Mary Harris "Mother" Jones was an Irish immigrant who devoted her life to improving conditions of the working class. A vagabond agitator, she worked primarily among miners, supporting their strikes and urging them to unionize.
Background
The early years of Mary Harris Jones are obscured by lack of records and her own inconsistencies in reporting her history. She was born in 1830 (some historians argue that 1843 is the accurate date) on the north side of the city of Cork, Ireland, to Richard Harris and Ellen (nee Cotter) Harris, the Irish who migrated to America when she was a child.
Education
She graduated from normal school in Toronto.
Career
Jones taught in public and parochial schools in Canada and the United States, and practiced the trade of dressmaking in Chicago. She later took a teaching job in Memphis, Tennessee.
In 1867 Jones returned to Chicago and dressmaking. Made homeless by the Great Fire of 1871, she began to attend meetings of the Knights of Labor. There she developed her commitment to rectifying inhumane working conditions, and she began a life-long friendship with Terrence V. Powderly, who led the Knights from 1879 to 1893.
Jones's particular contribution was to mobilize workers and to publicize their plight, which she did with her forceful personality and her flamboyant and salty oratory. Without a home, she went from town to town, from strike to strike, staying in hotels, in the homes of sympathizers, or in jails. When asked where she lived, she replied, "Wherever there is a fight. " Mother Jones worked on behalf of workers in the railroad, steel, copper, brewing, garment, and textile industries. She was particularly appalled by child labor, and in 1903 she marched with a group of adult and child textile workers from Philadelphia to President Theodore Roosevelt's home at Oyster Bay, New York, in a public demonstration against the evils of child labor.
But she worked most prominently and persistently among the coal miners of West Virginia and Colorado. At times the United Mine Workers paid her a salary, though she was often at odds with its leadership. The miners themselves adored her and called her "Mother. " Jones's own courage and willingness to risk arrest, jail, and violence served powerfully to inspire the miners. She also exhorted women to support strikes, and she developed the tactic of organizing miners' wives, armed with mops and brooms, to demonstrate and to keep strikebreakers from entering the mines. While she encouraged militance among women in mining families, she held traditional ideas about women.
Jones sometimes joined in labor activism with working women, but she did not believe that women should work outside the home.
She helped to found the Social Democratic Party in 1898 and the Industrial Workers of the World in 1905, but she never lived easily in any organization and frequently clashed with leaders and associates. She served in the defense of various radicals, including Western Federation of Miners' leaders Bill Haywood, George Moyer, and George Pettibone; California socialist Tom Mooney; and Mexican rebels who were imprisoned in the United States.
Jones continued to be active past 1920 when, by her count then, she was in her nineties. She spent most of her last decade at the Washington, D. C. , home of the Powderlys. On May 1, 1930, the American Federation of Labor staged celebrations of her birth in major cities, which Jones addressed by radio. Though ill, she enjoyed visits by reporters and hundreds of well-wishers. She died on November 30. As she had wished, Mother Jones was buried in the Miners' Cemetery in Mt. Olive, Illinois, near the graves of miners killed in the labor strife at Virden in 1898.
Achievements
Mary Harris Jones helped coordinate major strikes and cofounded the Industrial Workers of the World. She was also one of the founders of the Social Democratic Party.
Mother Jones magazine, established in 1976, is named for her.
(Shares the labor organizer's opinions on strikes, foreign...)
Religion
Jones was a Roman Catholic.
Politics
Jones was a highly visible figure in the American labour movement and an active proponent of legislation to prohibit child labour. She publicly opposed women's suffrage, in part because its supporters were mostly privileged women and because it would co-opt working-class women and divert them from economic issues. A pragmatic socialist who on occasion supported Democratic candidates, Jones was more interested in immediate reforms than in long-range socialist goals.
Views
Quotations:
"You don't need the vote to raise hell. "
"My address is like my shoes. It travels with me. "
"In Georgia where children work day and night in the cotton mills they have just passed a bill to protect song birds. What about the little children from whom all song is gone?"
"What one state could not get alone, what one miner against a powerful corporation could not achieve, can be achieved by the union. "
"I am not an anti to anything which will bring freedom to my class. "
Connections
She married George E. Jones, an iron moulder, in 1861. Six years later, she lost her husband and four children to a yellow fever epidemic.