General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsRemembering the Memorial Day Massacre

Content warning: violence, police brutality
The Archive includes over 1,000 items primarily from the collections of the SCHS. The Storytelling Project uses objects, documents, photographs, oral history interviews, and other materials from the archive to develop major story lines about Southeast Chicago. The two story lines currently available are Mexican-American Journeys and the Memorial Day Massacre. Two more storylines are in the works―the Closing of the Steel Mills and Environmental Pollution and Activism in the Region.
Although a major event in Chicago and US history, standard historical interpretations often exclude the Memorial Day Massacre. As part of the Little Steel Strike of 1937, workers struck against Ohio-based Republic Steel for better treatment and working conditions and higher wages. Republic had a mill located on Chicagos Southeast Side. Company management planned to break this strike with replacement workers and, ultimately, violence.
On Sunday, May 30, 1937, striking Republic workers and their allies attempted to set up a picket line in the prairie in front of the mill. Chicago police, who were already on the scene, responded with guns and clubs, injuring roughly one hundred people and killing ten men: Sam R. Popovich, Earl J. Handley, Kenneth Reed, Hilding Anderson, Alfred Causey, Leo Francisco, Otis A. Jones, Joseph Rothmund, Anthony Taglieri, and Lee Tisdale. Officers claimed they responded to violence with violence to protect the mill and the country from communists. A congressional investigation showed the claims of worker violence to be false, and only a small fraction of those there that day held radical left-wing political beliefs.

The Southeast Chicago Archive and Storytelling Project brilliantly tells the Memorial Day Massacre story using the scrapbook of Gerry Jolly Borozan as the central artifact. Mrs. Borozan, who was a teenager when the events unfolded, created a scrapbook with newspaper articles, letters, and photographs documenting the Massacre and its aftermath. She eventually donated it to the Southeast Chicago Historical Society. Using the scrapbook, photographs, oral histories, film footage, congressional testimony, and a striking interpretative framework, the story line recounts the events of late May 1937 and its consequences.

Users, for example, can learn about the men who perished. The story line includes a Chicago Defender article stating that African American steelworker Lee Tisdale would go down [in history] as one who gave his life that all workers may be freed from industrial slavery. Sam Popovich, a forty-five-year-old immigrant from southeastern Europe, died on the field that day after the police clubbed and shot him. Eventually, by 1941, Republic Steel recognized the steelworkers right to organize. Anyone interested in the citys history should definitely visit the Southeast Chicago Historical Society and the Exit Zero Projects website to learn more.
https://www.chicagohistory.org/remembering-the-memorial-day-massacre/
brer cat
(27,683 posts)Thanks for the post, sheshe.
sheshe2
(98,439 posts)Some things change and some things remain the same.
Solomon
(12,652 posts)They keep people ignorant deliberately. Today they are doing it openly, telling you to your face that they don't want you to know what happened everywhere.
hatrack
(65,138 posts)That would be valuable page space that could be given to happy black field hands cutting sugar cane in Louisiana circa 1840, or clocking the countless thousands of hours that Jefferson, Adams and Washington spent on their knees, seeking Divine Guidance, or perhaps to invisible Sioux and Navajo and Osage.
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