Labor's Days Explained
                               by Jim Barrett
                            
                              SYMBOLIC "HOLIDAYS" 
                              Not usually considered a union-friendly society, 
                              the United States recently celebrated its 109th 
                              annual Labor Day. In recent years Labor Day is mostly 
                              a matter of picnics and barbecues, but it could 
                              be more. We had our own enthusiastic observation 
                              of labor's vital role here in Champaign-Urbana. 
                              For the second year in a row, the Champaign County 
                              Federation of Labor sponsored a successful Labor 
                              Day parade and related festivities at West Side 
                              Park. Champaign's Labor Day parade, successfully 
                              resurrected last year after many years of dormancy, 
                              is on its way to becoming a new tradition. The event 
                              had all the requisite high school bands and trucks, 
                              as well as signs and banners conveying Labor's political 
                              agenda and issues of vital concern like the Living 
                              Wage. What we did not have was much discussion of 
                              what is actually happening to Labor in the United 
                              States (or Champaign-Urbana) at the beginning of 
                              a new century. Everyone had a good time, but did 
                              we really understand what we were doing?
                             By far the most 
                              important workers' holiday internationally is May 
                              Day -- the first day of May, not the first Monday 
                              in September. We also have an annual celebration 
                              of this more radical holiday in town with speeches 
                              on the Quad by folks from labor and socialist groups 
                              and post-modern protest music by Paul Kottheimer, 
                              who manages to blend the historic with the funky. 
                              The Altgeld Hall chimes, normally reserved for patriotic 
                              airs and Illini fight songs, ring out with the Internationale 
                              and picket line tunes. 
                            These two holidays 
                              have different origins and meanings. Surprisingly 
                              perhaps, it's radical May Day that has the firmest 
                              roots here in the Midwest. How did we get two different 
                              holidays and what do they represent? 
                              
                              
                              MAY DAY 
                              Celebrated for centuries in many parts of the world 
                              as a time of rebirth, May Day had its own rebirth 
                              as a worker's holiday in the late nineteenth century 
                              -- not in Europe but out on the Illinois prairies. 
                              Throughout the 1880s workers poured into labor reform 
                              organizations, demanding equal rights and a curb 
                              on corporate power.
                            The Knights of Labor 
                              symbolized, and to a considerable degree, organized 
                              this great labor upsurge. Pursuing a program of 
                              education, self-improvement, workers' cooperatives, 
                              electoral politics, and ultimately, the abolition 
                              of the wage labor system, the Knights captured the 
                              imaginations of American workers and reformers. 
                              They recruited nearly a million workers by 1886, 
                              including thousands in Illinois manufacturing and 
                              mining towns. A newer smaller organization, the 
                              Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions 
                              (later renamed the American Federation of Labor) 
                              focused on trade union organization and strikes, 
                              particularly among skilled male workers.
                            When the nascent 
                              Federation called for a general strike on May 1, 
                              1886 in support of the radical demand for an Eight-Hour 
                              Day, the Knights, a variety of socialist and anarchist 
                              groups, and workers throughout the country joined 
                              the movement. The response was particularly strong 
                              in midwestern industrial cities and coal mining 
                              towns, however, and the movement found its heart 
                              in Chicago where about 80,000 workers struck, crippling 
                              the city's industries. 
                            Police and industrialists 
                              moved quickly, attacking workers and their organizations. 
                              On May 3, police fired into the ranks of Eight-Hour 
                              strikers at the International Harvester Works, killing 
                              at least two and wounding many more. The International 
                              Working Peoples' Association, an anarchist group, 
                              called a protest meeting for the next day at Haymarket, 
                              the city's wholesale market area just west of the 
                              Loop. When a bomb exploded killing one policeman 
                              and mortally wounding others, the cops opened fire. 
                              The fusillade killed one protester instantly and 
                              wounded several other people, including policemen. 
                              The "Haymarket Riot" signaled a massive 
                              attack on labor and civil liberties. The contemporary 
                              press was full of the term "anarchist," 
                              which was used loosely in somewhat the same fashion 
                              that the word "terrorist" is employed 
                              today -- to associate dissidents and radicals in 
                              the public mind with meaningless violence. A fear 
                              gripped respectable society, providing support for 
                              an extreme political reaction that helped employers 
                              to break the back of the radical labor movement 
                              in Chicago and elsewhere around the country. 
                            Eight labor radicals 
                              were eventually convicted of a "conspiracy" 
                              leading to the "riot". In fact, there 
                              was no evidence that any of them were responsible 
                              for the violence at Haymarket. Rather, their crime 
                              was to demand basic rights for American workers 
                              and to project the vision for a new, more democratic 
                              society. Four of these men were hanged in November 
                              1887 and another committed suicide in his cell. 
                              The remaining four were imprisoned but later pardoned 
                              in 1893 by Governor John Peter Altgeld, who noted 
                              the striking lack of evidence against them and the 
                              hysteria that surrounded their trial. (Altgeld, 
                              who advanced the vision of a great democratic "peoples' 
                              university" in Champaign-Urbana, is fondly 
                              remembered by some at the University of Illinois 
                              as a supportive governor who opened the way for 
                              a variety of new programs by vastly expanding the 
                              university's budget.) Altgeld's courageous pardon 
                              ended his political career. 
                            Throughout the world, 
                              the "Chicago Martyrs" became the focal 
                              point for labor protests, and May Day emerged as 
                              the international working class holiday, proclaimed 
                              as such officially by the Socialist International 
                              in 1889. Even in the U.S., the Depression era witnessed 
                              large May Day parades and celebrations in Chicago, 
                              New York and other cities. Just after World War 
                              Two, with millions of American workers once again 
                              on strike, the European Left gathering steam, and 
                              the Cold War just beginning, Congress declared May 
                              First "Loyalty Day" in 1947  a clear 
                              effort to displace the popular radicalism associated 
                              with the celebration. Throughout the Cold War years 
                              the communist regimes did their part to discredit 
                              May Day by rolling around tanks and missiles and 
                              displaying their armies out on Red Square and Tiananmen 
                              Square. For them, it became a day to confront the 
                              swelling American military machine with their own 
                              power. In the United States during the 1950s, May 
                              Day marchers were equated with the international 
                              communist conspiracy and often attacked. Not surprisingly, 
                              the May Day tradition declined here. Still, workers 
                              took to the streets in most other parts of the world 
                              on May First, which they continued to claim as their 
                              own.
                             
                              
                              LABOR DAY 
                              Labor Day was established as an official holiday 
                              by act of Congress and signed into law in September 
                              1894 by President Grover Cleveland  the same 
                              Grover Cleveland who had dispatched Federal troops 
                              to Chicago and other railroad towns to crush the 
                              Pullman Strike just two months earlier. Labor Day 
                              is usually thought of as a conservative alternative 
                              to May Day, and it was certainly promoted as such 
                              during our various Red Scares and the Cold War. 
                              But Labor Day too has deep roots in the workers' 
                              movement. Long before Congressional action, New 
                              York's Central Labor Union launched a "Great 
                              Labor Parade" on September 1, 1882 and the 
                              event gradually spread through the labor movement. 
                              Based particularly on the trade unions, Labor Day 
                              lacked the radical vision of May Day, but it was 
                              originally intended by labor activists to demonstrate 
                              both the power and the grievances of organized workers. 
                              Unions took the opportunity to outline their program 
                              - shorter working hours, for example, and the legal 
                              right to organize and bargain collectively. It's 
                              not the founders' fault if the holiday has lapsed 
                              into baseball tournaments and long-winded speeches 
                              by political candidates representing business  
                              not labor  interests.
                             
                              CONCLUSION 
                              For a long time now, American labor has embraced 
                              this more conservative tradition and run away from 
                              its radical past. But if labor's celebrations have 
                              any significance beyond hot dogs and patriotic music, 
                              it lies in this history and the lessons we might 
                              find there. Weakened and under almost constant attack 
                              by business and conservative politicians, the time 
                              for labor complacency is long past. Workers need 
                              to maintain their own traditions and culture and 
                              employ them to help reinvigorate the movement. A 
                              new, more diverse and progressive labor movement 
                              can still emerge from the vision embodied in the 
                              histories of Labor Day and May Day. If the new labor 
                              movement springs once again from fertile fields 
                              of the prairies, this would be only fitting.
                            Although an academic, 
                              Jim Barrett, who comes from a blue collar Chicago 
                              family (his Dad was a policeman), has never abandoned 
                              his roots. He even teaches a course specifically 
                              on Chicago as part of the undergraduate 
                              curriculum in History. His area of interest is broadly 
                              defined as Labor History but specifically hes 
                              interested radical politics, immigration, and race 
                              relations of working class populations. His current 
                              research, with David Roediger, focuses on relations 
                              between the Irish who settled in industrial cities 
                              and how they influenced other immigrant populations 
                              of Eastern Europeans who would settle later. They 
                              are looking at the non-institutionalized ways of 
                              being indoctrinated into American-ism. 
                              Ways such as street gangs and labor unions. His 
                              partner at home, Jenny Barrett, shares his interest 
                              in unions. She is an organizer for the Union for 
                              Academic Professionals on campus. They have lived 
                              in Champaign since 1984. They always thought they 
                              would eventually retire back to Chicago. Jim says 
                              that lately they have been thinking that living 
                              is pretty easy right here in C-U.