{"id":47,"date":"2022-02-01T12:34:13","date_gmt":"2022-02-01T12:34:13","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/?post_type=front-matter&#038;p=47"},"modified":"2022-04-11T19:46:13","modified_gmt":"2022-04-11T19:46:13","slug":"introduction","status":"publish","type":"front-matter","link":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/front-matter\/introduction\/","title":{"rendered":"Introduction"},"content":{"raw":"<span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">May 1,<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> 1919<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> in Cleveland, Ohio,<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> seemed like<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> any other<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> day<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">.\u00a0 The weather was clear<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> and the city, like<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> much of the world, was getting accustomed to peace rather than war<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">.\u00a0 However, the day would be<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> anything but<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">peaceful <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">\u2014<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">as one reporter <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">later put it, <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">the day was <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">characterized by \u201cmounted police at the gallop wielding truncheons on the heads of <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 SCXW145578999 BCX0\">Bolsheviki<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">, citizens and soldiers tearing red flags and trampling them in the mud, [and] tanks from the western battle front charging crowds in the front of the statue of Tom Johnson.\u201d<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW145578999 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW145578999 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]<em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW140780199 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW140780199 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">The Cleveland Plain Dealer<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW140780199 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW140780199 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">, May 5, 1919<\/span><\/span>.[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> An American city from the \u201cheartland\u201d had become the scene of a large, politically-inflected street battle, an event commonly associated with post-war Germany in this era.\u00a0 This event, the Cleveland May Day riots of 1919, offers a historical scene which reveals cross-ethnic solidarity, the beginnings of modern veteran culture, the radicalization of a city, and an ignored tradition of civic-nationalism, all processes which defined one of America\u2019s largest cities during a critical period in the \u201cAmerican Century.\u201d\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW145578999 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span>\r\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\">The days and months leading up to May Day, 1919 in Cleveland were anything but calm.\u00a0 American entry into World War I and the following mobilization introduced patriotic fervor and suppression of political and pacifist dissent, most notably through the Espionage and Sedition Acts.\u00a0 These new laws criminalized, among other activities, anti-war speech as a nationally-subversive action.\u00a0 <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\">While t<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\">hese restrictions would not be a problem for the ardent patriot who followed Woodrow Wilson\u2019s claim that the United States made World War I into a war for democracy and against tyranny; such laws were utterly problematic for the confirmed isolationist<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\">, pacifist, or socialist.\u00a0 Just as<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\"> America became involved in the war, Russia retreated from it, first after the February Revolution, then definitively after the October Revolution and the Bolshevik policy of an immediate end to Russian involvement.\u00a0 The Bolshevik Revolution, the <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\">first major seizure of political power by radical leftists since the Paris Commune of 1871, had electrified the international left.\u00a0 It was soon followed by leftist revolutions in Hungary and Bavaria, which took the Russian cue in naming their form of government \u201cSoviets\/councils.\u201d<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW200598129 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW200598129 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]<span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW175033110\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW175033110\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Eliza<span>\u00a0<\/span><\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 BCX0 DefaultHighlightTransition SCXW175033110\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Ablovatski<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW175033110\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">, \u201cThe 1919 Central European revolutions and the Judeo-Bolshevik myth,\u201d<span>\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW175033110\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW175033110\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">European Review of History: Revue\u00a0<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 BCX0 SCXW175033110\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">europ\u00e9enne<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW175033110\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">\u00a0<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 BCX0 SCXW175033110\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">d'histoire<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW175033110\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW175033110\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">, 17, 3 (2010): 474.<\/span><\/span>[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\">\u00a0By May of 1919, the Bolsheviks had established a firm grasp on many parts of Russia, though they were still engaged in a brutal war against Russian counter-revolutionaries.\u00a0 Constant news coverage on the expansion of the revolution appeared side by side with coverage of the ongoing Paris Peace Conference that would ultimately produce the Treaty of Versailles.<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW200598129 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\r\n\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\r\n\r\nWhile President Woodrow Wilson was in Paris trying to forge an equitable peace settlement, the United States, like many other nations, was in the midst of economic and social upheaval.\u00a0 Economic troubles, low wages, and shortages were quietly suffered during the war by \u201cpatriots\u201d and protested by many anti-war liberals and leftists.\u00a0 With the war at an end, the conflicts endemic to industrial society erupted again.\u00a0 In April, a vast anarchist letter-bomb conspiracy revealed itself, which targeted, but failed to kill, a swath of anti-radical and anti-immigrant public figures, including federal officials like Attorney General A. M. Palmer, the governor of Mississippi, the mayors of Seattle and New York, and the businessmen J. D. Rockefeller and J.P. Morgan Jr.[footnote]<em style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW238640123 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW238640123 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Chicago Tribune<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW238640123 BCX0\" style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW238640123 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">, May 1, 1919.<\/span><\/span>[\/footnote]The nation sank into a state of terror, and a similar bomb plot occurred in June that year.\u00a0 The Seattle general strike, which lasted from February 6 through 11, also entered the forefront of the national consciousness.\u00a0 Initiated by radical unions associated with the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) for a modest wage increase, even conservative American Federation of Labor (AFL) unions joined in a sympathy strike that effectively shut down the city for a quiet week, during which the conservative press and mayor Ole Hanson feared a Bolshevik revolution was underway in the Pacific Northwest.[footnote]<span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\" style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Jeremy<span>\u00a0<\/span><\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Brecher<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">,<span>\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/span><em style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Strike!<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\" style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><span>\u00a0<\/span>(San Francisco<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">: Straight Arrow Books 1972), 111<\/span><\/span>.[\/footnote]\u00a0As Hanson later recalled:\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\r\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">The so-called sympathetic Seattle strike was an attempted revolution. That there was no violence does not alter the fact...The intent, openly and covertly announced, was for the overthrow of the industrial system; here first, then everywhere...True, there were no flashing guns, no bombs, no killings. Revolution, I repeat, doesn't need violence. The general strike, as practiced in Seattle, is of itself the weapon of revolution, all the more dangerous because quiet. To succeed, it must suspend everything; stop the entire life stream of a community...That is to say, it puts the government out of operation. And that is all there is to revolt-no matter how achieved.[footnote]<span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\">Ibid., 111<\/span>.[\/footnote]<\/div>\r\n<span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\">The strike quickly fell apart, mostly on account of the AFL and Teamster unions capitulating to pressure from the national leadership and local fears that the state and federal troops called out to prevent a suspected revolution would inevitably turn violently against the striking workers.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW211733548 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW211733548 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]<span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW242428610 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW242428610 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Ibid., 113-4<\/span><\/span>[\/footnote] <\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\">Revolution or not, Ole Hanson became a self-proclaimed American hero, subsequently quitting his office as mayor to go on the speaking circuit to warn his fellow citizens of the dangers of the American \u201c<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 SCXW211733548 BCX0\">Bolsheviki<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\">.\u201d<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW211733548 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW211733548 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]<span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Robert K. Murray,<\/span><em><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\"><em>Red Scare: A Study in National Hysteria<\/em>, 1919-1920<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">. (<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Minneapolis: Unive<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">rsity of Minnesota Press, 1955), 65-66<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span>.[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\">\u00a0This counter-revolutionary fame <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\">would lead him to take<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\"> part in the traveling Victory Bond campaign, which continued to raise funds to supply America\u2019s still partially-mobilized draft army.\u00a0 Thus, Ole Hanson became one of the main attractions<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\"> <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\">(another was an army tank from the Western Front) of a Victory Bond campaign in Cleveland which was promoted in advertisements in all the city\u2019s major newspapers on May 1.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW211733548 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW211733548 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]<em>Cleveland Press<\/em>, May 6, 1919[\/footnote]\u00a0<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun EmptyTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\"><\/span>\r\n\r\n<span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\">For their celebration of the first of May, otherwise known as International Workers\u2019 Day, various left-wing groups from Cleveland planned to march through the city, led by frequent mayoral candidate and head of the Cleveland branch of the Socialist Party, Charles Ruthenberg.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW144359404 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote] Stephen Millett, \u201cCharles E. Ruthenberg: The Development of an American Communist, 1909-1927,\u201d <em>Ohio History Journal<\/em>,\u00a081 (1972):\u00a0197[\/footnote] <\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\">The Socialists planned four parades, which would meet at the socialist meeting hall, Acme Hall, <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\">then march together to Public Square for speeches, and then dissemble for more festivities later that evening[footnote]Charles Ruthenberg, \u201cCleveland May Day Demonstration,\u201d Revolutionary Age, May 10, 1919.[\/footnote].<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW144359404 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW248875382 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW248875382 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\">Come the morning of May 1, everything had proceeded smoothly.\u00a0 An estimated 30,000 marchers had gathered at Acme Hall and begun the march to the city\u2019s center[footnote]The most conservative estimate for the parade\u2019s size is 5,000 (see: Millet, 202) and the most liberal is Ruthenberg\u2019s rough 50,000 people (see: Revolutionary Age, May 10, 1919), with several newspapers estimating somewhere between these two numbers, from about 10,000 or 20,000. As is noted elsewhere in this paper, even the Russian language branch of the Socialist Party exceeded 5,000, so Millett\u2019s conservative estimate appears false. Given that Ruthenberg has every reason to inflate the number, this author has chosen to take the average at around 30,000. Also accounting for the fact, cited below, that police arrested many bystanders by accident once the riots started, it seems impossible to ever get a truly accurate estimate from the contemporary historical accounts, because they had trouble differentiating bystanders from socialists.[\/footnote]. <\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW144359404 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><sup>\u00a0<\/sup><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\">Bearing flags and bedazzled in red pennants and ribbons, workers from various Socialist, IWW,<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW144359404 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]The IWW, or International Workers of the World, a union confederation, advocated a strain of radical socialism termed \u201canarcho-syndicalism,\u201d which envisions the tactical transition beyond capitalism to necessarily come from direct action by workers in the workplace.\u00a0 By organizing every type of worker in every industry, unions pave the way for a new type of society centered on the democratic control of factories and shops by workers, organized on the macro level by groups like the IWW as the \u201cOne Big Union.\u201d\u00a0 Their most powerful weapon was the general strike of its various workers, as seen in Seattle 1919.\u00a0 Also present at the May Day riots were Daniel DeLeon\u2019s WIIU, or Workers' International Industrial Union, a splinter of the IWW who supported some measure of political participation in the IWW platform[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\"> and AFL[footnote]The AFL, or American Federation of Labor, another union confederation, was politically eclectic, though nationally conservative under its long term leader Samuel Gompers from 1886 to 1924. A much larger organization than the IWW or Socialist Party, many debates by Socialists centered on the issue as to whether to work with, within, or against a \u201cpro-business\u201d union that coordinated with the U.S. government during World War I. Due to its size, one could likely find the most \u201cpatriotic\u201d and the most radical unions in a region to both participate in the AFL.[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\">\u00a0unions and Great War veterans <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\">who <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\">were there to announce their anti-capitalist politics, protest the ongoing American expedition into Civil War Siberia, and demand the release of Eugene V. Debs, Socialist icon and victim of government suppression of anti-war speech.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW144359404 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]Charles Ruthenberg, \u201cCleveland May Day Demonstration,\u201d <em>Revolutionary Age<\/em>, May 10, 1919[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun EmptyTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW144359404 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span>\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\r\n\r\n<span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">While planned as a peaceful demonstration, there were concerns about possible trouble.\u00a0 As the <\/span><\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">New York Times<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> would later recall, \u201ctwo machine-gun companies, equipped with motor trucks\u201d were stationed outside the city \u201cin the event the police proved unable to cope with [May <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">Day].\u201d<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW18992035 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]<em>The New York Times<\/em>, May 3, 1919[\/footnote] <\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">Police were on hand to maintain the peace;<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> regardl<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">ess, conflict arose.\u00a0 Fights broke out before all of the parade colum<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">n had reached Public Square.\u00a0 As<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> one part of the column<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> passed by<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">, a uniformed soldier who had been watching the parade approached another uniformed soldier who was marching with a red flag and attempted to take the flag.\u00a0 Allies of each and the police came to break the small struggle, but it expanded into a larger brawl.\u00a0 A<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> massive fight<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> developed between the \u201c<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 SCXW18992035 BCX0\">Bolsheviki<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">\u201d marchers and the, as the <\/span><\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">Cleveland Press<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> referred to them, \u201cloyalist\u201d citizens, veterans, and policemen.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW18992035 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 SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">P<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">itched battles then spread across the city.\u00a0 Fighting erupted at Public Square, where a public stand previously used by the Victory Bond campaign days earlier was commandeered by Ruthenberg and his followers.\u00a0 Almost immediately, soldiers and citizens assaulted them, demanding the destruction of red flags.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW18992035 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]<em>Revolutionary Age<\/em>, May 10, 1919[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> As part of its efforts to clear out the mobs of people, the police mobilized police trucks, cars, and even the Victory Bond tank.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW18992035 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]<em>Cleveland Plain Dealer<\/em>, May 2, 1919[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> The results of the violence were one-sided, with just over a hundred socialists, including Ruthenberg, arrested (no \u201cloyalists\u201d were arrested), two socialists killed, many people wounded, and the Socialist headquarters at Acme Hall ransacked.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW18992035 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\">[footnote]<em>Revolutionary Age<\/em>, May 10, 1919[\/footnote]<\/span><\/span>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\r\n\r\nThe Cleveland May Day riots, one of the more dramatic and violent events in the United States during the globally tumultuous year of 1919, opens many questions about the city and the nation during that period.\u00a0 Possible inquiries extend from broad questions of political symbolism to more detailed issues relating to individual identity and intent.\u00a0 While the narrative of the riot is fairly well documented, the socialists of Cleveland who participated in it, along with issues of personal motivation, remain historical cyphers.\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\r\n\r\nCleveland was one of the leading American cities in this era, yet conflicting reports from the time implied that Cleveland was either a thoroughly \u201cAmerican\u201d city, or a home to a set of foreign-born revolutionaries eager and immediately able to install a Marxist-Leninist dictatorship of the proletariat.\u00a0 This paper probes this dichotomy of historical image by examining four different \u201ccontexts\u201d relating to the city, the riots, and their participants.\u00a0 The first is the identity of the marchers, or \u201cRed Rioters,\u201d and how this identity fits into different conceptions of Cleveland, American or alien, in the early twentieth century.\u00a0 The second is the split image of the soldier or veteran during the immediate post-war era, an issue prompted by the fact that it was soldiers who acted as the vanguard in attacking a group of protestors that also included men in uniform.\u00a0 The third is the place of the riots in the overall political history of the Socialist Party in particular and the leftist movement in general in Cleveland, as well as Cleveland\u2019s relation to the movement throughout Ohio and the Midwest.\u00a0 The final context is the nature of the ideology embodied in the march.\u00a0 Rather than an expression of Bolshevism, the May Day marchers and their leftist movement adhered to a sort of American-socialist civic-nationalism, in contradistinction to a competing concept of a \u201cblood and soil\u201d nationalism that developed in the course of the Great War and Red Scare.\u00a0 While the Cleveland May Day riots are admittedly only a single event in American history, it has links to larger national and international questions, particularly those that relate to words and labels such as radical, patriot, alien, and American.\u00a0 When Ole Hanson, Eugene Debs, the Socialist Party, the Victory Bond campaign, tanks, red flags, and the immigrant and radical heritages of Cleveland, the Midwest, and the United States came together on May 1, 1919, the mixture proved to be both volatile and of more than local historical consequence.\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n<\/div>","rendered":"<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">May 1,<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> 1919<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> in Cleveland, Ohio,<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> seemed like<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> any other<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> day<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">.\u00a0 The weather was clear<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> and the city, like<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> much of the world, was getting accustomed to peace rather than war<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">.\u00a0 However, the day would be<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> anything but<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">peaceful <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">\u2014<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">as one reporter <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">later put it, <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">the day was <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">characterized by \u201cmounted police at the gallop wielding truncheons on the heads of <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 SCXW145578999 BCX0\">Bolsheviki<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\">, citizens and soldiers tearing red flags and trampling them in the mud, [and] tanks from the western battle front charging crowds in the front of the statue of Tom Johnson.\u201d<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW145578999 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW145578999 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"The Cleveland Plain Dealer, May 5, 1919.\" id=\"return-footnote-47-1\" href=\"#footnote-47-1\" 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 SCXW145578999 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW145578999 BCX0\"> An American city from the \u201cheartland\u201d had become the scene of a large, politically-inflected street battle, an event commonly associated with post-war Germany in this era.\u00a0 This event, the Cleveland May Day riots of 1919, offers a historical scene which reveals cross-ethnic solidarity, the beginnings of modern veteran culture, the radicalization of a city, and an ignored tradition of civic-nationalism, all processes which defined one of America\u2019s largest cities during a critical period in the \u201cAmerican Century.\u201d\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW145578999 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\">The days and months leading up to May Day, 1919 in Cleveland were anything but calm.\u00a0 American entry into World War I and the following mobilization introduced patriotic fervor and suppression of political and pacifist dissent, most notably through the Espionage and Sedition Acts.\u00a0 These new laws criminalized, among other activities, anti-war speech as a nationally-subversive action.\u00a0 <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\">While t<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\">hese restrictions would not be a problem for the ardent patriot who followed Woodrow Wilson\u2019s claim that the United States made World War I into a war for democracy and against tyranny; such laws were utterly problematic for the confirmed isolationist<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\">, pacifist, or socialist.\u00a0 Just as<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\"> America became involved in the war, Russia retreated from it, first after the February Revolution, then definitively after the October Revolution and the Bolshevik policy of an immediate end to Russian involvement.\u00a0 The Bolshevik Revolution, the <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\">first major seizure of political power by radical leftists since the Paris Commune of 1871, had electrified the international left.\u00a0 It was soon followed by leftist revolutions in Hungary and Bavaria, which took the Russian cue in naming their form of government \u201cSoviets\/councils.\u201d<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW200598129 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW200598129 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Eliza\u00a0Ablovatski, \u201cThe 1919 Central European revolutions and the Judeo-Bolshevik myth,\u201d\u00a0European Review of History: Revue\u00a0europ\u00e9enne\u00a0d'histoire, 17, 3 (2010): 474.\" id=\"return-footnote-47-2\" href=\"#footnote-47-2\" aria-label=\"Footnote 2\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[2]<\/sup><\/a><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW200598129 BCX0\">\u00a0By May of 1919, the Bolsheviks had established a firm grasp on many parts of Russia, though they were still engaged in a brutal war against Russian counter-revolutionaries.\u00a0 Constant news coverage on the expansion of the revolution appeared side by side with coverage of the ongoing Paris Peace Conference that would ultimately produce the Treaty of Versailles.<\/span><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW200598129 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\n<p>While President Woodrow Wilson was in Paris trying to forge an equitable peace settlement, the United States, like many other nations, was in the midst of economic and social upheaval.\u00a0 Economic troubles, low wages, and shortages were quietly suffered during the war by \u201cpatriots\u201d and protested by many anti-war liberals and leftists.\u00a0 With the war at an end, the conflicts endemic to industrial society erupted again.\u00a0 In April, a vast anarchist letter-bomb conspiracy revealed itself, which targeted, but failed to kill, a swath of anti-radical and anti-immigrant public figures, including federal officials like Attorney General A. M. Palmer, the governor of Mississippi, the mayors of Seattle and New York, and the businessmen J. D. Rockefeller and J.P. Morgan Jr.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Chicago Tribune, May 1, 1919.\" id=\"return-footnote-47-3\" href=\"#footnote-47-3\" aria-label=\"Footnote 3\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[3]<\/sup><\/a>The nation sank into a state of terror, and a similar bomb plot occurred in June that year.\u00a0 The Seattle general strike, which lasted from February 6 through 11, also entered the forefront of the national consciousness.\u00a0 Initiated by radical unions associated with the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) for a modest wage increase, even conservative American Federation of Labor (AFL) unions joined in a sympathy strike that effectively shut down the city for a quiet week, during which the conservative press and mayor Ole Hanson feared a Bolshevik revolution was underway in the Pacific Northwest.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Jeremy\u00a0Brecher,\u00a0Strike!\u00a0(San Francisco: Straight Arrow Books 1972), 111.\" id=\"return-footnote-47-4\" href=\"#footnote-47-4\" aria-label=\"Footnote 4\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[4]<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0As Hanson later recalled:<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\n<div class=\"textbox shaded\">The so-called sympathetic Seattle strike was an attempted revolution. That there was no violence does not alter the fact&#8230;The intent, openly and covertly announced, was for the overthrow of the industrial system; here first, then everywhere&#8230;True, there were no flashing guns, no bombs, no killings. Revolution, I repeat, doesn&#8217;t need violence. The general strike, as practiced in Seattle, is of itself the weapon of revolution, all the more dangerous because quiet. To succeed, it must suspend everything; stop the entire life stream of a community&#8230;That is to say, it puts the government out of operation. And that is all there is to revolt-no matter how achieved.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., 111.\" id=\"return-footnote-47-5\" href=\"#footnote-47-5\" aria-label=\"Footnote 5\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[5]<\/sup><\/a><\/div>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\">The strike quickly fell apart, mostly on account of the AFL and Teamster unions capitulating to pressure from the national leadership and local fears that the state and federal troops called out to prevent a suspected revolution would inevitably turn violently against the striking workers.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW211733548 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW211733548 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., 113-4\" id=\"return-footnote-47-6\" href=\"#footnote-47-6\" 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 SCXW211733548 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\">Revolution or not, Ole Hanson became a self-proclaimed American hero, subsequently quitting his office as mayor to go on the speaking circuit to warn his fellow citizens of the dangers of the American \u201c<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 SCXW211733548 BCX0\">Bolsheviki<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\">.\u201d<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW211733548 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW211733548 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Robert K. Murray,\u00a0Red Scare: A Study in National Hysteria, 1919-1920. (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1955), 65-66\u00a0.\" id=\"return-footnote-47-7\" href=\"#footnote-47-7\" 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 SCXW211733548 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\">\u00a0This counter-revolutionary fame <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\">would lead him to take<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\"> part in the traveling Victory Bond campaign, which continued to raise funds to supply America\u2019s still partially-mobilized draft army.\u00a0 Thus, Ole Hanson became one of the main attractions<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\"> <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\">(another was an army tank from the Western Front) of a Victory Bond campaign in Cleveland which was promoted in advertisements in all the city\u2019s major newspapers on May 1.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW211733548 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW211733548 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Cleveland Press, May 6, 1919\" id=\"return-footnote-47-8\" href=\"#footnote-47-8\" aria-label=\"Footnote 8\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[8]<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun EmptyTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\"><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\">For their celebration of the first of May, otherwise known as International Workers\u2019 Day, various left-wing groups from Cleveland planned to march through the city, led by frequent mayoral candidate and head of the Cleveland branch of the Socialist Party, Charles Ruthenberg.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW144359404 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Stephen Millett, \u201cCharles E. Ruthenberg: The Development of an American Communist, 1909-1927,\u201d Ohio History Journal,\u00a081 (1972):\u00a0197\" id=\"return-footnote-47-9\" href=\"#footnote-47-9\" aria-label=\"Footnote 9\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[9]<\/sup><\/a> <\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\">The Socialists planned four parades, which would meet at the socialist meeting hall, Acme Hall, <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\">then march together to Public Square for speeches, and then dissemble for more festivities later that evening<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Charles Ruthenberg, \u201cCleveland May Day Demonstration,\u201d Revolutionary Age, May 10, 1919.\" id=\"return-footnote-47-10\" href=\"#footnote-47-10\" aria-label=\"Footnote 10\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[10]<\/sup><\/a>.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW144359404 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW248875382 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW248875382 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\">Come the morning of May 1, everything had proceeded smoothly.\u00a0 An estimated 30,000 marchers had gathered at Acme Hall and begun the march to the city\u2019s center<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"The most conservative estimate for the parade\u2019s size is 5,000 (see: Millet, 202) and the most liberal is Ruthenberg\u2019s rough 50,000 people (see: Revolutionary Age, May 10, 1919), with several newspapers estimating somewhere between these two numbers, from about 10,000 or 20,000. As is noted elsewhere in this paper, even the Russian language branch of the Socialist Party exceeded 5,000, so Millett\u2019s conservative estimate appears false. Given that Ruthenberg has every reason to inflate the number, this author has chosen to take the average at around 30,000. Also accounting for the fact, cited below, that police arrested many bystanders by accident once the riots started, it seems impossible to ever get a truly accurate estimate from the contemporary historical accounts, because they had trouble differentiating bystanders from socialists.\" id=\"return-footnote-47-11\" href=\"#footnote-47-11\" 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 Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW144359404 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><sup>\u00a0<\/sup><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\">Bearing flags and bedazzled in red pennants and ribbons, workers from various Socialist, IWW,<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW144359404 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"The IWW, or International Workers of the World, a union confederation, advocated a strain of radical socialism termed \u201canarcho-syndicalism,\u201d which envisions the tactical transition beyond capitalism to necessarily come from direct action by workers in the workplace.\u00a0 By organizing every type of worker in every industry, unions pave the way for a new type of society centered on the democratic control of factories and shops by workers, organized on the macro level by groups like the IWW as the \u201cOne Big Union.\u201d\u00a0 Their most powerful weapon was the general strike of its various workers, as seen in Seattle 1919.\u00a0 Also present at the May Day riots were Daniel DeLeon\u2019s WIIU, or Workers' International Industrial Union, a splinter of the IWW who supported some measure of political participation in the IWW platform\" id=\"return-footnote-47-12\" href=\"#footnote-47-12\" 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 SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\"> and AFL<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"The AFL, or American Federation of Labor, another union confederation, was politically eclectic, though nationally conservative under its long term leader Samuel Gompers from 1886 to 1924. A much larger organization than the IWW or Socialist Party, many debates by Socialists centered on the issue as to whether to work with, within, or against a \u201cpro-business\u201d union that coordinated with the U.S. government during World War I. Due to its size, one could likely find the most \u201cpatriotic\u201d and the most radical unions in a region to both participate in the AFL.\" id=\"return-footnote-47-13\" href=\"#footnote-47-13\" 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 SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\">\u00a0unions and Great War veterans <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\">who <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\">were there to announce their anti-capitalist politics, protest the ongoing American expedition into Civil War Siberia, and demand the release of Eugene V. Debs, Socialist icon and victim of government suppression of anti-war speech.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW144359404 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Charles Ruthenberg, \u201cCleveland May Day Demonstration,\u201d Revolutionary Age, May 10, 1919\" id=\"return-footnote-47-14\" href=\"#footnote-47-14\" aria-label=\"Footnote 14\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[14]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun EmptyTextRun SCXW144359404 BCX0\"><\/span><span class=\"EOP SCXW144359404 BCX0\" data-ccp-props=\"{&quot;201341983&quot;:0,&quot;335559739&quot;:200,&quot;335559740&quot;:480}\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\n<p><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">While planned as a peaceful demonstration, there were concerns about possible trouble.\u00a0 As the <\/span><\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">New York Times<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> would later recall, \u201ctwo machine-gun companies, equipped with motor trucks\u201d were stationed outside the city \u201cin the event the police proved unable to cope with [May <\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">Day].\u201d<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW18992035 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"The New York Times, May 3, 1919\" id=\"return-footnote-47-15\" href=\"#footnote-47-15\" aria-label=\"Footnote 15\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[15]<\/sup><\/a> <\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">Police were on hand to maintain the peace;<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> regardl<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">ess, conflict arose.\u00a0 Fights broke out before all of the parade colum<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">n had reached Public Square.\u00a0 As<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> one part of the column<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> passed by<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">, a uniformed soldier who had been watching the parade approached another uniformed soldier who was marching with a red flag and attempted to take the flag.\u00a0 Allies of each and the police came to break the small struggle, but it expanded into a larger brawl.\u00a0 A<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> massive fight<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> developed between the \u201c<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 SCXW18992035 BCX0\">Bolsheviki<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">\u201d marchers and the, as the <\/span><\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">Cleveland Press<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> referred to them, \u201cloyalist\u201d citizens, veterans, and policemen.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW18992035 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Cleveland Press, May 2, 1919\" id=\"return-footnote-47-16\" href=\"#footnote-47-16\" aria-label=\"Footnote 16\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[16]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">P<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\">itched battles then spread across the city.\u00a0 Fighting erupted at Public Square, where a public stand previously used by the Victory Bond campaign days earlier was commandeered by Ruthenberg and his followers.\u00a0 Almost immediately, soldiers and citizens assaulted them, demanding the destruction of red flags.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW18992035 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Revolutionary Age, May 10, 1919\" id=\"return-footnote-47-17\" href=\"#footnote-47-17\" aria-label=\"Footnote 17\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[17]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> As part of its efforts to clear out the mobs of people, the police mobilized police trucks, cars, and even the Victory Bond tank.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW18992035 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Cleveland Plain Dealer, May 2, 1919\" id=\"return-footnote-47-18\" href=\"#footnote-47-18\" aria-label=\"Footnote 18\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[18]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW18992035 BCX0\"> The results of the violence were one-sided, with just over a hundred socialists, including Ruthenberg, arrested (no \u201cloyalists\u201d were arrested), two socialists killed, many people wounded, and the Socialist headquarters at Acme Hall ransacked.<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun Footnote BlobObject DragDrop SCXW18992035 BCX0\"><span class=\"Superscript SCXW18992035 BCX0\" data-fontsize=\"12\"><a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Revolutionary Age, May 10, 1919\" id=\"return-footnote-47-19\" href=\"#footnote-47-19\" aria-label=\"Footnote 19\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[19]<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\n<p>The Cleveland May Day riots, one of the more dramatic and violent events in the United States during the globally tumultuous year of 1919, opens many questions about the city and the nation during that period.\u00a0 Possible inquiries extend from broad questions of political symbolism to more detailed issues relating to individual identity and intent.\u00a0 While the narrative of the riot is fairly well documented, the socialists of Cleveland who participated in it, along with issues of personal motivation, remain historical cyphers.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\n<p>Cleveland was one of the leading American cities in this era, yet conflicting reports from the time implied that Cleveland was either a thoroughly \u201cAmerican\u201d city, or a home to a set of foreign-born revolutionaries eager and immediately able to install a Marxist-Leninist dictatorship of the proletariat.\u00a0 This paper probes this dichotomy of historical image by examining four different \u201ccontexts\u201d relating to the city, the riots, and their participants.\u00a0 The first is the identity of the marchers, or \u201cRed Rioters,\u201d and how this identity fits into different conceptions of Cleveland, American or alien, in the early twentieth century.\u00a0 The second is the split image of the soldier or veteran during the immediate post-war era, an issue prompted by the fact that it was soldiers who acted as the vanguard in attacking a group of protestors that also included men in uniform.\u00a0 The third is the place of the riots in the overall political history of the Socialist Party in particular and the leftist movement in general in Cleveland, as well as Cleveland\u2019s relation to the movement throughout Ohio and the Midwest.\u00a0 The final context is the nature of the ideology embodied in the march.\u00a0 Rather than an expression of Bolshevism, the May Day marchers and their leftist movement adhered to a sort of American-socialist civic-nationalism, in contradistinction to a competing concept of a \u201cblood and soil\u201d nationalism that developed in the course of the Great War and Red Scare.\u00a0 While the Cleveland May Day riots are admittedly only a single event in American history, it has links to larger national and international questions, particularly those that relate to words and labels such as radical, patriot, alien, and American.\u00a0 When Ole Hanson, Eugene Debs, the Socialist Party, the Victory Bond campaign, tanks, red flags, and the immigrant and radical heritages of Cleveland, the Midwest, and the United States came together on May 1, 1919, the mixture proved to be both volatile and of more than local historical consequence.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<hr class=\"before-footnotes clear\" \/><div class=\"footnotes\"><ol><li id=\"footnote-47-1\"><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW140780199 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW140780199 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">The Cleveland Plain Dealer<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW140780199 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW140780199 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">, May 5, 1919<\/span><\/span>. <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-1\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 1\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-2\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW175033110\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW175033110\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Eliza\u00a0<\/span><\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 BCX0 DefaultHighlightTransition SCXW175033110\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Ablovatski<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW175033110\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">, \u201cThe 1919 Central European revolutions and the Judeo-Bolshevik myth,\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/span><em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW175033110\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW175033110\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">European Review of History: Revue\u00a0<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 BCX0 SCXW175033110\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">europ\u00e9enne<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW175033110\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">\u00a0<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SpellingErrorV2 BCX0 SCXW175033110\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">d'histoire<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW175033110\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW175033110\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">, 17, 3 (2010): 474.<\/span><\/span> <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-2\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 2\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-3\"><em style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW238640123 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW238640123 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Chicago Tribune<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW238640123 BCX0\" style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW238640123 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">, May 1, 1919.<\/span><\/span> <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-3\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 3\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-4\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\" style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Jeremy\u00a0<\/span><\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Brecher<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">,\u00a0<\/span><em style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Strike!<\/span><\/span><\/em><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\" style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u00a0<\/span>(San Francisco<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun BCX0 SCXW98625713\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">: Straight Arrow Books 1972), 111<\/span>. <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-4\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 4\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-5\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\">Ibid., 111<\/span>. <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-5\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 5\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-6\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW242428610 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW242428610 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Ibid., 113-4<\/span><\/span> <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-6\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 6\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-7\"><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Robert K. Murray,<\/span><em><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">\u00a0<\/span><\/em><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\"><em>Red Scare: A Study in National Hysteria<\/em>, 1919-1920<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">. (<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">Minneapolis: Unive<\/span><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW66132986 BCX0\" data-ccp-parastyle=\"footnote text\">rsity of Minnesota Press, 1955), 65-66<\/span><\/span><span data-contrast=\"auto\" xml:lang=\"EN-US\" lang=\"EN-US\" class=\"TextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\"><span class=\"NormalTextRun SCXW211733548 BCX0\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span>. <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-7\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 7\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-8\"><em>Cleveland Press<\/em>, May 6, 1919 <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-8\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 8\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-9\"> Stephen Millett, \u201cCharles E. Ruthenberg: The Development of an American Communist, 1909-1927,\u201d <em>Ohio History Journal<\/em>,\u00a081 (1972):\u00a0197 <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-9\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 9\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-10\">Charles Ruthenberg, \u201cCleveland May Day Demonstration,\u201d Revolutionary Age, May 10, 1919. <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-10\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 10\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-11\">The most conservative estimate for the parade\u2019s size is 5,000 (see: Millet, 202) and the most liberal is Ruthenberg\u2019s rough 50,000 people (see: Revolutionary Age, May 10, 1919), with several newspapers estimating somewhere between these two numbers, from about 10,000 or 20,000. As is noted elsewhere in this paper, even the Russian language branch of the Socialist Party exceeded 5,000, so Millett\u2019s conservative estimate appears false. Given that Ruthenberg has every reason to inflate the number, this author has chosen to take the average at around 30,000. Also accounting for the fact, cited below, that police arrested many bystanders by accident once the riots started, it seems impossible to ever get a truly accurate estimate from the contemporary historical accounts, because they had trouble differentiating bystanders from socialists. <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-11\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 11\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-12\">The IWW, or International Workers of the World, a union confederation, advocated a strain of radical socialism termed \u201canarcho-syndicalism,\u201d which envisions the tactical transition beyond capitalism to necessarily come from direct action by workers in the workplace.\u00a0 By organizing every type of worker in every industry, unions pave the way for a new type of society centered on the democratic control of factories and shops by workers, organized on the macro level by groups like the IWW as the \u201cOne Big Union.\u201d\u00a0 Their most powerful weapon was the general strike of its various workers, as seen in Seattle 1919.\u00a0 Also present at the May Day riots were Daniel DeLeon\u2019s WIIU, or Workers' International Industrial Union, a splinter of the IWW who supported some measure of political participation in the IWW platform <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-12\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 12\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-13\">The AFL, or American Federation of Labor, another union confederation, was politically eclectic, though nationally conservative under its long term leader Samuel Gompers from 1886 to 1924. A much larger organization than the IWW or Socialist Party, many debates by Socialists centered on the issue as to whether to work with, within, or against a \u201cpro-business\u201d union that coordinated with the U.S. government during World War I. Due to its size, one could likely find the most \u201cpatriotic\u201d and the most radical unions in a region to both participate in the AFL. <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-13\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 13\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-14\">Charles Ruthenberg, \u201cCleveland May Day Demonstration,\u201d <em>Revolutionary Age<\/em>, May 10, 1919 <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-14\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 14\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-15\"><em>The New York Times<\/em>, May 3, 1919 <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-15\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 15\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-16\"><em>Cleveland Press<\/em>, May 2, 1919 <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-16\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 16\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-17\"><em>Revolutionary Age<\/em>, May 10, 1919 <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-17\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 17\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-18\"><em>Cleveland Plain Dealer<\/em>, May 2, 1919 <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-18\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 18\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-47-19\"><em>Revolutionary Age<\/em>, May 10, 1919 <a href=\"#return-footnote-47-19\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 19\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><\/ol><\/div>","protected":false},"author":3,"menu_order":3,"template":"","meta":{"pb_show_title":"on","pb_short_title":"","pb_subtitle":"","pb_authors":[],"pb_section_license":""},"front-matter-type":[12],"contributor":[],"license":[],"class_list":["post-47","front-matter","type-front-matter","status-publish","hentry","front-matter-type-introduction"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/front-matter\/47","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/front-matter"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/front-matter"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"version-history":[{"count":17,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/front-matter\/47\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":172,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/front-matter\/47\/revisions\/172"}],"metadata":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/front-matter\/47\/metadata\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=47"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"front-matter-type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/front-matter-type?post=47"},{"taxonomy":"contributor","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/contributor?post=47"},{"taxonomy":"license","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu\/until-victory-is-achieved\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/license?post=47"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}