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About Workmen's advocate. (New Haven, Conn.) 1883-1891
New Haven, Conn. (1883-1891)
- Title:
- Workmen's advocate. : (New Haven, Conn.) 1883-1891
- Place of publication:
- New Haven, Conn.
- Geographic coverage:
- Publisher:
- Trades Council of New Haven
- Dates of publication:
- 1883-1891
- Description:
-
- No. 1 (Sept. 8, 1883)-no.? ; ser. 2, no. 1 (Oct. 4, 1885)-7th yr., no. 13 (Mar. 28, 1891).
- Frequency:
- Weekly
- Language:
-
-
- English
-
- Subjects:
-
- Connecticut--New Haven County.--fast--(OCoLC)fst01207938
- Connecticut--New Haven.--fast--(OCoLC)fst01206280
- New Haven (Conn.)--Newspapers.
- New Haven County (Conn.)--Newspapers.
- New York (N.Y.)--Newspapers.
- New York (State)--New York County.--fast--(OCoLC)fst01234953
- New York (State)--New York.--fast--(OCoLC)fst01204333
- New York County (N.Y.)--Newspapers.
- Notes:
-
- Also issued on microfilm from the State Historical Society of Wisconsin.
- Archived issues are available in digital format from the Library of Congress Chronicling America online collection.
- Official journal of the Socialistic Labor Party of North America, Nov. 21, 1886-Dec. 3, 1887; Official journal of the Socialist Labor Party, Dec. 17, 1887-1891.
- Published in New Haven, Conn. 1883-Apr. 28, 1888; New York, N.Y. and New Haven, Conn., May 5, 1888-Jan. 18, 1890; and in New York, N.Y., Jan. 25, 1890-1891.
- Publisher: The National Executive Committee of the Socialist Labor Party, November 21, 1886-March 28, 1891.
- LCCN:
- sn 90065027
- OCLC:
- 21135098
- ISSN:
- 2643-6329
- Succeeding Titles:
- Related Links:
- Holdings:
-
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First Issue
Last Issue
Workmen's advocate. September 8, 1883 , Image 1
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Workmen's Advocate, The Examiner and Morning Journal and Courier
On September 8, 1883, the New Haven Connecticut Trades Council published, for the price of one cent, the first issue of the Workmen's Advocate. Its immediate aim was to publicize the demands of the compositors then on strike at the New Haven Daily Palladium and to urge a boycott of that newspaper. The new members of the Typographical Union at the Palladium struck to stop cost-cutting measures that had lowered their pay. The city's local trades unions, including the tailors, cleavers, stone masons, bricklayers, piano makers, cigar makers, wood carvers, and granite cutters, were the object of an appeal for funds to continue weekly publication of the new paper, but only one other issue came out that year. According to a history found on the editorial page, eight issues of the Workmen's Advocate were published in 1884 to support a strike against the New Haven Morning News. Later, on October 4, 1885, the Workmen's Advocate announced that it would henceforth appear as a regular weekly publication. According to Editor J. Fred Busche, the Workmen's Advocate was joining the Hartford Examiner and the Naugatuck Agitator as one of three independent labor newspapers in Connecticut.
Busche also declared that the Workmen's Advocate intended to counteract "the evil influences of the corrupt capitalist press by printing the truth and placing before the working people food for thought and reflection upon their industrial, social and political conditions, to the end that they emancipate themselves from wage slavery and landlordism." On September 12, 1886, the Advocate carried a story about New Haven's "Labor Holiday" and "first parade," which culminated in a picnic at Savin Rock. News of the many strands within New Haven's labor movement, including the Knights of Labor, the Greenback Labor Party, and various united state labor electoral formations, appeared on the page alongside appeals for the boycott of New Haven newspapers that refused to hire members of the Typographical Union. In July 1886, the Advocate was tried on conspiracy charges after calling for a boycott of the Morning Journal and Courier.
On November 21, 1886, the Workmen's Advocate declared itself "the official journal of the Socialistic Labor Party of North America." Becoming the English-language newspaper of a national organization whose congresses were still recorded primarily in German, the Advocate represented the hope that this wing of the socialist movement would gain increasing numbers of non-immigrant "American" members. National coverage included tours of European luminaries such as Karl Liebknecht, Edward Aveling, and Eleanor Marx that passed through Connecticut. In March of 1891, the Socialistic Labor Party replaced the Workmen's Advocate with a new and larger weekly newspaper called The People based in New York. The last editor of the Workmen's Advocate, Lucien Sanial, contributed to The People until 1892, when he retired.
Provided by: Connecticut State Library, Hartford, CT