By Walker C. Smith - IWW, 1917
This book is dedicated to those loyal soldiers of the great class war who were murdered on the steamer Verona at Everett, Washington, in the struggle for free speech and free assembly and the right to organize:
FELIX BARAN,
HUGO GERLOT,
GUSTAV JOHNSON,
JOHN LOONEY,
ABRAHAM RABINOWITZ,
and those unknown martyrs whose bodies were swept out to unmarked ocean graves on Sunday, November Fifth, 1916.
Preface
By C. E. PAYNE.
In ten minutes of seething, roaring hell at the Everett dock on the afternoon of Sunday, November 5, 1916, there was more of the age-old superstition regarding the identity of interests between capital and labor torn from the minds of the working people of the Pacific Northwest than could have been cleared away by a thousand lecturers in a year. It is with regret that we view the untimely passing of the seven or more Fellow Workers who were foully murdered on that fateful day, but if the working class of the world can view beyond their mangled forms the hideous brutality that was the cause of their deaths, they will not have died in vain.
This book is published with the hope that the tragedy at Everett may serve to set before the working class so clear a view of capitalism in all its ruthless greed that another such affair will be impossible.
- Chapter 1 - The Lumber Kingdom
- Chapter 2 - Class War Skirmishes
- Chapter 3 - A Reign of Terror
- Chapter 4 - Bloody Sunday
- Chapter 5 - Behind Prison Bars
- Chapter 6 - The Prosecution
- Chapter 7 - The Defense
- Chapter 8 - Pleadings and the Verdict
- Chapter 9 - Solidarity Scores a Success
- Chapter 10 - The Bankruptcy of "Law and Order"