Lucy Parsons


Lucy E. Parsons was an American social anarchist and later anarcho-communist, well-known throughout her long life for her fiery speeches and writings. She was a founding member of the Industrial Workers of the World. There are different versions of Parsons' early life: she herself said she was of mixed Mexican and Native American ancestry; historians believe she was born to an African-American slave, possibly in Virginia, then perhaps married a black freedman in Texas. She met the activist Albert Parsons in Waco, Texas, and claimed to have married him although no records have been found. They moved to Chicago together in late 1873 and her ideology was shaped by the harsh repression of workers in the Chicago railroad strike of 1877. She argued for labor organization and class struggle, writing polemical texts and speaking at events. She joined the Workingmen's Party of the United States and later the Knights of Labor, and she set up the Chicago Working Women's Union with her friend Lizzie Swank and other women.
Parsons had two children and worked in Chicago as a seamstress, later opening her own shop. After her husband was executed in 1887 following his conviction for being a ringleader in the Haymarket affair, she became internationally famous as an anarchist speaker, touring frequently across the United States and visiting England. She wrote articles and edited radical newspapers. She was helped financially by the Pioneer Aid and Support Association and wrote the biography The Life of Albert R. Parsons with her young lover Martin Lacher. In the decades following the 1917 Russian Revolution, Parsons moved towards communism. The Chicago police regarded her as a dangerous political figure and attempted many times to stop her speaking publicly. She continued her activism as she grew older, clashing with the anarchist Emma Goldman over their differing attitudes to free love and supporting challenges to miscarriages of justice in the cases of Angelo Herndon, Tom Mooney, and the Scottsboro Boys. She died in a house fire on March 7, 1942. Her partner George Markstall returned to find the building on fire and was unable to rescue her; he died the following day. She was buried in the German Waldheim Cemetery, where the Haymarket Martyrs' Monument stands. After her death, Parsons was primarily referenced as the wife of Albert Parsons, until recent scholarship and two book-length biographies have commemorated her own achievements. The Chicago Park District named a park on Belmont Avenue after her in 2004.

Early life

Little is known for certain about Parsons' early life. The historian Caroline Ashbaugh states in her biography of Parsons that she was born the daughter of a slave in 1849 and was possibly called Lucy Gathings; through her life Parsons also used the surnames Carter, Diaz, Gonzalez and Hull. There is confusion over Parsons' middle name; while historians such as Philip S. Foner give it as Eldine, both the birth certificate of her daughter and her own death certificate supply the name Ella. Parsons herself told different versions of her life history. She denied being of African heritage and said that she had Mexican and Native American parents, alternating between which one was which. When later events made her famous, national newspapers tried to investigate her Texas heritage but were unable to do so. One story she told was that she was born in Texas to Marie del Gather and John Waller who was Muscogee. Her entry in the American National Biography suggests she may have been daughter to Pedro Diáz González and his wife Marie. Contemporary reporters speculated about her background.
In her biography of Parsons, the social historian Jacqueline Jones states that she was born a slave in Virginia and in 1863 at the age of 12 was brought to McLennan County, Texas, by her owner Thomas J. Taliaferro along with her mother and brother. On this account she was called Lucia; she then moved to Waco, Texas, where people were reinventing their identities as they moved on from their past lives as slaves or Confederate soldiers. She began living with a black freedman called Oliver Benton, formerly known as Oliver Gathings because slaves were given the surnames of their owners. He was around 35 or 36 and she was about 16 or 17 years old. Benton paid $1.50 per month for her education at a local black school and they may have had a child together who died at a young age. Ashbaugh suggests that Parsons was a former slave of the Gathings brothers, since Philip Gathings had a daughter named Lucy in 1849 and Parsons may have been named after her. While slave records do not preserve names, the Gathings brothers did each own two slave girls in 1860 who would have been around Parsons' age.
Whilst in Waco, Lucy met Albert Parsons. He was a white man who had fought in the American Civil War on the losing Confederate side then after the war had become a Radical Republican agitating for black civil rights; he was shot in the leg for helping black people to register to vote. It is doubtful they were ever married since no records have been found and there were at the time anti-miscegenation laws. They both claimed that they married in Austin in 1872 and she told the Dictionary of American Biography for Albert's entry that they were married on June 10, 1871. The historian Lucie C. Price was unable to find any records either of the marriage certificate or of the official whom Parsons said had recorded the marriage. Ashbaugh asserts they would have found it difficult to form an interracial marriage, yet the couple lived together as husband and wife, with Lucy taking the last name Parsons.

Chicago

Lucy and Albert Parsons moved to Chicago at the end of 1873. The industrial city was growing rapidly. The couple lived in poor working-class slum tenements around Larrabee Street and North Avenue on the North Side. Albert Parsons worked as a compositor for newspapers and Lucy Parsons earned money as a seamstress. The couple became involved in the Social-Democratic Workingmen's Party of North America, later the Workingmen's Party of the United States. Parsons also demonstrated her willingness to stand up for her rights by twice taking white people to court in 1875, over an unpaid bill and a neighbor disturbance, respectively.
When the Chicago railroad strike of 1877 occurred as part of the Great Upheaval, Albert Parsons and fellow socialists Philip Van Patten and George Schilling spoke to a crowd of 25,000 people. He was then fired from his job at the Chicago Times and blacklisted; he had a gun put to his head by two unknown men when he went to the Chicago Tribune to ask for work. Lucy Parsons was forced to get a job to support her family and started a shop selling suits and dresses. She expanded the business into Parsons & Co., Manufacturers of Ladies' and Children's Clothing, opening a workspace at 306 Mohawk Street and employing her now blacklisted partner.
Parsons' first writings to be published were letters to the editor of The Socialist concerning the hunger and poverty of the working class. She began to lecture after the birth of her son, Albert Parsons Jr., in September 1879. Parsons' political perspective was evolving, and she determined that her personal problems were insignificant since only social movements could achieve change. She was more militant than her partner, campaigning against voting at a time when she did not have the right to do it herself. Her observations of the 1877 strike had taught her that workers were powerful when united. She developed her social anarchist approach, in which she condoned political violence, urged self-defense against racial violence and called for class struggle against religion. Alongside women such as Elizabeth Chambers Morgan, Elizabeth Flynn Rodgers, Alzina Stevens and Lizzie Swank she helped to set up the Chicago Working Women's Union and attended meetings while pregnant, at a time when child-bearing women were expected to stay at home. Swank became a good friend of Parsons and as soon as the Knights of Labor decided to admit women, they both joined up. The WWU encouraged women to unionize and promoted the eight-hour day.
On April 20, 1881, Parsons gave birth to her second child, Lulu Eda, who was to die of lymphedema at the age of eight. In 1883, the insurrectionary anarchist Johann Most visited Chicago and met the Parsons family. In November, Albert Parsons founded the American Group of Chicago as the local wing of the International Working People's Association. Lucy attended meetings, sometimes in her own home, developing her left-wing politics. When the IWPA published the radical newspaper The Alarm in 1884, she was one of the main contributors, theorising that violence was inevitable in class struggle and that trade unions were the engine of the revolution. She wrote texts which included "Our civilization. Is it worth saving?", "The factory child. Their wrongs portrayed and their rescue demanded" and "The negro. Let him leave politics to the politician and prayers to the preacher". Her article "To tramps, the unemployed, the disinherited and miserable" was reprinted from The Alarm and sold more than 10,000 copies between May and November 1885. The same year, Parsons published "Dynamite! The only voice the oppressors of the people can understand" in the Denver Labor Enquirer, inspired by Most's promotion of propaganda of the deed. On April 28, 1885, Parsons and Lizzie Holmes led an IWPA march to protest outside a banquet at the Board of Trade Building, which was newly constructed at a cost of $2 million. During this time period, Parsons and her partner would often address crowds of 1,000 to 5,000 people on Sundays at the shore of Lake Michigan. Labor organizer Mother Jones attended and thought the speeches advocated too much violence.

Haymarket affair

On Saturday May 1, 1886, 300,000 workers went on strike across the US. In Chicago, the Parsons family led a peaceful demonstration of 80,000 people down Michigan Avenue, demanding the eight-hour day. Two days later, Chicago Police and private security guards known as Pinkertons attacked striking workers at the McCormick Reaper factory, shooting at least one person dead. On May 4, Lucy Parsons organized a meeting to support striking sewing women and asked Albert Parsons to join her; on the same night, at the nearby Haymarket Square 176 police officers had ordered a demonstration to disperse when a bomb was thrown from the crowd. In what became known later as the Haymarket affair, the police opened fire, shooting at least seven workers dead, while one police officer died and six others succumbed to their injuries later; it is likely that in the chaos the officers were killed by police bullets. The Parsons family was at Zepf's Hall nearby and heard the blast; Albert fled the city, first staying with Lizzie and William Holmes in Geneva, Illinois, then moving to Waukesha, Wisconsin where he worked as a laborer and resided with Daniel Hoan.
On May 5, the day after the bombing, Lucy Parsons was in the office of the Arbeiter-Zeitung when it was raided by police officers without a search warrant. They arrested the entire staff including Parsons, whom an officer called "a black bitch"; she was released without charge since the police were hoping she would lead them to her partner. Over the next six months she was briefly detained several times. Other mass arrests and unlawful searches were made and Julius S. Grinnell, the Illinois Attorney General who would go on to prosecute the case, said "Make the raids first then look up the law afterwards". Lucy Parsons commented in the Denver Labor Enquirer the raids were extensive. A Grand Jury announced charges against 31 men on May 27, including murder charges against ten, the most fervent advocates of propaganda by the deed had not been charged.
The attitude of the US labor movement towards those accused was mixed, with some militants voicing support and others concerned by the loss of life at the square. While Albert was in hiding, he wrote to Lucy Parsons asking her to talk to the lawyer William P. Black and discuss the conditions of his surrender. Black encouraged her to bring him to court, believing there was little chance of conviction. His chief aide William A. Foster disagreed, thinking it best that Parsons remained free. On the first day of trial, Albert Parsons appeared after spending some hours with Lucy and surrendered to Judge Joseph Gary. The mainstream media campaign against anarchists was intense, with the Chicago Tribune calling for executions and Texas newspapers revisiting the presumed scandal of Parsons leaving her marriage with Oliver Benton for Albert. The Waco Day headlined a story "Beast Parsons: the sneaking snarl from some moral morass in which he hides; miscegenationist, murderer, moral outlaw, for whom the gallows waits". In response, Parsons visited her partner in jail with a journalist from the Tribune and he said he had been romantically attached to Benton's wife but that she was a different person to Lucy.
Lucy Parsons attended every day of the trial and was there when her partner, George Engel, Samuel Fielden, Adolph Fischer, Louis Lingg, Michael Schwab and August Spies were sentenced to death. Afterwards, she made a seven-week lecture tour in order to raise funds for the defendants; she addressed more than 200,000 people in places such as Cincinnati, New York and Philadelphia. In New Haven, Connecticut, she said "You may have expected me to belch forth great flames of dynamite and stand before you with bombs in my hands. If you are disappointed, you have only the capitalist press to thank for it". She spoke with the socialist Thomas J. Morgan at a rally in Sheffield, Indiana, which was just across the state line from Illinois, so that the Chicago police were unable to stop the event. In Columbus, Ohio, she was prevented from speaking and sent by the mayor to Franklin County Jail. When not lecturing, Parsons would visit her partner in jail, taking the children with her. She stopped her tailoring shop and the family was forced to move out of their Indiana Street apartment to another on Milwaukee Avenue. After his death sentence was announced, Albert Parsons wrote to his wife "I have one request to make of you: Commit no rash act to yourself when I am gone, but take up the great cause of Socialism where I am compelled to lay it down." An Amnesty Association was founded and took action to save Albert Parsons and the six other men on death row; Lucy Parsons spent her time fundraising and collecting signatures on the street, and the campaign to commute the sentences was supported even by those such as Melville Elijah Stone, editor of the Chicago Daily News, who had previously condemned the anarchists.
On Thursday November 10, the Governor of Illinois Richard J. Oglesby announced that Parsons and three others would be executed the next day. The next morning, Lucy Parsons took the children to see him for the last time, accompanied by Lizzie Holmes. She was prevented from entering the jail by a police cordon and when she attempted to cross it, the group was arrested and taken to the Chicago Avenue police station where they were strip-searched for explosives and detained until 15:00. The casket containing the corpse of Albert Parsons was taken to Lucy Parsons' shop, where over 10,000 people came to pay respects in one day. A total of between 10,000 and 15,000 people attended the funeral on Sunday, November 13; Parsons walked behind the casket. Twenty years later, she edited and published The famous speeches of the eight Chicago anarchists in court which sold more than 10,000 copies in 18 months.