, together with socialist, and anarchist groups met in Chicago to form the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) in what came to be called the "First Continental Congress of the working class." The immediate purpose of the IWW was to unite all working people into one worldwide union, regardless of race, creed, sex, skill, or national origin. The ultimate goal was abolition of the wage system, replacing wage labour with worker cooperatives.

The Wobblies, as IWW members were called, frequently engaged in creative tactics, including soapboxing and free speech fights . The IWW orators spoke to workers about bosses, corruption, exploitation, and the unfairness of capitalism. Championing such a direct challenge to capital, members of the IWW faced persecution and prejudice in North America and throughout the world. In many American cities, IWW members found their right to public speech interfered with by local ordinances, police harassment and vigilante violence.

From approximately 1906, the San Diego General Membership Branch of the IWW focused on various small industries, including cigar making and lumber.[citation needed] In 1910, the IWW attempted to organize Mexican workers of the San Diego Consolidated Gas and Electric Company. A successful strike led to the formation of a public service union, which was disbanded when many of the Mexican workers left to participate in the Mexican Revolution.

Ordinance prohibiting free speech

The free speech fight officially began on January 8, 1912, when the San Diego Common Council passed Ordinance No. 4623, which called for a restricted zone of 49-square blocks (more than that which was requested by San Diegans) in the middle of San Diego, encompassing all of "soapbox row." The ordinance came as a result of a recommendation given by the San Diego grand jury and a petition signed by eighty-five prominent citizens and property owners who had hoped to prohibit free speech in a seven-square block zone centered around 5th & E. The meetings blocked traffic, it was officially argued, and that necessitated an ordinance for "the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, and safety and one of emergency."[1] The initial punishment for violating the ordinance was punishable by a $25 to $100 fine and/or thirty days' imprisonment. Prior to passage of the ordinance, the Wobblies, Single Taxers, and Socialists had signed a 250-person petition in which they called for an allowance of unrestricted free speech.[2] This effort countered the petitions previously submitted by the San Diego Grand Jury and the high powered San Diegan citizens, but to no avail.

There was a period of uncertainty, during which the council delayed its decision. The council may have simply been searching for affirmation from the general public in order to avoid widespread conflict and dismay throughout the city. Some council members "believed that a referendum would show that the majority of San Diegans favored speaking anywhere at anytime."[3]

The council finally found a reason to pass the ordinance on the evening of January 6, 1912. The Socialists and Single Taxers were holding a soapbox event on the streets when an off-duty constable and real estate man, R.J. Walsh drove his car into a crowd at the closed-off soapbox row. With his horn blaring, he attempted to disrupt the orators.[4] His car was mobbed and its tires were slashed. The police intervened and two days later the San Diego Common Council passed Ordinance 4623 with an emergency clause that called for the immediate cessation of public free speech rights, sidestepping the customary twenty-day implementation wait period.

Opposition to the ordinance

The California Free Speech League was created on January 16, 1912, with the support of Socialists, Wobblies, church groups, the AFL and other trade unions. The League attempted to take a legal stand against the free speech restrictions by holding up the Constitution and defending the rights of non-property owning peoples.

After the passage of free speech restrictions, the Wobblies and other groups began testing the ordinance. At a typical IWW street meeting the police left the Wobblies undisturbed and merely relegated themselves to traffic and pedestrian direction. Indeed, the Wobblies and the Socialists believed that they had already won back their free speech rights. But law enforcement was simply adhering to a generally accepted 30-day grace period after the ordinance was enacted. Once the grace period was over, forty-one people were arrested during a parade and demonstration consisting of 5,000 protesters. Those arrested were jailed for twenty-four hours, held initially on a misdemeanor charge. But the prosecutors decided the violators had conspired to break the law, and thus tried the prisoners under a felony charge of conspiracy. The Wobblies and other soapbox speakers then moved their orations out of the restricted zone. But the council passed an ordinance which gave police the ability to arrest anyone that disrupted traffic throughout San Diego.

Germania Hall incident

On November 10, 1910, Local 13 of the IWW held a meeting to celebrate the martyrs of the Chicago Haymarket Riot. The police closed down the Wobbly meeting place, Germania Hall, before the event could take place. In response, the IWW took their grievances to the streets and began their soapbox free speech campaign. Afterwards, Wobblies who spoke "on the soapbox" were jailed, "fingerprinted, photographed in jail and then released."[5]

In response to the Germania Hall incident, the IWW shifted their efforts to a form of soapbox oratory in order to win over a diverse spectrum of the working class, focusing on gaining converts through their speeches. The fifty members of the IWW refocused their efforts to Heller's Corner at the corner of 5th and E Streets, in the center of the Stingaree. The Stingaree contained a mélange of ethnic groups: ranging from whites, white immigrant, blacks, Mexicans, and Chinese, most of which were members of the working class. The Stingaree and Heller's Corner were symbolic hubs for the San Diegan prejudices against different races and lower classes. The Stingaree was home to everything different and unknown that went against the "mission" ideal in San Diego, including: saloons, shops, cheap hotels, gambling houses, opium dens and prostitutes. The square block at the corner of Fifth and E Streets was home to more than just debauchery, as it also was the central location for a variety of "soapbox orators" including the Salvation Army, Socialists, Holy Rollers, and the Single Taxers. The situation was relatively peaceful and there were no violent run-ins with the police, until after the Germania Hall incident.[6]

Jail conditions and civil disobedience

The increase in arrests led to the rapid filling of the San Diego jails, causing overcrowding and the rapid decline of prison conditions, increasing Wobbly anger toward law enforcement. The reports about jail conditions were conflicting, but the general trend seems to show that the Wobblies and other pro-free speech detainees were treated badly. The jails filled up so quickly that the police used their sobering rooms or drunk tanks for housing inmates. These tanks had no beds and the arrested were forced to sleep on vermin infested concrete floors. Moreover, police brutality and aggression were rampant, while beatings and other abuses were relatively common throughout the ordeal. Sixty-three-year-old Michael Hoy died on March 28 after the police beat him and withheld medical attention.[7][8]

These events coincided with the plan of the Free Speech League to "glut the jails and then to demand individual jury trials which would clog the courts and bring the legal machinery to a standstill."[9] This especially appealed to the IWW, so much so that they called for 20,000 Wobblies to converge on San Diego in order to bring the system to a halt. There were 50 members of local 13 in 1912, but roughly 5,000 Wobblies came to San Diego to participate in the free speech fight. District Attorney Utley tried to offer a compromise to the Wobblies, promising to free the men originally arrested for conspiracy if the IWW ceased its public speaking in the restricted zone. The IWW declined the offer on principle even through its attorney, E.E. Kirk, recommended that they accept the compromise. The arrests continued. The IWW then protested against the detainment and the prison conditions in front of the city jail. Five thousand protesters turned out, and the police indiscriminately blasted people, including women and children, with fire hoses.

Vigilantes

The increase in arrests left Police Chief Keno Wilson with a dilemma; he wanted to punish the protesters, but simultaneously faced overcrowded jails and stockades. After local newspapers began editorializing vociferously against the protesters and their tactics, groups of vigilantes began transporting arrested Wobblies and free speakers to the county line. The vigilantes began patrolling trains that were inbound from the north, and would grab Wobblies and invited speakers before they could get to the city. The vigilantes then proceeded to "reeducate" the speakers on patriotism as this brutal first hand account notes:

They were drunk and hollering and cursing the rest of the night. In the morning they took us out four or five at a time and marched us up the track to the county line ... where were forced to kiss the flag and then run a gauntlet of 106 men, every one of which was striking at us as hard as they could with their pick ax handles. They broke one man's leg, and everyone was beaten black and blue, and was bleeding from a dozen wounds.[10]

These incidents occurred quite frequently, but there was no significant outcry from the middle class citizens of San Diego.

The state of California finally intervened, as Governor Hiram Johnson was flooded with demands for an inquiry into the arrests and vigilantism in San Diego. Governor Johnson sent Colonel Weinstock to act as an investigative commissioner. By all accounts Weinstock was an impartial judge of situation, and he concluded that the arrests and free speech restrictions were unlawful, but that the Wobblies were wrong in their pursuance of an activist stance. Moreover, Weinstock likened the situation to Czarist Russia and suggested the Attorney General take action, but he did not. Although Weinstock's presence caused a temporary cessation in violence, the situation was once again aroused when Joseph Mikolash, a Wobbly, was killed by police in the IWW headquarters in San Diego on May 7.[11]

The Wobblies reportedly employed firearms against the police in the incident, which led to the discovery of a small arms cache in the IWW headquarters. This increased the public's hostility toward the IWW and toward Weinstock's report, which had defended the Wobblies' constitutional right to free speech.

Emma Goldman and Ben Reitman

Emma Goldman's journal 'Mother Earth'. San Diego Edition, June 1912.

Emma Goldman and Ben Reitman came to San Diego for Goldman to give her speech "An Enemy of the People" on May 15, 1912. When the two arrived at the train station the same women that allegedly needed protection from the soapbox orators yelled "Give us that anarchist; we will strip her naked; we will tear out her guts."[12] Mayor of San Diego James E. Wadham offered a warning, but no help to the two activists. Reitman was abducted by vigilantes from his hotel room and tortured.[13] He later recalled,

They tore my clothes off. They knocked me down, and when I lay naked on the ground, they kicked and beat me until I was almost insensible. With a lighted cigar they burned the letters I.W.W. on my buttocks; then they poured a can of tar over my head and, in the absence of feathers, rubbed sage-brush on my body. One of them attempted to push a cane into my rectum. Another twisted my testicles. They forced me to kiss the flag and sing The Star-Spangled Banner. When they tired of the fun, they gave me my underwear for fear we should meet any women. They also gave me back my vest, in order that I might carry my money, railroad ticket, and watch. The rest of my clothes they kept. I was ordered to make a speech, and then they commanded me to run the gauntlet. The Vigilantes lined up, and as I ran past them, each one gave me a blow or a kick. Then they let me go.[14]

Reitman had not been a member of the IWW, although he was a supporter. Emma Goldman then returned to Los Angeles after being misled into thinking that the Vigilantes had not harmed Reitman but simply put him on a train for Los Angeles. Reitman was released a day later and arrived in Los Angeles badly beaten.[citation needed]

By the fall of 1912, the soapbox row had been abandoned.[15] In fact, the whole neighborhood of Stingaree was razed.[16] Goldman and Reitman attempted to return in 1913 but were arrested and "deported" by police. Goldman did not succeed in giving another speech in the city until June 1915.[17]

Legacy

In song

From the July 11, 1912, edition of the IWW's Little Red Songbook, the first stanza of "We're Bound For San Diego":

In that town called San Diego when the workers try to talk,
The cops will smash them with a sap and tell them "take a walk",
They throw them in a bull pen and they feed them rotten beans,
And they call that "law and order" in that city, so it seems.

The bonus track "Tar and Sagebrush" on the Anti-Flag album The Bright Lights of America is a folk punk interpretation of Ben Reitman's description of his torture.

100th Anniversary

On January 6, 2012, protesters from Occupy San Diego invoked the 1912 free speech fight while arguing against an encroachment law in 2012 by using soapboxes as props while observing the 100th anniversary of the San Diego free speech fight.[18]

On January 8, Ben Reitman's great-granddaughter took part in a commemoration event at 5th and E.[19]

On February 7, the San Diego City Council issued a proclamation to "express its deep dismay for our predecessor's actions and formally reiterates the Council’s repudiation of this shameful ordinance."[20][21] The proclamation was presented to representatives of the ACLU and local labor officials but members of Occupy San Diego who were present reminded the public of a similar municipal code that was currently being used to arrest peaceful protesters.[22][23]

Through February 12, an exhibit featuring art and historical exploration of California labor history hosted by Under the Perfect Sun co-author Jim Miller and labor leader Lorena Gonzalez was displayed at Centro Cultural de la Raza in Balboa Park.[24]

References

  1. ^ G. Miller p.216.
  2. ^ Monteagudo, Merrie (2022-01-09). "From the Archives: Limits set on free speech in San Diego 110 years ago". San Diego Union-Tribune. Archived from the original on 2022-01-09. Retrieved 2022-01-09.
  3. ^ G. Miller p.218.
  4. ^ Haywood, William D. (1913-04-13). "FIGHT FOR FREE SPEECH.; Leader Haywood Defends I.W.W.'s Part at San Diego". The New York Times. p. 6. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-04-22.
  5. ^ G. Miller pp.215-16.
  6. ^ G. Miller p.188.
  7. ^ Bovokoy, Matthew (2005). The San Diego World's Fairs and Southwestern Memory, 1880-1940. UNM Press. p. 33.
  8. ^ McWilliams, Carey (April 2, 1999). California: The Great Exception. Univ of California Press. p. 146. ISBN 9780520218932.
  9. ^ Shanks 29.
  10. ^ G. Miller 225.
  11. ^ "Assassins Attack and Wound Two Policemen". San Diego Union. May 8, 1912.
  12. ^ G. Miller 194.
  13. ^ "REITMAN DESCRIBES HOW HE WAS TARRED; Emma Goldman's Manager Tells About Tortures Inflicted by Vigilantes on California Desert". The New York Times. 1912-05-17. p. 7. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-04-22.
  14. ^ Reitman, as quoted by Emma Goldman, Living My Life, v.1, pp. 494-501.
  15. ^ Davis, Mike; Miller, Jim; Mayhew, Kelly (2003). Under the Perfect Sun: The San Diego Tourists Never See. New Press. ISBN 978-1-56584-832-0.
  16. ^ Elizabeth C., MacPhail (Spring 1974). "SHADY LADIES IN THE "STINGAREE DISTRICT" WHEN THE RED LIGHTS WENT OUT IN SAN DIEGO". The Journal of San Diego History. 20 (2). Archived from the original on 2016-06-29 – via San Diego History Center.
  17. ^ "May 20, 1913: Emma Goldman returns". San Diego Union-Tribune. 2018-05-20. Retrieved 2023-04-22.
  18. ^ Abbott, Nadin (2012-01-06). "A CENTURY OF FIGHTING FOR FREE SPEECH IN SAN DIEGO". East County Magazine. Archived from the original on 2023-09-24. Retrieved 2023-09-24.
  19. ^ "100 Year Anniversary of San Diego Free Speech Fight". Electronic Frontier Foundation. 2012-01-30. Retrieved 2023-09-24.
  20. ^ Gormlie, Frank (2012-02-06). "City Council to Commemorate San Diego Free Speech Centennial – Tuesday, Feb 7". OB Rag. Archived from the original on 2020-10-21. Retrieved 2023-09-24.
  21. ^ Mullen, Don; Jurado-Sainz, Diane (2012-01-23). "Resolution: 100 Tear Celebration of Free Speech" (PDF). sandiego.hylandcloud.com. San Diego City Council (published 2012-01-25). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2023-12-24.
  22. ^ Kat, Kali (2012-02-08). "Occupy San Diego Calls Out the San Diego City Council on Protecting Free Speech Rights". OB Rag. Retrieved 2023-09-24.
  23. ^ "Free Speech Ballot Measure Proposed By Occupy San Diego". OB Rag. 2012-01-04. Retrieved 2023-09-24.
  24. ^ Atleework, Kendra (2012-02-03). "Free speech movement of 1912 featured at Centro Cultural de la Raza". SDNews.com. Retrieved 2023-09-24.

Further reading

  • Mike Davis, Kelly Mayhew, and Jim Miller, Under the Perfect Sun: The San Diego Tourists Never See (New York: The New Press, 2003), 169-97.
  • Randy Dotinga. Blood, Spies and Terror: The Cost of Activism in San Diego. Voice of San Diego, June 5, 2020.
  • Randy Dotinga. When San Diego Had Its Own Big Labor Clash. Voice of San Diego. March 15, 2011.
  • Emma Goldman, Living My Life (1931), Volume 1, pp. 493–502.
  • Davey Jones, "A Fight for Free Speech in San Diego", San Diego Indymedia, Jan. 21, 2005.
  • Trevor Jones. Porkchops for All! The 100th Anniversary of the San Diego Free Speech Fights. Viewpoint Magazine, Feb. 23, 2012.
  • Grace L. Miller, "The I.W.W. Free Speech Fight: San Diego, 1912,", Southern California Quarterly, v.54, no. 3 (1972): 211-238.
  • Rosalie Shanks, "The I.W.W. Free Speech Movement: San Diego, 1912", Journal of San Diego History, v.19, no.1 (1973): 25-33.
  • Jeff Smith. The Big Noise: The Free Speech Fight of 1912, Part One. San Diego Reader, May 23, 2012.
  • Kevin Starr, Endangered Dreams: The Great Depression in California (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996), ch. 2.
  • Richard Steven Street, Beasts of the Field: A Narrative of California Farmworkers, 1769-1913 (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 2004), ch. 24.
  • Tom Waller. The Wobblies and San Diego's shame: The battle of Soapbox Row. San Diego Reader, April 2, 1992.
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