Source: http://railroadworkersunited.org/eugene-v-debs/
Timestamp: 2019-04-20 14:12:18+00:00

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Railroad Workers United proudly presents this Page dedicated to the life and work of visionary rail labor organizer and leader, Eugene V. Debs.
Film: "AMERICAN SOCIALIST: The Life and Times of Eugene Victor Debs"
A new film about the life, work and ideas of Eugene V. Debs is touring the country. Bernie Sanders inspired a generation - but who inspired him? “American Socialist: The Life and Times of Eugene Victor Debs” is the culmination of five years of research and production, an objective but passionate history of the movement as championed and founded by Eugene Victor Debs, a movement that continues to have an impact on our daily lives today. Coming to a theater near you later this year!
Eugene Victor Debs, by far the best known U.S. rail union leader, was born in Terre Haute, IN November 5, 1855. Born to French immigrant parents, Debs dropped out of school at age 14 and went to work on the railroad as a shop worker. Shortly thereafter he became a locomotive fireman. By age 20 he was made secretary of his new local lodge of the Fireman’s union. Then in 1880, he was named Grand Secretary of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen (BLF) and editor of the Magazine.
In his capacity as a union leader, Debs worked tirelessly to organize the firemen, but soon came to realize that the other railroad crafts must also be organized in order for the firemen to have any real power. Thus, he then assisted in the organizing of the brakemen, switchmen, carmen and telegraphers among other crafts, into their respective craft unions. Appreciating the need for active cooperation between crafts and their unions, he set about to organize a federation of rail workers’ unions. Success was achieved in this endeavor as well, until craft jurisdiction and jealousy caused the federation’s collapse.
Not long after, Debs resigned his position as Secretary-Treasurer of the BLF despite the mass objection of the firemen rank and file. And in 1893, together with other forward thinking rail union leaders, Debs organized the nation’s first industrial union, the American Railway Union (ARU). After years of first hand experience with the failures of the old craft unionism, Debs was now firmly convinced of the need for this new advanced form of union – the industrial union – where all workers in the industry would be organized as a whole, as opposed to separated – and hence ineffectual – under the old outmoded craft union structure.
The American Railway Union generated wide interest and support among the rail workers of North America. Rails were signing up at the rate of 2,000 a week, and within six months the new organization had 150,000 members! Its first contest pitted it against the Great Northern, and its powerful President James J. Hill, the “Empire Builder”, in the spring of 1894. ARU members from all crafts struck and the Great Northern was paralyzed. In less than three weeks time, the union had emerged victorious, winning nearly all of its demands. The power of industrial unionism had been demonstrated!
A few months later the ARU faced another test as it was pitted against the Pullman Company. In what was to become known as the "Great Pullman Strike of 1894”, the ARU was defeated by a grand coalition of Pullman, the major rail carriers, the corporate press, and the federal government and troops. The carriers – and corporate America as a whole -- were determined to smash the ARU because it presented a formidable opponent, a valuable example of what can be achieved when workers organize along industrial lines. Meantime, the carriers continued to work “cooperatively” with the weak, divided and ineffective craft unions. Debs and the other ARU leaders were jailed for violating a federal judge’s injunction against the strike, which was later upheld by the Supreme Court.
Debs’ experience with the ARU and prison further radicalized him. Around the turn of the century, together with other labor and populist political leaders, he founded the Socialist Party of America. Debs went on to become a founding member of the Industrial Workers of the World (the IWW or “Wobblies”) in 1905, an industrial type union that advocated “One Big Union” of all workers of all lands. He also ran for President of the United States five times, once receiving nearly a million votes as a federal prisoner in the Atlanta Penitentiary.
On June 16 1918 , after nearly a half century of union and political organizing – now in his 60s -- Debs gave a speech in Canton, Ohio in opposition to World War I. He was arrested under the Espionage Act of 1917. He was convicted, sentenced to serve ten years in prison and disenfranchised for life. Once again, the Supreme Court upheld his conviction.
He was pardoned and released on Christmas Day, 1921 by President Harding at age 65. While his health was broken, his spirit and optimism remained indomitable. He remained an outspoken advocate for the cause of labor and the working class. Debs died in 1926 at the age of 70 in Elmhurst, Illinois.
Eugene V. Debs lived an extraordinary life, one devoted to the cause of the average working man and woman. He was a true hero of the railroad workers of his time and remains one to this day, his name revered by railroad workers from coast-to-coast.
For more quotes by Eugene V. debs click here EVD quotes page.
YOUR communication of the 19th has been received and has been noted with special interest and appreciation. Of course I know you and have known you for a number of years by your excellent work. I followed you to Australia and read a number of your articles from there but did not know until your letter came that you had returned to England.
A copy of the RWU newsletter on Eugene Debs' desk in the Debs' Home in Terre Haute, IN.
Official Site of the Eugene V Debs Foundation in Terre Haute, IN.
The Eugene V. Debs Home in Terre Haute, Indiana is now a museum dedicated to the remembrance of Debs' life and work.
Eugene V. Debs: A Biography Ray Ginger. Haymarket Books. One of a number of biographies available on the life of rail labor's most famous leader, arguably the best biography of Debs. 1962.
Eugene V. Debs: Citizen and Socialist Nick Salvatore University of Illinois, Urbana. "In this stunning book, Salvatore sets Debs firmly within the central traditions of United States political and social history and depicts, as never before, the triumph and tragedy that characterized the socialist leader's personal and public life." --American Historical Review. 1984.
Eugene V. Debs Speaks Eugene V. Debs. Pathfinder Press. New York. Just one of many books available that contains a broad variety of the speeches given by Debs over the course of his life. 1970.
The Ragged Edge of Anarchy: The Railroad Barons, the Gilded Age, and the Greatest Labor Uprising in America. Jack Kelly. St. Martin’s Press. New book about the life of Debs, the creation of the American Railway Union, and the Pullman Strike. 2018.
Eugene V Debs: A Graphic Biography. Paul Buhl, Noah Van Sciver, Steve Max and Dave Nance. Penguin Random House. 2019.
The Selected Works of Eugene V. Debs - Volume #1: Building Solidarity on the Tracks 1877–1892. Edited by Tim Davenport and David Walters. Haymarket Books. 2019. (Another 4 volumes to follow in the coming years).

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