Murderpedia has thousands of hours of work behind it. To keep creating
new content, we kindly appreciate any donation you can give to help
the Murderpedia project stay alive. We have many
plans and enthusiasm
to keep expanding and making Murderpedia a better site, but we really
need your help for this. Thank you very much in advance.
August
Vincent Theodore SPIES
Same day
Policemen
Background
Spies was born in Germany in 1855 and emigrated to
America in 1872 with his mother, Christine, and his five siblings,
Henry, Kenny, Maggie, Willy, and Adolph. His father had died in 1871.
He settled in Chicago, where he became an upholsterer. Involving
himself in trade union activities due to the injustices he witnessed,
Spies joined the Socialist Labour Party in 1877, where he began his
deep involvement with labor causes and ultimately became editor of the
anarchist daily newspaper, the Arbeiter-Zeitung, in 1880.
Anarchist
Known for his aggressive rhetoric, an enraged
Spies published a leaflet on May 4, 1886 entitled Revenge!
Workingmen to Arms! It included the passage: "They killed the
poor wretches because they, like you, had the courage to disobey
the supreme will of your bosses. They killed them to show you
'Free American Citizens' that you must be satisfied with whatever
your bosses condescend to allow you, or you will get killed. If
you are men, if you are the sons of your grand sires, who have
shed their blood to free you, then you will rise in your might,
Hercules, and destroy the hideous monster that seeks to destroy
you. To arms we call you, to arms."
Haymarket Square
On May 4, 1886, Spies spoke during a rally at
Haymarket Square. Contrary to the mayor's explicit instructions,
police intervened, sending units into the crowd in an attempt to
disperse it. Violence erupted and a pipe-bomb was thrown, killing
seven policemen. Seven men were arrested, including Spies. Later,
Albert Parsons turned himself in.
Witnesses testified that none of the eight men
charged threw the bomb. According to The Press on Trial, Spies
had finished his speech but was still on stage when the bomb went off.
However, all eight were found guilty, and seven were sentenced to
death. One, Oscar Neebe, was sentenced to 15 years in prison.
Trial
The trial of Spies and his associates was highly
controversial. The jury was selected specifically by a special bailiff;
one of the jury members was a relative of one of the slain policemen.
Julius Grinnell, the State's Attorney, told the jury, "Convict these
men, make examples of them, hang them, and you save our institutions."
During the trial, the jury was allowed by the judge to read articles
in support of political violence written previously by the defendants
as evidence. While in prison, Spies wrote an autobiography.
In 1887, Spies and his co-defendants appealed to
the Illinois Supreme Court (122 Ill. 1), then to the Supreme Court of
the United States. At the Supreme Court they were represented by John
Randolph Tucker, Roger Atkinson Pryor, General Benjamin F. Butler and
William P. Black. Their petition for certiorari was denied (123 U.S.
131).
Two of the defendants, Michael Schwab and Samuel
Fielden, asked for clemency and their sentences were commuted to life
in prison on November 10, 1887, by Governor Richard James Oglesby. (The
three were pardoned and released on June 26, 1893, by John Peter
Altgeld, the governor of Illinois.) Of the remaining five, Louis Lingg
killed himself in his cell with a cigar bomb on November 10, 1887.
Spies, Albert Parsons, Adolph Fischer, and George Engel were hanged
the next day (November 11, 1887). As he faced his demise on the
gallows, Spies shouted, "the day will come when our silence will be
more powerful than the voices you strangle today."
Marriage
In January 1887, while still in prison, Spies
married Nina van Zandt (1862–1936). She was a graduate of Vassar
college and the only child of a wealthy Chicago chemist. She published
an article on the trial for the Chicago Knights of Labor. After
Spies's death she married Stephen A. Malato, an attorney, in 1895.
They divorced in 1902, and she reverted to the surname Spies.
Autobiography of August Spies
Dwardmac.pitzer.edu
"Barbarians, savages, illiterate, ignorant
Anarchists from Central Europe, men who cannot comprehend the spirit
of our free American institutions," of these I am one. My name is
August Vincent Theodore Spies, (pronounced Spees). I was born within
the ruins of the old robbers castle Landeck, upon a high mountain's
peak (Landeckerberg), Central Germany, in 1855. My father was a
forester (a government administrator of a forest district); the forest
house was a government building, and served -- only in a different
form -- the same purposes the old castle had served several centuries
before. The noble Knighthood of Highway robbery, the traces of which
were still discernable to the remnants of the old castle, had passed
away to make room for more genteel and less dangerous forms of plunder
and robbery, as carried on in the modern dwelling under the present
government. But while the people from old custom designate this and
similar old ruins in the vicinity as "old Robber Castles," they speak
with great deference of the present government buildings, in which
they themselves are daily and hourly fleeced; they would even, I
believe, fight for the maintenance of these lawful institutions.
How greatly these "Barbarians" differ from the
intelligent American people! Tell the Americans to fight for the
maintenance of our commercial robbing posts and fleecing institutions
-- tell them to fight for the protection of the lawful
enterprises of our Board of Trade men; Merchant princes, Railroad
kings, and Factory lords -- would they do it? Alas, more rapidly, I
fear, than those "Barbarians from Central Europe, who cannot
comprehend the spirit of our free American institutions."
Viewed from a historic standpoint my birthplace is
quite an interesting spot. And this is the only excuse I can offer for
my selection of the place for said purpose. I admit I ought not have
made the mistake, ought not have been born a foreigner, but little
children, particularly unborn children, will make mistakes! However, I
find no fault with such wise and intelligent men as Mr. Grinnell and
His jury, for hanging men who were injudicious in the selection of
their birthplace. Sins of this character deserve severe punishment; "society
must protect itself against offenses of this kind."
But speaking of castle Landeck. Follow me there,
reader, on a bright and clear day. We make our way up the old tower.
Take care, or you will stumble over the debris. That? Oh, that is a
piece of an old torture rack; we found it in one of the subterranean
walks, together with several pieces of old ugly weapons, once used to
maintain order among the victims but why do you shudder? The
policeman's outfit of to-day is not quite so blunt and barbaric, it is
true, but it is as effective and serves the same purpose. So, now,
take my hand, I'll help you on top of the ruin. Look out for the bats.
These winged lovers of darkness have great resemblance with kings,
priests and masters in general; they dwell in the ruins of the "good
old times," and become quite noisy when you disturb them or expose
them to the light; adders, too, made this place their favorable
habitation in former years and rendered it very dangerous for any one
to place his sacrilegious foot upon this feudal monument; we killed
them. They were the companions of the bats and owls; their fate has
given the latter much uneasiness, and tears were entertained that
something terrible would happen -- that the ghosts of the old 'noble
knights' and 'noble dames' would come back and avenge the rudeless
annihilation of the venerable reptiles, but nothing of the kind has
transpired. I need hardly add that the work of renovation was greatly
impeded by these venomous creatures; since their extermination we have
made remarkable progress
You smile! Oh, no, I am not speaking of those other
reptiles you seem to think of. But here, we have reached the top.
Great view, is it not! Over there, about thirty minutes walk from here,
(west) you see another ruin like this; that is castle Dreieck, and
over there an equal distance (southwest) you see another one, Wildeck.
And now look down in the fertile valleys, the beautiful meadows and
fields and flourishing villages! Of the latter you can count a dozen,
all located around this mount; and do you know that all these villages
and others which have been laid waste during the thirty years war were
tributary to the robbers who ruled over them in these three castles?
Yes, the people in these villages worked all their lives from early
dawn till late at night to fill the vaults of those noble knights,
who in return had the kindness to maintain 'Peace and
order' for them. For example: If one of these toiling
peasants expressed his dissatisfaction of the existing order of things,
if he complained of the heavy and unbearable tasks placed upon him, 'law
and order' demanded that he be placed upon one of those racks you have
seen a relic of, to be tortured into obedience and submission. 'Society
had to protect itself against this class of criminals.' The noble
knights had their Grinnells, Bonfields and Pinkertons
as well as their descendants have them today; and while they
were less civilized than their descendants of our time, they got along
wonderfully well. To accomplish their beneficent objects, they did not
even require the assistance of a Chicago jury.
Many of the peasants were put to an ignominious
death. Some of them would persist in their folly that it could not be
the object of society nor the intention of Providence to have a
thousand good people kill themselves in a laborious life for the glory,
enrichment and grandeur of a few ungrateful, vicious wretches. Such
dangerous teachings were a menace to society, and their promulgators
were unceremoniously stamped out.
Not more than 200 feet from where we stand there is
a perpendicular (chasm) hole of volcanic origin; it is about 8 feet in
length and 3 in breadth; its depth has never been ascertained. The
saying goes that scores of girls were cast into this terrible abyss by
the valiant Knights during their reign of peace and good order! It is
said that these benevolent "respectables" of ancient times kidnapped
the pretty girls of the villages, carried them like birds of prey to
their lofty abodes, and then when they got tired of them, or found ,,something
better," disposed of them in this way.
Oh, I see, you shake your heads incredulously! Have
you never seen the dumping grounds of the modern knighthood in our
large cities-a similar abyss? No? It is more frightful than the one I
have told you about; its name is prostitution.
You don't believe the people would have borne all
these outrages-? My friend, your rebellious spirit carries you away.
The "orderly and good people" suffered these atrocities just as
silently as our "law and order abiding workingmen" bear them today. I
told you what happened to those who showed resistance!
My words make you sad, turn you pessimistic? Let me
show you something else. Look through these two mounts; can you see a
tower in the dim distance-yes? At the side of this tower are yet to be
seen the ruins of the first chapel built in the realms of the old
heathen, but free and liberty-loving Germans. It was founded by one of
the apostles of St. Boniface, in the eighth century; his name was
Lullus. With this chapel and others that soon followed the poison of
Oriental servilism, the gospel of man's degradation, resignation and
asceticism was first introduced. The old Cherutker and
Katten, who had
in mortal combat thrust the Roman eagle to the
ground, were less successful in resisting the mind infecting poison of
pestilential Rome; it came flowing in incessantly through the channels
of the Christian church. It is true, the healthy and robust Germans
were not an easy prey to the pessimistic belief of a debauched and
dying race-(Rome) they never have been good Christiansbut they became
sufficiently infected to lose their consciousness and pride of manhood
for a while, to fall into the despairing vagaries of the Orient, and
as a natural consequence into serfdom. If life had no value, why then
aspire to liberty? Friend, the ruins of yonder chapel is the monument
of an epoch that gave birth to such robberburgs as the one we stand
upon. The people would have raised these roosts to the ground long
before they did, if the priest had not stood between them and "Law and
Order." The priest is an essential indivisible part of the despot and
oppressor; he is the conciliatory link between them and their victims.
These two ruins, once sacred as the pedestals of
social order, are prophetic monuments. Man will so stand upon the
ruins of the present order and will say as you say now-"was it
possible !"
But now turn around-along this mountain chain,
northeast, there, where the earth dips mistily into the horizon, the
periphery of our view-do you see yonder gray spot, it looks like a
small cloud? Yes? That's the Wartburg, you have heard of Wartburg. It
was here, where Dr. Martinus Luther lived and worked, an instrument of
the revolutionary forces; the revolutionary forces, my friend, that
gradually had developed in these villages.
It is our custom to attribute great movements to
single individuals, as being their merit. This is always wrong and it
was so with Luther. The Germanic race could not digest the Byzantinian
philosophy as embodied in the Judaic and Christian teachings. The idea
that this world was calculated to be simply a purgatory and our life a
martyrdom was repulsive to them, was that servitude and despotism were
growing from the seed of the new religion and developing, where once
had been the habitation of liberty; developing at such a rate, that
patience ceased to be a virtue. The rebellious spirit of the people.
their animosity to the doctrine of self-abnegation, imposed upon them
by the church, had been successfully calmed and suppressed by the
priests for several centuries. But as the iniquties of the "nobility,"
and the domestic burdens of the people grew unbearable this spirit
burst out in flames, and in Luther found a crystallization point.
From the Wartburg then the mighty wave of the
reformation rolled forth. It was the Occident struggling in self-
preservation against the Orient. The love of liberty which had been
lying spellbound in the people's heart for generations, now flowed out
in lucid streams; the magic spell was broken But the "nobility," while
they wanted liberation from the despotism of the Roman Church, they
liked the privileges the latter had given them; the patent to rob the
peasants of their labor too well-they scorned the idea of the common
people aspiring to economic freedom. Was not "spiritual liberty," a
change of certain religious notions, enough for any common man? Luther
soon became the tool of these cheating knaves, and wielded his pen in
condemnation of the objects contended for by the people. He denounced
the true and brave leaders of the people, the fearless Thomas Muenzer
and his associates, worse than the Pope had denounced him shortly
before.
And when the liberty-thirsty people finally took up
their scythes and axes and forks, and drove the "noble Knights" from
their robbers' roosts, it was Luther who brought about a vast
conspiracy of the latter against the people. It is
characteristic that now all religious differences were set aside and
all petty tyrants combined to subdue the people. Papist or Lutheran,
all were instantly united in the crusade against labor. (America at
this time presents an analagous spectacle: Republicans and Democrats
"embrace each other as Nectar and Ambrosia," wherever labor rises for
emancipation.)
Of course, the people were conspirators and
incendiaries. Hear what Thomas Muenzer said:---Lookyou, the sediment
of the soup of usury, theft and robbery are the Great, the masters.
they take all creatures as their property, the fish in the water, the
birds in the air; and the vegetation of the earth. And then they
preach God's commandment to the poor; 'Thou shall not steal.' But this
is not for themselves. They bone and scrape the poor farmer and
mechanic until these have nothing left, then, when the latter put
their hands on the sacred things, they are hanged. And Doctor Liar
says, Amen! The masters do it themselves. that the poor man hates them.
The cause of the rebellion they won't abolish, how then can things
change to the better. And I say this, I am an incendiary-let it be
so!" No, these words were not spoken in Judge Gary's court! You make a
mistake, reader, the language is not modern, it's 400 years old And
the man who used it was in the right. He interpreted the Gospel,
saying that it did not merely promise blessings in heaven, but that it
also commanded the equality and brotherhood among men on earth. The
champions of law and order and Christendom chopped his head off.
The rebels were victorious at first, but against
the united vassals of their oppressors they could not stand. At the
foot of this mount they were defeated, down there, where you see that
big rock, surrounded by magnificent oaks, the battle for freedom was
fought and, alas, lost. No, it was not lost, it was merely interceded
by a temporary victory of the enemy.
The spirit of the Reformation was the "eternal
spirit of the chainless mind," and nothing could stay its progress.
Gibbets, stakes, tortures, and dungeons were of no avail. On the
contrary, the blood of the martyrs only intensified the flame of
liberty, until it sprang from land to land, kindling everywhere the
discontent of the oppressed in its irresistible triumphant course.
These ruins still bear evidence of its tremendous
force! The most momentous thing accomplished by this rebellious and
lawless spirit, however, was the openings of the new world. The
reformation gave birth to the young giant, America; it gave England a
Cromwell and France a Richelieu. Its fermenting force drove the
Huguenots from France and the Puritans from England. But for the
reformation and the persecution of its adherents, these early settlers
of the western hemisphere would have remained in France and England as
good and law-abiding citizens. As dangerous elements, society had to
protect itself against them, and they fled over the Atlantic rather
than to suffer martyrdom at home for their "advanced ideas."
The reformation, my friend, which started right
here, in the country where four centuries later the "Barbarian
Anarchists" came from, "who cannot comprehend the spirit of American
institutions," etc broke down the feudal barriers, which impeded human
progress. It was asserted in a thirty year's war, that laid the
continent desolate, that the exercise of free thought and opinion as
well as scientific investigation should no longer be suppressed
because they conflicted with religious superstitution and dogma
generally believed in and sanctified by custom. The "good and law-abiding"
people were fanatically opposed to those in favor of that imperative
change, and oceans of blood had to be shed in consequence. The ruins
you see here wherever you turn your eyes bear witness of the terrible
war that is not yet ended-the war for human emancipation and freedom.
economic, political and religious. Every one of these ruins is a
milestone on the path of social progress. At our feet lies the
historic chausee, upon which Napoleon's victorious armies, much
against the intention of their grand empereur, carried the seed
of "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity" to the far cast, and there opened a
new perspective to the purblind eyes of the oppressed and down-trodden
millions of our race. Aye. even now that seed is bringing forth good
fruit. Russian dungeons, gibbets and Siberia bear witness.
Now, friend, before we retire from this
retrospective view. look once more into the mirror of the past I.000
years, observe closely the traces that lead from yonder chapel to this
castle, from this castle to the Wartburg, from the Wartburg to the
battlefield below here and to their ruins, and then follow them to
England, France and America, follow them up to this day and then tell
me, if you do not see the contours of the future reflected You
do!
I have dwelled at great length in describing my (barbarian)
birth place, but in so doing I have traversed in a general way over
the history of I,000 years. The present status of society is but the
result of the struggle of human kind during this and preceding periods-yes,
struggle! "You cannot reform the
world by the sprinkling of rose oil," said Mirabeau, and
history proves the correctness of this statement. In no age did the
rulers and despoilers of our race relinquish their hold upon the
throat of their victims, until forced so-by logic and argument? No
Blood, the precious sap was ever the price of liberty.
My years of childhood were pleasant. I played and
studied. How different from the childhood of the offsprings of the
average workingman in this "glorious, civilized and-according to
Grinnell-enlightened country." The children of the proletaire
have no youth; the spring of life has no sunshine, no blossoms, no
flowers for them! If there is a discernible object in their existence
it is that of serving to make life happy and pleasant for those who
tread upon them. In my native land children must attend school
daily from the age of 6 to that of 14; every child in that "Barbarian
country" is thus compelled to attend school for 8 years, and cannot
therefore be "utilized and made to pay" by either their parents or
factory lords. In this enlightened country the children of the wage-workers
do not attend school in the average more than two years; they learn
just enough to serve as a piece of organic machinery, and as such they
are "let out" to benevolent and Christian
employers in their tenderest years. Their vitality, which is
needed for their own bodily and intellectual development, is in such
wise tapped from the innocents and turned into gold for our "law and
order" loving, respectable citizens. They die from consumption before
they attain their maturity, or resort to whiskey, thinking thereby to
restore their lost vigor. If they escape early destruction, their
career is generally terminated in one of those charitable or
reformatory institutes known as the insane asylum, the penitentiary,
or poorhouse.
But woe to the wretch who condemns this order of
things! He is an "enemy of civilization," and "society must protect
itself against such criminals." . .... There comes the star-spangled
Mephisto, Bonfield, with his noble guards of "Liberty;" there comes
the savior of the state, Grinnell, with the visage of a Sicilian
brigand, there comes the hireling juror, and there comes the vast
horde of social vultures. Unisono is the anathema. Unisono
is the cry- "To the gallows!"
"Society" is saved, and "Liberty and order" -- of
the policeman's club -- triumph! Selah!
I do not intend to say that the condition of the
wage-workers in Germany is better than in this country, but I will say
that I never saw such real suffering from want as I have seen in this
country. And there is more protection for women and children in
Germany than here.
(I was educated for a career in the government
service forest branch.) As a child I had private tutors, and later
visited the Polytechnicum in Cassel. At the age of seventeen my
father died suddenly, leaving a large family in moderate circumstances.
As I was the eldest one I did not feel justified in continuing my
studies-they were expensive-and concluded to go to America, where I
had and have now a number of well-to-do relatives. I arrived in New
York in 1872 and upon the advice of my friends I learned the furniture
business. The following year I came to Chicago, where I have resided
ever since; though I may add that I have been away from the city
occasionally for some time. Once, with the intention of settling in
the country, I worked on a farm for a year. But seeing that the small
farmers and renters were in a worse plight even than the city wage-workers,
and that they were equally dependent, I returned to the city. I have
also traveled over the Southern States to get acquainted with the
country and people, and at another time, I joined an exploring
expedition through Upper Canada, which failed.
When I arrived in this country I knew nothing of
Socialism, except what I had seen in the newspapers, the "public
teachers" (?), and from what I'd read I concluded that the Socialists
were a lot of ignorant and lazy vagabonds "who wanted to divide up
everything." Having come but very little in contact with people who
earned their living by honest labor in the old country, I was amazed
and was shocked when I became acquainted with the condition of the
wage-workers in the new world.
The factory, the ignominious regulations, the
surveillance, the spy system, the servility and lack of manhood among
the workers and the arrogant arbitrary behavior of the boss and his
associates-all this made an impression upon me that I have never been
able to divest myself of. At first I could not understand why the
workers, among them many old men with bent backs, silently and without
a sign of protest bore every insult the caprice of the foreman or boss
would heap upon them. I was not then aware of the fact that the
opportunity to work was a privilege, a favor, and that it was in the
power of those who were in the possession of the factories and
instruments of labor to deny or grant this privilege. I did not then
understand how difficult it was to find a purchaser for one's labor. I
did not know then that there were thousands and thousands of idle
human bodies in the market, ready to hire out upon most any conditions,
actually begging for employment. I became conscious of this very soon,
however, and I knew then why these people were so servile, why they
suffered the humiliating dictates and capricious whims of their
employers. Personally I had no great difficulty in -getting along." I
had so many advantages over my co-workers. I would most likely have
succeeded in becoming a respectable business man myself, if I had been
possessed of that unscrupulous egotism which characterizes the
successful business man, and if my aspirations had been that of the
avaricious Hamster (the latter belongs to the family of rats, and his
"pursuit in life" is to steal and accumulate; in some of their
depositories the contents of whole granaries have often been found;
their greatest delight seems to be possession, for they steal a great
deal more than they can consume; in fact they steal, like most of our
respectable citizens, regardless of their capacity of consumption). My
philosophy has always been that the object of life can only consist in
the enjoyment of life, and that the rational application of this
principle is true morality.
I held that ascetism, as taught by the Church, was
a crime against nature.
Now observing that the vast mass of the people were
wasting their lives in drudgery, accompanied with want and misery, it
was but natural for me to inquire into the causes. (I had up to that
time never read a book, or even an impartial essay on Modern Socialism).
Was this self-abegnation, this selfcrucifixion of the people voluntary,
or was it forced upon them, and if so, by whom?
About this time, while looking over my books in
search of something, my attention was attracted by this passage from
Aristotle:` "When, at some future age, every tool upon command, or by
predestination, will perform its work as the art works of Daedalus did,
who moved by themselves, or like the three feet of Hephaestos, who
went to their sacred work spontaneously, when thus the weaver shuttles
will weave by themselves, then we will no longer require masters and
slaves.-
Had this time, long ago anticipated by the great
thinker, not come? Yes, it had. There were the machines. But master
and slave still existed. The question arose in my mind, is their
existence still necessary?
Antiporas, a Greek poet, who lived at the time of
Cicero, had in a like manner greeted the invention of the water- mill
(water power) as the emancipator of male and female slaves. "Oh, these
heathens!" writes Karl Marx, after quoting the above; "they knew
nothing of Political Economy and Christendom! They failed to conceive
how nicely the machines could be employed to lengthen the hours of
toil and to intensify the burdens of the slaves. They (the heathens)
excused the slavery of one on the ground that it would afford
the opportunity of human development to another. But to preach
the slavery of the masses in order that a few rude and arrogant
parvenus might become 'eminent spinners,' 'extensive sausage
makers' and 'influential shoe black dealers'-to do this they lacked
the specific Christian organ.
I think it was in 1875, at the time the "workingmen's
Party of Illinois," was organized, when, upon the invitation of a
friend, I visited the first meeting in which a lecture on Socialism
was delivered. If viewed from a theoretical standpoint this lecture,
delivered by a young mechanic, was not very impressive, but the
substance I win simply say that this lecture gave me the
passeparout to the many interrogation marks which had worried me
for a number of years.
I procured every piece of literature I could get on
the subject; whether it was adverse or friendly to Socialism made no
difference. In the beginning I was a visionary, an enthusiast. I
believed as so many righteous people do today that the truth only
required to be expressed, the argument only to be made to enlist every
good man and woman in the good cause of humanity. In my youthful
enthusiasm I forgot to apply the experience of historical progress to
this particular case. But to my great sorrow I soon became convinced
that the bulk of humanity were automatons, incapable of thinking and
reasoning, altogether unconscious of themselves, simply tools of
custom.
"For from the sordid is man made,
Usage and custom he doth call his nurse."
-Goethe.
But nothing could discourage me. The study of
French, German and English economists and social scientists soon made
me view things differently than I had seen them in my first enthusiasm.
Buckle's "History of Civilization," Karl Marx' "Kapital," and Morgan's
"Ancient Society" have probably had the greatest influence over me of
any-I now became an attentive observer of the various social phenomena
myself. The last ten years have been very favorable for such
investigation as I sought. I found my favorite teachers corroborated
everywhere.
I think it was in 1877 when I first became a member
of the Socialistic Labor Party. The events of that year, the brute
force with which the whining and confiding wage slaves were met on all
sides impressed upon me the necessity of like resistance. The
latter required organization. Shortly afterwards I joined the "Lehr
und Wehr Verein," an armed organization of the workingmen, numbering
about I,500 well-drilled members. As soon as our patricians saw that
the canaille were arming for defence to repel such scandalous
attacks in the future as had been made upon them in 1877, they at once
commanded their law agents in Springfield to prohibit workinginen from
bearing arms. The command was obeyed.
The workingmen also went into politics, independent
politics. I served as a nominal candidate myself several times, but
when the noble patricians and the political augurs saw that
they were successful in electing a number of their candidates, a
conspiracy was organized to disfranchise them by fraudulent count and
like methods. The workingmen. thereupon left the ballot with disgust.
Although I have myself in past years advocated
political action, I have never for an instant believed that thereby
the social evils would be abolished or even that reforms, benefiting
the workingmen, could thus be brought about,-I viewed "political
action," simply and solely as a good means of propaganda. Believing,
as I do, that the economic body, is the organism of society, the
substructure of all social, political, and moral institutions and
operations, I cannot but repel the idea that the foundation of society
could be changed by alterations of it, or by a structure that rests
upon it, and would tumble down the very minute the foundation was
touched.
The economic emancipation in my opinion can be
achieved through an economic struggle only, not through politics-although
the latter may be one of the many forces of organization, necessary in
the development of things to bring the final struggle to a focus.
Indeed it looks so at the present time.
To enter into this question more thoroughly in a
mere autobiography would lead us too far. But if your readers should
desire to hear my views upon this subject, I shall gladly furnish you
a special contribution.
As stated before, since my arrival in New York
(1872 until 1879) I was engaged in the furniture business (upholstery).
Being of a very independent disposition, I began to work for myself in
1876 by opening a small shop. In the same year my mother, three little
brothers and one sister emigrated to this city, with whom I have lived
ever since, and who were for some years dependent upon me. Nothing
very eventful occurred during these years.
In the spring of 1880 the Arbeiter Zeitung,
the German workingmen's organ, a paper which had been started in 1872
as a weekly, and which had since grown into an influential daily, was
on the verge of bankruptcy. Mismanagement was the cause of it. I was
called upon by the society to take the management, and shortly after
was elected superintendent, and still later editor. The paper was
saved, and has at this writing the largest circulation of any German
paper in this city. The German workingmen are justly proud of their
organ; it belongs to them as a class, and no one has a private
interest in it. I hope our English-speaking friends may soon follow
this example. An English daily workingmen's paper, owned and
controlled by the workingmen is surely needed here.
The politicians tried to befriend themselves with
me; looking for the support of the Arbeiter Zeitung. And when
they failed as they always did, they began to hate me. The worst thing
they could say against me was -- "he is a fanatic." So demoralized and
degraded have the champions of "free government" (for them!) become
that in the judgment of a man that is not in the market, who is not
for sale, must necessarily be a fanatic!
One of the members of the grand jury which indicted
us has issued a pronunciamento to the effect that we were
mercenaries, who made money out of the labor agitation, was Banker E.
S. Dreyer. This same man was treasurer of the Democratic campaign
committee during the last presidential campaign, during which said
committee offered me $I0,000 if I would agree to say nothing damaging
of Cleveland. He certainly must have known this; and he must have also
known that I morally "bounced" the man who made the offer (he happened
to be a friend of mine) out of the office. This same man, Dreyer,
about three years ago had sold a piece of property to the School Board
for $32,000. The property was located on the corner of Cass and
Illinois streets. The common council was about to ratify the bargain
when I learned that the same lots had shortly before been offered for
sale for-I think-$I6,000. I made all the noise I could, an
investigation proved the attempted "boodler," and the "job" was
spoiled.
When I consider that such men as he have indicted
and convicted me and my comrades for murder; when I consider that
these are the men who raise the cry that we are "dangerous to society,"
I am reminded of the old dodge, ',stop the thief!" But it is sad to
reflect that the good people are so easily being led astray.
Among those whose wrath I have brought upon me are
our governors, the good police. For years I have exposed their
blackmailing practices, their brutalities and general "pursuits." If
their deeds and behavior could not bear the light, it was not my fault!
When about eleven and a half years ago I had the desk sergeant of the
West Chicago Avenue station arrested for brutally outraging a young
girl while in the station, and nearly killing her (Martha Seidel), the
star-spangled libertines of the city swore dire vengeance. They have
got it now, they think.
That I have made myself generally obnoxious to the
extortionists and fleecers during my management of the Arbeiter
Zeitung-this I need hardly add. To conclude with: I am proud of
the enemies, and no less of the friends I have made.
I have been a member of the "Ameri-Kanische Turner
Bund" for a long number of years. Two years ago I was elected a
delegate to the national convention of this powerful organization, and
succeeded in having a socialistic plank inserted in the platform.
I was also a member of the Knights of Labor once --
about three years ago -- but the Assembly to which I belonged
dissolved, and I never since have renewed my membership, principally,
because I never liked secrecy or ceremonies in an organization. But I
have frequently lectured in meetings of "Knights," when invited.
As an oral agitator among the wage-workers, I have
been very active. I was a delegate to the congress of the
Revolutionary Socialists, held in this city, in 1881, and also a
delegate to the congress of the International Working People's
Association, held in Pittsburgh, in 1883.
I have addressed meetings in most of the industrial
cities in the states. During the strike in the Hocking Valley I
visited that locality and spoke to enthusiastic meetings,
notwithstanding the good Pinkertons who threatened to kill me and who
attended the meetings with Winchester rifles.
My connection with the meeting on the Haymarket, on
May 4th, 1886, did not go beyond that of an invited speaker. I had
been invited to address the meeting in German, but no English speakers
being present I spoke in English. The meeting had been called by the
representatives of a number of Trades Unions. Those present were
workingmen of all beliefs and views; they were not Anarchists, nor
were the speeches anarchistic, they treated on the eight-hour question.
Anarchism was not even referred to by anyone. But Anarchism was good
enough to serve as a scape-goat for Bonfield. This fiend, in order to
justify his murderous attack upon that meeting, said "they were
Anarchists." -Anarchists! Oh, horror!" The stupid mass imagined that -Anarchists-
must be something very bad, and they joined in the chorus with their
enemies and fleecers: "Crucify! Crucify!"
"Tis easy to astonish or appal
The vulgar mass which molds a horde of slaves."
All the pertaining to this matter may be found in
my speech before my hangman Gary and his worthy assistants.
In the cause of humanity and light, Yours,
A. Spies.
This 1886 engraving was the most widely reproduced
image of the Haymarket affair.