Joe Hill
$15.95
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Description
The definitive study of Joe Hill, American labor martyr, proletarian fold hero, and song writer.“Joe Hill became symbolic of the kind of individual sacrifice that would make a revolutionary new society possible. Thus labor radicals, communists, and novelists and playwrights such as John Dos Passos, Wallace Stegner, and Barrie Stavis used the circumstances of Hill’s convictions and manner of his death to create a legend that transformed ‘just another forgotten migrant worker’ into ‘The Man Who Never Died,” as the song which Paul Robeson enthralled audiences in the 1930s and 1940s had it . . . Gibbs Smith has served us well be recapturing the memory of a man whose songs, to quote another wobbly, evoked the spirit of radicals who were the ‘very epitome of guts and gallantry,’ a handful of homeless heroes touched by true romance. Men and women whose spirits were stirred far above their belly-need; men and women inspired by visions of heaven on earth. Now, as then, society needs such men and women.” –Melvyn Dubofsky, The New York Times Book Review
Become acquainted with Joe Hill, a true American rebel who fought for a vision of heaven on Earth. The definitive study of Joe Hill, labor martyr, Proletarian folk hero and songwriter, “A man whose songs evoked the spirit of radicals who were the very epitome of guts and gallantry. Now, as then, society needs such men and women.” — New York Times. A thorough, scholarly volume, this is the most complete factual account to date which also details Hill’s personal life and experiences.
Joe Hill, arriving in New York City after emigrating from Sweden in 1902, worked in factories and mines, and on farms and waterfronts as he traveled from the east coast to San Pedro, California, where he joined the Industrial Workers of the World. In 1913, journeying east again–probably via freight train–Hill stopped to work in the mines of Utah. While in that state he was arrested, tried, and convicted of murdering a Salt Lake City grocer. Joe Hill”s execution by a Utah firing squad in November of 1915 was preceded by appeals for clemency from thousands of sympathizers and such notables as Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor; W. A. F. Ekengren, Swedish Minister to the United States; and President Woodrow Wilson.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Joe Hill”s songs
From greenhorn Swede to rebel true-blue
Charged with murder
A guilty man?
Unexplaine gunshot wound
Utah, the Wobblies and Joe Hill
“My dear Governor Spry . . .”
“Don”t waste time in mourning: organize!”
“I don”t want to be foud dead in Utah”
Joe Hill will never die
Notes
Appendix A
Appendix B
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Joe Hill”s songs
From greenhorn Swede to rebel true-blue
Charged with murder
A guilty man?
Unexplaine gunshot wound
Utah, the Wobblies and Joe Hill
“My dear Governor Spry . . .”
“Don”t waste time in mourning: organize!”
“I don”t want to be foud dead in Utah”
Joe Hill will never die
Notes
Appendix A
Appendix B
Bibliography
Index
Additional information
Weight | 1 oz |
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Dimensions | 1 × 6 × 9 in |