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A Wobbly Life: IWW Organizer E. F. Doree

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A Wobbly Life: IWW Organizer E. F. Doree

By: Ellen Doree Rosen
Narrated by: Gloria Mason Martin
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About this listen

Early in the 20th century, the Wobblies, or Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), fought for the rights of workers-common laborers, migrants, immigrants, black workers-unprotected by the craft unions. In the face of beatings, kidnappings, and lynchings by vigilantes, company detectives, and hired guns, the Wobblies organized in mining and lumber camps, the wheat fields, on docksides and in textile factories. A meteoric career from its beginnings in 1906, the IWW arose with free speech fights, peaked with a membership of over 100,000 workers in 1917, and was devastated in 1918 by the imprisonment of its leadership for violations of wartime legislation. A Wobbly Life helps to set the record straight on the Wobblies during this period of labor history.

A key IWW organizer, union head, writer, and defense committee officer, E. F. Doree experienced all of this first-hand. Seventy-six years after his death, his daughter tells his story through the private letters he wrote, from 1918 to 1922, as one of over 100 Wobblies imprisoned in Leavenworth Penitentiary. They depict prison life, the comradeship and schisms within the ranks of political prisoners, and the role of civil libertarians - especially the Quakers - in seeking their release.

The book is published by Wayne State University Press.

©2004 Wayne State University Press (P)2015 Redwood Audiobooks
Business Business & Careers Labor & Industrial Relations Military Politicians

Critic Reviews

" A Wobbly Life is a rare, revealing and wrenching look at the inner life and love of an important labor radical and a timely reminder of the tragic costs of political repression." (David Roediger, University of Illinois, author of Colored White: Transcending the Racial Past)
"This book is a treasure. Using the letters that her father wrote from federal prison, Eileen Doree Rosen has given us a rare look at the life and loves and dreams and disappointments of an IWW organizer." (James N. Gregory, University of Washington)

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