Early Catholic Labor Champions:
Terence Powderly, Archbishop Gibbons,
and Father Edward McGlynn
Maria Mazzenga
[An address delivered at the annual conference of the
Council of Georgist Organizations, University of Scranton, Scranton,
Pennsylvania, 24 July, 2007. Reprinted from GroundSwell,
September-October, 2007. Compiled from notes and an audio recording by
GroundSwell editor, Nadine Stoner]
Dan Sullivan, an advisor to (he CGO Executive
Committee and also the director of Saving Communities, based in
Pittsburgh, PA, introduced the speaker Maria Mazzenga. Dan also
commented that he had always heard among the Georgists that
Archbishop Corrigan went after Father McGlynn because of Henry
George. But Henry George was also seen as a fellow traveler of
Terence Powderly. This whole thing is much more complicated. The
story Georgists have heard is that the Knights of Labor was a
small struggling organization and then they got hooked up with
Henry George and went from 60,000 to 700,000 members. Prior to
getting involved with Henry George, Terence Powderly was mayor
of Scranton for three terms, winning on the Greenback Labor
Party ticket. The other big issue of the Progressive movement
was greenback dollars.
There were connections between Powderly and the Molly McGuires
who were accused of violence; the Knights of Labor were accused
of being a front group for the Molly McGuires. The Catholic
church condemned secret organizations generally, and it
condemned the Masons explicitly. Catholics in the Knights of
Labor were not allowed in the church in Canada. Church
enforcement is mostly a moral sanction. There was a big move to
get Powderly sanctioned in Canada and the Knights of Labor
condemned in the United States. All this preceded Henry George's
involvement. Also, there was a big split in the Catholic church.
Over there (Europe) they allied themselves with the aristocracy.
In the United States the aristocracy was Protestant. And the
working people who were agitating against the aristocracy were
almost entirely Catholic. This is the context in which Terence
Powderly, Archbishop Gibbons, Father McGlynn, and Henry George
worked.
The Catholic University of America has the definitive
collection of things related to Terence Powderly. Right now his
position on the Molly McGuires is on the web. He also has a long
passage on land, railroads, and telegraphy, and a shorter
passage on money. It is very compatible with what Henry George
wrote. On free trade, Henry George said if we abolish land
monopoly, free trade would work just fine. Powderly's position
was well shut up about free trade, abolish land monopoly, and we
will all see the wisdom of what you have been saying about free
trade. And I tend to agree that George got off on that free
trade tangent to his detriment. He lost the support of Labor and
he lost his message. He had a core message and he diverted from
it. And it cost him politically.
MARIA MAZZENGA is the education outreach director for Catholic
University of America's Library system. She is a historian, and
has a doctoral degree from Catholic University. She started her
presentation with projecting a cartoon from Puck which
was a famous magazine of the late 19th century. It is captioned
benefit concert for the improvement of the labor condition and
it is making fun of the labor movement. Shown playing musical
instruments are Edward McGlynn, Terence Powderly, and Henry
George.
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The fates of Powderly and George were very much interconnected. This
is so illustrative of the late 19th century dominant Protestant views.
In Italy in 1870, people's lands were being taken away, and the
Vatican controlled a lot of territory in Italy. The Papacy felt their
territories were being taken away, and they tended to turn inward. So
a lot of people who were training for the priesthood and involved in
the church then began focusing on ecclesiastical and college studies
and conversations within the church. They couldn't control the outside
and they began to struggle a lot within the church. The convoluted
nature of what Catholics in the Labor movement in the United States
think of Powderly, etc. is tied to that fear of what outsiders think.
We are talking about three people, Terence Powderly, Cardinal James
Gibbons, and Father Edward McGlynn and how they tied up with Henry
George. Powderly, Gibbons, and McGlynn were different kinds of
Catholics. Powderly was a Catholic but he was more of a nominal
Catholic. He was very disenchanted with the Catholic Church by the end
of his life. When you look at his autobiography, called The Path I
Trod (it is in Google.com/books**), he says the church is a great
institution, it does many good things, but many of its practitioners
are evil. And there was lots of support for that in the late 19th
century. He was very critical of the church. But he played a huge role
in reconciling the Knights of Labor with the Catholic Church in the
late 19th century. He is a nominal Catholic but he does respect the
church's role to influence labor.
Cardinal James Gibbons was emphatically Catholic. He was a Cardinal
after 1886. He was the head of the most influential archdiocese in the
country in Baltimore. He was the father of the American Catholic
Church in the late 19th century. He was sympathetic to labor. He would
play a key role in reconciling the Knights of Labor and the Catholic
Church.
Then we have Father Edward McGlynn who needs little introduction to
Georgists. He has a rocky relationship with the Catholic Church, is an
avid Catholic at first, gets into social theories, gets into Georgist
theories, gets into trouble, is excommunicated, and then is reinstated
by the late 19th century.
Powderly was a child of industrial America. He was in fact born in
Carbondale nearby to Scranton. He was the llth of 12 children born to
immigrant Irish parents. At the time Carbondale was grimy and poor and
the anthracite industry there was dying and moving further out toward
Scranton. He was scrawny and sickly, not the typical working class
hero that you might envision. He had lost his hearing in one ear as a
result of scarlet fever. He had a variety of throat and respiratory
ailments, so he was sick a lot as a young man. He was the target of
local bullies which may have caused him to focus more on reading. His
mother was an abolitionist; she was against slavery. He learned a lot
of his tolerance and sympathy from his mother. His father had been a
mine worker and then had been a superintendent of the mines before he
became a skilled mechanic. Terence was charming and a very good
debater, but his education was cut short. At the time the working
class tended to go to school to maybe age 13 and then leave school to
go to work to supplement the family income. That was very common at
the time. So he attended school until he was 13 and then went to work
at a coal, canal, and railroad firm called D & H where he served
as a switch tender, a car examiner, a car repairer, and a brakeman on
the railroads. Despite his bookish nature he really enjoyed this work
tending machines. Eventually he had an apprenticeship as a mechanic
and he came to Scranton where things were booming and he started
working at a locomotive shop. While he had ambitions to be a poet (he
eventually did write non-fiction), he embraced his mechanics work
wholeheartedly. To give you some idea of the change going on between
Carbondale and Scranton in the late 19th century, Carbondale was
declining as a town and Scranton was just growing enormously. Between
1850 and 1870 Scranton jumped from 1,000 people to 35,000 people, and
a lot of this had to do with the arrival of the Scranton brothers.
Colonel Wm. Scranton came to Scranton with his brother and they
established the Lackawanna Iron and Coal Company in the 1840s. What
they were doing was building rails for the Erie Railroad and they
eventually built the DLW railroad a decade later in 1850 or so to
provide a rail access between New York City and Scranton. They made
the most of their location and the expansion of the whole region. The
Scranton clan retained dominance in this area for decades.
Powderly served as a mechanic with a man named James Dickson who
knows Wm. "King" Scranton, a descendent of the Scranton
family. He asks Wm. "King" Scranton for a job; Wm. "King"
Scranton gives him a job. While Powderly is embarking on his career as
a mechanic, the Knights of Labor was formed in 1869 in Philadelphia by
Uriah Stevens, head of the garment cutters. Uriah Stevens was a member
of the Knights of Pythias and of the Free Masons. They work a lot of
the rituals from the Masons into this new order called the Knights of
Labor. This becomes sort of a union fraternal order at the same time.
Uriah Stevens was head of the Knights of Labor until 1879. He died.
In 1878 Terrance Powderly became mayor of Scranton before he was 30.
Then he became the Grand Master Workman of the Knights of Labor. The
union grows immensely under Powderly. Labor is in a terrible bind;
there are strikes going on at the time. Knights of Labor membership
skyrocketed, because these people needed a way to organize. Under
Powderly this union will grow to over 700,000 members. At the time,
strikes were not popularly embraced by the labor movement. They were
in the early 20th century, but in the late 19th century, strikes were
seen as counterproductive. Mostly what was embraced was arbitration
and boycotts. It was in the midst of massive strikes in 1877,
including the railroad strike, that Knights of Labor membership
skyrocketed. Powderly himself had gone around saying he was against
labor strikes but that was really how his union grew at the time. It
was seen as immoral and socialistic at the time.
The Knights of Labor was the most powerful labor union of the 1880s
in America and it rises against this industrial change. Why were the
Knights special, why did they get so many members? First of all, they
were organized vertically as opposed to exclusively horizontally. They
were organized by trade. They organized across trades. So you would
have coal breakers and coal miners in the coal industry organizing
together. They may be separated in groups but they would coordinate
their activities together. This horizontal organization tended to be
more inclusive than the previous vertical organization where people
would stay more in groups.
This horizontal integration was very important in creating this new
union and creating its power. Also, the Knights of Labor gathered by
invitation skilled and unskilled workers, and you know how unusual
that it is, to be part of one big union. This was also part of its
success at the time. The Knights of Labor included previously
marginalized groups. And this is limited, but they invited women.
Women in larger cities were generally segregated from men insofar as
their assemblies. More remarkably, African Americans were invited, so
you also find African American assemblies of the Knights of Labor.
Excluded were individuals that the Knights deemed non-producers.
Bankers and lawyers were viewed as exploitative and as not
contributing to the finished material goods. Their constitution said
these people cannot be part of the Knights of Labor because they are
not producing anything. At the time it seemed to make a lot of sense
because we were an industrial economy.
Another thing unfortunately is that Labor excluded Chinese. They
supported the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 on the grounds that it
would prevent outside competition. That says there were certain limits
on their inclusiveness, and there was this anti-Chinese sentiment
also.
Between 1869 and 1896 there were orders in every state. Every state
had some assembly of the Knights of Labor. There were 15,000 local
assemblies.
Powderly was elected as Scranton mayor in 1878 by the Greenback Labor
Party and he served three 2-year terms. As mayor he was into
municipally owned gas and water works, and he wanted to have a
cooperative boot and shoe factory. He wanted to structure the city's
tax structure probably along the ideas of Henry George but the City
Council wouldn't let him do any of it. He got very little passed as
far as these progressive reforms go. But he was really popular both as
the mayor and as head of the Knights. He was so popular there were
people that named their babies after him. He was so popular, that he
was practically like a rock star. He was a celebrity at the time. More
substantially, John Coggeshall, a Knight in Iowa wondered in 1882 in a
letter to Powderly how they would get "releif {sic} from the
state of slavery to which the Vanderbilts, Goulds, Garretts, Perkins
and other corporation magnates have reduced us owing to our hitherto
isolated and consequently defenseless condition." This was part
of the language of the Knights of Labor at the time.
The leaders of the Catholic Church have a problem with the Knights of
Labor. The number one concern is socialism. The church fears socialism
for the obvious reasons. In its purist form it is an anti-religious
body of ideas or at least a non-religious body of ideas. The 19th
century saw the birth of socialism, and impoverished workers
everywhere embraced it because it sought to restructure society. The
Knights favored redistribution of wealth. They fevered the 8-hour work
day. They favored cooperative work places where workers made decisions
with their employers and the church saw this as attempting to
redistribute income.
The second concern was violence. The church feared labor violence.
The Molly McGuires were about more than just violence. You will recall
just a few years before the rise of the Knights there were murders
conducted by the labor agitators, the Molly McGuires. They operated in
the coal fields and used violence to achieve their treatment of
workers. This turned church leaders off, because everybody seemed to
be a Molly. By the way, Terence Powderly was referred to as a Molly in
many cases, but he was very much afraid of anarchy and very critical
of anarachists. The Molly McGuires were secret.
Finally the Knights engaged hi secrecy. The church takes personally
this engaging in secret behavior. Various church leaders got hold of
copies of the secret ritual booklet and thought they were engaging in
Free Masonry. A lot of the rites were actually based on Free Mason
rites. That was more antagonistic to the church. The Free Masons had
been outlawed in 1734 because they were antagonistic to the church. So
church leaders variously accused the Knights of Free Masonry and the
penalty was if the Knights of Labor were engaging in this Free Masonry
activity, they would not receive the sacraments. That is how they
twisted their arms.
How does this situation come to a head? In Canada in 1884, Eleazar
Taschereau, the Archbishop of Quebec, invoked the ban on secret
societies to condemn the Knights in organizing in Quebec. The idea
became popular and moved south into the United States, and Bishop
James Healy in Portland, Maine published the ban and said he wouldn't
give sacraments to any Knights in his diocese. Various Catholic
leaders get wind of this information and tried to decide, should we
condemn the Knights, too. People started talking about this whole
situation. You are either going to have Catholics joining the Knights
and leaving the church, Catholic workers ignoring the ban and exiting
the church, or they are going to heed the ban and not join the
Knights.
What happens is that James Gibbons of Baltimore takes the position
that if we condemn the Knights we are going to lose the workers of the
church. He is very shrewd in dealing with power and he attempted to
spread this position around and he started talking to other Catholic
leaders. He believes that the church is going to lose members and
revenue so he and several other Catholic leaders do two things to
support their view that Catholics should not be forbidden to join the
Knights of Labor. They convince Terence Powderly to end the policy of
secrecy in the Knights, specifically the secret oath practiced by the
Knights, and Powderly gets that done. The second thing he does is he
writes something called a Memorial in 1887. A Memorial is a petition
to the Pope asking him to not condemn the Knights of Labor. It is a
long piece; there are pieces of it on our website. And he says
essentially this is a huge mistake. There is no socialism in the
Knights of Labor. They are not doing anything wrong. The workers are
tremendously oppressed. He asks the Pope to say something about this
situation and not condemn it. Rome issued a decision in 1888 and it is
not a ringing endorsement of the Knights of Labor but they don't
condemn the order in the United States. You can join the Knights of
Labor and remain Catholics in good standing. Thanks to Cardinal
Gibbons.
Cardinal Gibbons came from a poor family and he supported the
workers.
Powderly read George's works, he read Progress and Poverty.
In fact, in 1883, he told the Knights of Labor to read George as he
had some good ideas. Knights of Labor reading rooms stocked the book.
So there is a strong relationship between these two men and the order
and George. Also, George was a member of the Knights of Labor, a
member of a local in New York and he joined in 1880. They were both
members of the Irish Land League against the landlordism in Ireland.
This was headed by Michael Davitt and the various other Irish figures
and they would come and try to raise awareness in the United States of
the exploitation of the Irish peasants in Ireland. Henry George and
Terence Powderly were both strong supporters of getting rid of Irish
landlordism, of Irish peasants owning the land. They had that in
common, too.
They had a lot of differences that eventually caused them to grow
apart. George and Powderly began to differ over the Haymarket affair
in 1886. Powderly is against clemency for the people accused of
committing murder and George at least initially was for clemency. Of
course there is all kinds of evidence as to whether the people accused
of this actually did it. This is a terrible moment in the American
labor movement. It raised all kinds of bells to the American public.
These people are anarchists in our country. This rift between these
two men becomes very public. Powderly doesn't like anarchism and
thinks they should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. They
came out publicly with these positions. They also differed on their
trade basis. I have several letters where George writes Powderly
trying to convince him to abandon his protectionism. But at least half
of the Knights were protectionists, and this may have been a limited
way of maintaining their jobs. Of course, George was a free trader. I
will just give you a little clip of a letter that George wrote to
Powderly in 1889 to convince him to abandon his protectionism.
"If you waste your strength pottering about little
trifling go-nowhere matters, without one clear ringing note on the
grand essentials, your day will have soon passed. But if you throw
aside your protectionism and all the quack remedies that have been
the stock in trade of the conventional labor leaders who have
succeeded each other only to disappear, and plant yourself firmly
and unequivocally on the broad platform of equal rights and equal
justice, urging the only practical measures by which they can be
attained, you have before you not merely a great work in the
present, but a high place in the list of those who have helped
onward the cause of freedom."
Powderly got this letter and had his assistant stamp on the top, no
answer Required. He did reconcile a bit later but this realty was a
serious rift with him.
We are starting to have these clear policy disagreements among these
members of the labor movement by the 1880s.
Now Edward McGlynn enters the picture. He is one of 11 children born
to Peter and Sarah McGlynn. He had a pretty comfortable life early on.
At the age of 13 he went to Rome to study at the Urban College of
Propaganda of the Faith. At the time Propaganda didn't have the
connotations that it has now. He was training to do missionary work
and related activities. He is eloquent, handsome, and is a brilliant
student. He is very young when he got a teaching post at What is known
as the North American College at Rome, which had been established to
train American priests.
Then McGlynn is sent to a parish in New York City in 1860. By 1865 he
is the head of the largest parish in New York City, St. Steven's
parish, with 24,000 souls registered. He is very influential, but
right on he becomes controversial. To build a parish, the advised
practice is you build a church and then you build a parish school
connected to it. That was a way to combat prejudice against
Catholicism because in the public schools Catholic kids often
encountered prejudice. It was also a way to consolidate the power
within the church. When McGlynn comes along, he says I was educated in
the public schools. I think we should just send all the kids to public
schools. Let's use the money for charity. And let's use it for
religious instruction. He says this publicly. It gets in the
newspapers, and he starts getting into trouble. Before George came
around and consolidated his relationship with him, McGlynn is in
trouble. He is also into the Irish Land League. He goes and speaks on
behalf of the Irish Land League in the United States. He was not
supposed to do this but he did it anyway. In 1882 he speaks at a very
large meeting and he espouses the ideas of Henry George, and says we
should apply George's ideas in Ireland. And let's apply his ideas in
the United States, too. He says this publicly, it is published, and
Roman officials get very upset and worried. This caused the Roman
official, Cardinal Giovanni Simconi, to issue a statement to McGlynn's
superior, the Archibishop of New York, Cardinal John McClosky. The
note warned the Cardinal that McGlynn's statements were socialist in
character and that he should therefore be reprimanded and, if
necessary, suspended. McClosky goes and talks to McGlynn and says
stop. McGlynn then promised McClosky he would not make any more public
statements on this matter. McGlynn thinks this promise only lasted
until McClosky's death which is 2-3 years later. McClosky dies and
Archbishop Michael Corrigan takes his place, and McGlynn says my
promise is ended because McClosky is dead, and he starts publicly
speaking on behalf of George again.
McGlynn starts this public speaking, and this is the situation when
Henry George runs for mayor in 1886 as the United Labor Party
candidate. McGlynn goes on a whirlwind speaking tour. Meanwhile
Archbishop Corrigan who is very conservative and angry, and less
discreet than McClosky was, says you have got to stop doing this.
McGlynn gave the address anyway at a rally of the Labor Party backing
Henry George's candidacy in New York, for which Corrigan then
suspended him from his priestly duties for two weeks. Around this time
Corrigan also released a letter condemning George's theories. Now you
see this war developing between Corrigan and his priest and this is
all being aired in the press. The letter was sent also to Cardinal
James Gibbons, who is the Dean of the American Church and he says I am
going to have do something about this. I have got a priest and
Archbishop fighting in public. Rome is not happy. They don't want
people to see what is going on within the church. Gibbons feels as
senior member of the hierarchy he needs to go and do something about
this.
The relationship between McGlynn and Corrigan continues to sour.
McGlynn is being more outspoken than ever. Gibbons goes and makes a
visit to New York right before he goes to Rome to get his Cardinal's
hat. He meets with McGlynn's friend, Fr. Richard Burtsell because he
doesn't want to talk directly to McGlynn, as it would look like he is
violating Corrigan's position to discipline McGlynn. Burtsell says he
is really not saying anything so bad. He is not a socialist. Henry
George is not a socialist either. Gibbons says you are right, let me
talk to the Pope when I go to Rome and see what he says. So he does,
and Leo XIII, the Pope at the time, asks him what is going on in New
York. Gibbons says I am going to tell Edward McGlynn to come and talk
to you personally.
While Gibbons is in Rome, he learns that there's a movement to put
the writings of Henry George on the church's Index of Prohibited
Books;. Gibbons realizes that putting George's works on the Index
would be foolish, not because he necessarily agrees with George, but
because he believes it would not be useful and would attract negative
public attention to the church. It is going to look like the Pope is
violating the American ideals of free speech, and it is probably going
to get more people reading Henry George's book. He knows also there
will probably be backlash against the Catholics if the Pope does this
because there is a lot of anti-Papal sentiment in America.
Gibbons prepares a Memorial, a petition against prohibiting George's
works, for the Pope. He argues essentially that many of George's ideas
originated with Herbert Spencer and John Stuart Mill and that the
world would judge the Pope harshly for condemning the works of "a
humble American artisan" rather than the writings of his masters.
Secondly, Gibbons notes that George's theories differed from socialism
and communism, stating that where communism abolishes private
property, George supports absolute ownership of all of the fruits of
one's labors, and only in the matter of land did George advocate
limited ownership, and even here he didn't teach that the actual
proprietors should be dispossessed, but that a change in the system of
taxation should be put in place so that taxes should come from the
land only and not from the fruits of industry. Finally, he said that
in the US, such ideas wouldn't get anywhere anyway, and the movement
would die out eventually as Congress would never enact the single tax
idea. He urged the Pope to issue a statement, an encyclical, on
private property.
The Pope read the Petition and does condemn George's work and puts it
on the Index, but he doesn't publish that. So it doesn't get
the kind of attention Gibbons thought it might.
Meanwhile the situation with McGlynn grows worse. In 1887 he is asked
to head the Anti-Poverty Society created by Henry George. As head of
the Anti-Poverty Society, McGlynn gives his famous speech "The
Cross of a New Crusade," which promoted the single tax theory and
better conditions for workers.
It is here that Terence Powderly enters the picture. McGlynn gave his
speech and is getting really popular. He wants to spread the word
about the Anti-Poverty Society and asks Terence Powderly for the
mailing list of the Journal of United Labor. This is the publication
of the Knights of Labor. Terence Powderly thinks, I am already in
trouble with the Catholic Church, and if I give him this list, I am
going to be in even more trouble. The hierarchy is going to get mad at
me, and then they might condemn the Knights of Labor. So Powderly
tells McGlynn the Knights of Labor constitution won't allow it, and I
am not giving it to you. McGlynn then goes and publicly denounces
Powderly and the Knights of Labor, and there is a huge uproar in the
press between McGlynn and Powderly.
McGlynn keeps giving his speeches, and he was ordered to stop giving
these speeches for George and his theories in 40 days or he would be
excommunicated. He keeps giving his speeches and on July 3, 1887, he
is excommunicated. Corrigan fears that he might be reinstated back
into the church if McGlynn goes and makes his case, so he passes
information about McGlynn's appearance activities and promiscuity -
which may have been fabricated. He sends this to Rome and the
excommunication is affirmed. Corrigan actually made membership in the
George's Anti-Poverty Society a sin. If you join the Anti-Poverty
Society you will not receive the sacraments. In 1889 Anti-Poverty
Society member Teresa Kelly of New York died and was refused burial
for being a member.
When 1892 rolled around, the excommunication is sticking, but McGlynn
doesn't care. He is going around and talking anyway. Pope Leo XIII has
just released Rerum Novarum, which is influenced by both the Knights
of Labor and Henry George's work. An emissary from Rome, Archbishop
Francesco Sartolli was sent to the US to reconcile McGlynn. Sartolli
asked McGlynn to compose a document outlining his ideas on political
and economic theory, and McGlynn does this. Satolli pronounces that
the document has nothing objectionable. McGlynn is also asked to
express his support for Rerum Novarum, and shortly after he is
reinstated into the church at the Catholic University in DC. In 1893
he goes to Rome and sees Leo XIII.
Archbishop Corrigan is not happy about any of this. McGlynn is moved
to a parish in Newburgh, NY, where he continues to speak for labor,
and on the single tax theory. McGlynn gave his last great speech at
the funeral of Henry George in 1897, saying "there was a man sent
from God and his name was Henry George."
Edward McGlynn died in 1900. Gibbons is gone by 1921. Powderly is
gone by 1924. It is really the end of an era when these men pass on.
And it is the AFL-CIO after that.
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