If the angels of love have not abandoned their mission they hover near where Martin Irons sleeps and in God's good time his name will be revived, the contumely will be effaced and his memory will shine resplendent in the galaxy of agitators, pioneers and warriors who died to make man free.
-Mother Jones
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Saturday December 17, 1904
From the Appeal to Reason: Debs Gives Tribute to the Hero Martin Irons
"The Great Railway Strike-attempt to start a freight train
under a guard of United States Marshals, at East St. Louis, Illinois."
The late hero of the
Great Southwest Railroad Strike of 1886 is remembered and honored today in the pages of the
Appeal to Reason. A loving tribute by Eugene V. Debs tells the story of the courageous union man who dared to defy capitalist tyranny.
...and from that hour he was doomed. All the powers of capitalism combined to crush him, and when at last he succumbed to overwhelming odds, he was hounded from place to place until he was ragged and foot-sore and the pangs of hunger gnawed at his vitals.
Comrade Debs is doing his part to ensure that the name of Martin Irons will not be lost from the memory of the working class:
The blow he struck for his class will preserve his memory. In the great struggle for emancipation he nobly did his share, and the history of labor cannot be written without his name.
From the Appeal to Reason of December 17, 1904:
Nailed to the Cross for Fourteen Years
__________
A Tribute to Martin Irons by Eugene V. Debs.
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Martin Irons
"Brave Comrade, love and farewell."
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It was in 1886 that Martin Irons, as chairman of the executive board of the Knights of Labor of the Gould southwest railway system, defied capitalist tyranny, and from that hour he was doomed. All the powers of capitalism combined to crush him, and when at last he succumbed to overwhelming odds, he was hounded from place to place until he was ragged and foot-sore and the pangs of hunger gnawed at his vitals.
For fourteen long years he fought single-handed the battle against persecution. He tramped far, and among strangers, under an assumed name, sought to earn enough to get bread. But he was tracked like a beast and driven from shelter. For this “poor wanderer of a stormy day” there was no pity. He had stood between his class and their oppressors-he was brave, and would not flinch; he was honest, and he would not sell; this was his crime, and he must die.
Martin Irons came to this country from Scotland a child. He was friendless, penniless, alone. At an early age he became a machinist. For years he worked at his trade. He had a clear head and a warm heart. He saw and felt the injustice suffered by his class. Three reductions in wages in rapid succession fired his blood. He resolved to resist. He appealed to his fellow-workers. When the great strike came, Martin Irons was its central figure. The men felt they could trust him. They were not mistaken.
When at the darkest hour Jay Gould sent word to Martin Irons that he wished to see him, the answer came, “I am in Kansas City.” Gould did not have gold enough to buy Irons. This was the greatest crime of labor's honest leader. The press united in fiercest denunciation. Every lie that malignity could conceive was circulated. In the popular mind Martin Irons was the blackest-hearted villain that ever went unhung. Pinkerton blood-hounds tracked him night and day. But thru it all this loyal, fearless, high-minded working-man stood immovable.
The courts and soldiers responded to the command of their masters, the railroads, the strike was crushed and the workingmen were beaten.
Martin Irons had served, suffered for and honored his class. But he had lost. His class now turned against him and joined in the execration of the enemy. This pained him more than all else. But he bore even this without a murmur, and if ever a despairing sigh was wrung from him it was when he was alone.
And thus it has been all along the highway of the centuries, from Jesus Christ to Martin Irons.
Let it not be said that Irons was not crucified. For fourteen years he was nailed to the cross, and no martyr to humanity ever bore his crucifixion with manlier fortitude.
He stood the taunts and jeers and all the bitter mockery of fate with patient heroism, and even when the poor dumb brutes whose wounds and bruises he would have swathed with his own heart strings turned upon him, pity sealed his lips and silent suffering wrought for him a martyr's crown.
Martin Irons was hated by all who were too ignorant or base to understand him. He died despised, yet shall he live beloved.
No president of the United States gave or tendered him a public office in testimony of his service to the working class. The kind of service he rendered was too honest to be respectable, too human to be popular.
The blow he struck for his class will preserve his memory. In the great struggle for emancipation he nobly did his share, and the history of labor cannot be written without his name.
He was an agitator, and as such shared the common fate of all. Jesus Christ, Joan of Arc, Elijah Lovejoy, John Brown, Albert Parsons and many others set the same example and paid the same penalty.
For the reason that he was a despised agitator and shunned of men too mean and sordid to comprehend the lofty motive that inspired him, he will be remembered with tenderness and love long after the last of his detractors shall have mouldered in a forgotten grave.
It was in April, 1899, in Waco, Texas, that I last pressed this comrade's hand. He bore the traces of poverty and broken health, but his spirit was as intrepid as when he struck the shield of Hoxie thirteen years before; and when he spoke of Socialism he seemed transformed, and all the smouldering fires within him blazed once more from his sunken eyes.
I was pained, but not surprised, when I read that he had “died penniless in an obscure Texas town.” It is his glory and society's shame that he died that way.
His weary body has at last found rest, and the grandchildren of the men and women he struggled, suffered and died for will weave chaplets where he sleeps.
His epitaph might read: “For standing bravely in defense of the working class, he was put to death by slow torture.”
Martin Irons was an honest, courageous, manly man. The world numbers one less since he has left it.
Brave comrade, love, and farewell.
[photograph added]
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SOURCE
Appeal to Reason
(Girard, Kansas)
-Dec 17, 1904
http://www.newspapers.com/...
See also:
Martin Irons, gravesite
http://www.findagrave.com/...
Molly Ivins Remembers Martin Irons
http://www.creators.com/...
A lot of busted heads and broken lives went into making the eight-hour workday a reality.
The Labor World Remembers Martin Irons
http://www.dailykos.com/...
"Song for the Knights of Labor" by PianoGuy
http://www.dailykos.com/...
The Official History of the Great Strike of 1886
on the Southwestern Railway System
Missouri. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Tribune Printing Company, state printers and binders, 1886
https://books.google.com/...
IMAGES
Martin Irons
http://www.loc.gov/...
The Great Southwest Railroad Strike of 1886
at East St Louis, Illinois, by G J Nebinger
http://www.loc.gov/...
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"Song for the Knights of Labor" from "Iron & Gold"
Why should the weak be prey to the strong?
Why does the tyrant's machinery run on?
To take for himself what does not belong,
The light of his brothers' sun?
-Lauren & Mark Arnest
To read and listen to "Iron & Gold"
http://millionmonkeys.us/
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