Emma Goldman, 1886? |
In July of 1892, the Labor activist and Anarchist Alexander
Berkman shot Henry Clay Frick three times. Frick, at the time, was the Chairman
of the Carnegie Steel Company. The steel mill in Homestead was in the middle of
a major and violent dispute between the fledgling labor unions and management.
In Living My Life, Emma Goldman’s
autobiography, she writes: “the philanthropic Andrew Carnegie conveniently
retired to his castle in Scotland, and Frick took full charge of the
situation.” (I am basing the following synopsis on Goldman's account in her autobiography, and am, undeniably biased in favor of the anarchists and labor activists over the industrialists.)
Frick refused to negotiate with the workers and the unions
over labor contracts, fired the mill workers, evicted the workers and their
families—including at least one very pregnant woman—and hired
strike-breakers—who were probably in dire economic necessity themselves, even more
newly arrived immigrants who were compelled to take the most immediate source
of income that presented itself. These striker-breakers were protected on their
route to the mills by the security forces Frick hired from the Pinkerton
detective agency, a group which seems particularly prone to being well-paid by
the powerful for unnecessary violence against unions and activists. In an
altercation between the striking workers and the hired “security forces”
several strikers—including a child—were killed.
Berkman, Goldman, and their circle of friends were outraged
and, while they felt no real personal grievance against Frick as a man, they
determined that he, as an active symbol for all of the inequity of power and
dignity that the Labor and Anarchy movements sought to alleviate. They were
young and passionate and utilitarian, and so their solution was that Berkman
would kill Frick, and that Berkman’s own likely death as an outcome of this
would be forfeit for their ideals.
A week of nightly experiments with bomb making in a cheap
and crowded tenement—thankfully—yielded nothing but lost time and money when
the dynamite turned out to be damp. The back-up solution was that Berkman would
go to Pittsburgh, work with the local Labor-Anarchist groups, buy a gun, and
assassinate Frick. The major trouble with this plan was that guns were
expensive, especially for impoverished Anarchists who were working 18-hour days
at menial paying work and trying to start a thousand revolutions with their
spare hours. Emma Goldman, who was remarkably well-read, decided that the only
course of action was to take a page from Crime and Punishment, and prostitute herself for as long as it took to
earn the money for Berkman’s gun. As she wrote, “Sasha [Berkman] is giving his
life, and you shrink from giving your body, miserable coward!”
So, Goldman spruces herself—cheaply—up, and trudges out to
the street, and hates every minute of it. The man who approaches her buys her a
beer, senses that this is not a job that Goldman will ever be any good
at—although he doesn’t agree with Goldman that most women who become prostitutes are
driven to the profession out of dire economic necessity, rather than “mere looseness
or love of excitement,” as the man terms things—and pays her ten dollars to go home and wash her face.
That money, plus the fifteen dollars Goldman borrows from
her sister—after lying that she needed the money because of illness, which
seems like the worst crime in this whole twist of mixed morals—buys the gun
that Berkman shoots Frick with a few weeks later.
In the ensuing struggle, Berkman also stabs Frick in the
leg, before Frick’s people knock Berkman out.
Berkman went to prison for fourteen years. Frick, with the
1890s version of top-notch medical care, survived. The Homestead Strike fizzled
out amid public outcry at the violence—on both sides, now—with few gains for
workers.
Eventually, Frick’s New York City mansion, home at one time
to the three-member Frick family and their twenty-seven member staff, became
the Frick Collection to showcase Frick’s personal art collection.
Lady Agnew of Lochnaw, 1892 |
Elsewhere in 1892, the painter John Singer Sargent made a
portrait of Gertrude Vernon Agnew, the wife of a Scottish Baron. The painting
helped to launch Sargent’s career of painting glamorous portraits of beautiful
rich women, and also advanced Lady Agnew’s career as a society lady.
For the last month or so, Lady Agnew of Lochnaw has been hanging in the Frick Collection, on loan
from the Scottish National Gallery.
Personally, I find Lady Agnew of Lochnaw as visually resonant as I find Emma Goldman’s
writing politically resonant.
They make an odd pair of icons, and would have probably
classistly hated each other. That their respective hey-days were the same era
is stranger still. While industrialists built libraries, collected art, made
fortunes off destroying the natural world with ignorance and greed, and hired
security forces to beat up workers, crusaders for social reform were holding
meetings, working long hours for little money, reading, writing, rabblerousing,
opening ice cream parlors, plotting assassinations, getting beat up by police
and paid security forces, going to jail, and always fighting for a fairer
world.
Do Carnegie’s many libraries, does the art displayed at the
Frick, does that absolve them of the inhumanity of how they made their money?
Does the intent of a violent action—like an assassination attempt or the touch
and go of building a bomb in a crowded apartment building—out weigh the
violence itself?
And it is easy, very easy, to say of Frick and Carnegie and
Rockefeller and Morgan and all the rest of the major industrialists of that
early era that the times were different, that isn’t it—in the end—good for the
public that they made all that money and had it to build public edifices? There
is a sense that this sort of industrially financed public offering is a PR
absolution for really dirty and inhumane treatment of workers and ecosystems
alike. And that such acts were of the past.
After visiting the Frick to see Lady Agnew in person—in a place that wouldn’t have been if history had gone differently—I went to the American Museum of Natural History. This included a long
and wonderful saunter through the David H. Koch Dinosaur Wing.
Koch, as in the Koch brothers.
As in the family that seems to use their—mostly fossil fuel
derived—fortune on political causes that run completely opposite to my own
beliefs. Never mind that their profits, as a fossil fuel company, come from our
blind obedience to the climate-change causing status quo.
Just a few weeks ago, the long struggled over Cape Wind project in Massachusetts was felled by power companies pulling out, nearly
eliminating the market for wind-generated electricity from a wind farm in
Nantucket Sound. Bill Koch, David “Dinosaur Wing” Koch’s brother, has donated
over a million dollars to fight against Cape Wind—possibly because the view
from his summer home would now include clean power sources—threatening his
lifestyle—as well as the oceanscape. When one side of a political fight is
better funded—corporate and political leaders versus environmentalists and
scientists, say—it becomes easy to see that people and common sense are worth
less than dollars and influence.
Now, I’m not advocating for assassinations of corporate
leaders. Or anyone else. Everyone's parents and children and friends love them, I suppose. Our
challenges in the climate change and human justice fields are, these
globally-connected days, more systemic than the elimination of any one person
could solve, anyway. Violence helps no one and only scares people away from joining a revolution.
Something, though, does need to change and be shaken up and
rearranged. Starting, I think, with what we question and what we blindly
accept. When push comes to shove, I’d rather have the dinosaurs stay in the
ground than become either a museum exhibit or climate-change and fortune
causing fuels. I’d rather all people have good useful work they feel confident
in and be paid a living wage than have one man open a museum filled with
artwork that his workers could never afford to have seen.
Push, though, will never come to shove. Powerful people will continue to buy off and silence opposition to their profits with pretty things. No one is going
to ask me to decide if I like dinosaur bones in a museum donated by rich men
who make a fortune but destroy ecosystems more than I like Tuvalu or alpine
flowers or the clear lungs of Appalachian toddlers, and then re-arrange the
world order according to my whims while I sit back and wish things were
different. No one is going to start this revolution except us. We must, ourselves, use every day as an act for the world we want.
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