{"id":44,"date":"2022-01-31T21:14:47","date_gmt":"2022-01-31T21:14:47","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/?post_type=chapter&#038;p=44"},"modified":"2022-03-11T19:28:37","modified_gmt":"2022-03-11T19:28:37","slug":"coda-the-echoes-of-1919-and-the-dissolution-of-clevelands-american-radicalism","status":"publish","type":"chapter","link":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/chapter\/coda-the-echoes-of-1919-and-the-dissolution-of-clevelands-american-radicalism\/","title":{"rendered":"Coda: The Echoes of 1919 and The Dissolution of Cleveland\u2019s American Radicalism"},"content":{"raw":"<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nBut what exactly happened after 1919?\u00a0 Surely a movement based around the idea of a socialistic civic-nationalism, which could mobilize thousands of Clevelanders and thrive under increased government pressure, would not simply disintegrate in a matter of months.\u00a0 What became of Cleveland\u2019s radicals?\u00a0 Just as any event has historical precedence, so too does it have a legacy.\u00a0 What was the legacy of the May Day riots, and May Day in general, in Cleveland?\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\n\u00a0Splits among the American left in 1919-20 and government persecution of leftist leaders devastated the organizational and leadership capabilities of the American socialists.\u00a0 As noted above, this factionalism would result in the irony that Charles Ruthenberg and Alfred Wagenknecht, radical Ohio socialists who had suffered the Canton workhouse together in 1917, would come to be leaders of opposing American communist parties in 1920.[footnote]Millett, \u201cCharles E. Ruthenberg\u201d: 205[\/footnote] Combined with constantly shifting political strategies, as dictated from the Comintern office in Moscow, the eventually united Communist Party USA (CPUSA) endured the 1920s dismally.\u00a0 By March of 1929, the national membership of the CPUSA stood at 9,300, which was a fraction of what the communist movement could boast even during its semi-legal underground period from 1920-23 (15,000 by 1923).[footnote]Harvey Klehr, <em>The Heyday of American Communism: The Depression Decade<\/em>, (New York: Basic Books, 1984), 5[\/footnote] Likewise, non-Bolshevik radical groups like the IWW were decimated by Red Scare operations like the Palmer Raids and the overall decline in union activity during the 1920s.\u00a0 In terms of nationwide activity, the IWW has been an empty husk ever since 1920.[footnote]Roy Wortman, <em>From Syndicalism To Trade Unionism: The IWW in Ohio 1905-1950<\/em>, (New York: Garland Publishing, 1985), 101[\/footnote]\u00a0But what about the Great Depression?\u00a0 Never before was the plight of the American worker so great, the unemployed so many, or capitalism\u2019s contradiction of poverty-within-overproduction so stark and lucid.\u00a0 If the remnants of 1919 were to revive themselves, this would have been their chance.\u00a0 In what ways, if any, did the specter of the Cleveland radical left which was on display in 1919 show itself during the Great Depression?\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nGiven the factious nature of the American left during the 1930s, there are a multitude of groups one could use to draw out the legacy of the Cleveland radicals of 1919.\u00a0 Two vital organizations to follow are the CPUSA, the party led by Ruthenberg until his death in 1927, and the IWW.\u00a0 No other national leftist group held as much of the public attention as the CPUSA, given its direct ties to the USSR through the Comintern.\u00a0 The IWW remains notable in the Cleveland context because, in the period from 1934 to 1950, the Cleveland IWW\u2019s Metal and Machine Workers\u2019 Industrial Union 440 (IU 440) was exceptional for being the only IWW local to dominate any major industry after the 1920 collapse of the organization.\u00a0 These two groups, in their failures and successes in the 1930s, indicate the two paths the legacy of Cleveland radicalism took: a slavish devotion to the prestige of Russian Bolshevism and a reformist recuperation under the labor-friendly politics of the New Deal coalition.\r\n<h2 style=\"text-align: center\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW227954900 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW227954900 BCX0\">Subsection: The CPUSA and The Decline of May Day in Cleveland<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW227954900 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\nWith the onset of the Great Depression with Black Tuesday in October, 1929, the United States and Cleveland were beset by massive unemployment.\u00a0 The prosperity and growth of the 1920s in Cleveland gave way to the Depression at an astounding rate, resulting in about 41,000 unemployed in April, 1930, and 100,000 in January, 1931, in a city of about 900,000 people.[footnote]Carol Miller and Robert Wheeler, <em>Cleveland: A Concise History, 1796-1996<\/em>, (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1997), 136[\/footnote] While $200 million in direct aid and work relief were provided from 1928 to 1937, this paled in comparison to Cuyahoga County\u2019s loss of $1.2 billion in salaries and wages during that period.[footnote]Ibid[\/footnote]At least initially, it seemed that the CPUSA was poised to exploit this disaster and grow its membership in the midst of disaster, just as Ruthenberg had grown the party during the economic and political stresses of World War I.\u00a0 The CPUSA sought to expand its membership, after Black Tuesday, by organizing the unemployed, appealing to those most vulgarized by capitalist crises.\u00a0 This took the form of putting together \u201cUnemployed Councils\u201d which would agitate and use protests to prod officials for relief.\u00a0[footnote]Klehr, <em>Heyday<\/em>, 49-50[\/footnote] Most importantly the CPUSA, in conjunction with its Comintern affiliates, organized an International Unemployment Day on March 6, 1930, in which thousands marched, demanding various forms of relief, as well as diplomatic recognition of the Soviet Union.\u00a0 It turned out to be a greater success than the CPUSA could have hoped.\u00a0 Between preparations with the Unemployed Councils and spontaneous support from bystanders, the marches in major cities defied expectations and the New York City demonstration was noted for devolving into a large riot and brawl with the police while other cities remained more passive in their confrontations.[footnote]Ibid., 34[\/footnote]\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nIn Cleveland, March 6, 1930 was a similar \u201csuccess.\u201d\u00a0 Dubbed \u201cRed Thursday\u201d by the press, the official Communist demonstrations in Ohio concluded without any violence.\u00a0 The Plain Dealer estimated there were a total of 10,000 people, about 2,500 Communists and 7,500 bystanders and interested onlookers.[footnote]<em>Plain Dealer<\/em>, March 7, 1930[\/footnote] The Communists assembled in Public Square, marched to City Hall, gave speeches, read demands, talked with the mayor, and dispersed peacefully.\u00a0 The demands communicated by John Adams, district organizer of the Communist Party for Ohio and West Virginia, included \u201cappropriation of funds to be placed at the disposal of the unemployed workers for relief, unemployment insurance, establishment of the seven-hour day and five day week\u2026abolition of the criminal syndicalist law and recognition of Soviet Russia.\u201d[footnote]Ibid[\/footnote]\u00a0As far as the <em>Plain Dealer<\/em> was concerned, there were two notable aspects to March 6 in Cleveland.\u00a0 The first was the personage of Lil Andrews, \u201cGirl Communist\u201d and leader of the district\u2019s Youth Communist League, who engaged in a witty dialogue with Cleveland Mayor John Marshall (brackets indicate paraphrasing by the <em>Plain Dealer<\/em>):\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nMarshall: \u201cThere\u2019s no use of my trying to fool you people.\u00a0 Suppose we put everybody in this crowd to work.\u00a0 Tomorrow we\u2019d have twice as many unemployed here from other cities.\u00a0 So far as putting money at your disposal, there is no legal way in which that could be done, even if the [city] Council wanted to do it.\u00a0 The five-day week is a matter of agreement.\u00a0 The abolition of child labor is a matter of state or federal law.\u00a0 You surely must realize that the city government has nothing to do with the recognition of Russia.\u201d\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nAndrews: [I don\u2019t see why the city cannot levy a tax on the profits of Cleveland businesses from last year.]\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nMarshall: \u201cSuppose for the sake of argument that we did that.\u00a0 It would take a year or a year and a half to collect the tax, and you want relief now.\u00a0 Maybe a year from now you won\u2019t need it.\u201d\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nAndrews: \u201cThen, you admit the inability of the city to meet our demands?\u201d\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nMarshall: [Yes]\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nAndrews: \u201cTherefore you admit the government is no good for the workers.\u201d\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nMarshall: \u201cI wouldn\u2019t say that.\u201d\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nAndrews: \u201cThat\u2019s what we think.\u201d[footnote]Ibid[\/footnote]\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<\/div>\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nThe second notable aspect of March 6 in Cleveland was that, after the official demonstration, there was \u201ca crowd of about 500 hangers-on lingering in Public Square\u201d whom the police violently dispersed with mounted police.\u00a0 As the <em>Dealer<\/em> put it: \u201cThere was no riot\u2026But for about 3 minutes Public Square was the scene of greater confusion than at any time since the May Day riot of 1919.\u201d[footnote]Ibid[\/footnote]\u00a0International Unemployment Day was the closest to a repeat of May Day 1919 the city would ever see, but the <em>Plain Dealer<\/em> displayed none of the wrath or fear of its earlier coverage.\u00a0 Even with the unexpected outpouring of support for March 6, the Communists elicited curiosity in bystanders, not political reaction.\u00a0\u00a0 As one article concluded, \u201cby 4:30 the pigeons reigned in the Square once more.\u201d[footnote]Ibid[\/footnote]\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nMarch 6 proved to be a flash in the pan and was not indicative of stupendous growth for the CPUSA in Cleveland or elsewhere.\u00a0 May Day, 1930 registered as a nonevent: \u201cMay Day in Cleveland broke no heads and made no history\u2026The police were ready but found nothing to do.\u00a0 Everybody was satisfied, unless it be some unsung hotspur thirsting for martyrdom.\u00a0 From his standpoint the disappointing feature of the day was that no martyrs to Communism were made.\u201d[footnote]<em>Plain Dealer<\/em>, May 2, 1930[\/footnote] March 6 proved itself an anomaly and the newspaper which once bristled with demands to restrict the rights of leftists, in response to a tepid May Day of about 600 Communists, now declared that \u201cThe right of petition and of free assemblage is so fundamental to liberty that any effort to suppress it is not only unfair but unsafe.\u201d[footnote]Ibid[\/footnote]\u00a0 May Day 1933 was similarly languid.\u00a0 About 1,500 Communists assembled in Public Square, made demands for unemployment relief, denounced Nazi persecution of Jews, and sang songs like \u201cSolidarity Forever\u201d and \u201cWave, Scarlet Banner Triumphantly (Bandiera Rossa)\u201d; seemingly gone were the days of leftists singing \u201cStar-Spangled Banner.\u201d[footnote]Ibid., May 2, 1933[\/footnote] Gone also, or for the most part, was the obsession with flags as symbols.\u00a0 When \u201csome city employee had hauled down the [American or Cleveland] flag from the Public Square flag pole just before the meeting,\u201d only the local American Legion chairman seemed to care about the symbolism of such an act.[footnote]Ibid[\/footnote] This trend of the Cleveland Communists making a poor show of their political acumen continued through the decade.\u00a0 While \u201ccampaigning\u201d for Ohio Governor, Cleveland CPUSA leader Andrew Onda was stereotypically assaulted with vegetables while speaking in Bellefontaine, Ohio, in 1936[footnote]Ibid., Oct 4, 1936[\/footnote]\u00a0and the anti-fascist periodical FIGHT publicly shamed Cleveland for its poor sales, notably being out-ordered by much smaller cities at a rate of 20:1.\u00a0 As they put it:\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">Where are the trade unionists of Cleveland?\u00a0 Where are the students and professional groups?\u00a0 Where are the Socialists and Communists?\u00a0 Where are the militant workers?\u00a0 Is Cleveland with a population of one million sastified with a sale of 25 copies of FIGHT?\u00a0 Is there no struggle against War and Fascism in Cleveland?[footnote]<em>Fight \u2013 Against War and Fascism<\/em>, May, 1934[\/footnote]<\/div>\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nThe closest the CPUSA ever came to re-approaching the socialist civic-nationalism of old was while acting under the \u201cPopular Front\u201d policy of the Comintern, which dictated that Communist parties align with non-proletarian groups, up to and including liberal and conservative political parties, to counteract the expansion of fascism.\u00a0 Accepted hesitantly by the CPUSA leader during the 1930s and early 40s, Earl Browder, this resulted in the CPUSA becoming more \u201cpatriotic,\u201d at least in public.\u00a0 Thus, on January 22, 1939, Cleveland was the stage for the national leader of the CPUSA publicly singing \u201cStar Spangled Banner\u201d while welcoming back Cleveland veterans of the Abraham Lincoln Brigades from the Spanish Civil War.[footnote]<em>Plain Dealer<\/em>, January 23, 1939[\/footnote] Tellingly, the May Day in Cleveland for that year was restricted to the protest by several hundred Communists of the German consulate, itself closed for the holiday.[footnote]Ibid., May 2, 1939[\/footnote] In other words, it was only under pressure from the Comintern to \u201cbe more American\u201d that the CPUSA adopted the trappings of the civic-nationalism which defined the political tenor of the movement two decades prior, creating phrases like \u201cCommunism is 20th century Americanism\u201d.\u00a0 During this period Cleveland\u2019s May Day, with the exception of the one-off International Unemployment Day, had degraded from a city-trembling march to a petty-protest done mostly on the part of Moscow-signed directives.\u00a0 When assessing the legacy of Cleveland May Day, 1919, the CPUSA represents one direction toward which that radicalism developed: rigid Stalinist ideology, tepid tactics and demonstrations, and the marginalization of Cleveland as a center of American leftism.\r\n<h2 style=\"text-align: center\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW60616330 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW60616330 BCX0\">Subsection: The IWW and The Recuperation of Industrial Action<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW60616330 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/h2>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nOf course, the CPUSA was not the only radical group to survive the leftist disasters of 1919-20.\u00a0 While the CPUSA had focused its efforts on organizing the unemployed during the Great Depression, its membership often being primarily unemployed,[footnote]Klehr,<em> Heyday<\/em>, 161[\/footnote] the remnants of the Industrial Workers of the World, also often being unemployed, remained ideologically centered in the labor movement, particularly in Cleveland.\u00a0 In contrast to the unity of the 1910s, the Russian Bolshevik persecution of anarchists and IWW refugees sowed great animosity between the Wobblies and their Bolshevik-inspired neighbors, often criticizing the later for being unlike the civic-nationalists they once were: the likes of the CPUSA had taken up \u201ctraditional Russian icon worship\u201d in their veneration of the great Bolshevik revolutionaries, had become dictatorial in party structure, dogmatic in ideology, and disconnected from the \u201cessence of the American people.\u201d[footnote]Wortman,<em> IWW in Ohio<\/em>, 102-3[\/footnote] In the eyes of the Depression-era IWW, their own moribund group was the only sufficiently democratic radical leftist organization in the U.S.\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nFinally, by 1934, it seemed as if the IWW would make its return.\u00a0 Though it lost union control of Detroit to the UAW, the IWW\u2019s IU 440 began to win strikes and shop-control in the metal working sector of Cleveland, gaining a membership that ranged from 1,600 to 10,000 in the period from 1934-1950.[footnote]Ibid 108[\/footnote] This success came under the leadership of the Cedervall brothers, Frank and Tor, who built up 440 with an ideology of anti-Communist and anti-fascist unionism, but also dissociated from the IWW\u2019s original anarchist and utopian ideology which had advocated vigorous struggles to build a syndicalist polity.[footnote]Ibid 110[\/footnote] In his own words, Frank Cedervall described his ideology as \u201cnon-political, not anti-political\u2026non-religious, not anti-religious\u2026against nationalism and for the recognition of the universal brotherhood of all men\u2026opposed to violence whether committed by government or individual men.\u201d[footnote]Ibid 111[\/footnote] The goals of the Cleveland IWW during the Great Depression were to be an effective union for its members and to not let the organization\u2019s past utopian dreams hamper that.\u00a0 In practice, this resulted in IU 440 taking full advantage of the pro-labor political climate of the Roosevelt years, including participation in the National Labor Relations Board system.\u00a0 In a twist of historical irony, an IWW local won labor representation for the Draper Manufacturing Company over the AFL through the auspices the NLRB, in other words, the federal government.[footnote]Ibid. 129[\/footnote]\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nIU 440\u2019s pragmatism also resulted in it breaking one of the sacred doctrines of the IWW, namely the signing of labor contracts.\u00a0 While contracts were originally conceived as a \u201ccapitulation to capitalism,\u201d the IWW justified its signing of contracts with the American Stove Company with the claim that \u201cContract Protects Solidarity.\u201d[footnote]<em>Industrial Worker<\/em>, May 29, 1937; as quoted in Ibid., 133[\/footnote] Through a willingness to bend principles to present realities, IU 440 had achieved success no other IWW local in the country had had since 1920, becoming the largest source of membership and dues for the national organization.[footnote]Ibid 180[\/footnote]\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nNonetheless, this turn towards \u201cpragmatism\u201d was not merely the employment of labor legislation and legal structures to advance \u201cradical trade unionism,\u201d but represented a fundamental de-ideological shift in the Cleveland IWW.\u00a0 As Frank Cedervall reflected, \u201cIdealism is a wonderful thing, but job control is a far more practical factor in holding a dues-paying membership in good standing.\u201d[footnote]Ibid 154[\/footnote] By the 1940s, IU 440 was seen as the IWW\u2019s rightwing anomaly.\u00a0 The national organization noted that there was \u201ca very slight absorption of IWW philosophy\u201d by the membership.[footnote]Ibid 125[\/footnote] Put differently, \u201cto place a Wobbly union card in a man\u2019s pocket was an easier task than to inculcate IWW ideals in his heart.\u201d[footnote]Ibid 125[\/footnote] This ideological-pragmatic difference of opinion ultimately came to a head in the late 1940s with arguments over the practice of signing labor contracts and the passage of the Taft-Hartley law which, among other labor-union restrictions, required union officials to sign non-Communist affidavits.[footnote]Ibid., 176[\/footnote] Despite being anti-Communist, the IWW national office had leftist principles and an organizational history of opposition to such state-driven witch hunts, as well as political issues with the other provisions of Taft-Hartley.\u00a0 Attached to a national office which refused to sign the affidavits, and thus gain union recognition for the NLRB, Cleveland\u2019s pragmatic IU 440, which served their non-ideological workers as well as their ideologists, successfully voted to split from the national IWW in November 1950.\u00a0 By signing the affidavits, the Cleveland IWW fully integrated itself into the American labor mainstream, incorporating itself into larger unions until it became part of the AFL-CIO.[footnote]Ibid 180[\/footnote] Through the Cleveland IWW, one segment of the Cleveland radical tradition of 1919 came in from the cold, but at the cost of anything that would have identified it with that IWW which marched along with Ruthenberg and the broader Cleveland radical left.\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\r\n\r\nThe CPUSA and IWW of Cleveland represent the two extremes of what ultimately became of that radical political tradition of Cleveland and the Midwest that was on display in the May Day riots of 1919.\u00a0 The CPUSA remained at the fringes, becoming the \u201cforeign ideology\u201d the left was always derided as, with the exception of the Comintern-dictated Popular Front period which prescribed patriotism as a USSR foreign policy.\u00a0 The success of the CPUSA among Cleveland\u2019s unemployed were spectacular, but was ultimately measured in hours.\u00a0 The IWW kept its democratic character, and in that sense remained \u201cAmerican,\u201d but the manner in which Cleveland\u2019s \u201cOne Big Union\u201d took advantage of the Great Depression and the New Deal sacrificed the political content of \u201cradical trade unionism.\u201d\u00a0 The <em>Plain Dealer<\/em> editors and letter writers\u2019 original portrayal of America\u2019s relation to radicalism, where it was a distinction between \u201cAmericanism\u201d and \u201cforeignism,\u201d proved true in more ways than one; the left itself came to conform to this dichotomy.\u00a0 In time, this divide became a reality and the Cleveland left(s) took up positions on either side of the Cold War split.\u00a0 The sort of \u201cradical-center\u201d which united proto-Bolsheviks, Wobblies, and left-AFLs around leaders like Debs and Ruthenberg did not hold after 1919, and the subsequent history of American radicalism until at least the 1960s\u2019 New Left was Soviet Bolshevism or left-liberal capitalism.\u00a0 With the decline of socialistic civic-nationalism in Cleveland, May Day dissolved as a notable event in the city; after 1919, it was all downhill.\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<\/div>\r\n<\/div>","rendered":"<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>But what exactly happened after 1919?\u00a0 Surely a movement based around the idea of a socialistic civic-nationalism, which could mobilize thousands of Clevelanders and thrive under increased government pressure, would not simply disintegrate in a matter of months.\u00a0 What became of Cleveland\u2019s radicals?\u00a0 Just as any event has historical precedence, so too does it have a legacy.\u00a0 What was the legacy of the May Day riots, and May Day in general, in Cleveland?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>\u00a0Splits among the American left in 1919-20 and government persecution of leftist leaders devastated the organizational and leadership capabilities of the American socialists.\u00a0 As noted above, this factionalism would result in the irony that Charles Ruthenberg and Alfred Wagenknecht, radical Ohio socialists who had suffered the Canton workhouse together in 1917, would come to be leaders of opposing American communist parties in 1920.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Millett, \u201cCharles E. Ruthenberg\u201d: 205\" id=\"return-footnote-44-1\" href=\"#footnote-44-1\" aria-label=\"Footnote 1\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[1]<\/sup><\/a> Combined with constantly shifting political strategies, as dictated from the Comintern office in Moscow, the eventually united Communist Party USA (CPUSA) endured the 1920s dismally.\u00a0 By March of 1929, the national membership of the CPUSA stood at 9,300, which was a fraction of what the communist movement could boast even during its semi-legal underground period from 1920-23 (15,000 by 1923).<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Harvey Klehr, The Heyday of American Communism: The Depression Decade, (New York: Basic Books, 1984), 5\" id=\"return-footnote-44-2\" href=\"#footnote-44-2\" aria-label=\"Footnote 2\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[2]<\/sup><\/a> Likewise, non-Bolshevik radical groups like the IWW were decimated by Red Scare operations like the Palmer Raids and the overall decline in union activity during the 1920s.\u00a0 In terms of nationwide activity, the IWW has been an empty husk ever since 1920.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Roy Wortman, From Syndicalism To Trade Unionism: The IWW in Ohio 1905-1950, (New York: Garland Publishing, 1985), 101\" id=\"return-footnote-44-3\" href=\"#footnote-44-3\" aria-label=\"Footnote 3\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[3]<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0But what about the Great Depression?\u00a0 Never before was the plight of the American worker so great, the unemployed so many, or capitalism\u2019s contradiction of poverty-within-overproduction so stark and lucid.\u00a0 If the remnants of 1919 were to revive themselves, this would have been their chance.\u00a0 In what ways, if any, did the specter of the Cleveland radical left which was on display in 1919 show itself during the Great Depression?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>Given the factious nature of the American left during the 1930s, there are a multitude of groups one could use to draw out the legacy of the Cleveland radicals of 1919.\u00a0 Two vital organizations to follow are the CPUSA, the party led by Ruthenberg until his death in 1927, and the IWW.\u00a0 No other national leftist group held as much of the public attention as the CPUSA, given its direct ties to the USSR through the Comintern.\u00a0 The IWW remains notable in the Cleveland context because, in the period from 1934 to 1950, the Cleveland IWW\u2019s Metal and Machine Workers\u2019 Industrial Union 440 (IU 440) was exceptional for being the only IWW local to dominate any major industry after the 1920 collapse of the organization.\u00a0 These two groups, in their failures and successes in the 1930s, indicate the two paths the legacy of Cleveland radicalism took: a slavish devotion to the prestige of Russian Bolshevism and a reformist recuperation under the labor-friendly politics of the New Deal coalition.<\/p>\n<h2 style=\"text-align: center\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW227954900 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW227954900 BCX0\">Subsection: The CPUSA and The Decline of May Day in Cleveland<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW227954900 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>With the onset of the Great Depression with Black Tuesday in October, 1929, the United States and Cleveland were beset by massive unemployment.\u00a0 The prosperity and growth of the 1920s in Cleveland gave way to the Depression at an astounding rate, resulting in about 41,000 unemployed in April, 1930, and 100,000 in January, 1931, in a city of about 900,000 people.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Carol Miller and Robert Wheeler, Cleveland: A Concise History, 1796-1996, (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1997), 136\" id=\"return-footnote-44-4\" href=\"#footnote-44-4\" aria-label=\"Footnote 4\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[4]<\/sup><\/a> While $200 million in direct aid and work relief were provided from 1928 to 1937, this paled in comparison to Cuyahoga County\u2019s loss of $1.2 billion in salaries and wages during that period.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid\" id=\"return-footnote-44-5\" href=\"#footnote-44-5\" aria-label=\"Footnote 5\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[5]<\/sup><\/a>At least initially, it seemed that the CPUSA was poised to exploit this disaster and grow its membership in the midst of disaster, just as Ruthenberg had grown the party during the economic and political stresses of World War I.\u00a0 The CPUSA sought to expand its membership, after Black Tuesday, by organizing the unemployed, appealing to those most vulgarized by capitalist crises.\u00a0 This took the form of putting together \u201cUnemployed Councils\u201d which would agitate and use protests to prod officials for relief.\u00a0<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Klehr, Heyday, 49-50\" id=\"return-footnote-44-6\" href=\"#footnote-44-6\" aria-label=\"Footnote 6\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[6]<\/sup><\/a> Most importantly the CPUSA, in conjunction with its Comintern affiliates, organized an International Unemployment Day on March 6, 1930, in which thousands marched, demanding various forms of relief, as well as diplomatic recognition of the Soviet Union.\u00a0 It turned out to be a greater success than the CPUSA could have hoped.\u00a0 Between preparations with the Unemployed Councils and spontaneous support from bystanders, the marches in major cities defied expectations and the New York City demonstration was noted for devolving into a large riot and brawl with the police while other cities remained more passive in their confrontations.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., 34\" id=\"return-footnote-44-7\" href=\"#footnote-44-7\" aria-label=\"Footnote 7\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[7]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>In Cleveland, March 6, 1930 was a similar \u201csuccess.\u201d\u00a0 Dubbed \u201cRed Thursday\u201d by the press, the official Communist demonstrations in Ohio concluded without any violence.\u00a0 The Plain Dealer estimated there were a total of 10,000 people, about 2,500 Communists and 7,500 bystanders and interested onlookers.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Plain Dealer, March 7, 1930\" id=\"return-footnote-44-8\" href=\"#footnote-44-8\" aria-label=\"Footnote 8\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[8]<\/sup><\/a> The Communists assembled in Public Square, marched to City Hall, gave speeches, read demands, talked with the mayor, and dispersed peacefully.\u00a0 The demands communicated by John Adams, district organizer of the Communist Party for Ohio and West Virginia, included \u201cappropriation of funds to be placed at the disposal of the unemployed workers for relief, unemployment insurance, establishment of the seven-hour day and five day week\u2026abolition of the criminal syndicalist law and recognition of Soviet Russia.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid\" id=\"return-footnote-44-9\" href=\"#footnote-44-9\" aria-label=\"Footnote 9\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[9]<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0As far as the <em>Plain Dealer<\/em> was concerned, there were two notable aspects to March 6 in Cleveland.\u00a0 The first was the personage of Lil Andrews, \u201cGirl Communist\u201d and leader of the district\u2019s Youth Communist League, who engaged in a witty dialogue with Cleveland Mayor John Marshall (brackets indicate paraphrasing by the <em>Plain Dealer<\/em>):<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>Marshall: \u201cThere\u2019s no use of my trying to fool you people.\u00a0 Suppose we put everybody in this crowd to work.\u00a0 Tomorrow we\u2019d have twice as many unemployed here from other cities.\u00a0 So far as putting money at your disposal, there is no legal way in which that could be done, even if the [city] Council wanted to do it.\u00a0 The five-day week is a matter of agreement.\u00a0 The abolition of child labor is a matter of state or federal law.\u00a0 You surely must realize that the city government has nothing to do with the recognition of Russia.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>Andrews: [I don\u2019t see why the city cannot levy a tax on the profits of Cleveland businesses from last year.]<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>Marshall: \u201cSuppose for the sake of argument that we did that.\u00a0 It would take a year or a year and a half to collect the tax, and you want relief now.\u00a0 Maybe a year from now you won\u2019t need it.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>Andrews: \u201cThen, you admit the inability of the city to meet our demands?\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>Marshall: [Yes]<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>Andrews: \u201cTherefore you admit the government is no good for the workers.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>Marshall: \u201cI wouldn\u2019t say that.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>Andrews: \u201cThat\u2019s what we think.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid\" id=\"return-footnote-44-10\" href=\"#footnote-44-10\" aria-label=\"Footnote 10\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[10]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>The second notable aspect of March 6 in Cleveland was that, after the official demonstration, there was \u201ca crowd of about 500 hangers-on lingering in Public Square\u201d whom the police violently dispersed with mounted police.\u00a0 As the <em>Dealer<\/em> put it: \u201cThere was no riot\u2026But for about 3 minutes Public Square was the scene of greater confusion than at any time since the May Day riot of 1919.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid\" id=\"return-footnote-44-11\" href=\"#footnote-44-11\" aria-label=\"Footnote 11\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[11]<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0International Unemployment Day was the closest to a repeat of May Day 1919 the city would ever see, but the <em>Plain Dealer<\/em> displayed none of the wrath or fear of its earlier coverage.\u00a0 Even with the unexpected outpouring of support for March 6, the Communists elicited curiosity in bystanders, not political reaction.\u00a0\u00a0 As one article concluded, \u201cby 4:30 the pigeons reigned in the Square once more.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid\" id=\"return-footnote-44-12\" href=\"#footnote-44-12\" aria-label=\"Footnote 12\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[12]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>March 6 proved to be a flash in the pan and was not indicative of stupendous growth for the CPUSA in Cleveland or elsewhere.\u00a0 May Day, 1930 registered as a nonevent: \u201cMay Day in Cleveland broke no heads and made no history\u2026The police were ready but found nothing to do.\u00a0 Everybody was satisfied, unless it be some unsung hotspur thirsting for martyrdom.\u00a0 From his standpoint the disappointing feature of the day was that no martyrs to Communism were made.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Plain Dealer, May 2, 1930\" id=\"return-footnote-44-13\" href=\"#footnote-44-13\" aria-label=\"Footnote 13\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[13]<\/sup><\/a> March 6 proved itself an anomaly and the newspaper which once bristled with demands to restrict the rights of leftists, in response to a tepid May Day of about 600 Communists, now declared that \u201cThe right of petition and of free assemblage is so fundamental to liberty that any effort to suppress it is not only unfair but unsafe.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid\" id=\"return-footnote-44-14\" href=\"#footnote-44-14\" aria-label=\"Footnote 14\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[14]<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0 May Day 1933 was similarly languid.\u00a0 About 1,500 Communists assembled in Public Square, made demands for unemployment relief, denounced Nazi persecution of Jews, and sang songs like \u201cSolidarity Forever\u201d and \u201cWave, Scarlet Banner Triumphantly (Bandiera Rossa)\u201d; seemingly gone were the days of leftists singing \u201cStar-Spangled Banner.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., May 2, 1933\" id=\"return-footnote-44-15\" href=\"#footnote-44-15\" aria-label=\"Footnote 15\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[15]<\/sup><\/a> Gone also, or for the most part, was the obsession with flags as symbols.\u00a0 When \u201csome city employee had hauled down the [American or Cleveland] flag from the Public Square flag pole just before the meeting,\u201d only the local American Legion chairman seemed to care about the symbolism of such an act.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid\" id=\"return-footnote-44-16\" href=\"#footnote-44-16\" aria-label=\"Footnote 16\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[16]<\/sup><\/a> This trend of the Cleveland Communists making a poor show of their political acumen continued through the decade.\u00a0 While \u201ccampaigning\u201d for Ohio Governor, Cleveland CPUSA leader Andrew Onda was stereotypically assaulted with vegetables while speaking in Bellefontaine, Ohio, in 1936<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., Oct 4, 1936\" id=\"return-footnote-44-17\" href=\"#footnote-44-17\" aria-label=\"Footnote 17\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[17]<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0and the anti-fascist periodical FIGHT publicly shamed Cleveland for its poor sales, notably being out-ordered by much smaller cities at a rate of 20:1.\u00a0 As they put it:<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">Where are the trade unionists of Cleveland?\u00a0 Where are the students and professional groups?\u00a0 Where are the Socialists and Communists?\u00a0 Where are the militant workers?\u00a0 Is Cleveland with a population of one million sastified with a sale of 25 copies of FIGHT?\u00a0 Is there no struggle against War and Fascism in Cleveland?<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Fight \u2013 Against War and Fascism, May, 1934\" id=\"return-footnote-44-18\" href=\"#footnote-44-18\" aria-label=\"Footnote 18\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[18]<\/sup><\/a><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>The closest the CPUSA ever came to re-approaching the socialist civic-nationalism of old was while acting under the \u201cPopular Front\u201d policy of the Comintern, which dictated that Communist parties align with non-proletarian groups, up to and including liberal and conservative political parties, to counteract the expansion of fascism.\u00a0 Accepted hesitantly by the CPUSA leader during the 1930s and early 40s, Earl Browder, this resulted in the CPUSA becoming more \u201cpatriotic,\u201d at least in public.\u00a0 Thus, on January 22, 1939, Cleveland was the stage for the national leader of the CPUSA publicly singing \u201cStar Spangled Banner\u201d while welcoming back Cleveland veterans of the Abraham Lincoln Brigades from the Spanish Civil War.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Plain Dealer, January 23, 1939\" id=\"return-footnote-44-19\" href=\"#footnote-44-19\" aria-label=\"Footnote 19\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[19]<\/sup><\/a> Tellingly, the May Day in Cleveland for that year was restricted to the protest by several hundred Communists of the German consulate, itself closed for the holiday.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., May 2, 1939\" id=\"return-footnote-44-20\" href=\"#footnote-44-20\" aria-label=\"Footnote 20\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[20]<\/sup><\/a> In other words, it was only under pressure from the Comintern to \u201cbe more American\u201d that the CPUSA adopted the trappings of the civic-nationalism which defined the political tenor of the movement two decades prior, creating phrases like \u201cCommunism is 20th century Americanism\u201d.\u00a0 During this period Cleveland\u2019s May Day, with the exception of the one-off International Unemployment Day, had degraded from a city-trembling march to a petty-protest done mostly on the part of Moscow-signed directives.\u00a0 When assessing the legacy of Cleveland May Day, 1919, the CPUSA represents one direction toward which that radicalism developed: rigid Stalinist ideology, tepid tactics and demonstrations, and the marginalization of Cleveland as a center of American leftism.<\/p>\n<h2 style=\"text-align: center\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW60616330 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW60616330 BCX0\">Subsection: The IWW and The Recuperation of Industrial Action<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW60616330 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/h2>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>Of course, the CPUSA was not the only radical group to survive the leftist disasters of 1919-20.\u00a0 While the CPUSA had focused its efforts on organizing the unemployed during the Great Depression, its membership often being primarily unemployed,<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Klehr, Heyday, 161\" id=\"return-footnote-44-21\" href=\"#footnote-44-21\" aria-label=\"Footnote 21\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[21]<\/sup><\/a> the remnants of the Industrial Workers of the World, also often being unemployed, remained ideologically centered in the labor movement, particularly in Cleveland.\u00a0 In contrast to the unity of the 1910s, the Russian Bolshevik persecution of anarchists and IWW refugees sowed great animosity between the Wobblies and their Bolshevik-inspired neighbors, often criticizing the later for being unlike the civic-nationalists they once were: the likes of the CPUSA had taken up \u201ctraditional Russian icon worship\u201d in their veneration of the great Bolshevik revolutionaries, had become dictatorial in party structure, dogmatic in ideology, and disconnected from the \u201cessence of the American people.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Wortman, IWW in Ohio, 102-3\" id=\"return-footnote-44-22\" href=\"#footnote-44-22\" aria-label=\"Footnote 22\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[22]<\/sup><\/a> In the eyes of the Depression-era IWW, their own moribund group was the only sufficiently democratic radical leftist organization in the U.S.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>Finally, by 1934, it seemed as if the IWW would make its return.\u00a0 Though it lost union control of Detroit to the UAW, the IWW\u2019s IU 440 began to win strikes and shop-control in the metal working sector of Cleveland, gaining a membership that ranged from 1,600 to 10,000 in the period from 1934-1950.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid 108\" id=\"return-footnote-44-23\" href=\"#footnote-44-23\" aria-label=\"Footnote 23\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[23]<\/sup><\/a> This success came under the leadership of the Cedervall brothers, Frank and Tor, who built up 440 with an ideology of anti-Communist and anti-fascist unionism, but also dissociated from the IWW\u2019s original anarchist and utopian ideology which had advocated vigorous struggles to build a syndicalist polity.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid 110\" id=\"return-footnote-44-24\" href=\"#footnote-44-24\" aria-label=\"Footnote 24\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[24]<\/sup><\/a> In his own words, Frank Cedervall described his ideology as \u201cnon-political, not anti-political\u2026non-religious, not anti-religious\u2026against nationalism and for the recognition of the universal brotherhood of all men\u2026opposed to violence whether committed by government or individual men.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid 111\" id=\"return-footnote-44-25\" href=\"#footnote-44-25\" aria-label=\"Footnote 25\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[25]<\/sup><\/a> The goals of the Cleveland IWW during the Great Depression were to be an effective union for its members and to not let the organization\u2019s past utopian dreams hamper that.\u00a0 In practice, this resulted in IU 440 taking full advantage of the pro-labor political climate of the Roosevelt years, including participation in the National Labor Relations Board system.\u00a0 In a twist of historical irony, an IWW local won labor representation for the Draper Manufacturing Company over the AFL through the auspices the NLRB, in other words, the federal government.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid. 129\" id=\"return-footnote-44-26\" href=\"#footnote-44-26\" aria-label=\"Footnote 26\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[26]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>IU 440\u2019s pragmatism also resulted in it breaking one of the sacred doctrines of the IWW, namely the signing of labor contracts.\u00a0 While contracts were originally conceived as a \u201ccapitulation to capitalism,\u201d the IWW justified its signing of contracts with the American Stove Company with the claim that \u201cContract Protects Solidarity.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Industrial Worker, May 29, 1937; as quoted in Ibid., 133\" id=\"return-footnote-44-27\" href=\"#footnote-44-27\" aria-label=\"Footnote 27\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[27]<\/sup><\/a> Through a willingness to bend principles to present realities, IU 440 had achieved success no other IWW local in the country had had since 1920, becoming the largest source of membership and dues for the national organization.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid 180\" id=\"return-footnote-44-28\" href=\"#footnote-44-28\" aria-label=\"Footnote 28\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[28]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>Nonetheless, this turn towards \u201cpragmatism\u201d was not merely the employment of labor legislation and legal structures to advance \u201cradical trade unionism,\u201d but represented a fundamental de-ideological shift in the Cleveland IWW.\u00a0 As Frank Cedervall reflected, \u201cIdealism is a wonderful thing, but job control is a far more practical factor in holding a dues-paying membership in good standing.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid 154\" id=\"return-footnote-44-29\" href=\"#footnote-44-29\" aria-label=\"Footnote 29\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[29]<\/sup><\/a> By the 1940s, IU 440 was seen as the IWW\u2019s rightwing anomaly.\u00a0 The national organization noted that there was \u201ca very slight absorption of IWW philosophy\u201d by the membership.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid 125\" id=\"return-footnote-44-30\" href=\"#footnote-44-30\" aria-label=\"Footnote 30\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[30]<\/sup><\/a> Put differently, \u201cto place a Wobbly union card in a man\u2019s pocket was an easier task than to inculcate IWW ideals in his heart.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid 125\" id=\"return-footnote-44-31\" href=\"#footnote-44-31\" aria-label=\"Footnote 31\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[31]<\/sup><\/a> This ideological-pragmatic difference of opinion ultimately came to a head in the late 1940s with arguments over the practice of signing labor contracts and the passage of the Taft-Hartley law which, among other labor-union restrictions, required union officials to sign non-Communist affidavits.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., 176\" id=\"return-footnote-44-32\" href=\"#footnote-44-32\" aria-label=\"Footnote 32\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[32]<\/sup><\/a> Despite being anti-Communist, the IWW national office had leftist principles and an organizational history of opposition to such state-driven witch hunts, as well as political issues with the other provisions of Taft-Hartley.\u00a0 Attached to a national office which refused to sign the affidavits, and thus gain union recognition for the NLRB, Cleveland\u2019s pragmatic IU 440, which served their non-ideological workers as well as their ideologists, successfully voted to split from the national IWW in November 1950.\u00a0 By signing the affidavits, the Cleveland IWW fully integrated itself into the American labor mainstream, incorporating itself into larger unions until it became part of the AFL-CIO.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid 180\" id=\"return-footnote-44-33\" href=\"#footnote-44-33\" aria-label=\"Footnote 33\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[33]<\/sup><\/a> Through the Cleveland IWW, one segment of the Cleveland radical tradition of 1919 came in from the cold, but at the cost of anything that would have identified it with that IWW which marched along with Ruthenberg and the broader Cleveland radical left.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400\">\n<p>The CPUSA and IWW of Cleveland represent the two extremes of what ultimately became of that radical political tradition of Cleveland and the Midwest that was on display in the May Day riots of 1919.\u00a0 The CPUSA remained at the fringes, becoming the \u201cforeign ideology\u201d the left was always derided as, with the exception of the Comintern-dictated Popular Front period which prescribed patriotism as a USSR foreign policy.\u00a0 The success of the CPUSA among Cleveland\u2019s unemployed were spectacular, but was ultimately measured in hours.\u00a0 The IWW kept its democratic character, and in that sense remained \u201cAmerican,\u201d but the manner in which Cleveland\u2019s \u201cOne Big Union\u201d took advantage of the Great Depression and the New Deal sacrificed the political content of \u201cradical trade unionism.\u201d\u00a0 The <em>Plain Dealer<\/em> editors and letter writers\u2019 original portrayal of America\u2019s relation to radicalism, where it was a distinction between \u201cAmericanism\u201d and \u201cforeignism,\u201d proved true in more ways than one; the left itself came to conform to this dichotomy.\u00a0 In time, this divide became a reality and the Cleveland left(s) took up positions on either side of the Cold War split.\u00a0 The sort of \u201cradical-center\u201d which united proto-Bolsheviks, Wobblies, and left-AFLs around leaders like Debs and Ruthenberg did not hold after 1919, and the subsequent history of American radicalism until at least the 1960s\u2019 New Left was Soviet Bolshevism or left-liberal capitalism.\u00a0 With the decline of socialistic civic-nationalism in Cleveland, May Day dissolved as a notable event in the city; after 1919, it was all downhill.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<hr class=\"before-footnotes clear\" \/><div class=\"footnotes\"><ol><li id=\"footnote-44-1\">Millett, \u201cCharles E. Ruthenberg\u201d: 205 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-1\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 1\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-2\">Harvey Klehr, <em>The Heyday of American Communism: The Depression Decade<\/em>, (New York: Basic Books, 1984), 5 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-2\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 2\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-3\">Roy Wortman, <em>From Syndicalism To Trade Unionism: The IWW in Ohio 1905-1950<\/em>, (New York: Garland Publishing, 1985), 101 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-3\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 3\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-4\">Carol Miller and Robert Wheeler, <em>Cleveland: A Concise History, 1796-1996<\/em>, (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1997), 136 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-4\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 4\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-5\">Ibid <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-5\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 5\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-6\">Klehr, <em>Heyday<\/em>, 49-50 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-6\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 6\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-7\">Ibid., 34 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-7\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 7\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-8\"><em>Plain Dealer<\/em>, March 7, 1930 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-8\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 8\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-9\">Ibid <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-9\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 9\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-10\">Ibid <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-10\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 10\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-11\">Ibid <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-11\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 11\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-12\">Ibid <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-12\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 12\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-13\"><em>Plain Dealer<\/em>, May 2, 1930 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-13\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 13\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-14\">Ibid <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-14\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 14\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-15\">Ibid., May 2, 1933 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-15\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 15\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-16\">Ibid <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-16\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 16\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-17\">Ibid., Oct 4, 1936 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-17\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 17\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-18\"><em>Fight \u2013 Against War and Fascism<\/em>, May, 1934 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-18\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 18\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-19\"><em>Plain Dealer<\/em>, January 23, 1939 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-19\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 19\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-20\">Ibid., May 2, 1939 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-20\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 20\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-21\">Klehr,<em> Heyday<\/em>, 161 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-21\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 21\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-22\">Wortman,<em> IWW in Ohio<\/em>, 102-3 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-22\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 22\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-23\">Ibid 108 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-23\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 23\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-24\">Ibid 110 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-24\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 24\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-25\">Ibid 111 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-25\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 25\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-26\">Ibid. 129 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-26\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 26\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-27\"><em>Industrial Worker<\/em>, May 29, 1937; as quoted in Ibid., 133 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-27\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 27\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-28\">Ibid 180 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-28\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 28\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-29\">Ibid 154 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-29\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 29\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-30\">Ibid 125 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-30\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 30\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-31\">Ibid 125 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-31\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 31\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-32\">Ibid., 176 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-32\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 32\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-44-33\">Ibid 180 <a href=\"#return-footnote-44-33\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 33\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><\/ol><\/div>","protected":false},"author":3,"menu_order":5,"template":"","meta":{"pb_show_title":"on","pb_short_title":"","pb_subtitle":"","pb_authors":[],"pb_section_license":""},"chapter-type":[],"contributor":[],"license":[],"class_list":["post-44","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\/44","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":10,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/44\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":152,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/44\/revisions\/152"}],"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\/44\/metadata\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=44"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"chapter-type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapter-type?post=44"},{"taxonomy":"contributor","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/contributor?post=44"},{"taxonomy":"license","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/license?post=44"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}