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International Labor Defense

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component of the total revolutionary strategy of the Comintern. Having already set up a sound organizational structure, IRA now began to refine its methods of reaching the non-Communist masses, i.e., its weapons of agitation and propaganda. The precise relationship between the Comintern and its auxiliary was also stated, a relationship in which IRA acted strictly according to the dictates of the Comintern, while carefully maintaining the fiction of independence. The years before 1926 had molded International Red Aid to the needs of the Comintern; and after 1926 until its dissolution in 1943 IRA served its parent, faithfully executing every demand of Comintern policy.
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spent on the defense and support of jailed revolutionaries in Germany and Bulgaria alone — two countries in which there were failed Communist uprisings in that year. While other funds were no doubt collected outside Soviet Russia by national affiliates of IRA and spent locally,> in its initial phase, the organization was essentially a means to provide Soviet support for the defense of imprisoned revolutionaries.
258:, and became increasingly isolated. Because of federal government pressure against organizations it considered subversive, such as the CRC, it became less useful in representing defendants in criminal justice cases. The CRC was dissolved in 1956. At the same time, in this period, black leaders were expanding the activities and reach of the 727:
be an Executive Committee of nine, of whom six were to be party members and three non-party. With this governing structure decided on June 27, 1925, a founding convention of the ILD was called to order in Chicago on the following day. Subsequent changes to the structure of the organization resulting from this gathering were minor.
624:(1881–1954, co-founder of the CPUSA) "stated unequivocally" that the IRA was not Communist, while stressing the IRA, a "United Front" organization, should support the Communist Party "from below". (Amter was not a member of the IRA when he spoke but became an executive committee member shortly thereafter.) In March 1925, 1338:
as a monthly, profusely illustrated magazine with a low cover price of 10 cents. The circulation of the magazine boomed, rising from about 1,500 paid subscriptions and 8,500 copies in bulk bundle sales in 1927, to about 5,500 paid subscriptions with a bundle sale of 16,500 by the middle of 1928. This
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argued "the IRA is a Communist organization", but the Fifth Plenum of the Executive Committee of the Communist International decided that the IRA "was no longer to be considered a Communist organization, but rather an independent class organization only incidentally supported by Communists." Between
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In its initial phase, IRA conducted activities on behalf of jailed Communists only, rather than non-party labor activists and members of other political organizations. The Russian national section, MOPR, was responsible for providing some 98% of the funds gathered in 1923, of which more than 70% were
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The magazine made a constant plea for additional funds for jailed labor activists across the country. A regular column called "Voices from Prison" highlighted the plight of those behind bars and reinforced the message that good work was being done on the behalf of the so-called "class war prisoners"
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Dues were payable either on an individual basis or through the collective affiliation of entire sympathetic organizations. A goal of 200,000 dues-paying members was declared. While falling short of this number, the ILD by 1926 claimed 20,000 individual members in 156 branches, with additional 75,000
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The Communist Party selected the top leadership of ILD; designated National Secretary Jim Cannon submitted a slate of 29 nominees for the group's nominal leadership body, the National Committee — a majority of whom were Workers Party members. The operational governing body of the organization was to
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activist who had become a Communist party leader, was particularly interested in such a new legal defense structure. As early as April 1924, he suggested such a new group, to be known as the "International Workers Defense Committee". This idea of a broad party-sponsored organization for the defense
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Over the next several years, debate occurred within the Comintern and the IRA apparatus as to whether the organization should continue as an openly Communist organization giving aid only to jailed Communists or whether it should try to win broad influence by extending its activities to individuals
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The Comintern apparatus by 1926 had determined that agitation and propaganda, the means by which IRA made contact with and attempted to gain influence over the masses, would become the central work of the organization... The year 1926 marked the emergence of International Red Aid as a recognized
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Cannon was sent on the road to build support for the fledgling ILD, making use of his extensive network of personal contacts with present and former members of the IWW (so-called "Wobblies"). Cannon and Haywood in Moscow had drawn up an initial list of 106 "class war prisoners" needing legal and
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This organization was established first in Soviet Russia as the International Society for the Aid of Revolutionary Fighters (MOPR). Outside Soviet Russia the organization was known as International Red Aid (IRA), although the MOPR acronym was also used as an abbreviation for the international
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As the 1930s began, the ILD claimed to be "defending nearly 1,100 workers against capitalist justice." Local branches conducted an endless series of mass meetings and fundraising events. New issues came to the fore, such as the abuse of African Americans used as veritable slave labor in the
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of the Southern prison system. Given the official Communist Party emphasis on the black liberation movement, the ILD and its magazine highlighted the systemic abuse of the African-American population, including chronic inequities of the justice and political system, which in the South had
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After returning to the US in April 1925, Cannon took up the question of a new legal defense organization with the governing Political Committee of the Workers Party. It also received a push from the Comintern to establish an American affiliate of International Red Aid. Cannon's desire for
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actions, and in other situations less ambiguously as legal actions against union organizers and activists for their economic activities. To defend its core activists and their activities from what was systematic legal attack, the IWW established a legal advocacy organization called the
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trade unionist and journalist. This broad base of support strengthened fundraising activities of the organization among those who would be less inclined to support a purely Communist organization. Control of the organization and its funds remained firmly in Communist Party hands.
254:. It intended to expand its appeal, especially to African Americans in the South. In several prominent cases in which blacks had been sentenced to death in the South, the CRC campaigned on behalf of black defendants. It had some conflict with former allies, such as the 548:
shortly after his appeals were exhausted but before he could be shepherded to prison. Tens of thousands of dollars remained tied up on bail well into the 1930s, but no further cases were tried against those indicted in association with the 1922 Bridgman conclave.
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Miss Damon: They send in an application asking to be affiliated with the International Labor Defense. They pay a fee for that, and they pay a regular fee, monthly or yearly—^it is not iron bound, or a specific fee ; it is mostly on a voluntary basis.
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In addition to participating in defense in sensational cases such as those of Sacco and Vanzetti and Tom Mooney, the ILD engaged attorneys in support of jailed strikers in various labor actions. In the late 1920s, it initiated actions on behalf of striking
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in Soviet Russia had a similar need, and sought organized support for their jailed comrades in Poland. The Russian Society of Old Bolsheviks and Former Political Exiles and Prisoners, a group whose members had previously raised funds for the support of
1561:(PhD). University of California, Los Angeles. pp. 18 (1917-1918), 25 (Lusk), 39 (Hoover), 40-41 (NDC), 42 (NDC leaders), 42 (NDC attorneys), 43 (WDC), 44 (1919 arrests), 67 (LDC), 67-68 (Frank D. Walsh), 73 (Haywood, CP Poland), 73-74 (SOBFPEP) 512:
demanding a fee of $ 50,000 in the case. Another $ 90,000 was tied up in bail from supporters. The LDC contributed mightily to this effort, raising more than $ 100,000 from party supporters and concerned trade unionists in the interest of the case.
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There was a massive need for legal defense on the part of those arrested in connection with these official operations against the communist political movement. In 1920 the Communist Party established its first legal defense organization, the
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in Tsarist times, acted upon these suggestions late in the summer of 1922. They passed a resolution calling for the establishment of a new international organization for the legal and economic support of left-wing political prisoners.
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Miss Damon: That is right ... There are two types of membership—affiliated and collective membership, and individual membership, that is made up in I.L.D. branches, like they have local unions—so we have branches of the I.L.D.
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in the early 1930s. Its work contributed to the appeal of the Communist Party among African Americans in the South. In addition to fundraising for defense and assisting in defense strategies, from January 1926 it published
463:(WDC). The efforts of these groups to defend those arrested in the Palmer Raids was largely successful, with the result that ultimately fewer than 10% of those arrested in Hoover's January 1920 raids suffered deportation. 391:. This followed a series of strikes and bombings in 1919, including one against US Attorney General Palmer. An estimated 10,000 arrests and detentions resulted from the latter operation, with hundreds held for possible 629:
1923 and 1925, IRA spent more than $ 2 million – half on political prisoners and their families, plus political immigrants to the USSR, and last on legal defense ("conducted exclusively by sections other than MOPR").
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Following World War II, years in which the federal government had intervened in some labor actions in order to protect war production, the Communist Party changed its approach. In 1946 the ILD was merged with the
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The ILD also worked to defend against various government attempts to pass criminal syndicalism legislation in the 1930s, which suppressed workers' right to organize and to strike. The economic crisis of the
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in 1917 and 1918 resulted in more than 2,000 prosecutions. These cases led to the formation of a legal defense organization for these defendants called the Civil Liberties Bureau, continued today as the
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Miss Damon: I don't know. But we issue charters to them. The reason I say I don't know is that I can't be accurate about that. We issue charters, and some of them appear and disappear in smaller groups.
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Ever since the birth of the organized labor movement, economic disputes have been contested in the legal system. In some cases, an employer or government has gone to court to achieve termination of
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and called herself ILD organizational secretary (1934-1937), national secretary (1937–present 1939), and a "charter member" of the CPUSA who had worked for the Party through the 1920s up to 1933.
412:(NDC), to raise funds and provide legal services for its adherents in legal trouble with criminal or immigration authorities. A number of leading communist activists, including political leaders 289:
by employers to prohibit specific actions and its enforcement by the courts occasionally resulted in groups of defendants being embroiled in the costly legal system for union activities. The
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of sticking to the facts (which included the deaths of several strikers) and of not playing into the prosecution's attempt to place the defendants' revolutionary beliefs on trial.
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During its early years, the ILD tried to portray itself as a multi-tendency organization largely independent of the Communist Party, as exemplified by this ILD magazine featuring
874: 1662:(PhD dissertation). Emory University. pp. 10 (IRA), 13 (IRA, MOPR), 14 (allegiance), 49 (funds), 49-50 (MOPR 1923), 56-57 (Amter), 58-59 (Zinoviev), 67-68 (summary) 313: 3105: 1425:
The International Labor Defense: Its Constitution and Organization: Resolution Adopted by the Fourth National Convention Held in Pittsburgh, Pa., Dec. 29-31, 1929.
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professing allegiance to other organizations or to no organization at all. During the First International Conference of IRA, held in Moscow on July 14–16, 1924,
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depicted a black-and-white world of heroic trade unionists and dastardly factory owners, of oppressed African Americans struggling for freedom against the
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Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Co., 1894. For a multi-sided account of union activity and its legal repercussions, see United States Strike Commission,
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James A. Miller, Susan D. Pennybacker, and Eve Rosenhaft, "Mother Ada Wright and the International Campaign to Free the Scottsboro Boys, 1931-1934",
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The literature on the Pullman Strike is voluminous. For a sympathetic contemporary depiction of the strikers' activities, see William H. Carwardine,
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Although established by the Communist Party, the LDC included a number of prominent non-Communists among its formal Executive Committee, including
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Labor Defense Manifesto: Resolutions, Constitution Adopted by the First National Conference Held in Ashland Auditorium, Chicago, June 28, 1925.
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coal miners in Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Illinois, as well as coordinating legal defense and relief for jailed textile workers in
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was raided by state and federal authorities, resulting in the arrest of dozens of leading party activists, headed by top trade union official
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The fledgling American Communist movement which emerged in the summer of 1919 quickly was subject to systemic legal attack as part of the
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and James P. Cannon. The organization's paid staff was stuffed with factional loyalists. By 1928 the opposing factional group headed by
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Within the faction-filled world of the 1920s American Communism, the ILD became a bastion for adherents of the Chicago-based faction of
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and the use of state terror to stifle and divide and destroy all opposition. Writers included both non-party voices such as novelist
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is seated in the front row in the middle. The Labor Defense Council was established to defend the individuals arrested in this raid.
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Milton Cantor, "Labor Defender: Chicago and New York, 1926-1937; Equal Justice: New York, 1937-1942," in Joseph R. Conlin (ed.),
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Prometheus Research Library editorial note to Abern, "International Labor Defense Activities (1 January - 1 July 1928)," pg. 536.
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Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1895. A modern review of the strike and its aftermath is Susan Eleanor Hirsch,
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James P. Cannon was formally named as National Secretary of the ILD at its founding convention, with his factional associates
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and five other defendants charged, and ultimately convicted, of conspiracy in the strike-related killing of a police chief in
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of so-called "class war prisoners" was further developed in Moscow in March 1925 during conversations between Cannon and
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Rare pinback button issued by the Labor Defense Council in conjunction with the 1923 trials of chief Bridgman defendants
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acted as Secretary-Treasurer. A number of prominent liberal and radical attorneys were employed by the group, including
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mid-1928 circulation figure was said by Assistant Secretary Marty Abern to be "greater than the combined circulation of
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During her 1939 testimony, Damon read from an ILD publication to declare that its only two affiliated groups were the
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had gained a position of dominance over the party, and they gave increased scrutiny and criticism to ILD activities.
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magazine from 1938 to 1942. Among other issues, it defended African-Americans against violence and discrimination.
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of the New York state legislature, conducted coordinated raids upon headquarters and about 70 meeting places of the
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Party leaders jailed in connection with the August 1922 raid on the CPA's Bridgman Convention. Executive Secretary
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The Bridgman case ended in a protracted stalemate. The initial test case against William Z. Foster resulted in a
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of the working class", the IRA emphasized its organic connection to the Comintern during its first five years.
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Eli was represented by local attorneys George Croom and Stanley Belden, and ILD attorney Samuel Neuberger, ...
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The ILD left behind several bodies of publications: organizational, public, and legal cases, archived at the
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The Chairman: Let me see if I understand. You have affiliated groups with the International Labor Defense?
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During her testimony, Damon stated that membership in the ILD was roughly 300,000 due to "affiliations":
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Mr. Whitley: How many branches does it have throughout the United States? ... Could you approximate it?
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to Soviet Russia, made a proposal in Moscow to establish a new entity dedicated to the legal defense of
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that segregation of public schools was unconstitutional. The CRC dissolved in 1956, at a time when the
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The Chairman: That is a loose affiliation, is it not? What do they do to affiliate? Do they pay dues?
505:(LDC) was established to raise funds and coordinate defense efforts for this new group of defendants. 459:
and coordinated its work with another radical legal defense organization based in the East called the
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James P. Cannon and the Early Years of American Communism. Selected Writings and Speeches, 1920-1928.
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This effort was expanded and intensified on the night of January 2/3, 1920 in a mass dragnet by the
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Hugh T. Murray, Jr., "The NAACP versus the Communist Party: The Scottsboro Rape Cases, 1931-1932",
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charges. the next month, the list had 128 names, including such high-profile cases as those of
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Kenneth W. Mack, "Law and Mass Politics in the Making of the Civil Rights Lawyer, 1931-1941",
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and high unemployment increased pressure on workers to accept whatever management would give.
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and CPA Executive Secretary C.E. Ruthenberg. The latter had only recently been released from
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Eric W. Rise, "Race, Rape, and Radicalism: The Case of the Martinsville Seven, 1949-1951",
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from the United States for alleged violation of immigration laws caused by their purported
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Mr. Whitley: Miss Damon, what is the total membership of the International Labor Defense?
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In August 1922 another legal crisis arose for the American Communist movement when its
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Martin Abern, "International Labor Defense Activities (1 January - 1 July 1928)," in
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The Communist Civil Rights Movement: Legal Activism in the United States, 1919-1946.
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Abern, "International Labor Defense Activities (1 January - 1 July 1928)," pg. 539.
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Abern, "International Labor Defense Activities (1 January - 1 July 1928)," pg. 538.
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The Communist Civil Rights Movement: Legal Activism in the United States, 1919-1946
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Charles H. Martin, "Communists and Blacks: The ILD and The Angelo Herndon Case",
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had served as national secretary between her and Cannon. She was unsure whether
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International Red Aid, 1922-1928: The Founding of a Comintern Front Organization
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Costs associated with the Bridgman case were high, with prominent labor lawyer
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of 1894, which brought about the trial and imprisonment of the officers of the
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James P. Cannon and the Origins of the American Revolutionary Left, 1890-1928.
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List of Communist Party USA members who have held office in the United States
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IRA was formally launched on an international basis in conjunction with the
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had ever served as executive secretary but stated "she was an official".
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Charles H. Martin, "The International Labor Defense and Black America",
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Founding members of the ILD (of whom many were also associated with the
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financial support, mostly convicted Wobblies jailed under various state
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was subject to particularly intense legal pressure, framed at times as
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since the turn of the 20th century. ILD also publicized opposition to
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under New York state law. A new legal defense organization called the
780: 694: 537: 432:, served on the governing Executive Committee of the NDC. CLP member 396: 202: 905: 2464: 2222: 1713:
James P. Cannon and the Origins of the American Revolutionary Left,
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James P. Cannon and the Origins of the American Revolutionary Left,
847:(CRC). The CRC served as the new legal defense organization of the 809: 580: 2035: 2020:"International Labor Defense (1925-1946): Organizational History" 456: 2009:"International Labor Defense Activities (1 January-1 July 1928)" 1110:(born Anna Cohen, married as Anna E. David) appeared before the 1184:
Miss Damon. It is made up mostly of affiliated organizations —
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PhD dissertation. University of California, Los Angeles, 2007.
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Miss Damon: I can't say. That is very difficult to ascertain.
1754:"Review of Gastonia 1929: The Story of the Loray Mill Strike" 1380:, as well as prominent Communists such as trade union leader 1213:
The Chairman. Well, how many individual members do you have?
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Defying Dixie: The Radical Roots of Civil Rights, 1919-1950.
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Case of the Gallup, New Mexico Coal Mine Workers, 1933-1938
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Rutherford, NJ: Farleigh Dickinson University Press, 1988.
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James P. Cannon and the Early Years of American Communism.
2022:, Early American Marxism website, www.marxisthistory.org/ 1518:
After the Strike: A Century of Labor Struggle at Pullman.
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extended the process for years. Ruthenberg died of acute
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that segregation of public schools was unconstitutional.
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Workers' rights organizations based in the United States
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Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2007; pg. 261.
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Communist Party v. Subversive Activities Control Board
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Communist Front? The Civil Rights Congress, 1946-1956.
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The Chairman: Whatever they can afford to contribute?
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named as editor of the new group's official magazine,
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New York: Prometheus Research Library, 1992; pg. 537.
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American Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born
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American Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born
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Cantor, "Labor Defender ... Equal Justice," pg. 255.
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Cantor, "Labor Defender ... Equal Justice," pg. 254.
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Cantor, "Labor Defender ... Equal Justice," pg. 253.
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The legal communist party in the United States, the
402: 2026:"People & Events: International Labor Defense" 3106:Legal advocacy organizations in the United States 1924:"Subversive Influence in the Educational Process" 3077: 2731:Albertson v. Subversive Activities Control Board 2086:vol. 106, no. 2 (April 2001), pp. 387–430. 2069:vol. 64, no. 2 (Spring 1979), pp. 131–141. 1993:The American Radical Press, 1880-1960: Volume 1. 1476:National Federation for Constitutional Liberties 1437:New York: International Labor Defense, May 1935. 837:National Federation for Constitutional Liberties 571:used at the time of its 10th Anniversary in 1932 244:National Federation for Constitutional Liberties 41:National Federation for Constitutional Liberties 2038:, Industrial Workers of the World, www.iww.org/ 1916: 1520:Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2003. 1514:Report on the Chicago Strike of June–July 1894. 1453:International Association of Democratic Lawyers 3096:Anti-racist organizations in the United States 2106:vol. 58, no. 3 (Aug. 1992), pp. 461–490. 2096:vol. 28, no. 3 (QIII-1967), pp. 276–287. 2036:IWW General Defense Committee official website 2015:New York: Spartacist Publishing Company, 1992. 1894: 1270: 579:, former Wobbly leader turned bail-jumper and 2135: 1995:Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1974; pg. 250. 1428:New York: International Labor Defense, n.d. . 1334:Beginning in January 1926, the ILD published 1329: 880:was instrumental in forming the ILD (no date) 830:The Communist Party USA and African Americans 643: 2059:vol. 93, no. 1 (June 2006), pp. 37–62. 1987: 1985: 1949:"International Labor Defense - Record Group" 1813: 1811: 1801: 1799: 1789: 1787: 1420:Chicago: International Labor Defense, n.d. . 1399: 1178:Mr. Whitley: Is that individual membership? 276: 3126:Political imprisonment in the United States 3121:1947 disestablishments in the United States 1707: 1705: 1703: 1396:of America. In 1937, the magazine ceased. 1392:, a former political prisoner in New York. 888:tapped as Assistant National Secretary and 2142: 2128: 1971: 1969: 1904:. New York Sun. 7 October 1941. p. 30 1870:Books on trial: red scare in the Heartland 1550: 1548: 1546: 1982: 1808: 1796: 1784: 1598: 1596: 1544: 1542: 1540: 1538: 1536: 1534: 1532: 1530: 1528: 1526: 3086:1925 establishments in the United States 2964:Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party 2079:vol. 26, no. 2 (1985), pp. 165–194. 1700: 1674: 1594: 1592: 1590: 1588: 1586: 1584: 1582: 1580: 1578: 1576: 1224: 945: 904: 872: 734: 647: 585:political prisoners in the United States 562: 553:International Red Aid (MOPR) (1922-1943) 465: 343: 339: 2149: 1966: 1943: 1941: 1837: 1835: 1833: 1831: 1829: 1827: 1825: 1823: 1554: 1261:American League for Peace and Democracy 1182:Mr. Whitley: Or affiliated membership? 1101: 916:, was among the co-founders of the ILD. 900: 779:In 1928, ILD represented party members 745:, featuring workers imprisoned for the 319:Government efforts to silence and jail 150:American League for Peace and Democracy 3116:Communist Party USA mass organizations 3078: 2915:American Committee for Spanish Freedom 1651: 1649: 1647: 1645: 1643: 1641: 1639: 1637: 1635: 1633: 1602: 1523: 225:, and prominently participated in the 2123: 1751: 1573: 1411: 1249:Senate Internal Security Subcommittee 385:Attorney General of the United States 379:, coordinated by the newly appointed 1938: 1841: 1820: 1655: 1606:American Communism and Soviet Russia 1232:(circa 1910-1913) was an ILD lawyer. 118:defend rights of political prisoners 2001: 1902:"Lawyer Walks Out on Tutor's Trial" 1630: 1555:Uhlmann, Jennifer Ruthanne (2007). 1176:Miss Damon: Approximately 300,000. 606:4th World Congress of the Comintern 455:The NDC maintained headquarters in 387:, and remembered in history as the 13: 1239:was an ILD lawyer and represented 934:Edward C. Wentworth, vice chairman 14: 3137: 3091:Organizations established in 1925 1926:. US GPO. 1953. pp. 995–1023 1192:unions, and other organizations. 403:National Defense Committee (1920) 17:International Labor Defense (ILD) 3036:Relations with African Americans 855:, the US Supreme Court ruled in 428:of the CPA, as well as attorney 1861: 1745: 1736: 1254: 868: 674:Industrial Workers of the World 383:, 24-year-old assistant to the 305:Industrial Workers of the World 201:as the American section of the 2740:Aptheker v. Secretary of State 1727: 1718: 1687: 1502: 1303:Sacco-Vanzetti Case, 1926-1930 865:was expanding its activities. 334:American Civil Liberties Union 1: 3022:San Francisco Workers' School 2785:Keyishian v. Board of Regents 1496: 1376:, and Socialist Party leader 1116:U.S. House of Representatives 730: 2104:Journal of Southern History, 2057:Journal of American History, 2045:New York: W.W. Norton, 2008. 1875:University of Oklahoma Press 1458:International Red Aid (MOPR) 931:Andrew T. McNamara, chairman 739:The September 1929 issue of 7: 2112:Jennifer Ruthanne Uhlmann, 2084:American Historical Review, 2030:Public Broadcasting Service 1656:Ryle, James Martin (1967). 1441: 1271:Publications (NYPL archive) 1201:Miss Damon: That is right. 858:Brown v. Board of Education 806:disenfranchised most blacks 719:, who had confessed to the 542:United States Supreme Court 265:Brown v. Board of Education 191:International Labor Defense 10: 3142: 3057:Young Communist League USA 2041:Glenda Elizabeth Gilmore, 1471:National Defense Committee 1330:Labor Defender (1926-1937) 1220: 827: 774:Centralia Massacre of 1919 770:New Bedford, Massachusetts 658:Socialist Party of America 644:ILD's establishment (1925) 556: 410:National Defense Committee 366:Communist Party of America 271: 209:network. The ILD defended 3064:Young Pioneers of America 2906: 2877: 2845: 2838: 2721: 2500: 2344: 2249: 2166: 2159: 2067:Journal of Negro History, 1603:Draper, Theodore (1960). 1400:Equal Justice (1938-1942) 823: 721:Los Angeles Times Bombing 589:Communist Party of Poland 461:Workers Defense Committee 314:General Defense Committee 277:Pre-Communist forerunners 229:and legal appeals in the 213:, was active in the anti- 159: 145: 135: 122: 114: 98: 90: 82: 68: 60: 50: 35: 21: 2950:International Publishers 2922:Bill of Rights socialism 2819:Watkins v. United States 1294: 897:collective memberships. 789:Gastonia, North Carolina 706:Preparedness Day bombers 666:Workers Party of America 483:1922 National Convention 2992:New York Workers School 2803:Scales v. United States 2767:Dennis v. United States 1486:National Negro Congress 1434:Night Riders in Gallup. 1277:New York Public Library 1125:Damon also stated that 995:Bishop William M. Brown 841:National Negro Congress 524:orator and writer, and 497:after a conviction for 373:Bureau of Investigation 327:political opponents of 321:conscientious objectors 45:National Negro Congress 2943:English-language press 2828:Yates v. United States 2607:Elizabeth Gurley Flynn 2579:Shirley Graham Du Bois 2488:Rossana Cambron & 2355:(1919–1920; 1922–1927) 1481:National Lawyers Guild 1245:Rapp-Coudert Committee 1233: 1218: 954: 917: 881: 749: 661: 641: 575:In the spring of 1922 572: 478: 353: 297:, is but one example. 295:American Railway Union 3029:Soviet Negro Republic 2936:Communist Labor Party 2794:Noto v. United States 2572:Benjamin J. Davis Jr. 2385:L. E. Katterfeld 2353:C. E. Ruthenberg 1491:Workers Defense Union 1448:Civil Rights Congress 1372:, former Wobbly poet 1299:Major cases include: 1228: 1171: 1163:Anna Damon, secretary 1106:On October 16, 1939, 1025:Charles E. Ruthenberg 1015:Alice Stone Blackwell 951:Alice Stone Blackwell 949: 940:, executive secretary 908: 876: 863:Civil Rights Movement 845:Civil Rights Congress 776:in Washington state. 738: 651: 634: 569:International Red Aid 566: 559:International Red Aid 503:Labor Defense Council 469: 422:Communist Labor Party 347: 340:Communist forerunners 260:Civil Rights Movement 248:Civil Rights Congress 207:International Red Aid 55:Civil Rights Congress 30:International Red Aid 2985:National conventions 2677:William L. Patterson 1764:(3): (326–331) 329. 1152:William J. Patterson 1144:U.S. Representative 1141:National Executive: 1135:Juliet Stuart Poyntz 1127:William L. Patterson 1102:Organization in 1939 958:National Committee: 901:Organization in 1925 691:criminal syndicalism 399:political activity. 2957:Language federation 2152:Communist Party USA 1758:Appalachian Journal 1752:HOWIE, SAM (1996). 1510:The Pullman Strike. 1247:in 1941 and the US 1237:Samuel A. Neuberger 1230:Samuel A. Neuberger 1120:Abraham J. Isserman 1072:Lovett Fort Whitman 1061:David Rhys Williams 1037:William Mollenhauer 992:Edward C. Wentworth 914:Scopes Monkey Trial 849:Communist Party USA 702:Bartolomeo Vanzetti 594:political prisoners 252:Communist Party USA 94:Promote world peace 18: 3050:Yokinen Show Trial 2758:De Jonge v. Oregon 2649:Antoinette Konikow 2621:Dorothy Ray Healey 2361:Alfred Wagenknecht 1412:Other publications 1404:The ILD published 1234: 986:Andrew T. McNamara 955: 918: 912:, attorney in the 882: 843:(NNC) to form the 750: 679:William D. Haywood 662: 577:"Big Bill" Haywood 573: 487:Bridgman, Michigan 479: 377:Justice Department 354: 211:Sacco and Vanzetti 137:Official language 77:William D. Haywood 16: 3073: 3072: 2999:Non-English press 2971:Lincoln Battalion 2902: 2901: 2698:Charles E. Taylor 2635:Oakley C. Johnson 2516:William Albertson 2501:Prominent members 2457:William Z. Foster 2433:William Z. Foster 2403:(1922; 1927–1929) 2393:William Weinstone 2340: 2339: 2250:Vice Presidential 2211:Charlene Mitchell 2175:William Z. Foster 1884:978-0-8061-3868-8 1680:Bryan D. Palmer, 1382:William Z. Foster 1216: 1043:Mandell Schuchter 977:William Z. Foster 754:William Z. Foster 747:Loray Mill strike 639: 610:mass organization 520:, recently freed 491:William Z. Foster 472:William Z. Foster 450:Joseph R. Brodsky 187: 186: 3133: 3066: 3059: 3052: 3045: 3038: 3031: 3024: 3017: 3010: 3001: 2994: 2987: 2980: 2973: 2966: 2959: 2952: 2945: 2938: 2931: 2924: 2917: 2907:Related articles 2895: 2888: 2870: 2863: 2856: 2843: 2842: 2831: 2822: 2813: 2811:Smith Act trials 2806: 2797: 2788: 2779: 2770: 2761: 2752: 2743: 2734: 2714: 2707: 2700: 2693: 2686: 2679: 2672: 2670:Karl Emil Nygard 2665: 2658: 2656:Claude Lightfoot 2651: 2644: 2637: 2630: 2623: 2616: 2609: 2602: 2595: 2588: 2581: 2574: 2567: 2560: 2558:Ella Reeve Bloor 2553: 2546: 2544:Walter Bernstein 2539: 2532: 2525: 2523:Herbert Aptheker 2518: 2511: 2493: 2484: 2476: 2468: 2460: 2452: 2444: 2436: 2428: 2420: 2412: 2404: 2396: 2388: 2380: 2372: 2364: 2356: 2333: 2317: 2301: 2289: 2269: 2242: 2218: 2206: 2190: 2164: 2163: 2153: 2144: 2137: 2130: 2121: 2120: 2002:External sources 1996: 1989: 1980: 1973: 1964: 1963: 1961: 1959: 1953: 1945: 1936: 1935: 1933: 1931: 1920: 1914: 1913: 1911: 1909: 1898: 1892: 1891: 1865: 1859: 1858: 1856: 1854: 1839: 1818: 1815: 1806: 1803: 1794: 1791: 1782: 1781: 1749: 1743: 1740: 1734: 1731: 1725: 1722: 1716: 1709: 1698: 1691: 1685: 1678: 1672: 1671: 1669: 1667: 1653: 1628: 1627: 1625: 1623: 1600: 1571: 1570: 1568: 1566: 1552: 1521: 1506: 1342:The Daily Worker 1251:(SISS) in 1953. 1180:Miss Damon: No. 1173: 1146:Vito Marcantonio 1131:J. Louis Engdahl 1040:Henry Corbishley 1007:William F. Dunne 818:Great Depression 717:John B. McNamara 636: 626:Grigory Zinoviev 499:criminal anarchy 495:Sing Sing prison 183: 180: 178: 176: 174: 172: 170: 168: 166: 127: 36:Merged into 19: 15: 3141: 3140: 3136: 3135: 3134: 3132: 3131: 3130: 3076: 3075: 3074: 3069: 3062: 3055: 3048: 3041: 3034: 3027: 3020: 3015:Red diaper baby 3013: 3004: 2997: 2990: 2983: 2976: 2969: 2962: 2955: 2948: 2941: 2934: 2927: 2920: 2913: 2898: 2891: 2884: 2873: 2866: 2859: 2852: 2834: 2825: 2816: 2809: 2800: 2791: 2782: 2773: 2764: 2755: 2746: 2737: 2728: 2717: 2710: 2703: 2696: 2689: 2682: 2675: 2668: 2661: 2654: 2647: 2640: 2633: 2628:Manning Johnson 2626: 2619: 2612: 2605: 2598: 2591: 2584: 2577: 2570: 2563: 2556: 2551:Marc Blitzstein 2549: 2542: 2535: 2528: 2521: 2514: 2507: 2496: 2487: 2479: 2471: 2463: 2455: 2447: 2439: 2431: 2423: 2415: 2409:James P. Cannon 2407: 2399: 2391: 2383: 2375: 2367: 2359: 2351: 2336: 2320: 2304: 2292: 2272: 2258:Benjamin Gitlow 2256: 2245: 2221: 2209: 2193: 2173: 2155: 2151: 2148: 2018:Tim Davenport, 2004: 1999: 1990: 1983: 1974: 1967: 1957: 1955: 1951: 1947: 1946: 1939: 1929: 1927: 1922: 1921: 1917: 1907: 1905: 1900: 1899: 1895: 1885: 1867: 1866: 1862: 1852: 1850: 1840: 1821: 1816: 1809: 1804: 1797: 1792: 1785: 1750: 1746: 1741: 1737: 1732: 1728: 1723: 1719: 1710: 1701: 1692: 1688: 1679: 1675: 1665: 1663: 1654: 1631: 1621: 1619: 1617: 1601: 1574: 1564: 1562: 1553: 1524: 1507: 1503: 1499: 1444: 1431:Louis Coleman, 1414: 1402: 1390:Benjamin Gitlow 1336:Labor Defender, 1332: 1315:Case, 1931-1939 1309:Case, 1931-1946 1297: 1273: 1257: 1241:Morris U. Cohen 1223: 1214: 1212: 1209: 1207: 1204: 1202: 1200: 1198: 1195: 1193: 1183: 1181: 1179: 1177: 1175: 1154:, vice chairman 1104: 1079:James P. Cannon 1054:Robert Whitaker 1050:Benjamin Gitlow 1002:Harrison George 972:Clarence Darrow 938:James P. Cannon 910:Clarence Darrow 903: 894:Labor Defender. 878:James P. Cannon 871: 832: 826: 785:Clarence Miller 733: 713:Warren Billings 670:James P. Cannon 646: 561: 555: 530:Cleveland, Ohio 522:Socialist Party 476:C.E. Ruthenberg 426:C.E. Ruthenberg 418:L.E. Katterfeld 405: 381:J. Edgar Hoover 358:First Red Scare 350:C.E. Ruthenberg 342: 325:anti-militarist 279: 274: 235:Scottsboro Boys 163: 138: 128: 125: 110: 73:James P. Cannon 12: 11: 5: 3139: 3129: 3128: 3123: 3118: 3113: 3108: 3103: 3098: 3093: 3088: 3071: 3070: 3068: 3067: 3060: 3053: 3046: 3039: 3032: 3025: 3018: 3011: 3007:People's World 3002: 2995: 2988: 2981: 2974: 2967: 2960: 2953: 2946: 2939: 2932: 2925: 2918: 2910: 2908: 2904: 2903: 2900: 2899: 2897: 2896: 2889: 2881: 2879: 2875: 2874: 2872: 2871: 2864: 2857: 2849: 2847: 2840: 2836: 2835: 2833: 2832: 2823: 2814: 2807: 2798: 2789: 2780: 2776:Kent v. Dulles 2771: 2762: 2753: 2744: 2735: 2725: 2723: 2719: 2718: 2716: 2715: 2712:Richard Wright 2708: 2701: 2694: 2687: 2680: 2673: 2666: 2659: 2652: 2645: 2638: 2631: 2624: 2617: 2610: 2603: 2600:Albert Goldman 2596: 2593:Richard Durham 2589: 2582: 2575: 2568: 2561: 2554: 2547: 2540: 2533: 2526: 2519: 2512: 2504: 2502: 2498: 2497: 2495: 2494: 2492:(2019–present) 2485: 2477: 2469: 2461: 2453: 2445: 2437: 2429: 2421: 2417:Caleb Harrison 2413: 2405: 2397: 2389: 2381: 2373: 2365: 2357: 2348: 2346: 2342: 2341: 2338: 2337: 2335: 2334: 2318: 2302: 2290: 2270: 2253: 2251: 2247: 2246: 2244: 2243: 2219: 2207: 2191: 2170: 2168: 2161: 2157: 2156: 2147: 2146: 2139: 2132: 2124: 2118: 2117: 2110: 2100: 2090: 2080: 2077:Labor History, 2073: 2063: 2053: 2048:Gerald Horne, 2046: 2039: 2033: 2023: 2016: 2007:Martin Abern, 2003: 2000: 1998: 1997: 1981: 1965: 1937: 1915: 1893: 1883: 1860: 1843:Ward, Harry F. 1819: 1807: 1795: 1783: 1744: 1735: 1726: 1717: 1699: 1686: 1673: 1629: 1615: 1572: 1522: 1500: 1498: 1495: 1494: 1493: 1488: 1483: 1478: 1473: 1468: 1464:Labor Defender 1460: 1455: 1450: 1443: 1440: 1439: 1438: 1429: 1421: 1413: 1410: 1401: 1398: 1378:Eugene V. Debs 1370:Upton Sinclair 1362:Labor Defender 1331: 1328: 1327: 1326: 1323: 1320:Angelo Herndon 1316: 1310: 1304: 1296: 1293: 1285:Labor Defender 1281:Hunger Fighter 1272: 1269: 1256: 1253: 1222: 1219: 1188:trade unions, 1167: 1166: 1165: 1164: 1161: 1158:Robert W. Dunn 1155: 1149: 1112:Dies Committee 1103: 1100: 1099: 1098: 1097: 1096: 1091: 1086: 1083: 1080: 1077: 1074: 1069: 1068:John Edenstrom 1066: 1063: 1058: 1055: 1052: 1047: 1044: 1041: 1038: 1035: 1032: 1027: 1022: 1017: 1012: 1009: 1004: 999: 996: 993: 990: 987: 984: 982:Robert W. Dunn 979: 974: 969: 967:Eugene V. Debs 964: 962:Upton Sinclair 944: 943: 942: 941: 935: 932: 902: 899: 870: 867: 828:Main article: 825: 822: 793:Leon Josephson 742:Labor Defender 732: 729: 654:Eugene V. Debs 645: 642: 601:organization. 557:Main article: 554: 551: 518:Eugene V. Debs 510:Frank P. Walsh 438:Swinburne Hale 404: 401: 362:Lusk Committee 341: 338: 291:Pullman Strike 283:strike actions 278: 275: 273: 270: 240:Labor Defender 185: 184: 161: 157: 156: 147: 143: 142: 139: 136: 133: 132: 129: 123: 120: 119: 116: 112: 111: 109: 108: 102: 100: 96: 95: 92: 88: 87: 86:April 28, 1947 84: 83:Merger of 80: 79: 70: 66: 65: 62: 58: 57: 52: 48: 47: 37: 33: 32: 23: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 3138: 3127: 3124: 3122: 3119: 3117: 3114: 3112: 3109: 3107: 3104: 3102: 3099: 3097: 3094: 3092: 3089: 3087: 3084: 3083: 3081: 3065: 3061: 3058: 3054: 3051: 3047: 3044: 3040: 3037: 3033: 3030: 3026: 3023: 3019: 3016: 3012: 3009: 3008: 3003: 3000: 2996: 2993: 2989: 2986: 2982: 2979: 2975: 2972: 2968: 2965: 2961: 2958: 2954: 2951: 2947: 2944: 2940: 2937: 2933: 2930: 2926: 2923: 2919: 2916: 2912: 2911: 2909: 2905: 2894: 2890: 2887: 2883: 2882: 2880: 2876: 2869: 2865: 2862: 2858: 2855: 2851: 2850: 2848: 2844: 2841: 2839:State parties 2837: 2830: 2829: 2824: 2821: 2820: 2815: 2812: 2808: 2805: 2804: 2799: 2796: 2795: 2790: 2787: 2786: 2781: 2778: 2777: 2772: 2769: 2768: 2763: 2760: 2759: 2754: 2751: 2750: 2745: 2742: 2741: 2736: 2733: 2732: 2727: 2726: 2724: 2720: 2713: 2709: 2706: 2705:Emma Tenayuca 2702: 2699: 2695: 2692: 2688: 2685: 2681: 2678: 2674: 2671: 2667: 2664: 2660: 2657: 2653: 2650: 2646: 2643: 2642:Claudia Jones 2639: 2636: 2632: 2629: 2625: 2622: 2618: 2615: 2614:Harry Haywood 2611: 2608: 2604: 2601: 2597: 2594: 2590: 2587: 2583: 2580: 2576: 2573: 2569: 2566: 2562: 2559: 2555: 2552: 2548: 2545: 2541: 2538: 2534: 2531: 2527: 2524: 2520: 2517: 2513: 2510: 2506: 2505: 2503: 2499: 2491: 2486: 2482: 2481:John Bachtell 2478: 2474: 2470: 2466: 2462: 2458: 2454: 2450: 2449:Eugene Dennis 2446: 2442: 2438: 2434: 2430: 2426: 2422: 2418: 2414: 2410: 2406: 2402: 2401:Jay Lovestone 2398: 2394: 2390: 2386: 2382: 2378: 2377:Louis Shapiro 2374: 2370: 2369:Charles Dirba 2366: 2362: 2358: 2354: 2350: 2349: 2347: 2343: 2331: 2327: 2323: 2319: 2315: 2311: 2307: 2303: 2299: 2295: 2294:Mike Zagarell 2291: 2287: 2283: 2279: 2275: 2274:James W. Ford 2271: 2267: 2263: 2259: 2255: 2254: 2252: 2248: 2240: 2236: 2232: 2228: 2224: 2220: 2216: 2212: 2208: 2204: 2200: 2196: 2192: 2188: 2184: 2180: 2176: 2172: 2171: 2169: 2165: 2162: 2158: 2154: 2145: 2140: 2138: 2133: 2131: 2126: 2125: 2122: 2115: 2111: 2109: 2105: 2101: 2099: 2095: 2091: 2089: 2085: 2081: 2078: 2074: 2072: 2068: 2064: 2062: 2058: 2054: 2051: 2047: 2044: 2040: 2037: 2034: 2031: 2027: 2024: 2021: 2017: 2014: 2010: 2006: 2005: 1994: 1988: 1986: 1978: 1972: 1970: 1950: 1944: 1942: 1925: 1919: 1903: 1897: 1890: 1886: 1880: 1876: 1872: 1871: 1864: 1848: 1844: 1838: 1836: 1834: 1832: 1830: 1828: 1826: 1824: 1814: 1812: 1802: 1800: 1790: 1788: 1779: 1775: 1771: 1767: 1763: 1759: 1755: 1748: 1739: 1730: 1721: 1714: 1708: 1706: 1704: 1696: 1690: 1683: 1677: 1661: 1660: 1652: 1650: 1648: 1646: 1644: 1642: 1640: 1638: 1636: 1634: 1618: 1616:9780374923341 1612: 1608: 1607: 1599: 1597: 1595: 1593: 1591: 1589: 1587: 1585: 1583: 1581: 1579: 1577: 1560: 1559: 1551: 1549: 1547: 1545: 1543: 1541: 1539: 1537: 1535: 1533: 1531: 1529: 1527: 1519: 1515: 1511: 1505: 1501: 1492: 1489: 1487: 1484: 1482: 1479: 1477: 1474: 1472: 1469: 1466: 1465: 1461: 1459: 1456: 1454: 1451: 1449: 1446: 1445: 1436: 1435: 1430: 1427: 1426: 1422: 1419: 1416: 1415: 1409: 1407: 1406:Equal Justice 1397: 1393: 1391: 1387: 1384:, cartoonist 1383: 1379: 1375: 1374:Ralph Chaplin 1371: 1367: 1363: 1359: 1357: 1356: 1355:The Communist 1351: 1349: 1345: 1343: 1337: 1324: 1321: 1317: 1314: 1311: 1308: 1305: 1302: 1301: 1300: 1292: 1290: 1289:Equal Justice 1286: 1282: 1278: 1268: 1266: 1262: 1252: 1250: 1246: 1242: 1238: 1231: 1227: 1217: 1191: 1187: 1170: 1162: 1159: 1156: 1153: 1150: 1147: 1143: 1142: 1140: 1139: 1138: 1136: 1132: 1128: 1123: 1121: 1118:with counsel 1117: 1113: 1109: 1095: 1092: 1090: 1089:Ralph Chaplin 1087: 1085:J. O. Bentall 1084: 1082:E. R. Meitzen 1081: 1078: 1075: 1073: 1070: 1067: 1064: 1062: 1059: 1056: 1053: 1051: 1048: 1045: 1042: 1039: 1036: 1033: 1031: 1028: 1026: 1023: 1021: 1018: 1016: 1013: 1011:George Maurer 1010: 1008: 1005: 1003: 1000: 997: 994: 991: 988: 985: 983: 980: 978: 975: 973: 970: 968: 965: 963: 960: 959: 957: 956: 952: 948: 939: 936: 933: 930: 929: 927: 926: 925: 923: 915: 911: 907: 898: 895: 891: 890:Max Shachtman 887: 879: 875: 866: 864: 860: 859: 854: 850: 846: 842: 838: 831: 821: 819: 813: 811: 807: 802: 796: 794: 790: 786: 782: 777: 775: 771: 767: 761: 759: 758:Jay Lovestone 755: 748: 744: 743: 737: 728: 724: 722: 718: 714: 710: 707: 703: 699: 696: 692: 686: 682: 680: 675: 671: 667: 659: 656:of the rival 655: 650: 640: 633: 630: 627: 623: 617: 613: 611: 607: 602: 598: 595: 590: 586: 582: 578: 570: 565: 560: 550: 547: 543: 539: 534: 531: 527: 523: 519: 514: 511: 506: 504: 500: 496: 492: 488: 484: 477: 473: 468: 464: 462: 458: 453: 451: 447: 446:Charles Recht 443: 442:Walter Nelles 439: 435: 431: 430:I.E. Ferguson 427: 423: 419: 415: 411: 400: 398: 394: 390: 386: 382: 378: 374: 369: 367: 363: 359: 351: 346: 337: 335: 330: 326: 322: 317: 315: 310: 309:"free speech" 306: 303: 298: 296: 292: 288: 284: 269: 267: 266: 261: 257: 253: 249: 245: 241: 236: 232: 231:cause célèbre 228: 224: 220: 216: 212: 208: 204: 200: 199:United States 196: 192: 182: 162: 158: 155: 151: 148: 144: 140: 134: 130: 121: 117: 113: 107: 106:New York City 104: 103: 101: 97: 93: 89: 85: 81: 78: 74: 71: 67: 64:June 28, 1925 63: 59: 56: 53: 49: 46: 42: 38: 34: 31: 27: 24: 20: 3005: 2826: 2817: 2801: 2792: 2783: 2774: 2765: 2756: 2747: 2738: 2729: 2691:Tupac Shakur 2684:Paul Robeson 2663:Steve Nelson 2537:John Bernard 2509:Bernard Ades 2441:Earl Browder 2425:Abram Jakira 2322:Angela Davis 2306:Jarvis Tyner 2195:Earl Browder 2167:Presidential 2113: 2103: 2093: 2083: 2076: 2066: 2056: 2049: 2042: 2012: 1992: 1976: 1956:. Retrieved 1928:. Retrieved 1918: 1906:. Retrieved 1896: 1888: 1869: 1863: 1851:. Retrieved 1761: 1757: 1747: 1738: 1729: 1720: 1712: 1694: 1689: 1681: 1676: 1664:. Retrieved 1658: 1620:. Retrieved 1605: 1563:. Retrieved 1557: 1517: 1513: 1509: 1504: 1462: 1433: 1424: 1417: 1405: 1403: 1394: 1386:Robert Minor 1366:Ku Klux Klan 1361: 1360: 1353: 1346: 1340: 1335: 1333: 1298: 1288: 1284: 1280: 1274: 1258: 1255:Affiliations 1235: 1172: 1168: 1124: 1105: 1030:Robert Minor 998:Rose Karsner 989:Fred Merrick 928:Executives: 924:) included: 919: 893: 886:Martin Abern 883: 869:Organization 856: 833: 814: 797: 778: 762: 751: 740: 725: 704:, purported 698:Nicola Sacco 687: 683: 663: 635: 631: 622:Israel Amter 618: 614: 603: 599: 574: 546:appendicitis 535: 526:Max S. Hayes 515: 507: 480: 454: 406: 389:Palmer Raids 370: 355: 318: 299: 280: 263: 246:to form the 239: 223:civil rights 194: 190: 188: 146:Affiliations 126:(circa 1939) 2565:Anne Burlak 2530:Max Bedacht 2483:(2014–2019) 2475:(2000–2014) 2467:(1959–2000) 2459:(1945–1957) 2451:(1945–1959) 2443:(1934–1945) 2435:(1929–1934) 2427:(1922–1923) 2419:(1921–1922) 2411:(1921–1922) 2395:(1921–1922) 2379:(late 1920) 2371:(1920–1921) 2363:(1919–1921) 1348:Labor Unity 1322:, 1932-1937 1243:before the 1186:A. F. of L. 1160:, treasurer 1094:Max Bedacht 1076:Jacob Dolla 1057:Cora Meyers 1046:Dan Stevens 1034:Rose Barron 1020:Helen Hayes 839:(NFCL) and 801:chain gangs 672:, a former 434:Edgar Owens 414:Max Bedacht 397:"anarchist" 393:deportation 329:World War I 302:syndicalist 124:Membership 22:Predecessor 3080:Categories 3043:Ware Group 2929:Browderism 2722:Litigation 2586:Bella Dodd 1930:11 October 1908:11 October 1497:References 1358:combined. 1313:Tom Mooney 1307:Scottsboro 1148:, chairman 1108:Anna Damon 766:anthracite 731:Operations 709:Tom Mooney 695:anarchists 567:Symbol of 424:(CLP) and 287:injunction 3101:Comintern 2088:.In JSTOR 1770:0090-3779 1666:18 August 1622:18 August 1565:18 August 1065:Fred Mann 810:lynchings 781:Fred Beal 632:In sum: 538:hung jury 219:movements 203:Comintern 131:~ 300,000 61:Formation 51:Successor 26:Comintern 2861:Maryland 2490:Joe Sims 2473:Sam Webb 2465:Gus Hall 2223:Gus Hall 2160:Nominees 2108:In JSTOR 2098:In JSTOR 2071:In JSTOR 2061:In JSTOR 1877:. 2007. 1845:(1940). 1778:40933777 1715:pg. 263. 1711:Palmer, 1697:pg. 262. 1693:Palmer, 1467:magazine 1442:See also 1318:Case of 1263:and the 1190:C. I. O. 581:defector 336:(ACLU). 215:lynching 169:/history 165:marxists 115:Services 99:Location 2886:Alabama 2878:Defunct 2854:Georgia 2846:Current 2345:Leaders 2094:Phylon, 2032:, 1999. 1958:21 July 1221:Members 1114:of the 457:Chicago 420:of the 375:of the 368:(CPA). 272:History 233:of the 227:defense 160:Website 141:English 91:Purpose 69:Founder 2893:Hawaii 2387:(1921) 1881:  1853:7 July 1776:  1768:  1613:  1388:, and 1287:, and 824:Merger 715:, and 448:, and 175:/other 2868:Texas 2011:, in 1952:(PDF) 1774:JSTOR 1295:Cases 853:NAACP 256:NAACP 181:.html 39:with 2330:1984 2326:1980 2314:1976 2310:1972 2298:1968 2286:1940 2282:1936 2278:1932 2266:1928 2262:1924 2239:1984 2235:1980 2231:1976 2227:1972 2215:1968 2203:1940 2199:1936 2187:1932 2183:1928 2179:1924 1960:2018 1932:2018 1910:2018 1879:ISBN 1855:2018 1766:ISSN 1668:2020 1624:2020 1611:ISBN 1567:2020 1352:and 1129:and 922:ACLU 711:and 700:and 528:, a 474:and 416:and 323:and 300:The 221:for 189:The 179:/ild 177:/ild 173:/eam 171:/usa 167:.org 43:and 485:at 205:'s 195:ILD 28:'s 3082:: 2328:; 2312:; 2284:; 2280:; 2264:; 2237:; 2233:; 2229:; 2201:; 2185:; 2181:; 2028:, 1984:^ 1968:^ 1940:^ 1887:. 1873:. 1822:^ 1810:^ 1798:^ 1786:^ 1772:. 1762:23 1760:. 1756:. 1702:^ 1632:^ 1575:^ 1525:^ 1291:. 1283:, 783:, 723:. 452:. 444:, 440:, 217:, 152:, 75:, 2332:) 2324:( 2316:) 2308:( 2300:) 2296:( 2288:) 2276:( 2268:) 2260:( 2241:) 2225:( 2217:) 2213:( 2205:) 2197:( 2189:) 2177:( 2143:e 2136:t 2129:v 1962:. 1934:. 1912:. 1857:. 1780:. 1670:. 1626:. 1569:. 1350:, 1344:, 660:. 193:(

Index

Comintern
International Red Aid
National Federation for Constitutional Liberties
National Negro Congress
Civil Rights Congress
James P. Cannon
William D. Haywood
New York City
American League for Peace and Democracy
American Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born
marxists.org/history/usa/eam/other/ild/ild.html
United States
Comintern
International Red Aid
Sacco and Vanzetti
lynching
movements
civil rights
defense
cause célèbre
Scottsboro Boys
National Federation for Constitutional Liberties
Civil Rights Congress
Communist Party USA
NAACP
Civil Rights Movement
Brown v. Board of Education
strike actions
injunction
Pullman Strike

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