"You
can put me in jail, but you cannot give me narrower quarters than as a
seaman I have always had. You cannot make me lonelier than I have always
been."
- Andrew Furuseth
Maritime History
Research Online This is a good primer on how to researh a ship
or an individual, and how to use online libraries. Good links page.
Ship lists Lists of every type of ship, when they were built,
what class of ship they were, what house flag they sailed under. Liberty
ships, Victory ships, APL ships, etc. An invaluable resource.
The history of the Sailors’ Union
of the Pacific is as rich as its possibilities. It begins long before
the lumber pile on Folsom Street Wharf in 1885. It starts with the Phoenicians,
the Vikings, and the Laws of Oleron. The Union’s past is important because
it is alive in the present. Marx said that ‘History does nothing, possesses
no enormous wealth, fights no battles. It is rather man, the real,
living man, who does everything, possesses, fights. It is not History,
as if she were a person apart, who uses men as a means to work out
her purposes, but history itself is nothing but the activity of men
pursuing their purposes.’
So this history is the activity of sailors pursuing a purpose not limited
to their own miserable wages, or to one brutal ship in a brutal age, but
for all sailors in the ships of every age. The founders of the Sailors’ Union
of the Pacific pursued the purpose of an all-inclusive Brotherhood of the
Sea, those that followed believed enough to bleed for it, and those that
come will make it a reality.
The following is series of digests that describe chapters
in a history written by Stephen Schwartz in 1985, under commission by the
Union. The complete chapters are linked at the beginning of each digest and
on the right. They represent the abridged, paperback version of the history.
The full hardback version of the history is available at Headquarters.
Chapter I - The Lookout
of the Labor Movement (PDF - 124k)
On a cold and foggy night in early March of 1885, a group of sailors gathered
on a lumber pile on Folsom Street Wharf in San Francisco. Angered by bad
food aboard ship, brutal and sadistic punishments, legal servitude, and another
wage cut, three hundred men took the first step towards permanently changing
the seagoing world. This chapter explores the important ethnic, cultural
and geographic elements unique to the Pacific Coast in the late 19th century,
as well as describing in detail the oppressive legal status accorded to seamen
of the age. It examines the pre-cursor organizations of the Coast Seamen’s
Union (CSU), and closely describes the events and figures that created the
oldest maritime union in continuous existence.
Chapter II - New Horizons
(PDF - 124k)
This chapter looks at the Union’s first disastrous strike in 1886 and the
idealism that persisted in its wake. Here too is a description of the crimping
system and the blood money that supported it, the brutalities of “buckoism,”
the foundation of the Union newspaper, The Coast Seamen’s Journal, early
legislative victories and the merger facts behind the founding of the Sailors'
Union of the Pacific in 1891. The important decision of the Arago case,
also known as Dred Scott II, is laid out here for comparison to the 14th
Amendment which freed slaves but not seamen. Finally, there arrives on stage,
in an 1885 committee was elected to reorganize the finances of the CSU,
one Andrew Furuseth. This is the first documented appearance of the man who
would very shortly thereafter lead the SUP, form the first seamen’s international
union, and through eloquence, persistence and great skill get Congress to
pass the Seaman’s
Act of 1915 and so become known as the emancipator of the world’s seamen.
Chapter III - Storm Birds
(PDF - 32k)
At the turn of the century the Sailors’ Union having had some success began
to form coalitions with other workers such as the marine firemen, the longshoremen,
lumbermen, etc and created the first maritime federation called the “City
Front Federation,” in San Francisco. This led to the blood strike of 1901,
which ended in a draw but had important consequences for the Union and the
industry. This chapter also covers the machinations behind the passage of
the Seaman’s Act, the specifics of the Act itself and the subversion of it
that followed.
Chapters IV / V - Twilight
of Freedom Parts I and II (PDF - 235k)
In the period after the passage of the Seamen’s Act the SUP and the ISU would
experience explosive growth and improvements. It would not last long. With
the American involvement in the First World War, things would begin to change
for seamen. The full, catastrophic effect would not be felt until 1921, three
years after the war had ended. This chapter looks at the decline of the ISU,
the influence of the IWW, and the battles with shipowners, Shipping Commissioners,
Communists. Part II explores the continued deterioration of wages and conditions
in the 1920’s, the re-appearance of the “fink hall” and the “fink book,”
and renewed oppression aboard ship. With the onset of the Great Depression
and the election of Roosevelt in 1932, the stage was set for the greatest
strike in the history of maritime labor.
Chapters VI / VII - Year
of Rebirth Parts I and II - Complete Text(PDF
- 78k) In 1934, the Sailors’ Union of the Pacific was at the
vanguard of a strike that would announce to the world that working people
in America had broken out and taken a new road. The Big Strike changed everything,
not the least of which were a set of legal reforms that still define and
condition the role of labor today. This chapter explores the origins of
the strike, the first days in various ports, and the emergence of the incomparable
Harry Lundeberg. Part II recounts the operatic unfolding of the day-by-day
street fighting including the climatic Bloody Thursday. In the end, the
sailors made a funeral pyre for the hated fink book, and as they burned
one commented:
“We have a real fighting membership now, and thousands of men who have a
little taste of unionism will no doubt line up later. We have forced the
U.S. government to realize that Seamen are human beings.”
Chapter VIII - Rebel Workers,
1935-1950 (PDF - 84k)
In the aftermath of the Big Strike it became clear that 1934 was only the
beginning, catalytic event. The Maritime Federation of the Pacific, under
the slogan “an injury to one is an injury to all,” briefly united the West
Coast maritime unions into a powerful coalition. A series of job actions
and victories cemented gains from 1934 and established unionism as a movement
of lasting effect. Despite great turbulence between the SUP and the ISU and
the eventual dissolution of the ISU, a second “big strike” in 1936-37 continued
the sailors’ efforts to gain control of the hiring process via hiring halls.
The struggle between the AFL and the CIO marks this period, and the SUP was
at the center of the conflict. In 1941 the nation was plunged into war and
the Union responded with all of its resources, including the ultimate sacrifice.
Except for the Marines, merchant seamen had a higher casualty rate than any
other service in WWII.
Chapter IX -The Fight
Goes On(PDF - 38k) The final chapter of this abridged SUP history deals
first with the legacy of Harry Lundeberg and his single-minded efforts to
improve the lives of sailors. He fought against the rotten flag-of-convenience
system as it appeared in its infancy; and against all odds, claimed several
important victories. He firmly established the hiring hall without employer
interference, set up the first seamen’s pension plan and the first welfare
plan, and fought against countless legislative attempts to weaken the American
Merchant Marine. Lundeberg’s sudden death in January of 1957, like his life,
greatly altered the landscape of maritime labor. This chapter also examines
the roles of Lundeberg’s successors, Morris Weisberger and Paul Dempster.
Despite the turbulent 70’s and 80’s, the Union emerged in its third century
of continuous operation with its democratic traditions intact and its dedication
to principle more vital than ever before.