484 lines
27 KiB
Markdown
484 lines
27 KiB
Markdown
**Joel Emmanuel Hägglund** (1879 - 1915) was an
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[IWW](Industrial_Workers_of_the_World "wikilink") organizer and
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songwriter. He was executed by the US state in controversial
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circumstances, with many arguing it was politically motivated.
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## Life
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### Family
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Joe Hill was born to a family of 9 (only 6 survived past the age of 5)
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in Gävle, Gästrikland, Sweden. His father, Olof, worked as a train
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conductor on the [Gefle Dala Railway](Rail_Transport "wikilink") and his
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family was deeply religious and interested in music.
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### Childhood
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As a child, Joe Hill learned how to play banjo, guitar, piano and the
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harmonica. He began writing songs about his family members, but this was
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cut short after his fathers death from a [heart
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attack](Health "wikilink") following a [surgery](Healthcare "wikilink").
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Pushing his family into dire poverty, forcing Joe to work at a local
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rope store and a construction worker, interacting with
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[coal](Fossil_Fuels "wikilink") and the [steam
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engine](Steam_Engine "wikilink").
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He contracted tuberculosis that affected his skin and bones, and
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underwent several x-rays and skin treatments in Stockholm, scarring his
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neck and face.
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### Young Adulthood
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His late teenager and early adulthood was spent gambling, his mothers
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death meant that he and his siblings sold their house and went their
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desperate ways. With Joe heading to New York City,
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[USA](United_States_of_America "wikilink"), living in the cities
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immigrant slums and working as a cleaner. He later traveled across the
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country being [unemployed](Unemployment "wikilink") and underemployed as
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a [farmer](Agriculture "wikilink"), construction worker, dockworker and
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lumberjack. He also witnessed the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake (which
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killed 3,000 people).
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### Radicalisation
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Witnessing poverty and inequality, as well as the mistreating of
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immigrant workers gave Joe a cynical view of America, and he joined the
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[Industrial Workers of the
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World](Industrial_Workers_of_the_World "wikilink") in 1910 while working
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at the port of San Pedro, California. He changed his named from Joel
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Hägglund to Joseph Hillström for unknown reasons. It is speculated that
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this was done to avoid union blacklists or to avoid police from his
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criminal activities.
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### Political Activities
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He began to organize strikes and wrote songs from the IWW, and during
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the [Mexican Revolution](Mexican_Revolution "wikilink") he traveled to
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Tijuana and attempted to get US soldiers to volunteer with Mexican
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Revolutionaries. He was eventually violently beaten in San Diego after
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In January 1911, Joe Hill was in the California-Mexico border area,
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joining a group of Wobblies who supported the struggle to overthrow the
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Mexican government and President Porfirio Diaz. In the border village of
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Tijuana, Joe Hill agitated to get volunteer Americans to join the fight
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in Mexico. In 1912, Joe Hill would have been violently beaten after
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holding a speech in San Diego in support of striking dockers. Joe Hill
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eventually became quite known as a singer and agitator. Employers also
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began to know him and in many cities he was denied employment. \[5\] In
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June 1913, Joe Hill was arrested during a docket strike in San Pedro,
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California. He was accused of driver and spent 30 days in prison. The
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following year, he worked with the mining carts in Silver King Mine in
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Park City, Utah near Salt Lake City. He came to Utah in the summer of
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1913 on his way to Chicago where he would meet IWW leader Bill Haywood,
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one of the movement's founders. Joe Hill visited several of the small
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Swedish groups in the mining villages in the area and sang and played
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for them. In the small village of Murray, he rented a room with the
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Eselius family. Joe Hill knew the family from Sweden and had a few years
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earlier met the family's three brothers, Ed, John and Frank Eselius, on
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the American west coast.
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With his talent as poets, singers and speakers, Joe Hill participated in
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the work of organizing and acquiring members of the IWW. His songs
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became known in an ever-growing circle, and since Joe Hill often wrote
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humorous lyrics with a very sharp ironic undertone for that time, the
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songs felt quick in many people's tastes. He became especially famous
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for the phrase "You'll get pie in the sky when you die", which stems
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from his perhaps most famous song, "The Preacher and the Slave". The
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text was written as a parody of the most famous American revival song,
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"In the Sweet Bye and Bye", and it was possible to sing Joe Hills text
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when the Salvation Army played the melody at the food queues and at
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revival meetings.
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"A pamphlet, no matter how good it is, is never read more than once,"
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wrote Joe Hill, "but a song is taught by heart and sung over and over."
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\[6\] And that's exactly what happened to his songs. Joe Hills lyrics
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were printed in the first edition of the IWW Workers' Songbook, The
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Little Red Songbook "in 1909, and although he never recorded his music
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himself, people learned to sing Joe Hills songs by heart and they sang
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on demonstrations, strikes and actions around In the US Among his most
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popular songs are "The Tramp", "There is Power in a Union", "Rebel
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Girl", "Workers of the World, Awaken\!", "Where the Fraser River Flows"
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and "Casey Jones -Union Scab ".
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On January 10, 1914 in the evening, former police officer John G.
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Morrison was at a slaughterhouse shop in Salt Lake City. In the store,
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which was on the corner of Eight South Street and West Temple Street,
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were also the sons of Arling and Merlin. John G. Morrison had left the
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police to open his own store. He had repeatedly said that the work of
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the police had given him many enemies, and that he feared being
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subjected to revenge. In the store he kept his old service gun. The
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store had been robbed sooner and at least once he had used his weapon to
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shoot himself free.
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Shortly before 10 pm, while John G. Morrison and his sons got ready to
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lock the deal, two armed men, both masked with red-colored shawls,
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penetrated the store. One of the men started shooting at John G.
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Morrison. Arling grabbed the father's gun and shot at the men. The
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gunman now turned to Arling and also shot him. Then the two men left the
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deal. The youngest son, the 13-year-old Merlin, had been at the back of
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the store when the shots had fallen, and was unharmed. John G. Morrison
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and his son Arling died of their bullet wounds.
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When the police arrived, Merlin could only give a scant description of
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the perpetrators. But he could say that the person who shot John G.
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Morrison had shouted "We've got you now\!" ("Now we have you") before
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the shots were fired. The police interrogated four men that night, all
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suspected of the murder. Two of the men, C. E. Christensen and Joe
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Woods, were arrested when they tried to jump on a freight train heading
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out from the railway station which is right next to the crime scene. The
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police had to shoot sharply to stop them. It turned out that the men
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were wanted for robbery in Prescott, Arizona.
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A third man, W. J. Williams, was found walking with a bloody shawl in
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his hand, not far from the store. The only thing he wanted to say was
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that he was innocent and he lived with the local salvation army who
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offered lodging for the homeless. Later it turned out that the Salvation
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Army did not know him. The fourth man, 19-year-old Oran Anderson, was
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interrogated when he came to the police station with a caliber 38 bullet
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in his arm. He claimed that he had been subjected to robbery at the
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scene of the crime.
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Around half past twelve o'clock that night, as the murder took place,
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Joe Hill had turned to Dr. Frank McHugh for treating a bullet wound. Joe
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Hill told me he had been shot in a quarrel over a woman. whose name he
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did not want to disclose. The bullet had entered the chest and out
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through the back just below the shoulder blade, but had not met any
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important organs. Frank McHugh later reported that Joe Hill had been
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armed with a gun. Joe Hills shoot wounds were treated and the doctor
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arranged for him to return home. On the way home, Joe Hill asked the car
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driver to stay in a dark place. Here Joe Hill went out of the car and
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hid a gun. This gun was never found again.
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The police initially considered the murder of John G. Morrison and his
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son as a vengeance when nothing was stolen from the deal. The day cash
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remained, so the motive was not to rob the deal. The city's newspaper
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told the day after the murder that one of the shots Arling fired had met
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one man. However, no technical evidence could confirm this claim but the
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witnesses have pointed out that one offender had taken his chest as he
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left the shop, and there had been blood traces in the snow not far from
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the scene. About the motive for the shooting of John G. Morrison and his
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son, the newspaper Salt Lake Tribune wrote the following day: "Revenge
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was the motive behind the crime is the police's opinion. On two previous
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occasions, Morrison had been subjected to armed robbery. In September,
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Morrison was attacked by two masked bandits on his way home from his
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shop. He pulled his revolver and shot at the men. Both escaped. Morrison
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had often described the appearance of the bandits for the family. The
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description of the murderers in many respects agreed with the
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description of the men that Morrison supported together at the previous
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occasion. " - Original text: Salt Lake Tribune: January 11, 1914
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The police called for the two perpetrators and the newspaper asked
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everyone who could contribute to the case being cleared up to make
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themselves known. When Dr. Frank McHugh next morning read this in the
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newspaper, he contacted the police and told him about Joe Hill's bullet
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wound. Three days later, Frank McHugh was on a home visit to Joe Hill to
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look after his wounds and give him painkillers. At the same time, police
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from Murray Joe Hills stormed the room of the Eselius family and found
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Joe Hill lying in bed. With drawn weapons, they commanded him to lie
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still. When Joe Hill seemed to stretch for something, one of the
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policemen fired a shot that hit Joe Hill in his hand.
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In his room they found a red-colored scarf but the gun the doctor had
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told them did not find. It wasn't a gun but a pair of pants Joe Hill had
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been stretching. He denied any knowledge of the murder of John G.
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Morrison and his son. He held his explanation from the night before
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about a quarrel about a woman, and said he had been shot while he had
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had his hands over his head. In the book Joe Hill - poet and agitator,
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by Ingvar Söderström it is speculated that if the woman Joe Hill claims
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to have visited the drop night was a Maria Johansson, whom he already
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knew that they both lived in Gävle \[7\]. When he was arrested as Joseph
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Hillstrom, it took a while before the public realized it was Joe Hill,
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the well-known protest singer and poet about it. The first day when the
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case was against him, a local newspaper could tell how it was. Joe
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Hill's roommate, Otto Applequist, who was suspected of being the second
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offender, had left Murray on the night of murder and not been seen since
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then.
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It was decided that an initial court hearing would determine if there
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was any factual ground for prosecuting Joe Hill for manslaughter. Joe
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Hill abstained from using a defender in court proceedings and demanded
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to defend himself, pro se defense, with reference to his poverty. At the
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hearing, the prosecutor claimed that Joe Hill had planned an armed
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robbery against John G. Morrison's deal, but that the robbery was wrong,
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after which Joe Hill had killed the two in the store. Joe Hill couldn't
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say much about his defense and the hearing decided that Joe Hill would
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be prosecuted for the murder. The public prosecutor demanded the team's
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most severe punishment, the death penalty. Joe Hill was kept in custody
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until the trial would take place without the possibility of bail.
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The trial of Joe Hill lasted from June 17 to June 28, 1914. Two lawyers
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in Salt Lake City, E. D. McDougall and F. B. Scott asked to defend Joe
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Hill without compensation. In the middle of the trial, Joe Hill
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requested that both be disconnected from the case, claiming that they
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were in fact working for the District Attorney (District Attorney) and
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wanted to get him killed only. The judge, Morris L. Ritchie, did not
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want to allow Joe Hill to defend himself and declined the request.
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Although IWW subsequently offered to make two of its best lawyers, Orrin
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N. Hilton and Soren Christensen available to the defense, Joe Hill
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refused to cooperate with his defenders.
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The Prosecutor, E. O. Leatherwood, built his evidence exclusively on
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testimonials. There was no technical track that tied Joe Hill to the
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crime scene. Neither his blood nor the bullet that had gone through him
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had been found. Merlin Morrison might see some similarities between Joe
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Hill and one of the perpetrators. Another witness claimed to recognize
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those brands Joe Hill had in the face after the tuberculosis as a child.
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Dr Frank McHugh testified in the evening when Joe Hill had searched him
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and described the bullet wounds Joe Hill had had. He also said he had
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seen Joe Hill have a gun.
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It was speculated whether Joe Hill would break the silence and testify
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in favor of his own defense - thus also revealing the circumstances of
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the jealousy he claimed to have resulted in his gunshot wound. But Joe
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Hill refused to testify. The prosecutor said that Joe Hills's reluctance
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to testify indicated that his testimony could not last very long. The
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jury just retired a few hours on June 28, 1914 before they found Joe
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Hill guilty of the murder and he was sentenced to death. As a convicted
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person in Utah, the convicted person could choose whether he wanted to
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be arched or hanged. Joe Hill also got this choice. "I choose the
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bushing," he replied, "I've been shot a few times before and I think I
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can do it".
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Joe Hill was taken to the Utah State Penitentiary, awaiting execution.
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It was decided that it would be implemented on October 1, 1915. During
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the 16 months to date, Joe Hill was in prison, while the verdict was
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tried in the US courts. When his goals were not addressed by the bodies,
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Joe Hill wrote songs, letters, poems and articles. But he was always
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secretive about himself. In 1915 he wrote: "Biography do you say? No,
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let's not ruin good writing paper with such stupidity - just here and
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now means something to me. I am a world citizen and was born on a planet
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called Earth. The place where I first saw the light of day means so
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little that it doesn't have to be commented on - I don't have much to
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say about myself. I just want to say that I've done the little I could
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to bring the flag of liberty closer to the goal. " - Original text: Joe
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Hill: The Man Who Didn’t Die
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The Socialist journal Appeal to Reason, launched in the United States in
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1897, printed an article by Joe Hill on August 15, 1915. In it he lifts
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a little on the veil of himself and the trial. He writes: "Despite all
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the horrible pictures and all the nasty stories written about me, I have
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only been arrested once in my life and it was in San Pedro, California.
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At that time, the dockers were in a big strike where I was secretary in
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the strike committee and I guess I was a little too active for the
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police chief of the city so he arrested me and put me in prison for
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thirty days for the runaway driver and that is the whole of my criminal
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path '.
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The key and important thing to value is, however, this: I did not kill
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Morrison and I do not know anything about it. He was shot, as the
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testimonies clearly show, by an enemy and I have not been in the city
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long enough to get me some enemies.
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A short time before I was arrested I came from Park City where I worked
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in the mines. Because of Morrison's position one must find a guilty one
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and then found signing, a countryman without friends, a Swedish, and
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worst of all, a member of the IWW, who in any case had no right to live
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and was therefore designated as guilty.
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2403/5000
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I have always worked hard for my livelihood and paid for everything I
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received and in my spare time I paint paintings, write songs and compose
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music.
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Now, when the residents of the state of Utah want to arc me without
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giving me a reasonable chance to put my side of the case, they must
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come, I'm ready. I have lived as an artist and I will die as an artist.
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" - Original text: Spartacus Educational: Joe Hill
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The day before the execution, Joe Hill wrote in a telegram to the leader
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of the IWW, William D. Haywood: "Farewell Bill. I die as a genuine
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worker uprising. Don't waste time grieving. Organize." \[8\] Attention
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to the goal Helen Keller, photographed here in 1905, wrote directly to
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Woodrow Wilson.
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After the court decision, Joe Hill and his death sentence became a case
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for IWW. William D. Haywood and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, IWW's female
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front figure, traveled around the United States and told it was big
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business behind Joe Hills's death sentence. The IWW magazine, Solidarty,
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urged everyone to write to the judicial authorities and demand Joe
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Hill's pardon. The demands were printed on pamphlets and slips
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throughout the United States. The invitation led to a letter storm and
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many thousands of letters, resolutions and petitions were sent with
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demands for pardon. On a pamphlet from 1915, it translated into
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translation: "Joe Hill.
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He has incurred hatred of the ruling class as a champion of humanity, as
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a working class defender and as the poet of the American proletariat.
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Should the rulers get their revenge? \[9\] \[10\] "
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In June 1915, the Australian Department of IWW sent a resolution of
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30,000 signatures, demanding that Joe Hill's death sentence be
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reconsidered. It was backed up by resolutions from trade unions in
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Europe. Several of these eventually ended up with Utah's governor,
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William Sprys, and the American president, Woodrow Wilson's desk. One of
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the letters to Woodrow Wilson came from author and activist Helen
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Keller, who wrote: "Mr. Excellency: I am convinced that Joseph Hillström
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has not received a fair trial and that the judgment he has received is
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unfair. I beg you, as an official father of all people, to use your
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power and influence to save one of the nation's helpless sons, to wait
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with the execution will allow time to investigate a new trial that
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allows the man to get the righteousness that he is entitled to under the
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laws of the country.
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Virginia Snow Stephen, an art director at the University of Utah, sent a
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telegram in September 1915 to Sweden's Ambassador to the United States,
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W. A. F. Ekengren. In the telegram, which was a request for the
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Swedish ambassador to intervene, it stated: “Hillström, a Swedish
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citizen, has been sentenced to execution on October 1. When the case is
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a serious assassination of the law, I ask you in the name of the court
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and humanity to seek a pardon.
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Miss Sigrid Bolin, sister of the deceased Jacob Bolin, former Swedish
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consul here, joins this wish. " - Original text: Joe Hill's Story: The
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Campaign to Save Joe Hill - (archived link) US President Woodrow Wilson
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tried to prevent the execution of Joe Hill.
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Joe Hill had retained his Swedish citizenship while living in the United
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States, and the Swedish ambassador therefore started an investigation
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about the circumstances surrounding his case and judgment. For the time
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being, W. A. F. Ekengren therefore, on behalf of the Swedish
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government, asked President Woodrow Wilson to report the execution.
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Request solved: "Mr President
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A Swedish citizen named Joseph Hillstrom has been convicted by the
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courts of Utah to be executed on 1 October for first-degree murder. I
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have only had a short time to study the matter. However, I have come to
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the conclusion that the evidence in the case, which is merely
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indicative, is not sufficient to justify the death penalty and that the
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prisoner's rude conduct during the trial and refusal to declare led both
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the jury and the court to judge him. I have already appealed to the
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Ministry of Foreign Affairs, as well as directly to Utah's governor, and
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requested that the execution be postponed so that the goal can
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eventually be resumed, but so far only has received an answer that if
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new facts can be presented in favor of the accused then the appeal will
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to be heard.
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Since the lack of evidence is what underlies my appeal, I cannot be
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satisfied with such an answer. My view of the lack of lawfulness of the
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judgment in the light of the evidence presented at the trial is shared
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by several men with legal background as well as a large number of
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well-known citizens of different cities in this country and I have
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received a number of requests to plead for the convicted. My government,
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which from various sources has received information on the matter, has
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asked me to do my utmost. To try every opportunity to postpone the
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execution of the judgment in any case, I take the liberty of very
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respectfully presenting the case to Mr President for his benevolent
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valuation. " - W.A.F. Ekengren, Swedish Minister (Ambassador),
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Translation of original text: Joe Hill's Story: International Protest
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(archived link)
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Woodrow Wilson could not overlook this appeal. He asked Utah's governor
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to postpone Joe Hills execution. Governor William Spry, convinced of Joe
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Hills debt, reluctantly agreed, so W. A. F. Ekengren was given the
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time needed to obtain evidence that could justify a review of the
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judgment. The defense failed to get more evidence and Joe Hill still
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refused to comment. In a simple message to the court, he reiterated that
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he was still not given a fair trial and that in a fair trial he had been
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acquitted. He also repeated that he did not have to prove his innocence.
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Pressed by, among others, the American Federation of Labor, Woodrow
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Wilson tried on November 17, 1915, to postpone the execution again. This
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request rejected William Spry with the letter:
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Who demand his release regardless of his guilt. I am fully convinced
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that your request must be based on a misconception of the facts or that
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there is some reason of an international nature that you have not
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disclosed. With a full knowledge of all the facts and circumstances
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submitted I had a further postponement at this time would be an
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unwarranted interference with the course of justice. Mindful of the
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bonds of my oath of office to see that the laws are enforce I cannot and
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will not lend myself or my office to such interference. Tangible facts
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must be presented before I will further interfere in this case. \[11\]
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Joe Hill was executed by archery at dawn on November 19, 1915.
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The night before his execution, Joe Hill wrote his last will. The
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handwritten will, addressed to William D. Haywood, read:
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My will is easy to decide, for there is nothing to divide. My kin
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doesn't need to fuss and moan - "Moss does not cling to rolling stone".
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My body? Ah, If I would choose, I would like to reduce it, and let the
|
||
merry breezes blow my dust to where some flowers grow.
|
||
|
||
Perhaps some fading flower then would come to life and bloom again. This
|
||
is my last and final will. Good luck to all of you,
|
||
Joe Hill
|
||
|
||
The morning after Joe Hills execution, The New York Times wrote that the
|
||
death sentence could "make Hillstrom dead more dangerous for social
|
||
stability than he was when he lived," and continued: "in the
|
||
revolutionary group, there is a sincere belief that he died as a hero
|
||
both like a martyr ".
|
||
|
||
Joe Hill received his desire to be dispersed for the wind. Following a
|
||
memorial service at O'Donnell Funeral Home in Salt Lake City on November
|
||
21, 1915, Joe Hills was brought to the Westside Auditorium in Chicago,
|
||
where his funeral on November 25 was attested by more than 30,000
|
||
people, thus becoming one of the greatest funerals in the history of the
|
||
United States. In December 1915, Ralph Chaplin wrote an article on the
|
||
Joe Hills funeral in the International Socialist Review: "At 10:30 am
|
||
the streets were blocked in all directions; the trams did not arrive and
|
||
all traffic was exposed. In the hall you could almost always hear a
|
||
needle falling. The coffin was placed on the flower decorations, on the
|
||
black and red-draped scene, and over it hung a hand-woven IWW banner.
|
||
|
||
The funeral opened with Joe Hills wonderful song, Workers of the World,
|
||
Awaken, members of the IWW led, and the congregation filled in the
|
||
corus. Subsequently, Jennie Wosczynska made a performance of Rebel Girl
|
||
written and composed by Joe Hill, after which came two beautiful tenor
|
||
solo performances, one in Swedish by John Chellman and one in Italian by
|
||
Ivan Rodems.
|
||
|
||
Thousands in the ward bore IWW pennants on their collars or red ribbons
|
||
with the words "Joe Hill, murdered by the authorities of the city of
|
||
Utah, November 19, 1915" or "Joe Hill, IWW martyr for a great cause",
|
||
"Don't worry - organize\! " and many others.
|
||
|
||
Throughout the ceremony most of Joe Hills songs were sung, but some of
|
||
the foreign-speaking songs sang revolutionary songs in their own
|
||
languages. As soon as a song died out in one place, the same song or
|
||
someone else was taken by other voices.
|
||
|
||
The killing of martyrs has never secured any tyrant. The state of Utah
|
||
has shot our song-writer into eternal immortality and has shot himself
|
||
to eternal shame. \[12\] "
|
||
|
||
Joe Hill was cremated on November 26, 1915. His ashes were distributed
|
||
in small bags and sent to the IWW's US, South America, Europe, Asia, New
|
||
Zealand, and Africa local offices, where the ashes on the International
|
||
Labor Day of the Workers were spread on the first May.
|
||
|
||
A Swedish-American, J. A. Granström, who also participated in the
|
||
cremation, took one of the bags with him when he later returned to
|
||
Sweden. In 1960 Granström contacted his friend from his youth, editor
|
||
Gustaf Sjöström in Gothenburg and told about the ashes. Preserved in a
|
||
cigar box, the ash bag in 1961 was handed over to the Workers' Archive.
|
||
At a ceremony on May 20, 1967, Joe Hill's ash was walled in the left
|
||
wall of Ljusgården at Folkets Hus in Landskrona. Along with the ashes,
|
||
documents from IWW were also placed in the wall. \[13\] The contemporary
|
||
workman singer Billy Bragg has also swallowed some of Joe Hills ashes in
|
||
order to become the bearer of his courage and song treasure. \[14\]
|
||
|
||
In 1969, the Swedish Workers' Central Organization (SAC) bought Joe
|
||
Hills childhood home in Gävle and made it a museum named Joe Hill Farm.
|
||
In a specially set up memory room in the house, copies of Joe Hills'
|
||
last letter to the family are preserved. The United States Postal
|
||
Service discovered in 1988 that one of the letters with Joe Hills ash
|
||
had been held back by the US postal service because of its controversial
|
||
content. The content, a photo of Joe Hill with the text: "Joe Hill
|
||
murdered by the capitalist class, Nov. 19, 1915" and a small bag of Joe
|
||
Hills ashes are deposited since then at the US National Archives, the
|
||
National Archives. The last of Joe Hills ashes was scattered to the wind
|
||
in Washington, D.C. in November 1988.
|
||
|
||
In March 2007, the US Communist Party gave a huge archive of party
|
||
material to New York University. The historical archive consisted of
|
||
12,000 boxes that included documents, books and about one million
|
||
photographs. The archive also contained Joe Hills handwritten will,
|
||
which he wrote the night before his execution.
|
||
|
||
## References
|
||
|
||
<references /> |