The Centralia Conspiracy
E-text prepared by Curtis A. Weyant
A Tongue of Flame The martyr cannot be dishonored. Every lash inflicted is a tongue of flame; every prison a more illustrious abode; every burned book or house enlightens the world; every suppressed or expunged word reverberates through the earth from side to side. The minds of men are at last aroused; reason looks out and justifies her own, and malice finds all her work is ruin. It is the whipper who is whipped and the tyrant who is undone.--Emerson.
This booklet is not an apology for murder. It is an honest effort to unravel the tangled mesh of circumstances that led up to the Armistice Day tragedy in Centralia, Washington. The writer is one of those who believe that the taking of human life is justifiable only in self-defense. Even then the act is a horrible reversion to the brute--to the low plane of savagery. Civilization, to be worthy of the name, must afford other methods of settling human differences than those of blood letting.
The nation was shocked on November 11, 1919, to read of the killing of four American Legion men by members of the Industrial Workers of the World in Centralia. The capitalist newspapers announced to the world that these unoffending paraders were killed in cold blood--that they were murdered from ambush without provocation of any kind. If the author were convinced that there was even a slight possibility of this being true, he would not raise his voice to defend the perpetrators of such a cowardly crime.
But there are two sides to every question and perhaps the newspapers presented only one of these. Dr. Frank Bickford, an ex-service man who participated in the affair, testified at the coroner's inquest that the Legion men were attempting to raid the union hall when they were killed. Sworn testimony of various eyewitnesses has revealed the fact that some of the unoffending paraders carried coils of rope and that others were armed with such weapons as would work the demolition of the hall and bodily injury to its occupants. These things throw an entirely different light on the subject. If this is true it means that the union loggers fired only in self-defense and not with the intention of committing wanton and malicious murder as has been stated. Now, as at least two of the union men who did the shooting were ex-soldiers, it appears that the tragedy must have resulted from something more than a mere quarrel between loggers and soldiers. There must be something back of it all that the public generally doesn't know about.
Ralph Chaplin
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The Centralia Conspiracy
The Centralia Conspiracy
Murder or Self-Defense?
A Labor Case
The Forests of the Northwest
Lumber--A Basic Industry
From Pioneer to Parasite
Stealing the People's Forest Land
The Triumph of Monopoly
The Human Element--"The Timber Beast"
What Is a Casual Laborer?
"Lumber-Jack" The Giant Killer
The Factory Worker and the Lumber-Jack
Why the Loggers Organized
Organization and the Opening Struggle
A Massacre and a New Law
The Eight Hour Day and "Treason"
Industrial Heretics and the White Terror
Autocracy vs. Unionism
While in Washington...
Weathering the Storm
Sinister Centralia
The High Priests of Labor Hatred
The Loved and Hated Union Hall
Pioneers of Unionism
The Block House and the Union Hall
The First Centralia Hall
The 1918 Raid
A Lawyer--and a Man
Blind Tom--A Blemish on America
The Conspiracy Develops
The Conspiracy--And a Snag
Renewed Efforts--Legal and Otherwise
The Employers Show Their Fangs
Failure and Desperation
The Maelstrom--And Four Men
Shadows Cast Before
Meeting of Business Men Called for Friday Evening
The New Black Hundred
The Inner Circle
The Plot Leaks Out
To the Citizens of Centralia We Must Appeal
"Let the Men in Uniform Do It"
"Decent Labor"--Hands Off!
"I Hope to Jesus Nothing Happens"
The Scorpion's Sting
"Let's go! At 'em, boys!"
"I Had No Business Being There"
Through the Hall Window
Wesley Everest
Dale Hubbard
"Let's Finish the Job!"
"Here Is Your Man"
The Night of Horrors
The Human Fiend
Lynching--An American Institution
"As Comical as a Corner"
The Man-Hunt
Hypocrisy and Terror
"Patriotic" Union Smashing
Vanderveer's Opening Speech
A Labor Movement on Trial
To Kill an Ideal...
The Two Raids
Patience No Longer a Virtue
Vanderveer's Closing Argument
Why Were the Shots Fired?
"Fearful of the Truth"
Why Were Ropes Carried?
The Lumber Trust Wins the Jury
But Labor Says, "Not Guilty!"
Labor's Verdict
Wesley Everest