Tomorrow is the street party to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the 1934
truckers strike in Minneapolis at the intersection of 3rd Street North and
6th Avenue North (a block south of Washington Avenue N. in the Warehouse
District AND YOU SHOULD KNOW that after much wrangling and negotiations
agreement has been reached for the organizers of this great street festival
to be able to use the entire intersection as originally planned)  This
location is where police opened fire on unarmed strikers in 1934 killing 2
and wounding some 65 more.  Many folks do not know of this strike that
helped establish the Teamsters right here in our own backyard.  Come learn
some local history about regular people standing up for themselves and their
families in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds.

The festival is named One Day in July and is free and open to all from 2 to
10:PM.  There will be many speakers and bands including Kari Tauring, NE
MPLS' own Paul Metsa and labor historian Dave Riehle who will speak about
the '34 Strike.

A full schedule of the festival can be found on the web site
http://www.1934strike.org/

>From TC Independent Media:
http://twincities.indymedia.org/feature/display/17251/index.php
"Music and memory will combine in a street festival scheduled for
Minneapolis' Warehouse District on Saturday, July 24, to honor the 70th
anniversary of a bloody confrontation that resulted in the death of two
strikers and the wounding of 65 more. The festival, called "One Day in
July", is being organized by young members of Minneapolis labor unions who
want to keep the history and significance of the 1934 events alive."

Written below is an account of what happened that "one day in July" by
Meridel Le Sueur.  Her piece in its entirety can be read at:
 http://www.marxists.org/subject/women/authors/lesueur/minneapolis.html
"In the hot afternoon for five minutes they fired point blank into the
bodies of truckmen, most of them trying for cover. The street was littered
with bodies. An old man on the sidewalk was seriously wounded, a young
messenger boy was shot. Two men were lying in the pickets' truck, had not
even gotten out of the truck, which shows how quickly the police opened
fire. Instantly from the picket lines in the face of this fire, which came
from BOTH sides of the street and from the center, young pickets rushed
forward to pick up their wounded--and were fired upon. The pickets behind
them came forward--unarmed men, without compulsion, without orders,
advancing again and again in a colossal tide that filled the gap the instant
it was opened by a prone man.

The strikers picked up what wounded they could and took them, not to the
hospital, but to their own headquarters, where they had set up their own
hospital. What wounded men the police picked up were instantly arrested--for
violence! A great many of these men were veterans and remarked that even in
the war they were allowed to pick up their own wounded."

It is my understanding that public sentiment was so great after this in
support of the strikers that 5 years later the Minneapolis Aquatennial was
established to draw folks away from a huge annual picnic that celebrated the
victorious strike so the public could focus on more appropriately germane
things, at least in the minds of the anti-union business organization known
as the Citizens Alliance.

are we just consumers or are we citizens ~ see ya there,
Tom Taylor
Green Party Endorsed Candidate for MN House Seat 59A
612-788-4252
www.VoteTomTaylor.org

"Raise less corn and more hell"
Mary Elizabeth Lease

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