You ought to be out raising hell. This is the fighting age. Put on your fighting clothes.
-Mother Jones
```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
Tuesday April 7, 1914
Washington D. C. - Rockefeller Jr. Declares "Open Shop" a "Great Principle."
John D Rockefeller Jr
John D. Rockefeller Jr. made his appearance yesterday in Washington, D. C., before a subcommittee of the House Committee on Mines and Mining which is investigating conditions in the coal mines of Colorado. During his four hours of sworn testimony, Mr. Rockefeller had this exchange with Chairman Foster:
THE DEATH SPECIAL, MACHINE GUNS,
AND MINE GUARDS
The CHAIRMAN. Do you know about an automobile being armored-built of armor plate being built in your company?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. It sounds interesting, but I have not heard of it.
The CHAIRMAN. It was built in the shops of the Colorado Fuel & Iron Co.
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. I did not know they produced automobiles as well.
The CHAIRMAN. They put on it machine guns, going around through that country.
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. I thought the idea referred to by Mr. Bowers, of having a number of searchlights was an excellent one, helping to prevent disorder. They could see the country all around.
The CHAIRMAN. Do you know this, that it was testified during the disturbances before the militia was called into the field, the mine guards were then in existence, and trouble took place between the striking miners and the mine guards or deputy sheriffs? Were you informed of that?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. I did not know that was so, but it is usual where a strike occurs for the company to undertake to protect its men with the local officials, and add to that number before the the militia is called out. I think that is customary.
The CHAIRMAN. Now, then, when the militia was called out, a great many of these mine guards or deputy sheriffs, it was said, were sworn into the service of the State, and they were kept on the pay rolls of the company; for instance, the Colorado Fuel & Iron Co. What is your idea of that? Do you think that makes the militia a nonpartisan preserver of the peace?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. I should simply say that if the local authorities in any community were unable to or did not render adequate protection to the workers of that district it was the duty of the employers of the labor to supplement that protection in any way they could.
The CHAIRMAN. Well, but if the militia had been called into the field and then the mine guards and deputy sheriffs who had been sworn into the militia were still on the pay roll of the company, drawing their pay from the State and from the company, too, is it your opinion that they would be a nonpartisan protector of the peace of the community?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. Of course, that is a very extensive country. There are mines in many different places. I do not know that in any case the militia has been sent there in sufficient numbers to cover the entire country.
MINE GUARDS ARMED AND STATIONED AS MILITIAMEN
The CHAIRMAN. You do not get my question, I think. The company’s guards—for instance, their old employees who had been with them for a long time-were disarmed, and also the miners were disarmed. But they immediately swore in the mine guards, the men who had been acting as mine guards, into the militia, and they were armed and stationed in that particular camp as militiamen instead of mine guards.
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. They could not have done that without the consent of those in authority over the militia.
The CHAIRMAN. That is said to be true. I am trying to get your opinion about that.
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. If that was the only way in which the governor could increase his force of militia to a sufficient extent, I assume it was an emergency measure which he sanctioned through his representatives, and the best thing that could possibly have been done.
The CHAIRMAN. So you think it was better to swear in the mine guards as part of the militia than it would have been to get them outside?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. I would not undertake to form an opinion in that matter as against the opinion of the governor of the state. I presume that he acted in the way that seemed to him wisest and best. He knew the conditions.
The CHAIRMAN. I am trying to get your opinion. The militia is supposed, is it not, to be sent into the field to preserve the peace?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. Yes.
The CHAIRMAN. And not to take part on either side?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. Certainly.
The CHAIRMAN. Do you think that the swearing in of your guards and keeping them on the pay roll as militiamen helps to do that?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. Without having been on the spot and knowing the situation it would be difficult to say whether that was the best thing to do or not.
ROCKEFELLER HAS NOT BEEN TO COLORADO In TEN YEARS
The CHAIRMAN. I see you are perfectly frank in answering questions that you can answer, but don’t you think that as a director and as the representative of a large interest in the Colorado Fuel & Iron CO. the reason that you are not prepared to answer a large part of these questions is because you have not personally investigated to find out the facts in the case, and that for 10 years you have not been in Colorado?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. That is true; I have not been in Colorado for 10 years.
The CHAIRMAN. SO you really know nothing about it except what these men wrote you?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. I keep posted through these officers.
The CHAIRMAN. And there has been no meeting of the directors of your company to personally look into this matter Of a strike?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. Of course, that I can not speak about, because I would not have known whether the notice came.
The CHAIRMAN. Do they ever have a meeting of the directors, without you knowing something about it?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. They constantly do. They have their meetings right along. Whether it is a monthly meeting or whether the executive secretary acts in the interim I do not know. Now, we have the means of keeping in touch with the interests and of doing the things that we thought it were incumbent on us to do.
The CHAIRMAN. But still there has been a great industrial disturbance in which your company has paid out $250,000, bought guns and ammunition, and taken all that means to protect your property, and yet it has not been of sufficient importance to you for you to personally look into the matter?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. It has been of such profound concern and importance to me that I have done the thing that seemed to me to be the very best way in which I could meet the situation and do my share in giving it the attention that it is incumbent upon me to give.
ROCKEFELLER IS SURE THAT CONDITIONS ARE ENTIRELY SATISFACTORY
The CHAIRMAN. And all this disturbance and loss of life, killing upon both sides out there, has not been of enough importance to you to cause you to say, Let us have a meeting of the directors, and find out more about it?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. I have been so greatly interested in the matter, and have such a warm sympathy for this very large number of men that work for us, that I should be the last one to surrender the liberty under which they have been working and the conditions which to them have been entirely satisfactory, to give up that liberty and accept dictation from those outside who have no interest in them or in the company.
The CHAIRMAN. But the killing of these people, the shooting of children, and all that that has been going on there for months has not been of enough importance to you for you to communicate with the other directors, and see if something might not be done to end that sort of thing?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. We believe that the issue is not a local one in Colorado; it is a national issue, whether worker's shall be allowed to work under such conditions as they may choose. And as part owners of the property, our interest in the laboring men in this country is so immense, so deep, so profound that we stand ready to lose every cent we put in that company rather than see the men we have employed thrown out of work and have imposed upon them conditions which are not of their seeking and which neither they nor we can see are in our interest.
[emphasis added]
THE OPEN SHOP, ROCKEFELLER'S GREAT PRINCIPLE
The CHAIRMAN. And you are willing to go on and let these killings take place—men losing their lives on either side, the expenditure of large sums of money, and all this disturbance of labor—rather than to go out there and see if you might do something to settle those conditions?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. There is just one thing, Mr. Chairman, so far as I understand it, which can be done, as things are at present, to settle this strike, and that is to unionize the camps; and our interest in labor is so profound and we believe so sincerely that that interest demands that the camps shall be open camps, that we expect to stand by the officers at any cost. It is not an accident that this is our position.
The CHAIRMAN. And you will do that if it costs all your property and kills all your employees?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. It is a great principle.
The CHAIRMAN. And you would do that rather than recognize the right of men to collective bargaining? Is that what I understand?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. No, sir. Rather than allow outside people to come in and interfere with employees who are thoroughly satisfied with their labor conditions—it was upon a similar principle that the War of the Revolution was carried on. It is a great national issue of the most vital kind.
The CHAIRMAN. And yet with all this disturbance, as you say, you have never taken the time personally, nor any of the directors, to find out for yourselves from personal knowledge whether these miners had any grievance or not?
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. Just the minute that I have the slightest lack of confidence in the man in charge--
The CHAIRMAN. I know; but you have not done that....
[emphasis added]
SOURCE
Conditions in the coal mines of Colorado: Hearings before a subcommittee of the Committee on mines and mining, House of Representatives, Sixty-third Congress, second session, pursuant to H. res. 387, a resolution authorizing and directing the Committee on Mines and Mining to make an investigation of conditions in the coal mines of Colorado, Volume 2
United States. Congress. House. Committee on Mines and Mining
Govt. print. off., 1914
http://books.google.com/...
Rockefeller testimony: p. 2841-2916
Above exchange with Foster: p. 2872-2874
(search preview with page number)
Photo: John D Rockefeller Jr, 1915
http://en.academic.ru/...
```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
Monday April 7, 2014
The New York Times Reports on the Great Principle of J. D. Rockefeller Jr.
The Lives to be Sacrificed for the Great Principle of John D Rockefeller Jr
The
Times featured Rockefeller's testimony in a long article which began with a full column on the front page and continued with two and a half columns on the second page. The headlines reveal that the
Times considered Rockefeller's stand for the open-shop to be a just stand against "union rule":
ROCKEFELLER, JR., DEFIES UNION RULE
-----------
Will sacrifice All in Colorado Rather Than Subject Miners to Union Dictation.
----------
FIRM FOR "OPEN SHOP"
----------
Americans, He Tells Congressmen, Must Have Right to Work Where They Please.
----------
SAYS HE DOES HIS DUTY
----------
Is a Director, but Must Trust Details to Trained Officers-Testifies for Four Hours.
----------
Special to the New York Times.
WASHINGTON, April 6.-John D. Rockefeller, Jr., testifying to-day as a Director of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company in the inquiry which the House Committee on Mines is conducting into the Colorado coal strike, declared unequivocally for the principle of the "open shop," and assented that he and his associates would prefer that they should "lose all of their millions invested in the coal fields than that the American workingmen should be deprived of the right under the Constitution to work for whom they pleased."
.....
Thus, Rockefeller was portrayed as a great hero willing to sacrifice the family fortune in order to "protect" the working men and women of America from the evils of collective bargaining!
SOURCE
The New York Times
(New York, New York)
-of Apr 7, 1914
http://select.nytimes.com/...
(it is necessary to use viewer in order to read full article)
Photo: Children of the Ludlow Tent Colony
http://www.du.edu/...
```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````
Fire In The Hole - Hazel Dickens
Daddy died a miner and grandpa he did too,
I'll bet this coal will kill me before my working days is through
And a hole this dark and dirty an early grave I find
And I plan to make a union for the ones I leave behind
Stand up boys, let the bosses know
Turn you buckets over, turn your lanterns low
There's fire in our hearts and fire in our soul
But there ain't gonna be no fire in the hole
There ain't gonna be no fire in the hole
There ain't gonna be no fire in the hole!
-Hazel Dickens
```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````