COMPANY
GUNMEN and the 1912 STRIKE
A
Terrible time to Live in Bingham
Copperfield 4th of July |
Mother
kept me out of school for part of that year because of the tension. The gunmen were everywhere on company
property and you never knew when you would have a gun stuck in your back and
challenged. We even had one in a packing
box below our house. I remember that one
of these men shot another and that seemed to be the only good they did while
they were here. I don’t remember of too
much violence, but they say there was a lot of shooting in Upper Bingham during
the strike, but evidently no casualties.
Copperfield 4th of July |
It
brought to Bingham an element that left a blight on the community for years to
come - Strike breakers or “scabs” were brought in to work the jobs, the men had
left and the gunmen were there to protect them.
The hate and resentment shown these unwelcome visitors impressed me as
young as I was, and to this date, I loathe such persons.
UTAH
COMPANY FORCING VIOLENCE IN 1912 STRIKE,
Greek Camp Copperfield 1912 ? |
Governor
Spry refused to give the mine owners the militia on their demand, and now the
owners are organizing a militia of their own.
Late
last night 50 sharpshooters, each man a dead shot, were ordered posted on the
hills around the Utah Copper Companies mines.
When
the miners struck they entrenched themselves near the mines. They did so because they had experiences with
Utah Copper special deputy sheriffs in the past.
Two
days after the strike was declared there were 100 heavily armed Company
deputies in Bingham. The company spread
reports of the finding of dynamite and of the likelihood of killings. Governor Spry hurried to Bingham.
Spry
asked the miners to meet with him and talk things over. They readily consented and left their
entrenchments, satisfied they were safe so long as the governor was in
Bingham.
Spry
asked the men their grievances. They
told him they wanted an increase in wages and recognition of the union. Spry advised arbitration. The men immediately offered to
arbitrate. The company refused.
Spry
advised the men not to use violence.
They said they had no intention of doing so. Spry asked them why they were armed and
entrenched. They told him of the deputy
sheriffs.
Spry
then said there was no need for the soldiers the company demanded and left
Bingham.
Bingham |
Meantime
the Utah Copper Company had enlisted the county commissioners in their service.
They
had the commissioners go to Bingham on a junket trip and inspect the miner’s
entrenchments, which Spry had not thought serious. The County Commissioners ordered the sheriff
to destroy the entrenchments and disarm everyone in Bingham except deputies.
This
is certain to cause trouble. The miners
are afraid of the deputies. They will
not submit to be disarmed, while the deputies are left armed, without
resistance.
And
if the miners do attempt resistance the sharpshooters on the hills above the
mines will be able to kill them at will.
Governor
Spry is still trying to get the company to agree to arbitration. The men have made another request for a
conference with company officials. The
company officials have returned no answer to the request.
Copperfield |
Quotes
from “Bingham” a
1945 school book-7th and 8th Grades.
The
Mine owners and scabs were successful in breaking the 1912 Strike.
Utah Copper had “fired and
Black-Balled” many of the strikers. They
were angry and unemployed. Scabs were
replaced with experienced men and both were causing trouble. Bingham was no longer a safe and happy place
to live. Some of my Swedish-Finn
relatives moved to Eureka or went back to Finland. Greeks and Italians found other work or
became self-employed.
John Leventis owned a coffee shop in Copperfield, said, “Let
the owners get the ore themselves”. The Greeks created a fraternal lodge
to help their members become independent.
With money and help partnerships opened most of the grocery stores, drug
stores and apartments. The more pressure
and discrimination they endured the closer they became. They united into one great family and they
survived.
The
Ku Klux Klan and the Company Deputies made life as miserable as they could.
Ellen
Vidalakis (Furgis)
told about the Ku Klux Klan when they were burning crosses in Dinkeyville. “You could see them everywhere and people
were just terrified.” A Mormon Bishop
was caught “burning crosses” above Magna.
Salt Lake and Price had crosses burning there, yet there were no arrests
by police anywhere.
“Lopex Saga” happened when Deputy Sheriff Julius Sorensen
pushed Raphael Lopez too far. The
sheriff was a company
gunman and bought in with the other 400 gunmen.
Raphael Lopez came to Bingham to work.
The mines were hiring and he was an experienced miner and worked as a “leaser”.
He made lots of money and spent it freely on his friends. He was noticed and watched by the
police. He was not a “Scab” yet he was
treated like some kind of animal. He was
an educated, honest and honorable person, from an aristocratic Spanish family
from Mexico Lopez was a half-blood Englishman and Mexican. He won the respect of the people who knew
him. He was quiet and good natured and
temperate with liquor. He was definitely
not a drunkard or a trouble maker. The
turning point in his life was most unfortunate.
Two young ladies came running to the Highland Boy Mine to tell about two Greek muckers who had bothered them and a Mexican had made them stop.
Two young ladies came running to the Highland Boy Mine to tell about two Greek muckers who had bothered them and a Mexican had made them stop.
Failing
to believe the young ladies Sorenson pistol-whipped Lopez and hauled Lopez to
jail. Lopez had a terrible temper and
wanted revenge. LOPEZ knew he had no life
in Bingham so when he was released he found his old enemy and killed him. There are many other versions of why he
killed Valdez.
He
left Bingham and headed over the mountain on foot, but there was snow on the
ground and he left a trail. The “Posse” followed
him on horses and soon caught him west of Lehi where he killed three of those
who found him. Of course Sorensen got
away.
LOPEZ
left tracks in the snow and the chase was on.
Several Posses from as many cities and counties began chasing like he
was some kind of animal. LOPEZ began
circling until no one knew who was following who. There were reports of gun battles at Mosida, a
town south of Utah Lake. Some thought
they had him near Eureka. Others had him
at Cedar fort. Fifty men plus 25 Indian Trackers had him at Skull Valley. Others had him in Little Valley, south-west
of Vernon living on McIntire Summer Ranch more than a hundred miles away.
A
man in Bingham stated the Police deserved what they got for treating people the
way they did. The
police beat him up, put him in jail and the judge fined him $50.00 to get
out. The town was sharply divided on who
was the good guy and who was the bad guy.
John Creedon wasn’t the only one who loathed the Company Gunmen.
Class 1947 Bingham High |
I
worked with a blacksmith named Joe Tome.
In his oral history Joe said he came to Bingham the same year as
Lopez. Joe said he liked Lopez and
thought he got a bum-rap. Everyone I knew liked Lopez, just wish I would have just asked what life was like for each one of
them “living in a Company Town” with Company Gunmen and Company Law.
The
posse learned Lopez had come back to Bingham and trapped in the Highland Boy mine. So, it was shut down and searched and had poisonous gasses pumped into the mine.
The searchers were paid with a five-dollar gold coin. When the police thought he was dead or gone, the searchers suddenly found a new track or sign of Lopez to keep the gold coins coming.
The searchers were paid with a five-dollar gold coin. When the police thought he was dead or gone, the searchers suddenly found a new track or sign of Lopez to keep the gold coins coming.
Bingham
had lived under the guns of gunmen over a year or two and it did not surprise
anyone when someone gave Lopez a helping hand and away he went.
Unions
were never recognized until 1944. Wages
were low and workers were still being killed or injured. So we went on strike. We went on strike time after time. When I retired they deducted 1 ½ years strike
time from my pension. Salt Lake County
sent 60 to 80 deputies up there at a time to intimidate us.
Machine gun Militia |
No comments:
Post a Comment