{"id":36,"date":"2022-01-31T21:12:33","date_gmt":"2022-01-31T21:12:33","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/?post_type=chapter&#038;p=36"},"modified":"2022-03-25T19:02:44","modified_gmt":"2022-03-25T19:02:44","slug":"the-leftist-context-the-identity-of-a-people-and-their-city","status":"publish","type":"chapter","link":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/chapter\/the-leftist-context-the-identity-of-a-people-and-their-city\/","title":{"rendered":"The Leftist Context: The Identity of a People and their City"},"content":{"raw":"<span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">Until 1920 Cleveland had long been a community with a substantial foreign-born <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">population.\u00a0 In 1870, 41.8 percent of the total city population was born in a foreign country.\u00a0 In 1910, the foreign-born and their offspring composed almost 75 percent of the population. <\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW130716183 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]Richard Judd, <em>Socialist Cities: Municipal Politics and the Grass Roots of American Socialism<\/em> (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1987), 162[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">\u00a0 While the foreign-born population dipped to 30.1 percent by 1920, the overall number of immigrants residing in the city had increased.[footnote]Federal Census Bureau, \u201cTech Paper 29: Table 22.\u00a0 Nativity of the Population for Urban Places Among the 50 Largest Urban Places Since 1870: 1850 to 1990.\u201d[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">\u00a0There was simply no mistaking it: Cleveland was a true cosmopolitan city in the early-twentieth century, and any attempt to construe \u201cthe foreign-born\u201d as <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">an Other<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"> stood as little more than uninformed nativism.\u00a0 When the oft-repeated Red Scare stereotype of the \u201cforeign-born radical,\u201d invoked in this time to help justify new immigration restrictions,<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW130716183 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]Gary Gerstle, <em>American Crucible: Race and Nation in the Twentieth Century<\/em> (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001), 99-100[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">was introduced to Cleveland, it meant that a substantial portion of the population might be suspect.\u00a0 Because of these demographic facts, it is difficult to justify claims that such identities were inimical to Cleveland, rather than actually being constitutive of the city.\u00a0 Nonetheless, foreign birth and the suspicion of radicalism played a key role in the construction of the May Day riots\u2019 image.\u00a0 <em>The <\/em><\/span><\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">Cleveland Plain Dealer<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">\u2019s report, that only four percent of the socialists arrested on May 1 were \u201cnative born\u201d and that the rest should be deported, typified the mainstream reaction.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW130716183 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]<em>Plain Dealer<\/em>, May 3, 1919[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">But what evidence did the paper have for this characterization?\u00a0 Just who were these radicals?\u00a0 Historians of American socialism traditionally find that the Socialist Party and its affiliated unions in the Midwest principally had their bases in the older immigrant communities of Anglo-Saxons and German, as well as skilled laborers.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW130716183 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]For a collection of essays examining the practices and demographics of other Midwestern towns and cities, including Milwaukee, WI, Marion, IN, Minneapolis, MN, and others, see Donald Critchlow, ed.,\u00a0\u00a0<em>Socialism<\/em> <em>in the Heartland<\/em> (Notre Dame:\u00a0 Notre Dame Press, 1986).\u00a0 One of the guiding theses that connect the essays, as Critchlow says in his introduction, is that \u201cAmerican socialism should be seen as a political and social experiment on the part of certain worker and ethnic groups to preserve their dignity and sense of freedom.\u201d (15)[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">\u00a0Did Charles Ruthenberg, a securely middle-class, American-born, educated former-sales manager, have <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">command of a particular ethnic group, neighborhood, or trade union?\u00a0 Additionally, what did the character of the Cleveland socialists say about Cleveland socialism?<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW130716183 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span>\r\n\r\n<span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\">Fortunately for historians, the <\/span><\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\">Cleveland Press<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\"> produced a comprehensive list of all those arrested (all reports agree loyalists were not arrested), noting their age, occupation, home address, country of birth, and even marital status.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW38352852 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW38352852 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]<em>Cleveland Press<\/em>, May 2, 1919[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\"> Additionally, it later printed a list of bystanders who were accidentally arrested and were not affiliated with the socialists.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW38352852 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW38352852 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]Ibid., May 3, 1919[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\">\u00a0What these two lists provide is, essentially, a randomly selected sample of 111 leftists that provides the basis for an analysis of the city\u2019s radical milieu (Figure 1; see Appendix).<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW38352852 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span>\r\n\r\n<span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\">In line with the <\/span><\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\">Plain Dealer<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\">\u2019s report, the <\/span><\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\">Cleveland Press<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\"> reports a very small percentage of American-born rioters, here found to be about five percent.\u00a0 However, the published list of individuals is somewhat problematic since it is based on national birthplace, rather than ethnicity.\u00a0 Thus it conceals a huge diversity, particularly among immigrants from the multi-ethnic empires of Austria-Hungary and Russia.\u00a0 When these immigrants arrived in Cleveland, they often settled into culturally- rather than nationally-defined neighborhoods; they were Czechs and Poles, not Austro-Hungarians and Russians.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW30920167 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW30920167 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]Edward Miggins and Mary Morgenthaler, \u201cThe Ethnic Mosaic: The Settlement of Cleveland by the Immigrants and Migrants\u201d in Thomas Campbell and Edward Miggins, eds.<em> The Birth of Modern Cleveland 1865-1930<\/em>, (Cleveland: Cleveland Historical Society, 1988), 106[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\">Fortunately, the Federal census schedules for 1910, 1920, and 1930 provide a form of cultural identification by listing the language of the individuals.\u00a0 When the names listed in the newspaper are traced through the census, a fuller picture of ethnic identity appears (Figure 2; see Appendix).<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW30920167 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559731&quot;:720,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span>\r\n\r\n<span>When the vague categories of \u201cRussia\u201d and \u201cHungary\u201d are dissolved, at least as the records allow, a much greater degree of ethnic diversity appears. Most important is the emergence of the Poles as the third largest ethnic category among the rioters, falling behind Magyar-speakers and the unclarified \u201cRussian\u201d category. The addition of language also reveals a large Yiddish-speaking grouping from several different national backgrounds. When these Yiddish-speakers of different nationalities are added together, they turn out to form a principal component of the marcher milieu. Overall, the preponderance of these groups is not at all surprising, given that they dominated the foreign-born demographic in Cleveland: the 1920 census recorded 800,000 Clevelanders, of which 240,000 were foreign-born, or about thirty percent[footnote]Federal Census Bureau, \u201cTech Paper 29: Table 22. Nativity of the Population for Urban Places Among the 50 Largest Urban Places Since 1870: 1850 to 1990.\u201d[\/footnote]. Of that 240,000, 58,000 were \u201cAustrian,\u201d 42,000 \u201cRussian,\u201d and 42,000 \u201cHungarian.\u201d Again, the lack of specificity caused by the multi-ethnic empires complicates comparison, but the sample of leftist \u201crioters,\u201d as a selection of Cleveland foreigners, roughly correlates with the foreign-born population as a whole. And despite the predominance of these three groups, they still composed only about sixty percent of the Red Rioters sample, the rest of which was a cornucopia of national origins and linguistic variety. As a matter of demographic fact, it can be said that the leftists were statistically representative of Cleveland\u2019s ethnic variety. The leftists were not dominated by any one ethnic group to any extent greater than the relative weight of those local ethnic populations. Thus, the socialists participating in the march can be characterized as a genuine political movement, rather than a particularity of any one cultural grouping.<\/span>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\"><span>The heterogeneity of the leftists is also displayed in their geographic distribution throughout the city and its immediate suburbs.\u00a0 While one might expect a large concentration in a single or several ethnic neighborhoods or working-class districts, the actual distribution is visibly dispersed when mapped.\u00a0 Ignoring cases of untraceable addresses and several homeless workers, the home locations appear as shown in Figure 3 (see Appendix).\u00a0 While there were certain concentrations in the East Side neighborhoods between Carnegie Avenue and Kinsman Road (possibly favored by the selection because it is near the locations where the riots first broke out), a large and scattered collection of leftists is apparent: most notable are the Italian from as far as the hamlet of Euclid Village (1920 population: 3,300) and an ethnically-varied collection of participants from the far West Side neighborhoods.<\/span><\/div>\r\n<div><\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\"><span>The final observation to be made from the Cleveland Press data is the surprising variety of occupations among the Red Rioters.\u00a0 As will be established below, the Cleveland Socialists were one of the most radical branches regionally.\u00a0 It might be argued that those who were willing to march in the growing Red Scare atmosphere would have had to possess a level of political dedication only expected from unskilled laborers (\u201cYou have nothing to lose but your chains.\u201d)\u00a0 And yet, while the category of \u201cLaborer\u201d dominates, one also comes across many machinists, carpenters, tailors, bakers, a female social worker, chauffeurs, the unemployed, and others.\u00a0 This conforms with the Ohio Socialist\u2019s coverage of the riots, reporting that a baker\u2019s union, machinists union, \u201cone local of the Carpenters\u201d and \u201cmembers of the Workmen\u2019s Sick and Death Benefit Fund\u201d marched on May 1.<\/span><sup>[footnote]<em>The Ohio Socialist<\/em>, May 8, 1919[\/footnote]<\/sup><\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\n<span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">In the categories of ethnicity, geography, and occupation, the participants in the May Day march of 1919 were a truly variegated group of the radical left.\u00a0 Contrary to the traditional thesis of historians of Midwestern radicalism, who contend that socialism was largely dominated by older immigrant groups, grew on the basis of a single ethnic group, or was strongest among skilled workers, the \u201cRed Rioters\u201d were as Slavic as Cleveland, but also multi-ethnic, and employed in jobs of varying skill<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\"> level<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW3339473 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW3339473 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]Critchlow, <em>Socialism in the Heartland<\/em>, 15[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">\u00a0And contrary to <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 SCXW3339473 BCX0\">Lipset<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\"> and Marks\u2019s sociological finding that socialist politics depended upon workers pre-existing communalism derived from <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">\u201ccultural homogeneity,\u201d the \u201cRed Rioters\u201d were culturally- and geographically-eclectic, but successfully united<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">.\u00a0 E<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">ven factious leftist groups and labor unions <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">came together <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">for a march under the duress of growing Red Scare oppression.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW3339473 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW3339473 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]Seymour Lipset and Gary Marks, <em>It Didn\u2019t Happen Here: Why Socialism Failed in the United States<\/em>, (New York: W.W. Norton &amp; Company, 2000), 135[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\"> <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">The conservative conspiracies that these \u201c<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 SCXW3339473 BCX0\">Bolsheviki<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">\u201d constituted a group of foreign infiltrators sent by Moscow also become<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">s<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\"> a more obvious farce.<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">\u00a0 The fact that census records were available for most of these individuals shows that they lived in the country either decades before or after the riots.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW3339473 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW3339473 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]<em>Census Schedules<\/em> for 1910 &amp; 1930, accessed through <a href=\"https:\/\/www.ancestry.com\/?ancid=4vmopenrg0&amp;ds_rl=1286410&amp;pgrid=120522386862&amp;ptaid=aud-966841546767%3akwd-29052520&amp;s_kwcid=ancestry&amp;gclid=EAIaIQobChMI0brqk8Pz9QIVCwmICR1JNgxHEAAYASAAEgK8s_D_BwE&amp;gclsrc=aw.ds&amp;o_xid=115784&amp;o_lid=115784&amp;o_sch=Paid+Search+Brand\">ancestry.com<\/a>[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">\u00a0This makes problematic the media assertion that they were foreign radicals.\u00a0 Certainly, they were not recently imported <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 SCXW3339473 BCX0\">Bolsheviki<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">.<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW3339473 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559731&quot;:720,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span>\r\n<h2 style=\"text-align: center\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW204129350 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW204129350 BCX0\">Subsection: The First Among Equals\u2014Charles Ruthenberg, a Cleveland Radical<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW204129350 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559731&quot;:720,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/h2>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nIn many ways the biography of the movement\u2019s leader, Charles Ruthenberg, fits this multifaceted and diverse characterization of those who followed him on May 1.\u00a0 It also illuminates the character and history of Cleveland socialism.\u00a0 Coming from a middle-class background, Ruthenberg began his political life as a supporter of Democratic reform mayor Tom Johnson.[footnote]Millett, \u201cCharles E. Ruthenberg\u201d: 195[\/footnote]For the future American-born head of a largely foreign-born socialist movement, Ruthenberg\u2019s socialism had distinctly European origins.\u00a0 Around 1904, a friend had suggested he read the work of the British socialist and Fabian, Robert Blatchford.\u00a0 Impressed by Blatchford\u2019s arguments for socialism, Ruthenberg proceeded then directly to Karl Marx\u2019s <em>Das Kapital<\/em>.[footnote]Ibid., 194-5[\/footnote] In his journey from a Progressive political stance, then to a Fabian intellectual introduction to socialism, and finally to Marx, it becomes perhaps obvious that Ruthenberg derived his political views from a social-evolutionary, reformist socialist tendency.\u00a0 As Stephen Millett puts it, Ruthenberg initially saw capitalism\u2019s injustice coming from its inefficiency, which would be solved through centralized planning.[footnote]Ibid., 196[\/footnote] Nonetheless, Ruthenberg\u2019s ideological development constantly shifted him further to the left.\u00a0 In 1912, when the question of tactics arose, whether to restrict the Socialist Party to purely political action at the ballot box or to pursue direct action in the workplace, Ruthenberg adopted a middle ground by accepting all tactics: he both defended the tactics of the IWW and stressed party unity.[footnote]Ibid., 197[\/footnote]By the time of his pamphlet <em>Are We Growing Towards Socialism?<\/em> (1917), Ruthenberg distanced himself even further from his Progressive past.\u00a0 In the pamphlet, he distilled the insights of <em>Das Kapital<\/em> into common American parlance, focusing most notably on the theory of surplus value so as to convince the reader of his\/her own exploitation and Marx\u2019s theory of history, which proposes a historical progression from primitive communism to feudalism to capitalism to socialism.\u00a0 Through his description of the transition from capitalism to socialism especially, Ruthenberg positions his own Progressive beginnings as the starting point for a larger political program.\u00a0 As he put it, \u201cCapitalism has developed from individual production to collective, co-operative production.\u201d[footnote]Charles Ruthenberg, <em>Are We Growing Towards Socialism?<\/em> (Cleveland: Local Cleveland, Socialist Party, 1917), 18[\/footnote]\u00a0The drive towards centralization, integration of industries, and mechanization leads to both greater production and greater exploitative capability; this was simply a repetition of Marx, but Ruthenberg added to these processes of \u201ccollectivism\u201d the development of municipal ownership of water, gas, and electric utilities, as well as ownership of industries brought on by World War I.\u00a0 While this \u201ccollectivism\u201d and planning might have sated the Progressive Ruthenberg of 1901, he rejected the social-democratic hubris of reform-towards-socialism and the inevitability of utopia:\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">This collectivism, which is developing in the shape of municipal and state ownership, is not, however, Socialism.\u00a0 With a powerful working class movement, strongly organized on the political and industrial field, developing with it, it may become the means of facilitating the establishment of Socialism. Without such a movement it may well become the basis for more extreme exploitation and oppression of the workers than that which existed in the days of capitalist competition.[footnote]Ibid., 32-3[\/footnote]<\/div>\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nRuthenberg\u2019s radical apogee occurred during the fire of the left-wing revolutions in Russia, Hungary, and Bavaria from 1917 to 1919 and the entrance of the United States into the war, a period during which Ruthenberg achieved national notice for his radical pacifism.\u00a0 During his 1917 Cleveland mayoral campaign, he directly invoked Karl Liebknecht, the only German Social Democrat to oppose Germany\u2019s entrance into the war in 1914, as a figure of emulation:\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">I am speaking to you as Karl Liebknecht spoke in the German nation . . . when he denounced the war as a war of the ruling class and stated his unalterable opposition to that war\u2026 If you are inspired with that which will bring a better world, then you must stand up and fight for that ideal. You must fight with those who are fighting against the war.[footnote]Millett, \u201cCharles Ruthenberg,\u201d 198[\/footnote]<\/div>\r\n<span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\">Ruthenberg attained national celebrity status within the Socialist Party through this and other public speeches against the war, becoming one of the writers of its resolution condemning the war and thus earning national acrimony from those outside the party.\u00a0 In 1917, he was indicted under the Espionage Act for subversive activity for a speech he delivered on Cleveland\u2019s Public Square on May 27, 1917: \u201cThis is not a war for democracy.\u00a0 This is not a war for freedom\u2026It is a war to secure the investment and profits of the ruling class of this country.\u201d<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop BCX0 SCXW215076229\"><span class=\"Superscript BCX0 SCXW215076229\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]Ibid., 198[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\"> The U.S. Supreme Court\u2019s support of the indictment in <\/span><\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\">Ruthenberg et al. v. United States<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\"> set the precedent allowing the Espionage Act to imprison many more socialists in the years to come.\u00a0 Later that year, presaging the much m<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\">ore violent May Day of 1919,<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\"> Cleveland<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\">\u2019s<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\"> mayoral candidates assembled in Luna Park on Labor Day, 1917 to give speeches.\u00a0 When Ruthenberg took the podium, he was assaulted by \u201cuniformed soldiers,\u201d escaping injury through the efforts of \u201cvaudeville entertainers\u201d who hid him backstage.\u00a0 Notwithstanding, Ruthenberg had his most successful campaign that year, polling 27,685 votes, about one fourth of those cast.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop BCX0 SCXW215076229\"><span class=\"Superscript BCX0 SCXW215076229\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]Ibid., 200[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span>\r\n\r\n<span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW154583873 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW154583873 BCX0\">Ruthenberg\u2019s Bolshevism assuredly emerged during the winter of 1918-19, the period <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW154583873 BCX0\">when he served his prison sentence for the May 27 speech.\u00a0 One possible radicalizing event was a Socialist Party convention in Canton, Ohio, held in the park across from the prison in which he was detained.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW154583873 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW154583873 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]Nick Salvatore, <em>Eugene Debs: Citizen and Socialist<\/em> (Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2007), 291[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW154583873 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW154583873 BCX0\"> Ruthenberg was visited by Eugene Debs, himself subsequently arrested for a speech that day extolling Ruthenberg and others for their imprisonment for exercising free speech.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW154583873 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW154583873 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]Ibid., 294[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW154583873 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW154583873 BCX0\">\u00a0Thus, a cycle emerges, linking Ruthenberg, Debs, and the Espionage Act: Ruthenberg as the first victim of the Act and the case under which it was constitutionally-confirmed; Debs as its most famous victim, in part caused by expressing sympathy with Ruthenberg; and Ruthenberg\u2019s marshalling of the May Day march to protest Debs own imprisonment, for which he would again be arrested.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW154583873 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559731&quot;:720,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span>\r\n\r\n<span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\">Ruthenberg\u2019s path to Bolshevism mirrored that of the Cleveland branch of the Socialist Party (Local Cleveland).\u00a0 During the winter of 1918-19, American socialists debated how to respond to the emerging success of the Bolsheviks and their calls for similar \u201cmass action\u201d revolutions in the industrial West.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW116437270 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW116437270 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]Salavatore, <em>Debs<\/em>, 297[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\">The Socialist Party left-wing vacillated<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\">, debating<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\"> whether to splinter from the right-wing, \u00e0 la Bolsheviks and Mensheviks, or to capture the whole party by changing the party platform to advocate revolution.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW116437270 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW116437270 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]Ibid., 298[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\"> Ruthenberg would end up declaring Local Cleveland\u2019s support of Bolshevik tactics in April, 1919: \u201cAs set forth in the Left Wing program, political action, revolutionary and emphasizing the implacable character of class struggle, has now overthrown the old idea of attempting to carry out various local reforms such as better housing or municipal ownership of street car lines\u2026It is the mass action that will count in the future warfare against the capitalist state.\u201d<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW116437270 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW116437270 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]<em>Revolutionary Age<\/em>, April 26, 1919[\/footnote] <\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\">These pronouncements were a far cry from his earlier passive consent to municipal ownership and centralization!<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW116437270 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559731&quot;:720,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nIt might have been intellectual engagement, with rigorous texts like<em> Das Kapital<\/em>, that propelled Ruthenberg to a general socialist position, but he was radicalized through the push of state oppression of free speech and the pull of Bolshevik success in Russia.\u00a0 It is in this context that Ruthenberg, a former Progressive and sales manager, came to head a far-left party branch, leading a march of Socialists, IWW members, and left-leaning AFL unions, composed of Cleveland\u2019s ethnically-eclectic working-class, to call for Eugene Debs\u2019s freedom, an end to all imperialist wars, and revolutionary socialism.\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\n&nbsp;\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<\/div>\r\n<\/div>\r\n<\/div>\r\n<\/div>","rendered":"<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">Until 1920 Cleveland had long been a community with a substantial foreign-born <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">population.\u00a0 In 1870, 41.8 percent of the total city population was born in a foreign country.\u00a0 In 1910, the foreign-born and their offspring composed almost 75 percent of the population. <\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW130716183 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Richard Judd, Socialist Cities: Municipal Politics and the Grass Roots of American Socialism (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1987), 162\" id=\"return-footnote-36-1\" href=\"#footnote-36-1\" aria-label=\"Footnote 1\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[1]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">\u00a0 While the foreign-born population dipped to 30.1 percent by 1920, the overall number of immigrants residing in the city had increased.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Federal Census Bureau, \u201cTech Paper 29: Table 22.\u00a0 Nativity of the Population for Urban Places Among the 50 Largest Urban Places Since 1870: 1850 to 1990.\u201d\" id=\"return-footnote-36-2\" href=\"#footnote-36-2\" aria-label=\"Footnote 2\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[2]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">\u00a0There was simply no mistaking it: Cleveland was a true cosmopolitan city in the early-twentieth century, and any attempt to construe \u201cthe foreign-born\u201d as <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">an Other<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"> stood as little more than uninformed nativism.\u00a0 When the oft-repeated Red Scare stereotype of the \u201cforeign-born radical,\u201d invoked in this time to help justify new immigration restrictions,<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW130716183 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Gary Gerstle, American Crucible: Race and Nation in the Twentieth Century (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001), 99-100\" id=\"return-footnote-36-3\" href=\"#footnote-36-3\" aria-label=\"Footnote 3\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[3]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">was introduced to Cleveland, it meant that a substantial portion of the population might be suspect.\u00a0 Because of these demographic facts, it is difficult to justify claims that such identities were inimical to Cleveland, rather than actually being constitutive of the city.\u00a0 Nonetheless, foreign birth and the suspicion of radicalism played a key role in the construction of the May Day riots\u2019 image.\u00a0 <em>The <\/em><\/span><\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">Cleveland Plain Dealer<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">\u2019s report, that only four percent of the socialists arrested on May 1 were \u201cnative born\u201d and that the rest should be deported, typified the mainstream reaction.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW130716183 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Plain Dealer, May 3, 1919\" id=\"return-footnote-36-4\" href=\"#footnote-36-4\" aria-label=\"Footnote 4\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[4]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">But what evidence did the paper have for this characterization?\u00a0 Just who were these radicals?\u00a0 Historians of American socialism traditionally find that the Socialist Party and its affiliated unions in the Midwest principally had their bases in the older immigrant communities of Anglo-Saxons and German, as well as skilled laborers.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW130716183 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"For a collection of essays examining the practices and demographics of other Midwestern towns and cities, including Milwaukee, WI, Marion, IN, Minneapolis, MN, and others, see Donald Critchlow, ed.,\u00a0\u00a0Socialism in the Heartland (Notre Dame:\u00a0 Notre Dame Press, 1986).\u00a0 One of the guiding theses that connect the essays, as Critchlow says in his introduction, is that \u201cAmerican socialism should be seen as a political and social experiment on the part of certain worker and ethnic groups to preserve their dignity and sense of freedom.\u201d (15)\" id=\"return-footnote-36-5\" href=\"#footnote-36-5\" aria-label=\"Footnote 5\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[5]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">\u00a0Did Charles Ruthenberg, a securely middle-class, American-born, educated former-sales manager, have <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW130716183 BCX0\">command of a particular ethnic group, neighborhood, or trade union?\u00a0 Additionally, what did the character of the Cleveland socialists say about Cleveland socialism?<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW130716183 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\">Fortunately for historians, the <\/span><\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\">Cleveland Press<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\"> produced a comprehensive list of all those arrested (all reports agree loyalists were not arrested), noting their age, occupation, home address, country of birth, and even marital status.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW38352852 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW38352852 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Cleveland Press, May 2, 1919\" id=\"return-footnote-36-6\" href=\"#footnote-36-6\" aria-label=\"Footnote 6\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[6]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\"> Additionally, it later printed a list of bystanders who were accidentally arrested and were not affiliated with the socialists.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW38352852 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW38352852 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., May 3, 1919\" id=\"return-footnote-36-7\" href=\"#footnote-36-7\" aria-label=\"Footnote 7\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[7]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW38352852 BCX0\">\u00a0What these two lists provide is, essentially, a randomly selected sample of 111 leftists that provides the basis for an analysis of the city\u2019s radical milieu (Figure 1; see Appendix).<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW38352852 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\">In line with the <\/span><\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\">Plain Dealer<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\">\u2019s report, the <\/span><\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\">Cleveland Press<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\"> reports a very small percentage of American-born rioters, here found to be about five percent.\u00a0 However, the published list of individuals is somewhat problematic since it is based on national birthplace, rather than ethnicity.\u00a0 Thus it conceals a huge diversity, particularly among immigrants from the multi-ethnic empires of Austria-Hungary and Russia.\u00a0 When these immigrants arrived in Cleveland, they often settled into culturally- rather than nationally-defined neighborhoods; they were Czechs and Poles, not Austro-Hungarians and Russians.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW30920167 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW30920167 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Edward Miggins and Mary Morgenthaler, \u201cThe Ethnic Mosaic: The Settlement of Cleveland by the Immigrants and Migrants\u201d in Thomas Campbell and Edward Miggins, eds. The Birth of Modern Cleveland 1865-1930, (Cleveland: Cleveland Historical Society, 1988), 106\" id=\"return-footnote-36-8\" href=\"#footnote-36-8\" aria-label=\"Footnote 8\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[8]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW30920167 BCX0\">Fortunately, the Federal census schedules for 1910, 1920, and 1930 provide a form of cultural identification by listing the language of the individuals.\u00a0 When the names listed in the newspaper are traced through the census, a fuller picture of ethnic identity appears (Figure 2; see Appendix).<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW30920167 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559731&quot;:720,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>When the vague categories of \u201cRussia\u201d and \u201cHungary\u201d are dissolved, at least as the records allow, a much greater degree of ethnic diversity appears. Most important is the emergence of the Poles as the third largest ethnic category among the rioters, falling behind Magyar-speakers and the unclarified \u201cRussian\u201d category. The addition of language also reveals a large Yiddish-speaking grouping from several different national backgrounds. When these Yiddish-speakers of different nationalities are added together, they turn out to form a principal component of the marcher milieu. Overall, the preponderance of these groups is not at all surprising, given that they dominated the foreign-born demographic in Cleveland: the 1920 census recorded 800,000 Clevelanders, of which 240,000 were foreign-born, or about thirty percent<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Federal Census Bureau, \u201cTech Paper 29: Table 22. Nativity of the Population for Urban Places Among the 50 Largest Urban Places Since 1870: 1850 to 1990.\u201d\" id=\"return-footnote-36-9\" href=\"#footnote-36-9\" aria-label=\"Footnote 9\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[9]<\/sup><\/a>. Of that 240,000, 58,000 were \u201cAustrian,\u201d 42,000 \u201cRussian,\u201d and 42,000 \u201cHungarian.\u201d Again, the lack of specificity caused by the multi-ethnic empires complicates comparison, but the sample of leftist \u201crioters,\u201d as a selection of Cleveland foreigners, roughly correlates with the foreign-born population as a whole. And despite the predominance of these three groups, they still composed only about sixty percent of the Red Rioters sample, the rest of which was a cornucopia of national origins and linguistic variety. As a matter of demographic fact, it can be said that the leftists were statistically representative of Cleveland\u2019s ethnic variety. The leftists were not dominated by any one ethnic group to any extent greater than the relative weight of those local ethnic populations. Thus, the socialists participating in the march can be characterized as a genuine political movement, rather than a particularity of any one cultural grouping.<\/p>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">The heterogeneity of the leftists is also displayed in their geographic distribution throughout the city and its immediate suburbs.\u00a0 While one might expect a large concentration in a single or several ethnic neighborhoods or working-class districts, the actual distribution is visibly dispersed when mapped.\u00a0 Ignoring cases of untraceable addresses and several homeless workers, the home locations appear as shown in Figure 3 (see Appendix).\u00a0 While there were certain concentrations in the East Side neighborhoods between Carnegie Avenue and Kinsman Road (possibly favored by the selection because it is near the locations where the riots first broke out), a large and scattered collection of leftists is apparent: most notable are the Italian from as far as the hamlet of Euclid Village (1920 population: 3,300) and an ethnically-varied collection of participants from the far West Side neighborhoods.<\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">The final observation to be made from the Cleveland Press data is the surprising variety of occupations among the Red Rioters.\u00a0 As will be established below, the Cleveland Socialists were one of the most radical branches regionally.\u00a0 It might be argued that those who were willing to march in the growing Red Scare atmosphere would have had to possess a level of political dedication only expected from unskilled laborers (\u201cYou have nothing to lose but your chains.\u201d)\u00a0 And yet, while the category of \u201cLaborer\u201d dominates, one also comes across many machinists, carpenters, tailors, bakers, a female social worker, chauffeurs, the unemployed, and others.\u00a0 This conforms with the Ohio Socialist\u2019s coverage of the riots, reporting that a baker\u2019s union, machinists union, \u201cone local of the Carpenters\u201d and \u201cmembers of the Workmen\u2019s Sick and Death Benefit Fund\u201d marched on May 1.<sup><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"The Ohio Socialist, May 8, 1919\" id=\"return-footnote-36-10\" href=\"#footnote-36-10\" aria-label=\"Footnote 10\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[10]<\/sup><\/a><\/sup><\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">In the categories of ethnicity, geography, and occupation, the participants in the May Day march of 1919 were a truly variegated group of the radical left.\u00a0 Contrary to the traditional thesis of historians of Midwestern radicalism, who contend that socialism was largely dominated by older immigrant groups, grew on the basis of a single ethnic group, or was strongest among skilled workers, the \u201cRed Rioters\u201d were as Slavic as Cleveland, but also multi-ethnic, and employed in jobs of varying skill<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\"> level<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW3339473 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW3339473 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Critchlow, Socialism in the Heartland, 15\" id=\"return-footnote-36-11\" href=\"#footnote-36-11\" aria-label=\"Footnote 11\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[11]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">\u00a0And contrary to <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 SCXW3339473 BCX0\">Lipset<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\"> and Marks\u2019s sociological finding that socialist politics depended upon workers pre-existing communalism derived from <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">\u201ccultural homogeneity,\u201d the \u201cRed Rioters\u201d were culturally- and geographically-eclectic, but successfully united<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">.\u00a0 E<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">ven factious leftist groups and labor unions <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">came together <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">for a march under the duress of growing Red Scare oppression.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW3339473 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW3339473 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Seymour Lipset and Gary Marks, It Didn\u2019t Happen Here: Why Socialism Failed in the United States, (New York: W.W. Norton &amp; Company, 2000), 135\" id=\"return-footnote-36-12\" href=\"#footnote-36-12\" aria-label=\"Footnote 12\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[12]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\"> <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">The conservative conspiracies that these \u201c<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 SCXW3339473 BCX0\">Bolsheviki<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">\u201d constituted a group of foreign infiltrators sent by Moscow also become<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">s<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\"> a more obvious farce.<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">\u00a0 The fact that census records were available for most of these individuals shows that they lived in the country either decades before or after the riots.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW3339473 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW3339473 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Census Schedules for 1910 &amp; 1930, accessed through ancestry.com\" id=\"return-footnote-36-13\" href=\"#footnote-36-13\" aria-label=\"Footnote 13\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[13]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">\u00a0This makes problematic the media assertion that they were foreign radicals.\u00a0 Certainly, they were not recently imported <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 SCXW3339473 BCX0\">Bolsheviki<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">.<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW3339473 BCX0\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW3339473 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559731&quot;:720,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<h2 style=\"text-align: center\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW204129350 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW204129350 BCX0\">Subsection: The First Among Equals\u2014Charles Ruthenberg, a Cleveland Radical<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW204129350 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559731&quot;:720,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/h2>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>In many ways the biography of the movement\u2019s leader, Charles Ruthenberg, fits this multifaceted and diverse characterization of those who followed him on May 1.\u00a0 It also illuminates the character and history of Cleveland socialism.\u00a0 Coming from a middle-class background, Ruthenberg began his political life as a supporter of Democratic reform mayor Tom Johnson.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Millett, \u201cCharles E. Ruthenberg\u201d: 195\" id=\"return-footnote-36-14\" href=\"#footnote-36-14\" aria-label=\"Footnote 14\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[14]<\/sup><\/a>For the future American-born head of a largely foreign-born socialist movement, Ruthenberg\u2019s socialism had distinctly European origins.\u00a0 Around 1904, a friend had suggested he read the work of the British socialist and Fabian, Robert Blatchford.\u00a0 Impressed by Blatchford\u2019s arguments for socialism, Ruthenberg proceeded then directly to Karl Marx\u2019s <em>Das Kapital<\/em>.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., 194-5\" id=\"return-footnote-36-15\" href=\"#footnote-36-15\" aria-label=\"Footnote 15\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[15]<\/sup><\/a> In his journey from a Progressive political stance, then to a Fabian intellectual introduction to socialism, and finally to Marx, it becomes perhaps obvious that Ruthenberg derived his political views from a social-evolutionary, reformist socialist tendency.\u00a0 As Stephen Millett puts it, Ruthenberg initially saw capitalism\u2019s injustice coming from its inefficiency, which would be solved through centralized planning.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., 196\" id=\"return-footnote-36-16\" href=\"#footnote-36-16\" aria-label=\"Footnote 16\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[16]<\/sup><\/a> Nonetheless, Ruthenberg\u2019s ideological development constantly shifted him further to the left.\u00a0 In 1912, when the question of tactics arose, whether to restrict the Socialist Party to purely political action at the ballot box or to pursue direct action in the workplace, Ruthenberg adopted a middle ground by accepting all tactics: he both defended the tactics of the IWW and stressed party unity.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., 197\" id=\"return-footnote-36-17\" href=\"#footnote-36-17\" aria-label=\"Footnote 17\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[17]<\/sup><\/a>By the time of his pamphlet <em>Are We Growing Towards Socialism?<\/em> (1917), Ruthenberg distanced himself even further from his Progressive past.\u00a0 In the pamphlet, he distilled the insights of <em>Das Kapital<\/em> into common American parlance, focusing most notably on the theory of surplus value so as to convince the reader of his\/her own exploitation and Marx\u2019s theory of history, which proposes a historical progression from primitive communism to feudalism to capitalism to socialism.\u00a0 Through his description of the transition from capitalism to socialism especially, Ruthenberg positions his own Progressive beginnings as the starting point for a larger political program.\u00a0 As he put it, \u201cCapitalism has developed from individual production to collective, co-operative production.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Charles Ruthenberg, Are We Growing Towards Socialism? (Cleveland: Local Cleveland, Socialist Party, 1917), 18\" id=\"return-footnote-36-18\" href=\"#footnote-36-18\" aria-label=\"Footnote 18\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[18]<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0The drive towards centralization, integration of industries, and mechanization leads to both greater production and greater exploitative capability; this was simply a repetition of Marx, but Ruthenberg added to these processes of \u201ccollectivism\u201d the development of municipal ownership of water, gas, and electric utilities, as well as ownership of industries brought on by World War I.\u00a0 While this \u201ccollectivism\u201d and planning might have sated the Progressive Ruthenberg of 1901, he rejected the social-democratic hubris of reform-towards-socialism and the inevitability of utopia:<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">This collectivism, which is developing in the shape of municipal and state ownership, is not, however, Socialism.\u00a0 With a powerful working class movement, strongly organized on the political and industrial field, developing with it, it may become the means of facilitating the establishment of Socialism. Without such a movement it may well become the basis for more extreme exploitation and oppression of the workers than that which existed in the days of capitalist competition.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., 32-3\" id=\"return-footnote-36-19\" href=\"#footnote-36-19\" aria-label=\"Footnote 19\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[19]<\/sup><\/a><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>Ruthenberg\u2019s radical apogee occurred during the fire of the left-wing revolutions in Russia, Hungary, and Bavaria from 1917 to 1919 and the entrance of the United States into the war, a period during which Ruthenberg achieved national notice for his radical pacifism.\u00a0 During his 1917 Cleveland mayoral campaign, he directly invoked Karl Liebknecht, the only German Social Democrat to oppose Germany\u2019s entrance into the war in 1914, as a figure of emulation:<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">I am speaking to you as Karl Liebknecht spoke in the German nation . . . when he denounced the war as a war of the ruling class and stated his unalterable opposition to that war\u2026 If you are inspired with that which will bring a better world, then you must stand up and fight for that ideal. You must fight with those who are fighting against the war.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Millett, \u201cCharles Ruthenberg,\u201d 198\" id=\"return-footnote-36-20\" href=\"#footnote-36-20\" aria-label=\"Footnote 20\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[20]<\/sup><\/a><\/div>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\">Ruthenberg attained national celebrity status within the Socialist Party through this and other public speeches against the war, becoming one of the writers of its resolution condemning the war and thus earning national acrimony from those outside the party.\u00a0 In 1917, he was indicted under the Espionage Act for subversive activity for a speech he delivered on Cleveland\u2019s Public Square on May 27, 1917: \u201cThis is not a war for democracy.\u00a0 This is not a war for freedom\u2026It is a war to secure the investment and profits of the ruling class of this country.\u201d<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop BCX0 SCXW215076229\"><span class=\"Superscript BCX0 SCXW215076229\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., 198\" id=\"return-footnote-36-21\" href=\"#footnote-36-21\" aria-label=\"Footnote 21\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[21]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\"> The U.S. Supreme Court\u2019s support of the indictment in <\/span><\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\">Ruthenberg et al. v. United States<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\"> set the precedent allowing the Espionage Act to imprison many more socialists in the years to come.\u00a0 Later that year, presaging the much m<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\">ore violent May Day of 1919,<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\"> Cleveland<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\">\u2019s<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW215076229\"> mayoral candidates assembled in Luna Park on Labor Day, 1917 to give speeches.\u00a0 When Ruthenberg took the podium, he was assaulted by \u201cuniformed soldiers,\u201d escaping injury through the efforts of \u201cvaudeville entertainers\u201d who hid him backstage.\u00a0 Notwithstanding, Ruthenberg had his most successful campaign that year, polling 27,685 votes, about one fourth of those cast.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop BCX0 SCXW215076229\"><span class=\"Superscript BCX0 SCXW215076229\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., 200\" id=\"return-footnote-36-22\" href=\"#footnote-36-22\" aria-label=\"Footnote 22\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[22]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW154583873 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW154583873 BCX0\">Ruthenberg\u2019s Bolshevism assuredly emerged during the winter of 1918-19, the period <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW154583873 BCX0\">when he served his prison sentence for the May 27 speech.\u00a0 One possible radicalizing event was a Socialist Party convention in Canton, Ohio, held in the park across from the prison in which he was detained.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW154583873 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW154583873 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Nick Salvatore, Eugene Debs: Citizen and Socialist (Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2007), 291\" id=\"return-footnote-36-23\" href=\"#footnote-36-23\" aria-label=\"Footnote 23\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[23]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW154583873 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW154583873 BCX0\"> Ruthenberg was visited by Eugene Debs, himself subsequently arrested for a speech that day extolling Ruthenberg and others for their imprisonment for exercising free speech.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW154583873 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW154583873 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., 294\" id=\"return-footnote-36-24\" href=\"#footnote-36-24\" aria-label=\"Footnote 24\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[24]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW154583873 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW154583873 BCX0\">\u00a0Thus, a cycle emerges, linking Ruthenberg, Debs, and the Espionage Act: Ruthenberg as the first victim of the Act and the case under which it was constitutionally-confirmed; Debs as its most famous victim, in part caused by expressing sympathy with Ruthenberg; and Ruthenberg\u2019s marshalling of the May Day march to protest Debs own imprisonment, for which he would again be arrested.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW154583873 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559731&quot;:720,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\">Ruthenberg\u2019s path to Bolshevism mirrored that of the Cleveland branch of the Socialist Party (Local Cleveland).\u00a0 During the winter of 1918-19, American socialists debated how to respond to the emerging success of the Bolsheviks and their calls for similar \u201cmass action\u201d revolutions in the industrial West.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW116437270 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW116437270 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Salavatore, Debs, 297\" id=\"return-footnote-36-25\" href=\"#footnote-36-25\" aria-label=\"Footnote 25\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[25]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\">The Socialist Party left-wing vacillated<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\">, debating<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\"> whether to splinter from the right-wing, \u00e0 la Bolsheviks and Mensheviks, or to capture the whole party by changing the party platform to advocate revolution.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW116437270 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW116437270 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., 298\" id=\"return-footnote-36-26\" href=\"#footnote-36-26\" aria-label=\"Footnote 26\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[26]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\"> Ruthenberg would end up declaring Local Cleveland\u2019s support of Bolshevik tactics in April, 1919: \u201cAs set forth in the Left Wing program, political action, revolutionary and emphasizing the implacable character of class struggle, has now overthrown the old idea of attempting to carry out various local reforms such as better housing or municipal ownership of street car lines\u2026It is the mass action that will count in the future warfare against the capitalist state.\u201d<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW116437270 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW116437270 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Revolutionary Age, April 26, 1919\" id=\"return-footnote-36-27\" href=\"#footnote-36-27\" aria-label=\"Footnote 27\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[27]<\/sup><\/a> <\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW116437270 BCX0\">These pronouncements were a far cry from his earlier passive consent to municipal ownership and centralization!<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW116437270 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559731&quot;:720,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>It might have been intellectual engagement, with rigorous texts like<em> Das Kapital<\/em>, that propelled Ruthenberg to a general socialist position, but he was radicalized through the push of state oppression of free speech and the pull of Bolshevik success in Russia.\u00a0 It is in this context that Ruthenberg, a former Progressive and sales manager, came to head a far-left party branch, leading a march of Socialists, IWW members, and left-leaning AFL unions, composed of Cleveland\u2019s ethnically-eclectic working-class, to call for Eugene Debs\u2019s freedom, an end to all imperialist wars, and revolutionary socialism.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<hr class=\"before-footnotes clear\" \/><div class=\"footnotes\"><ol><li id=\"footnote-36-1\">Richard Judd, <em>Socialist Cities: Municipal Politics and the Grass Roots of American Socialism<\/em> (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1987), 162 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-1\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 1\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-2\">Federal Census Bureau, \u201cTech Paper 29: Table 22.\u00a0 Nativity of the Population for Urban Places Among the 50 Largest Urban Places Since 1870: 1850 to 1990.\u201d <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-2\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 2\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-3\">Gary Gerstle, <em>American Crucible: Race and Nation in the Twentieth Century<\/em> (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001), 99-100 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-3\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 3\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-4\"><em>Plain Dealer<\/em>, May 3, 1919 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-4\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 4\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-5\">For a collection of essays examining the practices and demographics of other Midwestern towns and cities, including Milwaukee, WI, Marion, IN, Minneapolis, MN, and others, see Donald Critchlow, ed.,\u00a0\u00a0<em>Socialism<\/em> <em>in the Heartland<\/em> (Notre Dame:\u00a0 Notre Dame Press, 1986).\u00a0 One of the guiding theses that connect the essays, as Critchlow says in his introduction, is that \u201cAmerican socialism should be seen as a political and social experiment on the part of certain worker and ethnic groups to preserve their dignity and sense of freedom.\u201d (15) <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-5\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 5\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-6\"><em>Cleveland Press<\/em>, May 2, 1919 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-6\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 6\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-7\">Ibid., May 3, 1919 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-7\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 7\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-8\">Edward Miggins and Mary Morgenthaler, \u201cThe Ethnic Mosaic: The Settlement of Cleveland by the Immigrants and Migrants\u201d in Thomas Campbell and Edward Miggins, eds.<em> The Birth of Modern Cleveland 1865-1930<\/em>, (Cleveland: Cleveland Historical Society, 1988), 106 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-8\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 8\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-9\">Federal Census Bureau, \u201cTech Paper 29: Table 22. Nativity of the Population for Urban Places Among the 50 Largest Urban Places Since 1870: 1850 to 1990.\u201d <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-9\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 9\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-10\"><em>The Ohio Socialist<\/em>, May 8, 1919 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-10\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 10\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-11\">Critchlow, <em>Socialism in the Heartland<\/em>, 15 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-11\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 11\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-12\">Seymour Lipset and Gary Marks, <em>It Didn\u2019t Happen Here: Why Socialism Failed in the United States<\/em>, (New York: W.W. Norton &amp; Company, 2000), 135 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-12\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 12\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-13\"><em>Census Schedules<\/em> for 1910 &amp; 1930, accessed through <a href=\"https:\/\/www.ancestry.com\/?ancid=4vmopenrg0&amp;ds_rl=1286410&amp;pgrid=120522386862&amp;ptaid=aud-966841546767%3akwd-29052520&amp;s_kwcid=ancestry&amp;gclid=EAIaIQobChMI0brqk8Pz9QIVCwmICR1JNgxHEAAYASAAEgK8s_D_BwE&amp;gclsrc=aw.ds&amp;o_xid=115784&amp;o_lid=115784&amp;o_sch=Paid+Search+Brand\">ancestry.com<\/a> <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-13\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 13\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-14\">Millett, \u201cCharles E. Ruthenberg\u201d: 195 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-14\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 14\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-15\">Ibid., 194-5 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-15\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 15\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-16\">Ibid., 196 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-16\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 16\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-17\">Ibid., 197 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-17\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 17\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-18\">Charles Ruthenberg, <em>Are We Growing Towards Socialism?<\/em> (Cleveland: Local Cleveland, Socialist Party, 1917), 18 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-18\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 18\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-19\">Ibid., 32-3 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-19\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 19\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-20\">Millett, \u201cCharles Ruthenberg,\u201d 198 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-20\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 20\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-21\">Ibid., 198 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-21\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 21\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-22\">Ibid., 200 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-22\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 22\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-23\">Nick Salvatore, <em>Eugene Debs: Citizen and Socialist<\/em> (Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2007), 291 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-23\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 23\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-24\">Ibid., 294 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-24\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 24\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-25\">Salavatore, <em>Debs<\/em>, 297 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-25\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 25\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-26\">Ibid., 298 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-26\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 26\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-36-27\"><em>Revolutionary Age<\/em>, April 26, 1919 <a href=\"#return-footnote-36-27\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 27\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><\/ol><\/div>","protected":false},"author":3,"menu_order":1,"template":"","meta":{"pb_show_title":"on","pb_short_title":"","pb_subtitle":"","pb_authors":[],"pb_section_license":""},"chapter-type":[],"contributor":[],"license":[],"class_list":["post-36","chapter","type-chapter","status-publish","hentry"],"part":3,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/36","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/chapter"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"version-history":[{"count":19,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/36\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":173,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/36\/revisions\/173"}],"part":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/parts\/3"}],"metadata":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/36\/metadata\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=36"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"chapter-type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapter-type?post=36"},{"taxonomy":"contributor","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/contributor?post=36"},{"taxonomy":"license","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/license?post=36"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}