Bullpush Hollow

A Story of Miners and Their Families in the Coal Camps of West Virginia and the Mine Wars of the Early 1900’s.

A Struggle for Freedom

Bullpush Hollow

Bullpush Hollow

A Story of Miners and Their Families in the Coal Camps of West Virginia and the Mine Wars of the Early 1900’s.

A Struggle for Freedom

Bullpush Hollow–An Online Graphic History

updating with new strips weekly

New York, New York, June 1909  

(Fone-Wolf [Here Come], Green, Corbin [Life], various period newspapers)

Victory After All! #22P

When reading this, Becky asked–why weren’t the Italians in the Union? Well, joining the union did cost some of your paycheck and many immigrants were in even more dire straits than native born miners.

The only direct evidence we have that they weren’t union at this point is the reports of Ben Davis’s claims during negotiation. Certainly the armed continuation of a strike the union had given up on wasn’t union sanctioned.

But were those taking action on their own also union members?

We don’t have local union rolls from the time period, but given surrounding evidence, they likely were not members–yet. However many of these Italian miners would go on to join the UMW and be elected as local leaders. A handful of years later, Giacomo (Italian for James), was identified by the mine superintendent as the president of the UMW local.

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