Working on this new server in php7...
imc indymedia

Los Angeles Indymedia : Activist News

white themeblack themered themetheme help
About Us Contact Us Calendar Publish RSS
Features
latest news
best of news
syndication
commentary


KILLRADIO

VozMob

ABCF LA

A-Infos Radio

Indymedia On Air

Dope-X-Resistance-LA List

LAAMN List




IMC Network:

Original Cities

www.indymedia.org africa: ambazonia canarias estrecho / madiaq kenya nigeria south africa canada: hamilton london, ontario maritimes montreal ontario ottawa quebec thunder bay vancouver victoria windsor winnipeg east asia: burma jakarta japan korea manila qc europe: abruzzo alacant andorra antwerpen armenia athens austria barcelona belarus belgium belgrade bristol brussels bulgaria calabria croatia cyprus emilia-romagna estrecho / madiaq euskal herria galiza germany grenoble hungary ireland istanbul italy la plana liege liguria lille linksunten lombardia london madrid malta marseille nantes napoli netherlands nice northern england norway oost-vlaanderen paris/Île-de-france patras piemonte poland portugal roma romania russia saint-petersburg scotland sverige switzerland thessaloniki torun toscana toulouse ukraine united kingdom valencia latin america: argentina bolivia chiapas chile chile sur cmi brasil colombia ecuador mexico peru puerto rico qollasuyu rosario santiago tijuana uruguay valparaiso venezuela venezuela oceania: adelaide aotearoa brisbane burma darwin jakarta manila melbourne perth qc sydney south asia: india mumbai united states: arizona arkansas asheville atlanta austin baltimore big muddy binghamton boston buffalo charlottesville chicago cleveland colorado columbus dc hawaii houston hudson mohawk kansas city la madison maine miami michigan milwaukee minneapolis/st. paul new hampshire new jersey new mexico new orleans north carolina north texas nyc oklahoma philadelphia pittsburgh portland richmond rochester rogue valley saint louis san diego san francisco san francisco bay area santa barbara santa cruz, ca sarasota seattle tampa bay tennessee urbana-champaign vermont western mass worcester west asia: armenia beirut israel palestine process: fbi/legal updates mailing lists process & imc docs tech volunteer projects: print radio satellite tv video regions: oceania united states topics: biotech

Surviving Cities

www.indymedia.org africa: canada: quebec east asia: japan europe: athens barcelona belgium bristol brussels cyprus germany grenoble ireland istanbul lille linksunten nantes netherlands norway portugal united kingdom latin america: argentina cmi brasil rosario oceania: aotearoa united states: austin big muddy binghamton boston chicago columbus la michigan nyc portland rochester saint louis san diego san francisco bay area santa cruz, ca tennessee urbana-champaign worcester west asia: palestine process: fbi/legal updates process & imc docs projects: radio satellite tv
printable version - js reader version - view hidden posts - tags and related articles

View article without comments

The History of Free Speech in San Diego, or Can't Jail the Spirit!

by deedee Wednesday, Jun. 20, 2001 at 11:33 AM
dhalleck@weber.ucsd.edu

In 1912, the IWW (the Wobblies) were brutally suppressed in a struggle to maintain a freespeech area in downtown San Diego.

San Diego has an interesting history in terms of labor and free speech struggles. In 1912, Southern California elites tried to suppress freespeech by cutting off access for speakers and demonstrators to an area in downtown (E Street between Fourth and Fifth Avenues) which had been a gathering place for a variety of political parties and causes. The prohibition was later extended to a destricted district "49 square blocks in the center of town in which street corner meetings could not be held...Failure to comply was punishable with a thirty day prison sentence or to 0 fine or both."

Harrison Gray Otis, editor of the LA Times, called for the city to restrain the right of free speech. The LA Times building had been bombed in October 1910. He owned a piece of land in Baja and worried about the impending Mexican Revolution and the potential for cross border collaboration.

The IWW took the challenge and union members from all over the West Coast came to SD to challenge the suppression of the First Amendment. It has been estimated that over 5,000 union members from all over the country turned up during the free speech fight. Hundreds were jailed and many were beaten. Water cannon were used to rout the thousands of demonstrators who showed up at the jail to protest the brutal conditions under which prisoners were held. (The location of the jail was right around the corner from the current San Diego IMC)

One of the things that most riled the authorities was the lively optimism of the union. Police Chief Wilson complained "I cannot punish them. Listen to them singing. They are singing all the time and yelling and hollering and telling the jailors to quit work and join the union. They are worse than animals."

The San Diego and Los Angeles business establishment encouraged gangs of quickly "deputized" thugs to take revenge on the demonstrators. There was a fear that the workers--who declared themselves internationistas in their very name (International Workers of the World)-- would connect up with Flores Magon, and other Mexican rebels to endanger US business holdings in the South West and in Baja. Spreckles of the sugar fortune (the downtown theater is named for him) owned extensive land in Baja which he wanted to develop and he planned a railroad line from Yuma,through Baja to San Diego.

Emma Goldman and her lover, Ben Reitman, came around to help out with the cause. Before her scheduled speech, Reitman was taken into the desert in North County and brutalized, sent through a gauntlet, tarred (feathered with sage brush and cactus), and even had an Abner Louima style rape with a stick, later confirmed by doctors in Los Angeles. Goldman fled to LA without speaking publicly.

President Taft supported any measures to suppress the radicals. He said: "There is not any doubt that that corner of the country is a basis for most of the anarchists and the Industrial World Workers (sic) and for all the lawless flotsam and jetsam that proximity to the Mexican border thrusts into those two cities...We ought to take decided action....It is our business to go in and show the strong hand of the U.S. in marked way so that they shall undertand that we are on the job."

The Free Speech fight was later won through the courts and Emma Goldman returned to San Diego in 1915 to speak to the Open Forum, a group which had been organized to protect freedom of speech in 1912.

This is taken from an article by Grace Miller, "The IWW Free Speech Fight: San Diego, 1912 in The Journal of the Historical Society of San Diego.Thanks to Dan Schiller for pointing it out to me. DeeDee Halleck

Report this post as:

Reference info

by deedee Wednesday, Jun. 20, 2001 at 3:51 PM
dhalleck@weber.ucsd.edu

I forgot to put the article info:

It is the Southern California Quarterly of the Historical Society of Southern California

Date: Volume LIV number 3

Fall 1972 starting pp 211-233

Report this post as:

fascinating story

by Guy Berliner Wednesday, Jun. 20, 2001 at 6:37 PM

Thank you, DeeDee, for this sketch of a fascinating

historical episode in San Diego's past. No doubt

there are many more such stories of which most of

us know little and certainly never learned in school.

Report this post as:

© 2000-2018 Los Angeles Independent Media Center. Unless otherwise stated by the author, all content is free for non-commercial reuse, reprint, and rebroadcast, on the net and elsewhere. Opinions are those of the contributors and are not necessarily endorsed by the Los Angeles Independent Media Center. Running sf-active v0.9.4 Disclaimer | Privacy